Hecountedouttoherthepriceofallherjunk,grudgingeachpieceofmoneyasifithadbeenthebloodofhisveins。Theaffairwasconcluded。
  ButZerkowstillhadsomethingtosay。AsMariafoldedupthepillow-caseandrosetogo,theoldJewsaid:
  “Well,seehereaminute,we’ll——you’llhaveadrinkbeforeyougo,won’tyou?Justtoshowthatit’sallrightbetweenus。“Mariasatdownagain。
  “Yes,IguessI’llhaveadrink,“sheanswered。
  Zerkowtookdownawhiskeybottleandaredglasstumblerwithabrokenbasefromacupboardonthewall。Thetwodranktogether,Zerkowfromthebottle,Mariafromthebrokentumbler。Theywipedtheirlipsslowly,drawingbreathagain。Therewasamoment’ssilence。
  “Say,“saidZerkowatlast,“howaboutthosegolddishesyoutoldmeaboutthelasttimeyouwerehere?“
  “Whatgolddishes?“inquiredMaria,puzzled。
  “Ah,youknow,“returnedtheother。“TheplateyourfatherownedinCentralAmericaalongtimeago。Don’tyouknow,itranglikesomanybells?Redgold,youknow,likeoranges?“
  “Ah,“saidMaria,puttingherchinintheairasifsheknewalongstoryaboutthatifshehadamindtotellit。“Ah,yes,thatgoldservice。“
  “Tellusaboutitagain,“saidZerkow,hisbloodlesslowerlipmovingagainsttheupper,hisclaw-likefingersfeelingabouthismouthandchin。“Tellusaboutit;goon。“
  Hewasbreathingshort,hislimbstrembledalittle。Itwasasifsomehungrybeastofpreyhadscentedaquarry。Mariastillrefused,puttingupherhead,insistingthatshehadtobegoing。
  “Let’shaveit,“insistedtheJew。“Takeanotherdrink。“Mariatookanotherswallowofthewhiskey。“Now,goon,“repeatedZerkow;“let’shavethestory。“Mariasquaredherelbowsonthedealtable,lookingstraightinfrontofherwitheyesthatsawnothing。
  “Well,itwasthisway,“shebegan。“ItwaswhenIwaslittle。Myfolksmusthavebeenrich,oh,richintothemillions——coffee,Iguess——andtherewasalargehouse,butIcanonlyremembertheplate。Oh,thatserviceofplate!
  Itwaswonderful。Thereweremorethanahundredpieces,andeveryoneofthemgold。Youshouldhaveseenthesightwhentheleathertrunkwasopened。Itfairdazzledyoureyes。Itwasayellowblazelikeafire,likeasunset;
  suchaglory,allpileduptogether,onepieceovertheother。Why,iftheroomwasdarkyou’dthinkyoucouldseejustthesamewithallthatglitterthere。Therewa’n’tapiecethatwassomuchasscratched;everyonewaslikeamirror,smoothandbright,justlikealittlepoolwhenthesunshinesintoit。Therewasdinnerdishesandsouptureensandpitchers;andgreat,bigplattersaslongasthatandwidetoo;andcream-jugsandbowlswithcarvedhandles,allvinesandthings;anddrinkingmugs,everyoneadifferentshape;anddishesforgravyandsauces;andthenagreat,bigpunch-bowlwithaladle,andthebowlwasallcarvedoutwithfiguresandbunchesofgrapes。Why,justonlythatpunch-bowlwasworthafortune,Iguess。Whenallthatplatewassetoutonatable,itwasasightforakingtolookat。Suchaserviceasthatwas!Eachpiecewasheavy,oh,soheavy!andthick,youknow;thick,fatgold,nothingbutgold——red,shining,puregold,orangered——andwhenyoustruckitwithyourknuckle,ah,youshouldhaveheard!Nochurchbelleverrangsweeterorclearer。Itwassoftgold,too;youcouldbiteintoit,andleavethedentofyourteeth。Oh,thatgoldplate!Icanseeitjustasplain——solid,solid,heavy,rich,puregold;nothingbutgold,gold,heapsandheapsofit。Whataservicethatwas!“
  Mariapaused,shakingherhead,thinkingoverthevanishedsplendor。Illiterateenough,unimaginativeenoughonallothersubjects,herdistortedwitscalledupthispicturewithmarvellousdistinctness。Itwasplainshesawtheplateclearly。Herdescriptionwasaccurate,wasalmosteloquent。
  Didthatwonderfulserviceofgoldplateeverexistoutsideofherdiseasedimagination?WasMariaactuallyrememberingsomerealityofachildhoodofbarbaricluxury?WereherparentsatonetimepossessedofanincalculablefortunederivedfromsomeCentralAmericancoffeeplantation,afortunelongsinceconfiscatedbyarmiesofinsurrectionists,orsquanderedinthesupportofrevolutionarygovernments?
  Itwasnotimpossible。OfMariaMacapa’spastpriortothetimeofherappearanceatthe“flat“absolutelynothingcouldbelearned。Shesuddenlyappearedfromtheunknown,astrangewomanofamixedrace,saneonallsubjectsbutthatofthefamousserviceofgoldplate;butunusual,complex,mysterious,evenatherbest。
  ButwhatmiseryZerkowenduredashelistenedtohertale!
