Part 7 (1/2)

”Bought? Who says so?”

”Why, 'tis what they say.”

”But who's he to buy from? 'Tis common land.”

”Ay, 'tis so.”

”And sweat of his brow to every spade of it.”

”Why, they say 'tis the State owns all the land.”

Inger could make nothing of this. ”Ay, maybe so. Was it Oline said so?”

”I don't well remember,” says the Lapp, and his s.h.i.+fty eyes looked all ways around.

Inger wondered why he did not beg for anything; Os-Anders always begged, as do all the Lapps. Os-Anders sits sc.r.a.ping at the bowl of his clay pipe, and and lights up. What a pipe! He puffs and draws at it till his wrinkled old face looks like a wizard's runes.

”No need to ask if the little ones there are yours,” says he, flattering again. ”They're as like you as could be. The living image of yourself when you were small.”

Now Inger was a monster and a deformity to look at; 'twas all wrong, of course, but she swelled with pride for all that. Even a Lapp can gladden a mother's heart.

”If it wasn't that your sack there's so full, I'd find you something to put in it,” says Inger.

”Nay, 'tis more than's worth your while.”

Inger goes inside with the child on her arm; Eleseus stays outside with the Lapp. The two make friends at once; the child sees something curious in the sack, something soft and fluffy, and wants to pat it.

The dog stands alert, barking and whining. Inger comes out with a parcel of food; she gives a cry, and drops down on the door-slab.

”What's that you've got there? What is it?”

”Tis nothing. Only a hare.”

”I saw it.”

”'Twas the boy wanted to look. Dog ran it down this morning and killed it, and I brought it along....”

”Here's your food,” said Inger.

Chapter V

One bad year never comes alone. Isak had grown patient, and took what fell to his lot. The corn was parched, and the hay was poor, but the potatoes looked like pulling through once more--bad enough, all things together, but not the worst. Isak had still a season's yield of cordwood and timber to sell in the village, and the herring fishery had been rich all round the coast, so there was plenty of money to buy wood. Indeed, it almost looked like a providence that the corn harvest had failed--for how could he have threshed it without a barn and thres.h.i.+ng-floor? Call it providence; there's no harm in that sometimes.

There were other things not so easily put out of mind. What was it a certain Lapp had said to Inger that summer--something about not having bought? Buy, what should he buy for? The ground was there, the forest was there; he had cleared and tilled, built up a homestead in the midst of a natural wilderness, winning bread for himself and his, asking nothing of any man, but working, and working alone. He had often thought himself of asking the Lensmand [Footnote: Sheriff's officer, in charge of a small district.] about the matter when he went down to the village, but had always put it off; the Lensmand was not a pleasant man to deal with, so people said, and Isak was not one to talk much. What could he say if he went--what had he come for?

One day that winter the Lensmand himself came driving up to the place.

There was a man with him, and a lot of papers in a bag. Geissler himself, the Lensmand, no less. He looked at the broad open hillside, cleared of timber, smooth and unbroken under the snow; he thought perhaps that it was all tilled land already, for he said:

”Why, this is a whole big farm you've got. You don't expect to get all this for nothing?”