<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 2 </h2>
<p>After his breakfast the following Monday morning, McTeague looked over the
appointments he had written down in the book-slate that hung against the
screen. His writing was immense, very clumsy, and very round, with huge,
full-bellied l's and h's. He saw that he had made an appointment at one
o'clock for Miss Baker, the retired dressmaker, a little old maid who had
a tiny room a few doors down the hall. It adjoined that of Old Grannis.</p>
<p>Quite an affair had arisen from this circumstance. Miss Baker and Old
Grannis were both over sixty, and yet it was current talk amongst the
lodgers of the flat that the two were in love with each other. Singularly
enough, they were not even acquaintances; never a word had passed between
them. At intervals they met on the stairway; he on his way to his little
dog hospital, she returning from a bit of marketing in the street. At such
times they passed each other with averted eyes, pretending a certain
preoccupation, suddenly seized with a great embarrassment, the timidity of
a second childhood. He went on about his business, disturbed and
thoughtful. She hurried up to her tiny room, her curious little false
curls shaking with her agitation, the faintest suggestion of a flush
coming and going in her withered cheeks. The emotion of one of these
chance meetings remained with them during all the rest of the day.</p>
<p>Was it the first romance in the lives of each? Did Old Grannis ever
remember a certain face amongst those that he had known when he was young
Grannis—the face of some pale-haired girl, such as one sees in the
old cathedral towns of England? Did Miss Baker still treasure up in a
seldom opened drawer or box some faded daguerreotype, some strange
old-fashioned likeness, with its curling hair and high stock? It was
impossible to say.</p>
<p>Maria Macapa, the Mexican woman who took care of the lodgers' rooms, had
been the first to call the flat's attention to the affair, spreading the
news of it from room to room, from floor to floor. Of late she had made a
great discovery; all the women folk of the flat were yet vibrant with it.
Old Grannis came home from his work at four o'clock, and between that time
and six Miss Baker would sit in her room, her hands idle in her lap, doing
nothing, listening, waiting. Old Grannis did the same, drawing his
arm-chair near to the wall, knowing that Miss Baker was upon the other
side, conscious, perhaps, that she was thinking of him; and there the two
would sit through the hours of the afternoon, listening and waiting, they
did not know exactly for what, but near to each other, separated only by
the thin partition of their rooms. They had come to know each other's
habits. Old Grannis knew that at quarter of five precisely Miss Baker made
a cup of tea over the oil stove on the stand between the bureau and the
window. Miss Baker felt instinctively the exact moment when Old Grannis
took down his little binding apparatus from the second shelf of his
clothes closet and began his favorite occupation of binding pamphlets—pamphlets
that he never read, for all that.</p>
<p>In his "Parlors" McTeague began his week's work. He glanced in the glass
saucer in which he kept his sponge-gold, and noticing that he had used up
all his pellets, set about making some more. In examining Miss Baker's
teeth at the preliminary sitting he had found a cavity in one of the
incisors. Miss Baker had decided to have it filled with gold. McTeague
remembered now that it was what is called a "proximate case," where there
is not sufficient room to fill with large pieces of gold. He told himself
that he should have to use "mats" in the filling. He made some dozen of
these "mats" from his tape of non-cohesive gold, cutting it transversely
into small pieces that could be inserted edgewise between the teeth and
consolidated by packing. After he had made his "mats" he continued with
the other kind of gold fillings, such as he would have occasion to use
during the week; "blocks" to be used in large proximal cavities, made by
folding the tape on itself a number of times and then shaping it with the
soldering pliers; "cylinders" for commencing fillings, which he formed by
rolling the tape around a needle called a "broach," cutting it afterwards
into different lengths. He worked slowly, mechanically, turning the foil
between his fingers with the manual dexterity that one sometimes sees in
stupid persons. His head was quite empty of all thought, and he did not
whistle over his work as another man might have done. The canary made up
for his silence, trilling and chittering continually, splashing about in
its morning bath, keeping up an incessant noise and movement that would
have been maddening to any one but McTeague, who seemed to have no nerves
at all.</p>
<p>After he had finished his fillings, he made a hook broach from a bit of
piano wire to replace an old one that he had lost. It was time for his
dinner then, and when he returned from the car conductors' coffee-joint,
he found Miss Baker waiting for him.</p>
<p>The ancient little dressmaker was at all times willing to talk of Old
Grannis to anybody that would listen, quite unconscious of the gossip of
the flat. McTeague found her all a-flutter with excitement. Something
extraordinary had happened. She had found out that the wall-paper in Old
Grannis's room was the same as that in hers.</p>
<p>"It has led me to thinking, Doctor McTeague," she exclaimed, shaking her
little false curls at him. "You know my room is so small, anyhow, and the
wall-paper being the same—the pattern from my room continues right
into his—I declare, I believe at one time that was all one room.
