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<h2> CHAPTER 13 </h2>
<p>One morning about a week after Marcus had left for the southern part of
the State, McTeague found an oblong letter thrust through the letter-drop
of the door of his "Parlors." The address was typewritten. He opened it.
The letter had been sent from the City Hall and was stamped in one corner
with the seal of the State of California, very official; the form and file
numbers superscribed.</p>
<p>McTeague had been making fillings when this letter arrived. He was in his
"Parlors," pottering over his movable rack underneath the bird cage in the
bay window. He was making "blocks" to be used in large proximal cavities
and "cylinders" for commencing fillings. He heard the postman's step in
the hall and saw the envelopes begin to shuttle themselves through the
slit of his letter-drop. Then came the fat oblong envelope, with its
official seal, that dropped flatwise to the floor with a sodden, dull
impact.</p>
<p>The dentist put down the broach and scissors and gathered up his mail.
There were four letters altogether. One was for Trina, in Selina's
"elegant" handwriting; another was an advertisement of a new kind of
operating chair for dentists; the third was a card from a milliner on the
next block, announcing an opening; and the fourth, contained in the fat
oblong envelope, was a printed form with blanks left for names and dates,
and addressed to McTeague, from an office in the City Hall. McTeague read
it through laboriously. "I don' know, I don' know," he muttered, looking
stupidly at the rifle manufacturer's calendar. Then he heard Trina, from
the kitchen, singing as she made a clattering noise with the breakfast
dishes. "I guess I'll ask Trina about it," he muttered.</p>
<p>He went through the suite, by the sitting-room, where the sun was pouring
in through the looped backed Nottingham curtains upon the clean white
matting and the varnished surface of the melodeon, passed on through the
bedroom, with its framed lithographs of round-cheeked English babies and
alert fox terriers, and came out into the brick-paved kitchen. The kitchen
was clean as a new whistle; the freshly blackened cook stove glowed like a
negro's hide; the tins and porcelain-lined stew-pans might have been of
silver and of ivory. Trina was in the centre of the room, wiping off, with
a damp sponge, the oilcloth table-cover, on which they had breakfasted.
Never had she looked so pretty. Early though it was, her enormous tiara of
swarthy hair was neatly combed and coiled, not a pin was so much as loose.
She wore a blue calico skirt with a white figure, and a belt of imitation
alligator skin clasped around her small, firmly-corseted waist; her shirt
waist was of pink linen, so new and crisp that it crackled with every
movement, while around the collar, tied in a neat knot, was one of
McTeague's lawn ties which she had appropriated. Her sleeves were
carefully rolled up almost to her shoulders, and nothing could have been
more delicious than the sight of her small round arms, white as milk,
moving back and forth as she sponged the table-cover, a faint touch of
pink coming and going at the elbows as they bent and straightened. She
looked up quickly as her husband entered, her narrow eyes alight, her
adorable little chin in the air; her lips rounded and opened with the last
words of her song, so that one could catch a glint of gold in the fillings
of her upper teeth.</p>
<p>The whole scene—the clean kitchen and its clean brick floor; the
smell of coffee that lingered in the air; Trina herself, fresh as if from
a bath, and singing at her work; the morning sun, striking obliquely
through the white muslin half-curtain of the window and spanning the
little kitchen with a bridge of golden mist—gave off, as it were, a
note of gayety that was not to be resisted. Through the opened top of the
window came the noises of Polk Street, already long awake. One heard the
chanting of street cries, the shrill calling of children on their way to
school, the merry rattle of a butcher's cart, the brisk noise of
hammering, or the occasional prolonged roll of a cable car trundling
heavily past, with a vibrant whirring of its jostled glass and the joyous
clanging of its bells.</p>
<p>"What is it, Mac, dear?" said Trina.</p>
<p>McTeague shut the door behind him with his heel and handed her the letter.
Trina read it through. Then suddenly her small hand gripped tightly upon
the sponge, so that the water started from it and dripped in a little
pattering deluge upon the bricks.</p>
<p>The letter—or rather printed notice—informed McTeague that he
had never received a diploma from a dental college, and that in
consequence he was forbidden to practise his profession any longer. A
legal extract bearing upon the case was attached in small type.</p>
<p>"Why, what's all this?" said Trina, calmly, without thought as yet.</p>
<p>"I don' know, I don' know," answered her husband.</p>
<p>"You can't practise any longer," continued Trina,—"'is herewith
prohibited and enjoined from further continuing——'" She
re-read the extract, her forehead lifting and puckering. She put the
sponge carefully away in its wire rack over the sink, and drew up a chair
to the table, spreading out the notice before her. "Sit down," she said to
McTeague. "Draw up to the table here, Mac, and let's see what this is."</p>
<p>"I got it this morning," murmured the dentist. "It just now came. I was
making some fillings—there, in the 'Parlors,' in the window—and
the postman shoved it through the door. I thought it was a number of the
'American System of Dentistry' at first, and when I'd opened it and looked
at it I thought I'd better——"</p>
<p>"Say, Mac," interrupted Trina, looking up from the notice, "DIDN'T you
ever go to a dental college?"</p>
<p>"Huh? What? What?" exclaimed McTeague.</p>
<p>"How did you learn to be a dentist? Did you go to a college?"</p>
<p>"I went along with a fellow who came to the mine once. My mother sent me.
