Part 53 (2/2)

”Herr von Rambow, it will not do yet, yesterday and to-day it has been cloudy, and it has not dried; the grain is still soft, and some stems are quite green.”

”Well, it will do. How will you bring it in?”

”If it must be brought in, we should begin right behind the village, and go with two gangs, one to drive into the great barn, the other into the barley barn.”

”Begin behind the village? With two gangs? Why?”

”The nearer we begin to the village the more we can get in in one day and the weather looks suspicious; and we must bring it in in two gangs, and into two barns, or the people will get in each other's way, and the wagons will interfere.”

”Hm!” said Axel, closing the window, ”I will think about it.” And he thought, and came to the conclusion that he would get in this harvest with Fritz Triddelsitz alone; Habermann should have nothing whatever to do with it, and they would show him that he was the fifth wheel of the coach. They would begin at the other end of the field, and bring it in with one gang. What one gang or two gangs were, he was not quite clear in his own mind, but they were only subordinate matters, probably nothing more than some whim of the old inspector's, and he would have nothing to do with these, he meant to free himself from them entirely.

The next morning, at six o'clock, he was on his feet, and went up in a very friendly way to the old man, who was busy in the yard.

”Dear Herr Habermann, I have considered the matter,--you must not take it unkindly,--but I have decided to get in this harvest, with young Triddelsitz, quite by myself, and to give all the necessary orders in person.”

The old man stood before him, confounded and dismayed. At last came, heavily and constrained from his breast, the words: ”And I, Herr, am I merely to look on? And do you prefer the help of a stupid apprentice to my help?”

He held his walking-stick in front of him, and looked at the young man with eyes which shone in his old face with as much youthful fire, as if all the energy and activity of his long life were concentrated in them, and said frankly:

”Herr, you were a little boy, when I devoted my whole abilities to your good father,--he thanked me, on his dying bed he thanked me! but you?

You have filled my cup to the brim, with your ingrat.i.tude, and now you wish to disgrace me!”

Then he went off, and Axel called after him:

”Dear Herr Habermann, it is not so intended. I only wanted to try myself.” But it was so intended, as he knew very well; he did not want the old man in his way, he looked after him too sharply, and he felt ashamed before him.

The old inspector went to his room, opened his desk, and seated himself before it; but it was long before he could think and begin anything, and meanwhile there was great commotion in the yard. ”Triddelsitz!”

”Herr von Rambow!” ”Where are you going, Jochen?” ”Eh, I don't know, n.o.body has told me.” ”Fritz Pasel, what are you doing with the plough?” ”Eh, what do I know? I was going to plough in the field.”

”Blockhead!”--this was Fritz's voice--”we are going to get in the rye.”

”It is all the same to me, if I am not to do it, I will not,”--and he tumbled the plough out of the wagon,--”what the inspector tells me, I do.”

”Flegel!” called the young Herr. ”Fritz Flegel!” repeated Triddelsitz, after him.

”What do you want?” roared a voice from the workshop.

”Where are the harvesting straps?” asked Fritz Triddelsitz. ”There, where you stand,” said the wheelwright; ”and n.o.body has said anything to me about them.”

”Well, what shall we do?” asked the day-laborer Nasel. ”Lord knows,”

replied Pegel, ”n.o.body has told us.” ”Flegel!” cried Fritz again, ”we are going to bring in the rye; the wagons must be greased.” ”For all me,” called Flegel from his shop, ”the tar-barrel stands there.”

”Herr von Rambow,” said Fritz, ”where is Habermann? shall I not call the inspector?”

”No,” said Axel slowly, turning to go away.

<script>