Think of it, do you suppose it was? It almost amounts to our occupying the
same room. I don't know—why, really—do you think I should
speak to the landlady about it? He bound pamphlets last night until
half-past nine. They say that he's the younger son of a baronet; that
there are reasons for his not coming to the title; his stepfather wronged
him cruelly."</p>
<p>No one had ever said such a thing. It was preposterous to imagine any
mystery connected with Old Grannis. Miss Baker had chosen to invent the
little fiction, had created the title and the unjust stepfather from some
dim memories of the novels of her girlhood.</p>
<p>She took her place in the operating chair. McTeague began the filling.
There was a long silence. It was impossible for McTeague to work and talk
at the same time.</p>
<p>He was just burnishing the last "mat" in Miss Baker's tooth, when the door
of the "Parlors" opened, jangling the bell which he had hung over it, and
which was absolutely unnecessary. McTeague turned, one foot on the pedal
of his dental engine, the corundum disk whirling between his fingers.</p>
<p>It was Marcus Schouler who came in, ushering a young girl of about twenty.</p>
<p>"Hello, Mac," exclaimed Marcus; "busy? Brought my cousin round about that
broken tooth."</p>
<p>McTeague nodded his head gravely.</p>
<p>"In a minute," he answered.</p>
<p>Marcus and his cousin Trina sat down in the rigid chairs underneath the
steel engraving of the Court of Lorenzo de' Medici. They began talking in
low tones. The girl looked about the room, noticing the stone pug dog, the
rifle manufacturer's calendar, the canary in its little gilt prison, and
the tumbled blankets on the unmade bed-lounge against the wall. Marcus
began telling her about McTeague. "We're pals," he explained, just above a
whisper. "Ah, Mac's all right, you bet. Say, Trina, he's the strongest
duck you ever saw. What do you suppose? He can pull out your teeth with
his fingers; yes, he can. What do you think of that? With his fingers,
mind you; he can, for a fact. Get on to the size of him, anyhow. Ah, Mac's
all right!"</p>
<p>Maria Macapa had come into the room while he had been speaking. She was
making up McTeague's bed. Suddenly Marcus exclaimed under his breath: "Now
we'll have some fun. It's the girl that takes care of the rooms. She's a
greaser, and she's queer in the head. She ain't regularly crazy, but I
don't know, she's queer. Y'ought to hear her go on about a gold dinner
service she says her folks used to own. Ask her what her name is and see
what she'll say." Trina shrank back, a little frightened.</p>
<p>"No, you ask," she whispered.</p>
<p>"Ah, go on; what you 'fraid of?" urged Marcus. Trina shook her head
energetically, shutting her lips together.</p>
<p>"Well, listen here," answered Marcus, nudging her; then raising his voice,
he said:</p>
<p>"How do, Maria?" Maria nodded to him over her shoulder as she bent over
the lounge.</p>
<p>"Workun hard nowadays, Maria?"</p>
<p>"Pretty hard."</p>
<p>"Didunt always have to work for your living, though, did you, when you ate
offa gold dishes?" Maria didn't answer, except by putting her chin in the
air and shutting her eyes, as though to say she knew a long story about
that if she had a mind to talk. All Marcus's efforts to draw her out on
the subject were unavailing. She only responded by movements of her head.</p>
<p>"Can't always start her going," Marcus told his cousin.</p>
<p>"What does she do, though, when you ask her about her name?"</p>
<p>"Oh, sure," said Marcus, who had forgotten. "Say, Maria, what's your
name?"</p>
<p>"Huh?" asked Maria, straightening up, her hands on he hips.</p>
<p>"Tell us your name," repeated Marcus.</p>
<p>"Name is Maria—Miranda—Macapa." Then, after a pause, she
added, as though she had but that moment thought of it, "Had a flying
squirrel an' let him go."</p>
<p>Invariably Maria Macapa made this answer. It was not always she would talk
about the famous service of gold plate, but a question as to her name
never failed to elicit the same strange answer, delivered in a rapid
undertone: "Name is Maria—Miranda—Macapa." Then, as if struck
with an after thought, "Had a flying squirrel an' let him go."</p>
<p>Why Maria should associate the release of the mythical squirrel with her
name could not be said. About Maria the flat knew absolutely nothing
further than that she was Spanish-American. Miss Baker was the oldest
lodger in the flat, and Maria was a fixture there as maid of all work when
she had come. There was a legend to the effect that Maria's people had
been at one time immensely wealthy in Central America.</p>
<p>Maria turned again to her work. Trina and Marcus watched her curiously.
