Thenmattersreachedasuddenclimax。Inhisagitationthedentisthadbeenpullinghardonhispipe,andasMarcusforthelasttimethrusthisfaceclosetohisown,McTeague,inopeninghislipstoreply,blewastifling,acridclouddirectlyinMarcusSchouler’seyes。Marcusknockedthepipefromhisfingerswithasuddenflashofhishand;itspunacrosstheroomandbrokeintoadozenfragmentsinafarcorner。
McTeaguerosetohisfeet,hiseyeswide。Butasyethewasnotangry,onlysurprised,takenallabackbythesuddennessofMarcusSchouler’soutbreakaswellasbyitsunreasonableness。WhyhadMarcusbrokenhispipe?Whatdiditallmean,anyway?Asherosethedentistmadeavaguemotionwithhisrighthand。DidMarcusmisinterpretitasagestureofmenace?Hesprangbackasthoughavoidingablow。Allatoncetherewasacry。Marcushadmadeaquick,peculiarmotion,swinginghisarmupwardwithawideandsweepinggesture;hisjack-knifelayopeninhispalm;itshotforwardasheflungit,glintedsharplybyMcTeague’shead,andstruckquiveringintothewallbehind。
Asuddenchillranthroughtheroom;theothersstoodtransfixed,asattheswiftpassageofsomecoldanddeadlywind。Deathhadstoopedthereforaninstant,hadstoopedandpast,leavingatrailofterrorandconfusion。Thenthedoorleadingtothestreetslammed;Marcushaddisappeared。
Thereonagreatbabelofexclamationarose。Thetensionofthatallbutfatalinstantsnapped,andspeechbecameoncemorepossible。
“Hewouldhaveknifedyou。“
“Narrowescape。“
“WhatkindofamandoyoucallTHAT?“
“’Tain’thisfaultheain’tamurderer。“
“I’dhavehimupforit。“
“Andtheytwohavebeenthegreatestkindoffriends。“
“Hedidn’ttouchyou,didhe?“
“No——no——no。“
“Whata——whatadevil!Whattreachery!Aregulargreasertrick!“
“Lookouthedon’tstabyouintheback。Ifthat’sthekindofmanheis,younevercantell。“
Frennadrewtheknifefromthewall。
“GuessI’llkeepthistoad-stabber,“heobserved。“Thatfellowwon’tcomeroundforitinahurry;goodsizedblade,too。“Thegroupexamineditwithintenseinterest。
“Bigenoughtoletthelifeoutofanyman,“observedHeise。
“What——what——whatdidhedoitfor?“stammeredMcTeague。“I
gotnoquarrelwithhim。“
Hewaspuzzledandharassedbythestrangenessofitall。
Marcuswouldhavekilledhim;hadthrownhisknifeathiminthetrue,uncanny“greaser“style。Itwasinexplicable。
McTeaguesatdownagain,lookingstupidlyaboutonthefloor。Inacorneroftheroomhiseyeencounteredhisbrokenpipe,adozenlittlefragmentsofpaintedporcelainandthestemofcherrywoodandamber。
Atthatsighthistardywrath,everlaggingbehindtheoriginalaffront,suddenlyblazedup。Instantlyhishugejawsclickedtogether。
“Hecan’tmakesmallofME,“heexclaimed,suddenly。
“I’llshowMarcusSchouler——I’llshowhim——I’ll——“
Hegotupandclappedonhishat。
“Now,Doctor,“remonstratedHeise,standingbetweenhimandthedoor,“don’tgomakeafoolofyourself。“
“Let’umalone,“joinedinFrenna,catchingthedentistbythearm;“he’sfull,anyhow。“
“Hebrokemypipe,“answeredMcTeague。
Itwasthisthathadrousedhim。Thethrownknife,theattemptonhislife,wasbeyondhissolution;butthebreakingofhispipeheunderstoodclearlyenough。
“I’llshowhim,“heexclaimed。
Asthoughtheyhadbeenlittlechildren,McTeaguesetFrennaandtheharness-makeraside,andstrodeoutatthedoorlikearagingelephant。Heisestoodrubbinghisshoulder。
“Mightaswelltrytostopalocomotive,“hemuttered。“Theman’smadeofiron。“
