Cannery Row

Cannery Row by John Steinbeck Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Cannery Row by John Steinbeck Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Steinbeck
Hazel. “You can’t understand a word he says. Know what he said about stink bugs? No—I better not tell you.”
    “He seem in a nice friendly mood?” Mack asked.
    “Sure,” said Hazel. “We got two three hundred starfish. He’s all right.”
    “I wonder if we better all go over?” Mack asked himself and he answered himself, “No I guess it would be better if one went alone. It might get him mixed up if we all went.”
    “What is this?” Hazel asked.
    “We got plans,” said Mack. “I’ll go myself so as not to startle him. You guys stay here and wait. I’ll come back in a few minutes.”
    Mack went out and he teetered down the chicken walk and across the track. Mr. Malloy was sitting on a brick in front of his boiler.
    “How are you, Sam?” Mack asked.
    “Pretty good.”
    “How’s the missus?”
    “Pretty good,” said Mr. Malloy. “You know any kind of glue that you can stick cloth to iron?”
    Ordinarily Mack would have thrown himself headlong into this problem but now he was not to be deflected. “No,” he said.
    He went across the vacant lot, crossed the street and entered the basement of the laboratory.
    Doc had his hat off now since there was practically no chance of getting his head wet unless a pipe broke. He was busy removing the starfish from the wet sacks and arranging them on the cool concrete floor. The starfish were twisted and knotted up, for a starfish loves to hang onto something and for an hour these had found only each other. Doc arranged them in long lines and very slowly they straightened out until they lay in symmetrical stars on the concrete floor. Doc’s pointed brown beard was damp with perspiration as he worked. He looked up a little nervously as Mack entered. It was not that trouble always came in with Mack but something always entered with him.
    “Hiya, Doc?” said Mack.
    “All right,” said Doc uneasily.
    “Hear about Phyllis Mae over at the Bear Flag? She hit a drunk and got his tooth in her fist and it’s infected clear to the elbow. She showed me the tooth. It was out of a plate. Is a false tooth poison, Doc?”
    “I guess everything that comes out of the human mouth is poison,” said Doc warningfully. “Has she got a doctor?”
    “The bouncer fixed her up,” said Mack.
    “I’ll take her some sulfa,” said Doc, and he waited for the storm to break. He knew Mack had come for something and Mack knew he knew it.
    Mack said, “Doc, you got any need for any kind of animals now?”
    Doc sighed with relief. “Why?” he asked guardedly.
    Mack became open and confidential. “I’ll tell you, Doc. I and the boys got to get some dough—we simply got to. It’s for a good purpose, you might say a worthy cause.”
    “Phyllis Mae’s arm?”
    Mack saw the chance, weighed it and gave it up. “Well—no,” he said. “It’s more important than that. You can’t kill a whore. No—this is different. I and the boys thought if you needed something why we’d get it for you and that way we could make a little piece of change.”
    It seemed simple and innocent. Doc laid down four more starfish in lines. “I could use three or four hundred frogs,” he said. “I’d get them myself but I’ve got to go down to La Jolla tonight. There’s a good tide tomorrow and I have to get some octopi.”
    “Same price for frogs?” Mack asked. “Five cents apiece?”
    “Same price,” said Doc.
    Mack was jovial. “Don’t you worry about frogs, Doc,” he said. “We’ll get you all the frogs you want. You just rest easy about frogs. Why we can get them right up Carmel River. I know a place.”
    “Good,” said Doc. “I’ll take all you get but I need about three hundred.”
    “Just you rest easy, Doc. Don’t you lose no sleep about it. You’ll get your frogs, maybe seven eight hundred. ” He put the Doc at his ease about frogs and then a little cloud crossed Mack’s face. “Doc,” he said, “any chance of using your car to go up the Valley?”
    “No,” said

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