There was a silence. The corundum burr in McTeague's engine hummed in a
prolonged monotone. The canary bird chittered occasionally. The room was
warm, and the breathing of the five people in the narrow space made the
air close and thick. At long intervals an acrid odor of ink floated up
from the branch post-office immediately below.</p>
<p>Maria Macapa finished her work and started to leave. As she passed near
Marcus and his cousin she stopped, and drew a bunch of blue tickets
furtively from her pocket. "Buy a ticket in the lottery?" she inquired,
looking at the girl. "Just a dollar."</p>
<p>"Go along with you, Maria," said Marcus, who had but thirty cents in his
pocket. "Go along; it's against the law."</p>
<p>"Buy a ticket," urged Maria, thrusting the bundle toward Trina. "Try your
luck. The butcher on the next block won twenty dollars the last drawing."</p>
<p>Very uneasy, Trina bought a ticket for the sake of being rid of her. Maria
disappeared.</p>
<p>"Ain't she a queer bird?" muttered Marcus. He was much embarrassed and
disturbed because he had not bought the ticket for Trina.</p>
<p>But there was a sudden movement. McTeague had just finished with Miss
Baker.</p>
<p>"You should notice," the dressmaker said to the dentist, in a low voice,
"he always leaves the door a little ajar in the afternoon." When she had
gone out, Marcus Schouler brought Trina forward.</p>
<p>"Say, Mac, this is my cousin, Trina Sieppe." The two shook hands dumbly,
McTeague slowly nodding his huge head with its great shock of yellow hair.
Trina was very small and prettily made. Her face was round and rather
pale; her eyes long and narrow and blue, like the half-open eyes of a
little baby; her lips and the lobes of her tiny ears were pale, a little
suggestive of anaemia; while across the bridge of her nose ran an adorable
little line of freckles. But it was to her hair that one's attention was
most attracted. Heaps and heaps of blue-black coils and braids, a royal
crown of swarthy bands, a veritable sable tiara, heavy, abundant, odorous.
All the vitality that should have given color to her face seemed to have
been absorbed by this marvellous hair. It was the coiffure of a queen that
shadowed the pale temples of this little bourgeoise. So heavy was it that
it tipped her head backward, and the position thrust her chin out a
little. It was a charming poise, innocent, confiding, almost infantile.</p>
<p>She was dressed all in black, very modest and plain. The effect of her
pale face in all this contrasting black was almost monastic.</p>
<p>"Well," exclaimed Marcus suddenly, "I got to go. Must get back to work.
Don't hurt her too much, Mac. S'long, Trina."</p>
<p>McTeague and Trina were left alone. He was embarrassed, troubled. These
young girls disturbed and perplexed him. He did not like them, obstinately
cherishing that intuitive suspicion of all things feminine—the
perverse dislike of an overgrown boy. On the other hand, she was perfectly
at her ease; doubtless the woman in her was not yet awakened; she was yet,
as one might say, without sex. She was almost like a boy, frank, candid,
unreserved.</p>
<p>She took her place in the operating chair and told him what was the
matter, looking squarely into his face. She had fallen out of a swing the
afternoon of the preceding day; one of her teeth had been knocked loose
and the other altogether broken out.</p>
<p>McTeague listened to her with apparent stolidity, nodding his head from
time to time as she spoke. The keenness of his dislike of her as a woman
began to be blunted. He thought she was rather pretty, that he even liked
her because she was so small, so prettily made, so good natured and
straightforward.</p>
<p>"Let's have a look at your teeth," he said, picking up his mirror. "You
better take your hat off." She leaned back in her chair and opened her
mouth, showing the rows of little round teeth, as white and even as the
kernels on an ear of green corn, except where an ugly gap came at the
side.</p>
<p>McTeague put the mirror into her mouth, touching one and another of her
teeth with the handle of an excavator. By and by he straightened up,
wiping the moisture from the mirror on his coat-sleeve.</p>
<p>"Well, Doctor," said the girl, anxiously, "it's a dreadful disfigurement,
isn't it?" adding, "What can you do about it?"</p>
<p>"Well," answered McTeague, slowly, looking vaguely about on the floor of
the room, "the roots of the broken tooth are still in the gum; they'll
have to come out, and I guess I'll have to pull that other bicuspid. Let
me look again. Yes," he went on in a moment, peering into her mouth with
the mirror, "I guess that'll have to come out, too." The tooth was loose,
discolored, and evidently dead. "It's a curious case," McTeague went on.