Meanwhile,McTeaguewentstormingupthestreettowardtheflat,wagginghisheadandgrumblingtohimself。Ah,Marcuswouldbreakhispipe,wouldhe?Ah,hewasazinc-plugger,washe?He’dshowMarcusSchouler。Nooneshouldmakesmallofhim。HetrampedupthestairstoMarcus’sroom。Thedoorwaslocked。Thedentistputoneenormoushandontheknobandpushedthedoorin,snappingthewood-work,tearingoffthelock。Nobody——theroomwasdarkandempty。Nevermind,Marcuswouldhavetocomehomesometimethatnight。
McTeaguewouldgodownandwaitforhiminhis“Parlors。“
Hewasboundtohearhimashecameupthestairs。
AsMcTeaguereachedhisroomhestumbledover,inthedarkness,abigpacking-boxthatstoodinthehallwayjustoutsidehisdoor。Puzzled,hesteppedoverit,andlightingthegasinhisroom,draggeditinsideandexaminedit。
Itwasaddressedtohim。Whatcoulditmean?Hewasexpectingnothing。Neversincehehadfirstfurnishedhisroomhadpacking-casesbeenleftforhiminthisfashion。
Nomistakewaspossible。Therewerehisnameandaddressunmistakably。“Dr。McTeague,dentist——PolkStreet,SanFrancisco,Cal。,“andtheredWellsFargotag。
Seizedwiththejoyfulcuriosityofanovergrownboy,hepriedofftheboardswiththecornerofhisfireshovel。Thecasewasstuffedfullofexcelsior。OnthetoplayanenvelopeaddressedtohiminTrina’shandwriting。Heopeneditandread,“FormydearMac’sbirthday,fromTrina;“andbelow,inakindofpost-script,“Themanwillberoundto-morrowtoputitinplace。“McTeaguetoreawaytheexcelsior。Suddenlyheutteredanexclamation。
ItwastheTooth——thefamousgoldenmolarwithitshugeprongs——hissign,hisambition,theoneunrealizeddreamofhislife;anditwasFrenchgilt,too,notthecheapGermangiltthatwasnogood。Ah,whatadearlittlewomanwasthisTrina,tokeepsoquiet,torememberhisbirthday!
“Ain’tshe——ain’tshejusta——justaJEWEL,“exclaimedMcTeagueunderhisbreath,“aJEWEL——yes,justaJEWEL;that’stheword。“
Verycarefullyheremovedtherestoftheexcelsior,andliftingtheponderousToothfromitsbox,setituponthemarble-topcentretable。Howimmenseitlookedinthatlittleroom!Thethingwastremendous,overpowering——thetoothofagiganticfossil,goldenanddazzling。Besideiteverythingseemeddwarfed。EvenMcTeaguehimself,bigbonedandenormousashewas,shrankanddwindledinthepresenceofthemonster。Asforaninstantheboreitinhishands,itwaslikeapunyGulliverstrugglingwiththemolarofsomevastBrobdingnag。
Thedentistcircledaboutthatgoldenwonder,gaspingwithdelightandstupefaction,touchingitgingerlywithhishandsasifitweresomethingsacred。AteverymomenthisthoughtreturnedtoTrina。No,neverwastheresuchalittlewomanashis——theverythinghewanted——howhadsheremembered?Andthemoney,wherehadthatcomefrom?Nooneknewbetterthanhehowexpensivewerethesesigns;notanotherdentistonPolkStreetcouldaffordone。Where,then,hadTrinafoundthemoney?Itcameoutofherfivethousanddollars,nodoubt。
Butwhatawonderful,beautifultoothitwas,tobesure,brightasamirror,shiningthereinitscoatofFrenchgilt,asifwithalightofitsown!Nodangerofthattoothturningblackwiththeweather,asdidthecheapGermangiltimpostures。Whatwouldthatotherdentist,thatposer,thatriderofbicycles,thatcourserofgreyhounds,saywhenheshouldseethismarvellousmolarrunoutfromMcTeague’sbaywindowlikeaflagofdefiance?Nodoubthewouldsufferveritableconvulsionsofenvy;wouldbepositivelysickwithjealousy。IfMcTeaguecouldonlyseehisfaceatthemoment!
