McTeague eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 440 pages of information about McTeague.

McTeague eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 440 pages of information about McTeague.

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.

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.

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.

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McTeague from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.