"I don't know as I ever had a tooth like that before. It's what's called
necrosis. It don't often happen. It'll have to come out sure."</p>
<p>Then a discussion was opened on the subject, Trina sitting up in the
chair, holding her hat in her lap; McTeague leaning against the window
frame his hands in his pockets, his eyes wandering about on the floor.
Trina did not want the other tooth removed; one hole like that was bad
enough; but two—ah, no, it was not to be thought of.</p>
<p>But McTeague reasoned with her, tried in vain to make her understand that
there was no vascular connection between the root and the gum. Trina was
blindly persistent, with the persistency of a girl who has made up her
mind.</p>
<p>McTeague began to like her better and better, and after a while commenced
himself to feel that it would be a pity to disfigure such a pretty mouth.
He became interested; perhaps he could do something, something in the way
of a crown or bridge. "Let's look at that again," he said, picking up his
mirror. He began to study the situation very carefully, really desiring to
remedy the blemish.</p>
<p>It was the first bicuspid that was missing, and though part of the root of
the second (the loose one) would remain after its extraction, he was sure
it would not be strong enough to sustain a crown. All at once he grew
obstinate, resolving, with all the strength of a crude and primitive man,
to conquer the difficulty in spite of everything. He turned over in his
mind the technicalities of the case. No, evidently the root was not strong
enough to sustain a crown; besides that, it was placed a little
irregularly in the arch. But, fortunately, there were cavities in the two
teeth on either side of the gap—one in the first molar and one in
the palatine surface of the cuspid; might he not drill a socket in the
remaining root and sockets in the molar and cuspid, and, partly by
bridging, partly by crowning, fill in the gap? He made up his mind to do
it.</p>
<p>Why he should pledge himself to this hazardous case McTeague was puzzled
to know. With most of his clients he would have contented himself with the
extraction of the loose tooth and the roots of the broken one. Why should
he risk his reputation in this case? He could not say why.</p>
<p>It was the most difficult operation he had ever performed. He bungled it
considerably, but in the end he succeeded passably well. He extracted the
loose tooth with his bayonet forceps and prepared the roots of the broken
one as if for filling, fitting into them a flattened piece of platinum
wire to serve as a dowel. But this was only the beginning; altogether it
was a fortnight's work. Trina came nearly every other day, and passed two,
and even three, hours in the chair.</p>
<p>By degrees McTeague's first awkwardness and suspicion vanished entirely.
The two became good friends. McTeague even arrived at that point where he
could work and talk to her at the same time—a thing that had never
before been possible for him.</p>
<p>Never until then had McTeague become so well acquainted with a girl of
Trina's age. The younger women of Polk Street—the shop girls, the
young women of the soda fountains, the waitresses in the cheap restaurants—preferred
another dentist, a young fellow just graduated from the college, a poser,
a rider of bicycles, a man about town, who wore astonishing waistcoats and
bet money on greyhound coursing. Trina was McTeague's first experience.
With her the feminine element suddenly entered his little world. It was
not only her that he saw and felt, it was the woman, the whole sex, an
entire new humanity, strange and alluring, that he seemed to have
discovered. How had he ignored it so long? It was dazzling, delicious,
charming beyond all words. His narrow point of view was at once enlarged
and confused, and all at once he saw that there was something else in life
besides concertinas and steam beer. Everything had to be made over again.
