登陆注册
26258900000091

第91章 CHAPTER 18(3)

On the following Thursday morning McTeague woke to hear the eaves dripping and the prolonged rattle of the rain upon the roof.

"Raining," he growled, in deep disgust, sitting up in bed, and winking at the blurred window.

"It's been raining all night," said Trina. She was already up and dressed, and was cooking breakfast on the oil stove.

McTeague dressed himself, grumbling, "Well, I'll go, anyhow.

The fish will bite all the better for the rain."

"Look here, Mac," said Trina, slicing a bit of bacon as thinly as she could. "Look here, why don't you bring some of your fish home sometime?"

"Huh!" snorted the dentist, "so's we could have 'em for breakfast. Might save you a nickel, mightn't it?"

"Well, and if it did! Or you might fish for the market.

The fisherman across the street would buy 'em of you."

"Shut up!" exclaimed the dentist, and Trina obediently subsided.

"Look here," continued her husband, fumbling in his trousers pocket and bringing out a dollar, "I'm sick and tired of coffee and bacon and mashed potatoes. Go over to the market and get some kind of meat for breakfast. Get a steak, or chops, or something.

"Why, Mac, that's a whole dollar, and he only gave you five for your sign. We can't afford it. Sure, Mac. Let me put that money away against a rainy day. You're just as well off without meat for breakfast."

"You do as I tell you. Get some steak, or chops, or something."

"Please, Mac, dear."

"Go on, now. I'll bite your fingers again pretty soon."

"But----"

The dentist took a step towards her, snatching at her hand.

"All right, I'll go," cried Trina, wincing and shrinking.

"I'll go."

She did not get the chops at the big market, however.

Instead, she hurried to a cheaper butcher shop on a side street two blocks away, and bought fifteen cents' worth of chops from a side of mutton some two or three days old. She was gone some little time.

"Give me the change," exclaimed the dentist as soon as she returned. Trina handed him a quarter; and when McTeague was about to protest, broke in upon him with a rapid stream of talk that confused him upon the instant. But for that matter, it was never difficult for Trina to deceive the dentist. He never went to the bottom of things. He would have believed her if she had told him the chops had cost a dollar.

"There's sixty cents saved, anyhow," thought Trina, as she clutched the money in her pocket to keep it from rattling.

Trina cooked the chops, and they breakfasted in silence.

"Now," said McTeague as he rose, wiping the coffee from his thick mustache with the hollow of his palm, "now I'm going fishing, rain or no rain. I'm going to be gone all day."

He stood for a moment at the door, his fish-line in his hand, swinging the heavy sinker back and forth. He looked at Trina as she cleared away the breakfast things.

"So long," said he, nodding his huge square-cut head. This amiability in the matter of leave taking was unusual. Trina put the dishes down and came up to him, her little chin, once so adorable, in the air:

"Kiss me good-by, Mac," she said, putting her arms around his neck. "You DO love me a little yet, don't you, Mac? We'll be happy again some day. This is hard times now, but we'll pull out. You'll find something to do pretty soon."

"I guess so," growled McTeague, allowing her to kiss him.

The canary was stirring nimbly in its cage, and just now broke out into a shrill trilling, its little throat bulging and quivering. The dentist stared at it. "Say," he remarked slowly, "I think I'll take that bird of mine along."

"Sell it?" inquired Trina.

"Yes, yes, sell it."

"Well, you ARE coming to your senses at last," answered Trina, approvingly. "But don't you let the bird-store man cheat you. That's a good songster; and with the cage, you ought to make him give you five dollars. You stick out for that at first, anyhow."

McTeague unhooked the cage and carefully wrapped it in an old newspaper, remarking, "He might get cold. Well, so long," he repeated, "so long."

"Good-by, Mac."

When he was gone, Trina took the sixty cents she had stolen from him out of her pocket and recounted it. "It's sixty cents, all right," she said proudly. "But I DO believe that dime is too smooth." She looked at it critically. The clock on the power-house of the Sutter Street cable struck eight. "Eight o'clock already," she exclaimed. "I must get to work." She cleared the breakfast things from the table, and drawing up her chair and her workbox began painting the sets of Noah's ark animals she had whittled the day before.

She worked steadily all the morning. At noon she lunched, warming over the coffee left from breakfast, and frying a couple of sausages. By one she was bending over her table again. Her fingers--some of them lacerated by McTeague's teeth--flew, and the little pile of cheap toys in the basket at her elbow grew steadily.

"Where DO all the toys go to?" she murmured. "The thousands and thousands of these Noah's arks that I have made--horses and chickens and elephants--and always there never seems to be enough. It's a good thing for me that children break their things, and that they all have to have birthdays and Christmases." She dipped her brush into a pot of Vandyke brown and painted one of the whittled toy horses in two strokes. Then a touch of ivory black with a small flat brush created the tail and mane, and dots of Chinese white made the eyes. The turpentine in the paint dried it almost immediately, and she tossed the completed little horse into the basket.