We used to go from one camp to another. I sharpened his excavators for
him, and put up his notices in the towns—stuck them up in the
post-offices and on the doors of the Odd Fellows' halls. He had a wagon."</p>
<p>"But didn't you never go to a college?"</p>
<p>"Huh? What? College? No, I never went. I learned from the fellow."</p>
<p>Trina rolled down her sleeves. She was a little paler than usual. She
fastened the buttons into the cuffs and said:</p>
<p>"But do you know you can't practise unless you're graduated from a
college? You haven't the right to call yourself, 'doctor.'"</p>
<p>McTeague stared a moment; then:</p>
<p>"Why, I've been practising ten years. More—nearly twelve."</p>
<p>"But it's the law."</p>
<p>"What's the law?"</p>
<p>"That you can't practise, or call yourself doctor, unless you've got a
diploma."</p>
<p>"What's that—a diploma?"</p>
<p>"I don't know exactly. It's a kind of paper that—that—oh, Mac,
we're ruined." Trina's voice rose to a cry.</p>
<p>"What do you mean, Trina? Ain't I a dentist? Ain't I a doctor? Look at my
sign, and the gold tooth you gave me. Why, I've been practising nearly
twelve years."</p>
<p>Trina shut her lips tightly, cleared her throat, and pretended to resettle
a hair-pin at the back of her head.</p>
<p>"I guess it isn't as bad as that," she said, very quietly. "Let's read
this again. 'Herewith prohibited and enjoined from further continuing——'"
She read to the end.</p>
<p>"Why, it isn't possible," she cried. "They can't mean—oh, Mac, I do
believe—pshaw!" she exclaimed, her pale face flushing. "They don't
know how good a dentist you are. What difference does a diploma make, if
you're a first-class dentist? I guess that's all right. Mac, didn't you
ever go to a dental college?"</p>
<p>"No," answered McTeague, doggedly. "What was the good? I learned how to
operate; wa'n't that enough?"</p>
<p>"Hark," said Trina, suddenly. "Wasn't that the bell of your office?" They
had both heard the jangling of the bell that McTeague had hung over the
door of his "Parlors." The dentist looked at the kitchen clock.</p>
<p>"That's Vanovitch," said he. "He's a plumber round on Sutter Street. He's
got an appointment with me to have a bicuspid pulled. I got to go back to
work." He rose.</p>
<p>"But you can't," cried Trina, the back of her hand upon her lips, her eyes
brimming. "Mac, don't you see? Can't you understand? You've got to stop.
Oh, it's dreadful! Listen." She hurried around the table to him and caught
his arm in both her hands.</p>
<p>"Huh?" growled McTeague, looking at her with a puzzled frown.</p>
<p>"They'll arrest you. You'll go to prison. You can't work—can't work
any more. We're ruined."</p>
<p>Vanovitch was pounding on the door of the sitting-room.</p>
<p>"He'll be gone in a minute," exclaimed McTeague.</p>
<p>"Well, let him go. Tell him to go; tell him to come again."</p>
<p>"Why, he's got an APPOINTMENT with me," exclaimed McTeague, his hand upon
the door.</p>
<p>Trina caught him back. "But, Mac, you ain't a dentist any longer; you
ain't a doctor. You haven't the right to work. You never went to a dental
college."</p>
<p>"Well, suppose I never went to a college, ain't I a dentist just the same?
