登陆注册
26258900000096

第96章 CHAPTER 19(2)

But for all that the match-box and the bag refused to fill up; after three weeks of the most rigid economy they contained but eighteen dollars and some small change. What was that compared with four hundred? Trina told herself that she must have her money in hand. She longed to see again the heap of it upon her work-table, where she could plunge her hands into it, her face into it, feeling the cool, smooth metal upon her cheeks. At such moments she would see in her imagination her wonderful five thousand dollars piled in columns, shining and gleaming somewhere at the bottom of Uncle Oelbermann's vault. She would look at the paper that Uncle Oelbermann had given her, and tell herself that it represented five thousand dollars. But in the end this ceased to satisfy her, she must have the money itself. She must have her four hundred dollars back again, there in her trunk, in her bag and her match-box, where she could touch it and see it whenever she desired.

At length she could stand it no longer, and one day presented herself before Uncle Oelbermann as he sat in his office in the wholesale toy store, and told him she wanted to have four hundred dollars of her money.

"But this is very irregular, you know, Mrs. McTeague," said the great man. "Not business-like at all."

But his niece's misfortunes and the sight of her poor maimed hand appealed to him. He opened his check-book. "You understand, of course," he said, "that this will reduce the amount of your interest by just so much."

"I know, I know. I've thought of that," said Trina.

"Four hundred, did you say?" remarked Uncle Oelbermann, taking the cap from his fountain pen.

"Yes, four hundred," exclaimed Trina, quickly, her eyes glistening.

Trina cashed the check and returned home with the money--all in twenty-dollar pieces as she had desired--in an ecstasy of delight. For half of that night she sat up playing with her money, counting it and recounting it, polishing the duller pieces until they shone. Altogether there were twenty twenty-dollar gold pieces.

"Oh-h, you beauties!" murmured Trina, running her palms over them, fairly quivering with pleasure. "You beauties!

IS there anything prettier than a twenty-dollar gold piece?

You dear, dear money! Oh, don't I LOVE you! Mine, mine, mine--all of you mine."

She laid them out in a row on the ledge of the table, or arranged them in patterns--triangles, circles, and squares-- or built them all up into a pyramid which she afterward overthrew for the sake of hearing the delicious clink of the pieces tumbling against each other. Then at last she put them away in the brass match-box and chamois bag, delighted beyond words that they were once more full and heavy.

Then, a few days after, the thought of the money still remaining in Uncle Oelbermann's keeping returned to her. It was hers, all hers--all that four thousand six hundred. She could have as much of it or as little of it as she chose.

She only had to ask. For a week Trina resisted, knowing very well that taking from her capital was proportionately reducing her monthly income. Then at last she yielded.

"Just to make it an even five hundred, anyhow," she told herself. That day she drew a hundred dollars more, in twenty-dollar gold pieces as before. From that time Trina began to draw steadily upon her capital, a little at a time.

It was a passion with her, a mania, a veritable mental disease; a temptation such as drunkards only know.

It would come upon her all of a sudden. While she was about her work, scrubbing the floor of some vacant house; or in her room, in the morning, as she made her coffee on the oil stove, or when she woke in the night, a brusque access of cupidity would seize upon her. Her cheeks flushed, her eyes glistened, her breath came short. At times she would leave her work just as it was, put on her old bonnet of black straw, throw her shawl about her, and go straight to Uncle Oelbermann's store and draw against her money. Now it would be a hundred dollars, now sixty; now she would content herself with only twenty; and once, after a fortnight's abstinence, she permitted herself a positive debauch of five hundred. Little by little she drew her capital from Uncle Oelbermann, and little by little her original interest of twenty-five dollars a month dwindled.

One day she presented herself again in the office of the whole-sale toy store.

"Will you let me have a check for two hundred dollars, Uncle Oelbermann?" she said.

The great man laid down his fountain pen and leaned back in his swivel chair with great deliberation.

"I don't understand, Mrs. McTeague," he said. "Every week you come here and draw out a little of your money. I've told you that it is not at all regular or business-like for me to let you have it this way. And more than this, it's a great inconvenience to me to give you these checks at unstated times. If you wish to draw out the whole amount let's have some understanding. Draw it in monthly installments of, say, five hundred dollars, or else," he added, abruptly, "draw it all at once, now, to-day. I would even prefer it that way. Otherwise it's--it's annoying. Come, shall I draw you a check for thirty-seven hundred, and have it over and done with?"

"No, no," cried Trina, with instinctive apprehension, refusing, she did not know why. "No, I'll leave it with you. I won't draw out any more."