His whole rude idea of life had to be changed. The male virile desire in
him tardily awakened, aroused itself, strong and brutal. It was
resistless, untrained, a thing not to be held in leash an instant.</p>
<p>Little by little, by gradual, almost imperceptible degrees, the thought of
Trina Sieppe occupied his mind from day to day, from hour to hour. He
found himself thinking of her constantly; at every instant he saw her
round, pale face; her narrow, milk-blue eyes; her little out-thrust chin;
her heavy, huge tiara of black hair. At night he lay awake for hours under
the thick blankets of the bed-lounge, staring upward into the darkness,
tormented with the idea of her, exasperated at the delicate, subtle mesh
in which he found himself entangled. During the forenoons, while he went
about his work, he thought of her. As he made his plaster-of-paris moulds
at the washstand in the corner behind the screen he turned over in his
mind all that had happened, all that had been said at the previous
sitting. Her little tooth that he had extracted he kept wrapped in a bit
of newspaper in his vest pocket. Often he took it out and held it in the
palm of his immense, horny hand, seized with some strange elephantine
sentiment, wagging his head at it, heaving tremendous sighs. What a folly!</p>
<p>At two o'clock on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays Trina arrived and
took her place in the operating chair. While at his work McTeague was
every minute obliged to bend closely over her; his hands touched her face,
her cheeks, her adorable little chin; her lips pressed against his
fingers. She breathed warmly on his forehead and on his eyelids, while the
odor of her hair, a charming feminine perfume, sweet, heavy, enervating,
came to his nostrils, so penetrating, so delicious, that his flesh pricked
and tingled with it; a veritable sensation of faintness passed over this
huge, callous fellow, with his enormous bones and corded muscles. He drew
a short breath through his nose; his jaws suddenly gripped together
vise-like.</p>
<p>But this was only at times—a strange, vexing spasm, that subsided
almost immediately. For the most part, McTeague enjoyed the pleasure of
these sittings with Trina with a certain strong calmness, blindly happy
that she was there. This poor crude dentist of Polk Street, stupid,
ignorant, vulgar, with his sham education and plebeian tastes, whose only
relaxations were to eat, to drink steam beer, and to play upon his
concertina, was living through his first romance, his first idyl. It was
delightful. The long hours he passed alone with Trina in the "Dental
Parlors," silent, only for the scraping of the instruments and the pouring
of bud-burrs in the engine, in the foul atmosphere, overheated by the
little stove and heavy with the smell of ether, creosote, and stale
bedding, had all the charm of secret appointments and stolen meetings
under the moon.</p>
<p>By degrees the operation progressed. One day, just after McTeague had put
in the temporary gutta-percha fillings and nothing more could be done at
that sitting, Trina asked him to examine the rest of her teeth. They were
perfect, with one exception—a spot of white caries on the lateral
surface of an incisor. McTeague filled it with gold, enlarging the cavity
with hard-bits and hoe-excavators, and burring in afterward with half-cone
burrs. The cavity was deep, and Trina began to wince and moan. To hurt
Trina was a positive anguish for McTeague, yet an anguish which he was
obliged to endure at every hour of the sitting. It was harrowing—he
sweated under it—to be forced to torture her, of all women in the
world; could anything be worse than that?</p>
<p>"Hurt?" he inquired, anxiously.</p>
<p>She answered by frowning, with a sharp intake of breath, putting her
fingers over her closed lips and nodding her head. McTeague sprayed the
tooth with glycerite of tannin, but without effect. Rather than hurt her
he found himself forced to the use of anaesthesia, which he hated. He had
a notion that the nitrous oxide gas was dangerous, so on this occasion, as
on all others, used ether.</p>
<p>He put the sponge a half dozen times to Trina's face, more nervous than he
had ever been before, watching the symptoms closely. Her breathing became
short and irregular; there was a slight twitching of the muscles. When her
thumbs turned inward toward the palms, he took the sponge away. She passed
off very quickly, and, with a long sigh, sank back into the chair.</p>
<p>McTeague straightened up, putting the sponge upon the rack behind him, his
eyes fixed upon Trina's face. For some time he stood watching her as she
lay there, unconscious and helpless, and very pretty. He was alone with
her, and she was absolutely without defense.</p>
<p>Suddenly the animal in the man stirred and woke; the evil instincts that
in him were so close to the surface leaped to life, shouting and
clamoring.</p>
<p>It was a crisis—a crisis that had arisen all in an instant; a crisis
for which he was totally unprepared. Blindly, and without knowing why,
McTeague fought against it, moved by an unreasoned instinct of resistance.
Within him, a certain second self, another better McTeague rose with the
brute; both were strong, with the huge crude strength of the man himself.