Listen, he's pounding there again. No, I'm going, sure."</p>
<p>"Well, of course, go," said Trina, with sudden reaction. "It ain't
possible they'll make you stop. If you're a good dentist, that's all
that's wanted. Go on, Mac; hurry, before he goes."</p>
<p>McTeague went out, closing the door. Trina stood for a moment looking
intently at the bricks at her feet. Then she returned to the table, and
sat down again before the notice, and, resting her head in both her fists,
read it yet another time. Suddenly the conviction seized upon her that it
was all true. McTeague would be obliged to stop work, no matter how good a
dentist he was. But why had the authorities at the City Hall waited this
long before serving the notice? All at once Trina snapped her fingers,
with a quick flash of intelligence.</p>
<p>"It's Marcus that's done it," she cried.</p>
<hr />
<p>It was like a clap of thunder. McTeague was stunned, stupefied. He said
nothing. Never in his life had he been so taciturn. At times he did not
seem to hear Trina when she spoke to him, and often she had to shake him
by the shoulder to arouse his attention. He would sit apart in his
"Parlors," turning the notice about in his enormous clumsy fingers,
reading it stupidly over and over again. He couldn't understand. What had
a clerk at the City Hall to do with him? Why couldn't they let him alone?</p>
<p>"Oh, what's to become of us NOW?" wailed Trina. "What's to become of us
now? We're paupers, beggars—and all so sudden." And once, in a
quick, inexplicable fury, totally unlike anything that McTeague had
noticed in her before, she had started up, with fists and teeth shut
tight, and had cried, "Oh, if you'd only KILLED Marcus Schouler that time
he fought you!"</p>
<p>McTeague had continued his work, acting from sheer force of habit; his
sluggish, deliberate nature, methodical, obstinate, refusing to adapt
itself to the new conditions.</p>
<p>"Maybe Marcus was only trying to scare us," Trina had said. "How are they
going to know whether you're practising or not?"</p>
<p>"I got a mould to make to-morrow," McTeague said, "and Vanovitch, that
plumber round on Sutter Street, he's coming again at three."</p>
<p>"Well, you go right ahead," Trina told him, decisively; "you go right
ahead and make the mould, and pull every tooth in Vanovitch's head if you
want to. Who's going to know? Maybe they just sent that notice as a matter
of form. Maybe Marcus got that paper and filled it in himself."</p>
<p>The two would lie awake all night long, staring up into the dark, talking,
talking, talking.</p>
<p>"Haven't you got any right to practise if you've not been to a dental
college, Mac? Didn't you ever go?" Trina would ask again and again.</p>
<p>"No, no," answered the dentist, "I never went. I learnt from the fellow I
was apprenticed to. I don' know anything about a dental college. Ain't I
got a right to do as I like?" he suddenly exclaimed.</p>
<p>"If you know your profession, isn't that enough?" cried Trina.</p>
<p>"Sure, sure," growled McTeague. "I ain't going to stop for them."</p>
<p>"You go right on," Trina said, "and I bet you won't hear another word
about it."</p>
<p>"Suppose I go round to the City Hall and see them," hazarded McTeague.</p>
<p>"No, no, don't you do it, Mac," exclaimed Trina. "Because, if Marcus has
done this just to scare you, they won't know anything about it there at
the City Hall; but they'll begin to ask you questions, and find out that
you never HAD graduated from a dental college, and you'd be just as bad
off as ever."</p>
<p>"Well, I ain't going to quit for just a piece of paper," declared the
dentist. The phrase stuck to him. All day long he went about their rooms
or continued at his work in the "Parlors," growling behind his thick
mustache: "I ain't going to quit for just a piece of paper. No, I ain't
going to quit for just a piece of paper. Sure not."</p>
<p>The days passed, a week went by, McTeague continued his work as usual.
They heard no more from the City Hall, but the suspense of the situation
was harrowing. Trina was actually sick with it. The terror of the thing
was ever at their elbows, going to bed with them, sitting down with them
at breakfast in the kitchen, keeping them company all through the day.
Trina dared not think of what would be their fate if the income derived
from McTeague's practice was suddenly taken from them. Then they would
have to fall back on the interest of her lottery money and the pittance
she derived from the manufacture of the Noah's ark animals, a little over
thirty dollars a month. No, no, it was not to be thought of. It could not
be that their means of livelihood was to be thus stricken from them.</p>
<p>A fortnight went by. "I guess we're all right, Mac," Trina allowed herself
to say. "It looks as though we were all right. How are they going to tell
whether you're practising or not?"</p>
<p>That day a second and much more peremptory notice was served upon McTeague
by an official in person. Then suddenly Trina was seized with a panic
terror, unreasoned, instinctive. If McTeague persisted they would both be
sent to a prison, she was sure of it; a place where people were chained to
the wall, in the dark, and fed on bread and water.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mac, you've got to quit," she wailed. "You can't go on. They can make
you stop. Oh, why didn't you go to a dental college? Why didn't you find
out that you had to have a college degree? And now we're paupers, beggars.
We've got to leave here—leave this flat where I've been—where
WE'VE been so happy, and sell all the pretty things; sell the pictures and
the melodeon, and—Oh, it's too dreadful!"</p>
<p>"Huh? Huh? What? What?" exclaimed the dentist, bewildered. "I ain't going
to quit for just a piece of paper. Let them put me out. I'll show them.