She took her departure, but paused on the pavement outside the store, and stood for a moment lost in thought, her eyes beginning to glisten and her breath coming short. Slowly she turned about and reentered the store; she came back into the office, and stood trembling at the corner of Uncle Oelbermann's desk. He looked up sharply. Twice Trina tried to get her voice, and when it did come to her, she could hardly recognize it. Between breaths she said:

"Yes, all right--I'll--you can give me--will you give me a check for thirty-seven hundred? Give me ALL of my money."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 祸天下之逍遥乱

    祸天下之逍遥乱

    位临大陆,强者如云,神,妖,魔,冥四族鼎立,妖族却发生了叛乱,妖主半夏与叛徒大战。被其暗伤妖主力量被封,被传送到另一片大陆,陆临大陆这个无修真,无魔法的大陆迎来了带着仇恨的他,朝廷上叫板皇帝,江湖上号召群雄,桃花漫天飞舞,看妖主半夏如何祸乱天下
  • 爆笑初恋:拽丫头爱上恶劣王子

    爆笑初恋:拽丫头爱上恶劣王子

    她冷若薰是谁?是二十一世纪的绝世特工,IQ、EQ、外貌是所有人都比不上的,被自己的男朋友杀了,莫名其妙地穿越到了一个历史上没有出现过的朝代嫁给三王爷当小妾?这是肿么回事?
  • 崖柏之恋

    崖柏之恋

    妻子在婚礼现场被枪杀,却无犯罪嫌疑人,家人,亲人一夕之间全部变成泡沫,只是造假?知道一切的同居人,原来惦记的是自己?是时间的“途人”也是生命的“屠人”。是留下,还是离开。
  • 依白头

    依白头

    相约白头却无善终,为了一个随口的诺言,付出了那么多真的值得吗?
  • 世界边缘

    世界边缘

    问:假如小明以光速御剑飞行一天一夜,能飞出太阳系吗?答:早飞出去了,但如果他有女朋友,一定会后悔的。问:哦?答:因为地球上已经过去了一百三十二年。
  • 那些年留学在美国

    那些年留学在美国

    “前往纽约的旅客请注意,您乘坐的UA87航班现在开始登机了……”陈欣拖着蓝绿色的行李箱,向登机口走去。看着手中飞往纽约的机票与美国大学的入学通知书,心里有些百感交集。自从16岁去美国读高中已经有3年了,慢慢的开始适应美国的文化,转眼高中毕业,美国的大学,又有什么样的生活在等着自己呢?陈欣好奇的抽了三张塔罗牌,带着几丝疑虑与兴奋,再次踏上了去往美利坚的飞机。本书将以女主人公陈欣的视角,让大家读到赴美留学生的青春励志生活。如果你正在好奇留学生在国外的生活,那就请跟着文章中女主人公陈欣的步伐,去一探究竟。
  • 玄冥黑洞

    玄冥黑洞

    千年流转,不为得天地造化,万世沉沦,只愿寻她后世之身。睁开眼,我便是天。
  • 独家私宠:薛定谔的猫

    独家私宠:薛定谔的猫

    她是平民庶女,他是世家少爷。她徘徊在文艺的十字路口,不知何去何从。他游弋于女人的篷门莲足,流连忘返…………nonono!安靖想要的怎么可能是这样门不当户不对的爱情。她有竹马,愿为青梅,老不相离,死不相弃。只是万万没想到的是,她分手得目的肯定是达到了,但是他和她?她和他——交换身体,这是个什么鬼啊?
  • 行政处罚与行政复议

    行政处罚与行政复议

    从现实生活中的真实案例、热点问题出发,有机结合《行政处罚法》与《行政复议法》及其相关条例、司法解释,采取“宣讲要点”“典型案例”“专家评析”和“法条指引”的结构编写而成。内容层次循序渐进,易于读者理解和掌握法律常识和相关法理。
  • 每天学点社交学大全集(超值金版)

    每天学点社交学大全集(超值金版)

    成功的事业离不开社交,美满的生活同样离不开社交。要想在社交中游刃有余,做到人见人爱,除了提高自身素质外,还必须掌握一些社交技巧。余春荣编著的《每天学点社交学大全集》正是要教你一些成功社交的小窍门。首先,《每天学点社交学大全集》会告诉你,人脉是多么重要,我们一定要花点心思与人交往。然后,要与人顺利交往,不仅要有良好的心态、形象、礼仪、口才,而且还要知己知彼,才能对症下药,百战不殆。书中还有很多典型事例和小故事,深入浅出,通俗易懂,同时又很有启发性。读完此书,你定能学到很多有用的东西。