The two were at grapples. There in that cheap and shabby "Dental Parlor" a
dreaded struggle began. It was the old battle, old as the world, wide as
the world—the sudden panther leap of the animal, lips drawn, fangs
aflash, hideous, monstrous, not to be resisted, and the simultaneous
arousing of the other man, the better self that cries, "Down, down,"
without knowing why; that grips the monster; that fights to strangle it,
to thrust it down and back.</p>
<p>Dizzied and bewildered with the shock, the like of which he had never
known before, McTeague turned from Trina, gazing bewilderedly about the
room. The struggle was bitter; his teeth ground themselves together with a
little rasping sound; the blood sang in his ears; his face flushed
scarlet; his hands twisted themselves together like the knotting of
cables. The fury in him was as the fury of a young bull in the heat of
high summer. But for all that he shook his huge head from time to time,
muttering:</p>
<p>"No, by God! No, by God!"</p>
<p>Dimly he seemed to realize that should he yield now he would never be able
to care for Trina again. She would never be the same to him, never so
radiant, so sweet, so adorable; her charm for him would vanish in an
instant. Across her forehead, her little pale forehead, under the shadow
of her royal hair, he would surely see the smudge of a foul ordure, the
footprint of the monster. It would be a sacrilege, an abomination. He
recoiled from it, banding all his strength to the issue.</p>
<p>"No, by God! No, by God!"</p>
<p>He turned to his work, as if seeking a refuge in it. But as he drew near
to her again, the charm of her innocence and helplessness came over him
afresh. It was a final protest against his resolution. Suddenly he leaned
over and kissed her, grossly, full on the mouth. The thing was done before
he knew it. Terrified at his weakness at the very moment he believed
himself strong, he threw himself once more into his work with desperate
energy. By the time he was fastening the sheet of rubber upon the tooth,
he had himself once more in hand. He was disturbed, still trembling, still
vibrating with the throes of the crisis, but he was the master; the animal
was downed, was cowed for this time, at least.</p>
<p>But for all that, the brute was there. Long dormant, it was now at last
alive, awake. From now on he would feel its presence continually; would
feel it tugging at its chain, watching its opportunity. Ah, the pity of
it! Why could he not always love her purely, cleanly? What was this
perverse, vicious thing that lived within him, knitted to his flesh?</p>
<p>Below the fine fabric of all that was good in him ran the foul stream of
hereditary evil, like a sewer. The vices and sins of his father and of his
father's father, to the third and fourth and five hundredth generation,
tainted him. The evil of an entire race flowed in his veins. Why should it
be? He did not desire it. Was he to blame?</p>
<p>But McTeague could not understand this thing. It had faced him, as sooner
or later it faces every child of man; but its significance was not for
him. To reason with it was beyond him. He could only oppose to it an
instinctive stubborn resistance, blind, inert.</p>
<p>McTeague went on with his work. As he was rapping in the little blocks and
cylinders with the mallet, Trina slowly came back to herself with a long
sigh. She still felt a little confused, and lay quiet in the chair. There
was a long silence, broken only by the uneven tapping of the hardwood
mallet. By and by she said, "I never felt a thing," and then she smiled at
him very prettily beneath the rubber dam. McTeague turned to her suddenly,
his mallet in one hand, his pliers holding a pellet of sponge-gold in the
other. All at once he said, with the unreasoned simplicity and directness
of a child: "Listen here, Miss Trina, I like you better than any one else;
what's the matter with us getting married?"</p>
<p>Trina sat up in the chair quickly, and then drew back from him, frightened
and bewildered.</p>
<p>"Will you? Will you?" said McTeague. "Say, Miss Trina, will you?"</p>
<p>"What is it? What do you mean?" she cried, confusedly, her words muffled
beneath the rubber.</p>
<p>"Will you?" repeated McTeague.</p>
<p>"No, no," she exclaimed, refusing without knowing why, suddenly seized
with a fear of him, the intuitive feminine fear of the male. McTeague
could only repeat the same thing over and over again. Trina, more and more
frightened at his huge hands—the hands of the old-time car-boy—his
immense square-cut head and his enormous brute strength, cried out: "No,
no," behind the rubber dam, shaking her head violently, holding out her
hands, and shrinking down before him in the operating chair. McTeague came
nearer to her, repeating the same question. "No, no," she cried,
terrified. Then, as she exclaimed, "Oh, I am sick," was suddenly taken
with a fit of vomiting. It was the not unusual after effect of the ether,
aided now by her excitement and nervousness. McTeague was checked. He
poured some bromide of potassium into a graduated glass and held it to her
lips.</p>
<p>"Here, swallow this," he said.</p>
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