登陆注册
6150600000054

第54章 CHAPTER 10(6)

"outraged constituencies," "opinions warped by personal bias," "eyes blinded by party prejudice," etc.

Of her family, Trina heard every fortnight in letters from her mother. The upholstery business which Mr. Sieppe had bought was doing poorly, and Mrs. Sieppe bewailed the day she had ever left B Street. Mr. Sieppe was losing money every month. Owgooste, who was to have gone to school, had been forced to go to work in "the store," picking waste.

Mrs. Sieppe was obliged to take a lodger or two. Affairs were in a very bad way. Occasionally she spoke of Marcus.

Mr. Sieppe had not forgotten him despite his own troubles, but still had an eye out for some one whom Marcus could "go in with" on a ranch.

It was toward the end of this period of three years that Trina and McTeague had their first serious quarrel. Trina had talked so much about having a little house of their own at some future day, that McTeague had at length come to regard the affair as the end and object of all their labors.

For a long time they had had their eyes upon one house in particular. It was situated on a cross street close by, between Polk Street and the great avenue one block above, and hardly a Sunday afternoon passed that Trina and McTeague did not go and look at it. They stood for fully half an hour upon the other side of the street, examining every detail of its exterior, hazarding guesses as to the arrangement of the rooms, commenting upon its immediate neighborhood--which was rather sordid. The house was a wooden two-story arrangement, built by a misguided contractor in a sort of hideous Queen Anne style, all scrolls and meaningless mill work, with a cheap imitation of stained glass in the light over the door. There was a microscopic front yard full of dusty calla-lilies. The front door boasted an electric bell. But for the McTeagues it was an ideal home. Their idea was to live in this little house, the dentist retaining merely his office in the flat. The two places were but around the corner from each other, so that McTeague could lunch with his wife, as usual, and could even keep his early morning appointments and return to breakfast if he so desired.

However, the house was occupied. A Hungarian family lived in it. The father kept a stationery and notion "bazaar" next to Heise's harness-shop on Polk Street, while the oldest son played a third violin in the orchestra of a theatre. The family rented the house unfurnished for thirty-five dollars, paying extra for the water.

But one Sunday as Trina and McTeague on their way home from their usual walk turned into the cross street on which the little house was situated, they became promptly aware of an unwonted bustle going on upon the sidewalk in front of it.

A dray was back against the curb, an express wagon drove away loaded with furniture; bedsteads, looking-glasses, and washbowls littered the sidewalks. The Hungarian family were moving out.

"Oh, Mac, look!" gasped Trina.

"Sure, sure," muttered the dentist.

After that they spoke but little. For upwards of an hour the two stood upon the sidewalk opposite, watching intently all that went forward, absorbed, excited.

On the evening of the next day they returned and visited the house, finding a great delight in going from room to room and imagining themselves installed therein. Here would be the bedroom, here the dining-room, here a charming little parlor. As they came out upon the front steps once more they met the owner, an enormous, red-faced fellow, so fat that his walking seemed merely a certain movement of his feet by which he pushed his stomach along in front of him. Trina talked with him a few moments, but arrived at no understanding, and the two went away after giving him their address. At supper that night McTeague said:

"Huh--what do you think, Trina?"

Trina put her chin in the air, tilting back her heavy tiara of swarthy hair.

"I am not so sure yet. Thirty-five dollars and the water extra. I don't think we can afford it, Mac."

"Ah, pshaw!" growled the dentist, "sure we can."

"It isn't only that," said Trina, "but it'll cost so much to make the change."

"Ah, you talk's though we were paupers. Ain't we got five thousand dollars?"

Trina flushed on the instant, even to the lobes of her tiny pale ears, and put her lips together.

"Now, Mac, you know I don't want you should talk like that.

That money's never, never to be touched."

"And you've been savun up a good deal, besides," went on McTeague, exasperated at Trina's persistent economies. "How much money have you got in that little brass match-safe in the bottom of your trunk? Pretty near a hundred dollars, I guess--ah, sure." He shut his eyes and nodded his great head in a knowing way.

Trina had more than that in the brass match-safe in question, but her instinct of hoarding had led her to keep it a secret from her husband. Now she lied to him with prompt fluency.

"A hundred dollars! What are you talking of, Mac? I've not got fifty. I've not got THIRTY."

"Oh, let's take that little house," broke in McTeague. "We got the chance now, and it may never come again. Come on, Trina, shall we? Say, come on, shall we, huh?"

"We'd have to be awful saving if we did, Mac."