  Forhechosetobelieveit,forcedhimselftobelieveit,lashedandharassedbyapitilessgreedthatcheckedatnotaleoftreasure,howeverpreposterous。Thestoryravishedhimwithdelight。Hewasnearsomeonewhohadpossessedthiswealth。Hesawsomeonewhohadseenthispileofgold。
  Heseemednearit;itwasthere,somewherecloseby,underhiseyes,underhisfingers;itwasred,gleaming,ponderous。Hegazedabouthimwildly;nothing,nothingbutthesordidjunkshopandtherust-corrodedtins。Whatexasperation,whatpositivemisery,tobesoneartoitandyettoknowthatitwasirrevocably,irretrievablylost!A
  spasmofanguishpassedthroughhim。Hegnawedathisbloodlesslips,atthehopelessnessofit,therage,thefuryofit。
  “Goon,goon,“hewhispered;“let’shaveitalloveragain。
  Polishedlikeamirror,hey,andheavy?Yes,Iknow,I
  know。Apunch-bowlworthafortune。Ah!andyousawit,youhaditall!“
  Mariarosetogo。Zerkowaccompaniedhertothedoor,urginganotherdrinkuponher。
  “Comeagain,comeagain,“hecroaked。“Don’twaittillyou’vegotjunk;comeanytimeyoufeellikeit,andtellmemoreabouttheplate。“
  Hefollowedherastepdownthealley。
  “Howmuchdoyouthinkitwasworth?“heinquired,anxiously。
  “Oh,amilliondollars,“answeredMaria,vaguely。
  WhenMariahadgone,Zerkowreturnedtothebackroomoftheshop,andstoodinfrontofthealcoholstove,lookingdownintohiscolddinner,preoccupied,thoughtful。
  “Amilliondollars,“hemutteredinhisrasping,gutturalwhisper,hisfinger-tipswanderingoverhisthin,cat-likelips。“Agoldenserviceworthamilliondollars;apunch-
  bowlworthafortune;redgoldplates,heapsandpiles。
  God!“
  CHAPTER4
  Thedayspassed。McTeaguehadfinishedtheoperationonTrina’steeth。Shedidnotcomeanymoretothe“Parlors。“
  Mattershadreadjustedthemselvesalittlebetweenthetwoduringthelastsittings。Trinayetstooduponherreserve,andMcTeaguestillfelthimselfshamblingandungainlyinherpresence;butthatconstraintandembarrassmentthathadfolloweduponMcTeague’sblunderingdeclarationbrokeuplittlebylittle。Inspiteofthemselvestheyweregraduallyresumingthesamerelativepositionstheyhadoccupiedwhentheyhadfirstmet。
  ButMcTeaguesufferedmiserablyforallthat。HeneverwouldhaveTrina,hesawthatclearly。Shewastoogoodforhim;toodelicate,toorefined,tooprettilymadeforhim,whowassocoarse,soenormous,sostupid。Shewasforsomeoneelse——Marcus,nodoubt——oratleastforsomefiner-
  grainedman。Sheshouldhavegonetosomeotherdentist;
  theyoungfellowonthecorner,forinstance,theposer,theriderofbicycles,thecourserofgrey-hounds。McTeaguebegantoloatheandtoenvythisfellow。Hespieduponhimgoinginandoutofhisoffice,andnotedhissalmon-pinknecktiesandhisastonishingwaistcoats。
  OneSunday,afewdaysafterTrina’slastsitting,McTeaguemetMarcusSchoulerathistableinthecarconductors’
  coffee-joint,nexttotheharnessshop。
  “Whatyougottodothisafternoon,Mac?“inquiredtheother,astheyatetheirsuetpudding。
  “Nothing,nothing,“repliedMcTeague,shakinghishead。Hismouthwasfullofpudding。Itmadehimwarmtoeat,andlittlebeadsofperspirationstoodacrossthebridgeofhisnose。Helookedforwardtoanafternoonpassedinhisoperatingchairasusual。Onleavinghis“Parlors“hehadputtencentsintohispitcherandhadleftitatFrenna’stobefilled。
  “Whatdoyousaywetakeawalk,huh?“saidMarcus。“Ah,that’sthething——awalk,alongwalk,bydamn!It’llbeoutasight。Igottotakethreeorfourofthedogsoutforexercise,anyhow。OldGrannisthinkstheyneedut。We’llwalkouttothePresidio。“
  Oflateithadbecomethecustomofthetwofriendstotakelongwalksfromtimetotime。OnholidaysandonthoseSundayafternoonswhenMarcuswasnotabsentwiththeSieppestheywentouttogether,sometimestothepark,sometimestothePresidio,sometimesevenacrossthebay。
  Theytookagreatpleasureineachother’scompany,butsilentlyandwithreservation,havingthemasculinehorrorofanydemonstrationoffriendship。
  Theywalkedforupwardsoffivehoursthatafternoon,outthelengthofCaliforniaStreet,andacrossthePresidioReservationtotheGoldenGate。Thentheyturned,and,followingthelineoftheshore,broughtupattheCliffHouse。Heretheyhaltedforbeer,Marcusswearingthathismouthwasasdryasahay-bin。Beforestartingontheirwalktheyhadgonearoundtothelittledoghospital,andMarcushadletoutfouroftheconvalescents,crazedwithjoyattherelease。