"That fellow won't
come round for it in a hurry; goodsized blade, too." The group examined
it with intense interest.
"Big enough to let the life out of any man," observed Heise.
"What--what--what did he do it for?" stammered McTeague. "I got no
quarrel with him."
He was puzzled and harassed by the strangeness of it all. Marcus would
have killed him; had thrown his knife at him in the true, uncanny
"greaser" style. It was inexplicable. McTeague sat down again, looking
stupidly about on the floor. In a corner of the room his eye encountered
his broken pipe, a dozen little fragments of painted porcelain and the
stem of cherry wood and amber.
At that sight his tardy wrath, ever lagging behind the original affront,
suddenly blazed up. Instantly his huge jaws clicked together.
"He can't make small of ME," he exclaimed, suddenly. "I'll show Marcus
Schouler--I'll show him--I'll----"
He got up and clapped on his hat.
"Now, Doctor," remonstrated Heise, standing between him and the door,
"don't go make a fool of yourself."
"Let 'um alone," joined in Frenna, catching the dentist by the arm;
"he's full, anyhow."
"He broke my pipe," answered McTeague.
It was this that had roused him.
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