"Well, sure, I say let's take it."

"I don't know," said Trina, hesitating. "Wouldn't it be lovely to have a house all to ourselves? But let's not decide until to-morrow."

The next day the owner of the house called. Trina was out at her morning's marketing and the dentist, who had no one in the chair at the time, received him in the "Parlors."

Before he was well aware of it, McTeague had concluded the bargain. The owner bewildered him with a world of phrases, made him believe that it would be a great saving to move into the little house, and finally offered it to him "water free."

"All right, all right," said McTeague, "I'll take it."

The other immediately produced a paper.

"Well, then, suppose you sign for the first month's rent, and we'll call it a bargain. That's business, you know," and McTeague, hesitating, signed.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 王妃请接招

    王妃请接招

    莫名其妙的一次穿越竟然成了潇王妃看看什么也不懂的小菜鸟如何在没有史册记录的年代混的风生水起新文开坑勿喷希望大家多多支持
  • 妻不可失

    妻不可失

    【简介】17岁她被人贩卖到越南,遇见乔慕城,那颗心砰然心动却无开花结果。18岁她回国,声音再不能言语。19岁她见到了严寒琛,从此她再未走出过他为她画地为牢的世界。蓉城流传着这样一个传说,爱上谁都不要爱上严韩琛。那年,严氏大厦顶层女子纵身一跃,从此屈雅这个名字在蓉城销声匿迹5年。外界众说纷纭,她被推上风口浪尖。媒体前,他揽她入怀,右手指间夹着刚点燃的香烟,拇指摩挲她娇嫩的唇瓣,“做我的女人,你现在所面临的一切问题,都可迎刃而解。”5年后,她双目失明,手握盲人棍,在人潮涌动的广场和他邂逅,他却再不识得她。那天,广场的白鸽成群结队觅食,他转身驻足,深邃如墨的眸光落在她的身上,车祸失忆5年后他喊出她的名字,他叫她雅雅,她背对他,眼眶湿润。男人穿深色大衣,身材挺拔立身广场中央,他紧紧抱紧怀中女子,眼眸猩红,声音黯哑道:“严寒琛的生命里不能没有屈雅。”完结文:《总裁爱而不得》http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/975998《盛宠独爱,首席总裁一往情深》http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/823243连载文:《婚恋情深,腹黑首席总不放人》http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/1041605
  • 江山渡

    江山渡

    前一世,一家四口,三张遗像挂在客厅,只剩她苏瑾一人。这一世,连父母的影子都没见到,跌跌撞撞一个人成长。女儿身无法长大,那就化名九卿,成为玖园的传奇当家!两世为人,她停不下寻找的脚步,直到那抹黑黝黝的眸子静静地看她,抬了手,将她按向胸膛:九卿,停下来,歇一歇,我再陪你一起走!她摇头:你有江山要守,我停三年,陪你拿下!三爷想笑,却落了泪,她本该换上女儿装,在阳光下翩然而舞,却因为他,握紧双生,厮杀在前。九卿说,江山他担着,才能天下太平,可若踏上高位,九卿又将远远遁去,再不会路过他的一生。江山是责任,九卿是爱人,不到最后,谁又知道,三爷选了谁...
  • 史前地球:灵长类动物和人类祖先(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    史前地球:灵长类动物和人类祖先(谷臻小简·AI导读版)

    本书探究了灵长类动物的生物学特性、进化以及行为。第一部分简洁但全面地探究了进化思想史,以及灵长类动物和人类进化的基本原理和机制。第二部分讲述了非人类灵长类动物,即狐猴、猴类、猿类和人类的起源、进化以及分类。第三部分将重点放在早期古人类和非洲猿类的分离。
  • 咬噬

    咬噬

    剧情很曲折,各种悬疑谜团,虽然看起来会需要动脑子,不过我相信还是会有人喜欢的
  • 随祖

    随祖

    “你后悔吗?”后悔?“后悔爱上天族。”后悔?不,永远不会。
  • 精灵会武术

    精灵会武术

    精灵会武术,谁也挡不住!假如生活中出现精灵,那会是怎样的世界?(部分进行魔改,尽量改到贴近现实。另外,开局较慢,介意务读)
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 英雄联盟王者坑神

    英雄联盟王者坑神

    (5中单,随即选,不给就送。)这一句话已然成为韩服最令人毛骨悚然话。此人混迹在韩服王者,大师组,曾经亲手毁灭了无数大师们的王者梦,甚至还坑害了几名无辜的王者路人...事情的起因还要纠结到四年前...