Forawholehourthedentistsatthereinhislittle“Parlor,“gazingecstaticallyathistreasure,dazzled,supremelycontent。Thewholeroomtookonadifferentaspectbecauseofit。Thestonepugdogbeforethelittlestovereflecteditinhisprotrudingeyes;thecanarywokeandchitteredfeeblyatthisnewgilt,somuchbrighterthanthebarsofitslittleprison。Lorenzode’Medici,inthesteelengraving,sittingintheheartofhiscourt,seemedtooglethethingoutofthecornerofoneeye,whilethebrilliantcolorsoftheunusedriflemanufacturer’scalendarseemedtofadeandpaleinthebrillianceofthisgreaterglory。
Atlength,longaftermidnight,thedentiststartedtogotobed,undressinghimselfwithhiseyesstillfixedonthegreattooth。AllatonceheheardMarcusSchouler’sfootonthestairs;hestartedupwithhisfistsclenched,butimmediatelydroppedbackuponthebed-loungewithagestureofindifference。
Hewasinnotruculentstateofmindnow。Hecouldnotreinstatehimselfinthatmoodofwrathwhereinhehadleftthecornergrocery。Thetoothhadchangedallthat。WhatwasMarcusSchouler’shatredtohim,whohadTrina’saffection?Whatdidhecareaboutabrokenpipenowthathehadthetooth?Lethimgo。AsFrennasaid,hewasnotworthit。HeheardMarcuscomeoutintothehall,shoutingaggrievedlytoanyonewithinsoundofhisvoice:
“An’nowhebreaksintomyroom——intomyroom,bydamn!HowdoIknowhowmanythingshe’sstolen?It’scometostealingfromme,now,hasit?“Hewentintohisroom,banginghissplintereddoor。
McTeaguelookedupwardattheceiling,inthedirectionofthevoice,muttering:
“Ah,gotobed,you。“
Hewenttobedhimself,turningoutthegas,butleavingthewindow-curtainsupsothathecouldseethetooththelastthingbeforehewenttosleepandthefirstthingashearoseinthemorning。
Buthewasrestlessduringthenight。Everynowandthenhewasawakenedbynoisestowhichhehadlongsincebecomeaccustomed。Nowitwasthecacklingofthegeeseinthedesertedmarketacrossthestreet;nowitwasthestoppageofthecable,thesuddensilencecomingalmostlikeashock;
andnowitwastheinfuriatedbarkingofthedogsinthebackyard——Alec,theIrishsetter,andthecolliethatbelongedtothebranchpost-officeragingateachotherthroughthefence,snarlingtheirendlesshatredintoeachother’sfaces。Asoftenashewoke,McTeagueturnedandlookedforthetooth,withasuddensuspicionthathehadonlythatmomentdreamedthewholebusiness。Buthealwaysfoundit——Trina’sgift,hisbirthdayfromhislittlewoman——
ahuge,vaguebulk,loomingtherethroughthehalfdarknessinthecentreoftheroom,shiningdimlyoutasifwithsomemysteriouslightofitsown。
CHAPTER9
TrinaandMcTeagueweremarriedonthefirstdayofJune,inthephotographer’sroomsthatthedentisthadrented。AllthroughMaytheSieppehouseholdhadbeenturnedupsidedown。Thelittleboxofahousevibratedwithexcitementandconfusion,fornotonlywerethepreparationsforTrina’smarriagetobemade,butalsothepreliminariesweretobearrangedforthehegiraoftheentireSieppefamily。
TheyweretomovetothesouthernpartoftheStatethedayafterTrina’smarriage,Mr。SieppehavingboughtathirdinterestinanupholsteringbusinessinthesuburbsofLosAngeles。ItwaspossiblethatMarcusSchoulerwouldgowiththem。