Part 5 (1/2)

”Have you any one here?”

”No, not here.”

”But yonder in your native parish?”

”Oh, no; not there either.”

”Have you not any one at all who cares for you?”

”Oh, no; I have not.”

But Arne went from him loving his own mother so intensely that it seemed as though his heart would break; and he felt, as it were, a blissful light over him. ”Thou Heavenly Father,” thought he, ”Thou hast given her to me, and such unspeakable love with the gift, and I put this away from me; and one day when I want it, she will be perhaps no more!” He felt a desire to go to her, if for nothing else only to look at her. But on the way, it suddenly occurred to him: ”Perhaps because you did not appreciate her you may soon have to endure the grief of losing her!” He stood still at once. ”Almighty G.o.d! what then would become of me?”

He felt as though some calamity must be happening at home. He hastened toward the house; cold sweat stood on his brow; his feet scarcely touched the ground. He tore open the pa.s.sage door, but within the whole atmosphere was at once filled with peace. He softly opened the door into the family-room. The mother had gone to bed, the moon shone full in her face, and she lay sleeping calmly as a child.

CHAPTER VI.

Some days after this, mother and son, who of late had been more together, agreed to be present at the wedding of some relatives at a neighboring gard. The mother had not been to any party since she was a girl.

They knew few people at the wedding, save by name, and Arne thought it especially strange that everybody stared at him wherever he went.

Once some words were spoken behind him in the pa.s.sage; he was not sure, but he fancied he understood them, and every drop of blood rushed into his face whenever he thought of them.

He could not keep his eyes off the man who had spoken these words; finally, he took a seat beside him. But as he drew up to the table he thought the conversation took another turn.

”Well, now I am going to tell you a story, which proves that nothing can be buried so deep down in night that it will not find its way into daylight,” said the man, and Arne was sure he looked at _him_. He was an ill-favored man, with thin, red hair encircling a great, round brow.

Beneath were a pair of very small eyes and a little bottle-shaped nose; but the mouth was very large, with very pale, out-turned lips. When he laughed, he showed his gums. His hands lay on the table: they were clumsy and coa.r.s.e, but the wrists were slender. He looked sharp and talked fast, but with much effort. People nicknamed him the Rattle-tongue, and Arne knew that tailor Nils had dealt roughly with him in the old days.

”Yes, there is a great deal of wickedness in this world; it comes nearer home to us than we think. But no matter; you shall hear now of an ugly deed. Those who are old remember Alf, Scrip Alf. 'Sure to come back!'

said Alf; that saying comes from him; for when he had struck a bargain--and he could trade, that fellow!--he flung his scrip on his back. 'Sure to come back,' said Alf. A devilish good fellow, fine fellow, splendid fellow, this Alf, Scrip Alf!

”Well, there was Alf and Big Lazy-bones--aye, you knew Big Lazy-bones?--he was big and he was lazy too. He looked too long at a s.h.i.+ning black horse Scrip Alf drove and had trained to spring like a summer frog. And before Big Lazy-bones knew what he was about, he had given fifty dollars for the nag Big Lazy-bones mounted a carriole,[13]

as large as life, to drive like a king with his fifty-dollar horse; but now he might lash and swear until the gard was all in a smoke; the horse ran, for all that, against all the doors and walls that were in the way; he was stone blind.

”Afterwards, Alf and Big Lazy-bones fell to quarreling about this horse all through the parish, just like a couple of dogs. Big Lazy-bones wanted his money back; but you may believe he never got so much as two Danish s.h.i.+llings. Scrip Alf thrashed him until the hair flew. 'Sure to come back,' said Alf. Devilish good fellow, fine fellow, splendid fellow, this Alf--Scrip Alf.

”Well, then, some years pa.s.sed by without his being heard of again.

”It might have been ten years later that he was published on the church hill;[14] there had been left to him a tremendous fortune. Big Lazy-bones was standing by. 'I knew very well,' said he, 'that it was money that was crying for Scrip Alf, and not people.'

”Now there was a great deal of gossip about Alf; and out of it all was gathered that he had been seen last on this side of Roren, and not on the other. Yes, you remember the Roren road--the old road?

”But Big Lazy-bones had succeeded in rising to great power and splendor, owning both farm and complete outfit.

”Moreover, he had professed great piety, and everybody knew he did not become pious for nothing--any more than other folks do. People began to talk about it.

”It was at this time that the Roren road was to be changed, old-time folks wanted to go straight ahead, and so it went directly over Roren; but we like things level, and so the road now runs down by the river.