By this time Trina and McTeague, Old Grannis, and little Miss Baker—all the lodgers on the upper floors of the flat—had gathered about Maria. Trina and the dentist, who had gone to bed, were partially dressed, and Trina's enormous mane of black hair was hanging in two thick braids far down her back. But, late as it was, Old Grannis and the retired dressmaker had still been up and about when Maria had aroused them.
“Why, Maria,” said Trina, “you always used to tell us about your gold dishes. You said your folks used to have them.”
“Never, never, never!” exclaimed Maria, vehemently. “You folks must all be crazy. I never HEARD of any gold dishes.”
“Well,” spoke up Miss Baker, “you're a queer girl, Maria; that's all I can say.” She left the group and returned to her room. Old Grannis watched her go from the corner of his eye, and in a few moments followed her, leaving the group as unnoticed as he had joined it. By degrees the flat quieted down again. Trina and McTeague returned to their rooms.
“I guess I'll go back now,” said Maria. “He's all right now. I ain't afraid of him so long as he ain't got his knife.”
“Well, say,” Marcus called to her as she went down stairs, “if he gets funny again, you just yell out; I'LL hear you. I won't let him hurt you.”
Marcus went into his room again and resumed his wrangle with the refractory boots. His eye fell on Zerkow's knife, a long, keen-bladed hunting-knife, with a buckhorn handle. “I'll take you along with me,” he exclaimed, suddenly. “I'll just need you where I'm going.”
Meanwhile, old Miss Baker was making tea to calm her nerves after the excitement of Maria's incursion. This evening she went so far as to make tea for two, laying an extra place on the other side of her little tea-table, setting out a cup and saucer and one of the Gorham silver spoons. Close upon the other side of the partition Old Grannis bound uncut numbers of the “Nation.”
“Do you know what I think, Mac?” said Trina, when the couple had returned to their rooms. “I think Marcus is going away.”
“What? What?” muttered the dentist, very sleepy and stupid, “what you saying? What's that about Marcus?”