They—they can't make small of me."</p>
<p>"Oh, that's all very fine to talk that way, but you'll have to quit."</p>
<p>"Well, we ain't paupers," McTeague suddenly exclaimed, an idea entering
his mind. "We've got our money yet. You've got your five thousand dollars
and the money you've been saving up. People ain't paupers when they've got
over five thousand dollars."</p>
<p>"What do you mean, Mac?" cried Trina, apprehensively.</p>
<p>"Well, we can live on THAT money until—until—until—" he
broke off with an uncertain movement of his shoulders, looking about him
stupidly.</p>
<p>"Until WHEN?" cried Trina. "There ain't ever going to be any 'until.'
We've got the INTEREST of that five thousand and we've got what Uncle
Oelbermann gives me, a little over thirty dollars a month, and that's all
we've got. You'll have to find something else to do."</p>
<p>"What will I find to do?"</p>
<p>What, indeed? McTeague was over thirty now, sluggish and slow-witted at
best. What new trade could he learn at this age?</p>
<p>Little by little Trina made the dentist understand the calamity that had
befallen them, and McTeague at last began cancelling his appointments.
Trina gave it out that he was sick.</p>
<p>"Not a soul need know what's happened to us," she said to her husband.</p>
<p>But it was only by slow degrees that McTeague abandoned his profession.
Every morning after breakfast he would go into his "Parlors" as usual and
potter about his instruments, his dental engine, and his washstand in the
corner behind his screen where he made his moulds. Now he would sharpen a
"hoe" excavator, now he would busy himself for a whole hour making "mats"
and "cylinders." Then he would look over his slate where he kept a record
of his appointments.</p>
<p>One day Trina softly opened the door of the "Parlors" and came in from the
sitting-room. She had not heard McTeague moving about for some time and
had begun to wonder what he was doing. She came in, quietly shutting the
door behind her.</p>
<p>McTeague had tidied the room with the greatest care. The volumes of the
"Practical Dentist" and the "American System of Dentistry" were piled upon
the marble-top centre-table in rectangular blocks. The few chairs were
drawn up against the wall under the steel engraving of "Lorenzo de'
Medici" with more than usual precision. The dental engine and the
nickelled trimmings of the operating chair had been furbished till they
shone, while on the movable rack in the bay window McTeague had arranged
his instruments with the greatest neatness and regularity. "Hoe"
excavators, pluggers, forceps, pliers, corundum disks and burrs, even the
boxwood mallet that Trina was never to use again, all were laid out and
ready for immediate use.</p>
<p>McTeague himself sat in his operating chair, looking stupidly out of the
windows, across the roofs opposite, with an unseeing gaze, his red hands
lying idly in his lap. Trina came up to him. There was something in his
eyes that made her put both arms around his neck and lay his huge head
with its coarse blond hair upon her shoulder.</p>
<p>"I—I got everything fixed," he said. "I got everything fixed an'
ready. See, everything ready an' waiting, an'—an'—an' nobody
comes, an' nobody's ever going to come any more. Oh, Trina!" He put his
arms about her and drew her down closer to him.</p>
<p>"Never mind, dear; never mind," cried Trina, through her tears. "It'll all
come right in the end, and we'll be poor together if we have to. You can
sure find something else to do. We'll start in again."</p>
<p>"Look at the slate there," said McTeague, pulling away from her and
reaching down the slate on which he kept a record of his appointments.
"Look at them. There's Vanovitch at two on Wednesday, and Loughhead's wife
Thursday morning, and Heise's little girl Thursday afternoon at
one-thirty; Mrs. Watson on Friday, and Vanovitch again Saturday morning
early—at seven. That's what I was to have had, and they ain't going
to come. They ain't ever going to come any more."</p>
<p>Trina took the little slate from him and looked at it ruefully.</p>
<p>"Rub them out," she said, her voice trembling; "rub it all out;" and as
she spoke her eyes brimmed again, and a great tear dropped on the slate.
"That's it," she said; "that's the way to rub it out, by me crying on it."
Then she passed her fingers over the tear-blurred writing and washed the
slate clean. "All gone, all gone," she said.</p>
<p>"All gone," echoed the dentist. There was a silence. Then McTeague heaved
himself up to his full six feet two, his face purpling, his enormous
mallet-like fists raised over his head. His massive jaw protruded more
than ever, while his teeth clicked and grated together; then he growled:</p>
<p>"If ever I meet Marcus Schouler—" he broke off abruptly, the white
of his eyes growing suddenly pink.</p>
<p>"Oh, if ever you DO," exclaimed Trina, catching her breath.</p>
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