At six o'clock the dentist had not returned. Trina waited until seven, and then put her work away, and ate her supper alone.

"I wonder what's keeping Mac," she exclaimed as the clock from the power-house on Sutter Street struck half-past seven. "I KNOW he's drinking somewhere," she cried, apprehensively. "He had the money from his sign with him."

At eight o'clock she threw a shawl over her head and went over to the harness shop. If anybody would know where McTeague was it would be Heise. But the harness-maker had seen nothing of him since the day before.

同类推荐
  • 灵济真君注生堂灵签

    灵济真君注生堂灵签

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 梵语千字文(并序附刻)

    梵语千字文(并序附刻)

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 广客谈

    广客谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 滇考

    滇考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说箭喻经

    佛说箭喻经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 烬天戈

    烬天戈

    千百年前,他们首度在红尘相遇。他是妖娆傲世的君王,她是胎记可怖的平凡女子,即便倾心,即便她最终的美艳不可方物,他眼里的她也只是一件华美衣衫。灯红酒绿的民国,他们再度相遇,她依然爱上了他,看着他一步步成为只手遮天的帮派首领,然而这段啼笑姻缘,最终何去何从...
  • 三岔曲

    三岔曲

    冷面杀手冰中火,铁血将军义蹉跎,酒中浪子侠于隐,天下之势分还和?
  • 小心公子

    小心公子

    【已出版上市】女扮男装追贼,楚汐自认步步为营,哪儿知遇到贼祖宗,一路骗着她耍着她,这已经够悲催的了。岂知那贼一转身,成了一朝之主,离他远儿点吧,惹不起咱能躲得起。可她不论怎么躲,他总有法子逼她现身。于是楚汐总结,遇到公孙瑾,她从前的所有不幸都不过是倒霉前的开胃小菜……
  • 秦朝人

    秦朝人

    莫奇蒙恬部下猛将,因言语得罪秦始皇,被编配到修筑长城的队伍中,又惨遭奸人陷害,被困山洞,因因缘巧合封印山洞千年,后被香港考古的富家小姐李云柔发现,带回香港,开始了他新的生活。
  • 夺爱

    夺爱

    记忆是无形的精灵,总是让不幸的人,生活在伤感的世界中。王素云是一个美丽、善良、有理想的故娘,她和同住一个小院的赵秋生,彼此倾慕,渴望得到真正的爱情。但王素云的美丽、善良,非但没有转化为人生的光环,反而成了苦难的根源,让她在漫长的岁月里,一次次受到伤害。王素云在饱受屈辱后,心力交瘁,精神失常,万念俱灰中她想结束生命,让苦涩的爱,不再有难言的伤感……情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 情不知所起:语薄凉

    情不知所起:语薄凉

    闻人无忧:娃娃,不要皱眉头了,好像小老太婆呀……娃娃,以后无忧陪着你,你在哪儿,我就在哪儿,一辈子……娃娃,对不起,无忧要食言了,无忧不能陪你了……西屠雪衣:语薄凉,你说,你说你爱我,你是爱我的……你从不曾信我,即使如今你也不肯相信我,哪怕一次……封舒玄:我的世界没有黑,没有白,没有光明,没有黑暗,一片浑浊,而你就是我的发光点……打从你救我的那一刻起,我的命就是你的,我信你……曲为心:我以为我负你一生,到头来,只是我以为......语薄凉:我一生机关算尽,却原来还是输了,输得这么惨,这么痛……
  • 重生之灵源天下

    重生之灵源天下

    一场车祸,使他来到一个陌生的世界,让原本是孤儿的他有了父母,但是却被自己大哥追杀,身受重伤而坠崖,被神秘女子相救,为了帮神秘女子找回遗失的记忆,他们从此走上了寻找红绫岛的道路……
  • 紫瞳异闻录

    紫瞳异闻录

    恐怖,就在你的身边。我是一位拥有灵异能力的网络写手,自从我来到这个陌生的城市,周围的灵异事件似乎越来越频繁的发生。真的不能做什么吗?面对灵异,难道真的只能在恐怖与绝望中等待死亡吗?滴答,滴答……时间在一点点地逼近,我自己的死亡期限,快了。我绝望地闭上双眼,不敢想象,等待自己的会是什么。我闻到了它的气息,越来,越近了……
  • 闲侃历史

    闲侃历史

    历史故事的一些感悟,视角独特,一家之言。
  • 武傲

    武傲

    一万年太久,武神不朽,傲然天下!------放一个书友群:113779964