Ditte: Girl Alive! - BestLightNovel.com
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When Lars Peter was about to carry the things out to the cart, he said smilingly, "That will be--let me see, how much do you owe for last time?"
"I'd like to let it wait a bit--till I get settled up after the auction!"
"Well, I'm afraid it can't. I don't know anything about you yet."
"Oh, so you're paying me out." Lars Peter began to fume.
"Paying you out? Not at all. But I like to know what sort of a man I'm dealing with before I can trust him."
"Oh, indeed! It's easy enough to see what sort of a fellow you are!"
shouted Lars Peter and rushed out.
The inn-keeper followed him out to the cart. "You'll have a different opinion of me some day," said he gently, "then we can talk it over again. Never mind. But another thing--where'll you get food for the horse?"
"I'll manage somehow," answered Lars Peter shortly.
"And stabling? It's setting in cold now."
"You leave that to me!"
Lars Peter drove off at a walking pace. He knew perfectly well that he could find neither food nor stabling for the horse without the inn-keeper's help. Two or three days afterwards he sent Kristian with the horse and cart back to the farm.
He had done this once, but he was wiser now--or at all events more careful. When occasionally he felt a longing for the road and wanted to spend a day on it in company with Klavs, he asked politely for the loan of it, and he was allowed to have it. Then he and the horse were like sweethearts who seldom saw each other.
He was no wiser than before. The inn-keeper he couldn't make out--with his care for others and his desire to rule.
His partners and the other men he didn't understand either. He had spent his life in the country where people kept to themselves--where he had often longed for society. It looked cosy--as seen from the lonely Crow's Nest--people lived next door to each other; they could give a helping hand occasionally and chat with each other. But what pleasure had a man here? They toiled unwillingly, pus.h.i.+ng responsibilities and troubles on to others, getting only enough for a meager meal from day to day and letting another man run off with their profits. It was extraordinary how that crooked devil sc.r.a.ped in everything with his long arms, without any one daring to protest.
He must have an enormous hold on them somehow.
Lars Peter did not think of rebelling again. When his anger rose he had only to think of fisher-Jacob, who was daily before his eyes.
Every one knew how he had become the wreck he was. He had once owned a big boat, and had hired men to work with him, so he thought it unnecessary to submit to the inn-keeper. But the inn-keeper licked him into shape. He refused to buy his fish, so that they had to sail elsewhere with it, but this outlet he closed for them too. They could buy no goods nor gear in the village--they were shunned like lepers, no one dared help them. Then his partners turned against him, blaming him for their ill-luck. He tried to sell up and moved to another place, but the inn-keeper would not buy his possessions and no-one else dared; he had to stay on--and learn to submit.
Although he owned a boat and gear, he had to hire it from the inn-keeper. It told so heavily on him that he lost his reason; now he muddled about looking for a magic word to fell the inn-keeper; at times he went round with a gun, declaring he would shoot him. But the inn-keeper only laughed.
Ditte talked a great deal with the women. They all agreed that the inn-keeper had the evil eye. He was always in her mind; she went in an everlasting dread of him. When she saw him on the downs she almost screamed; Lars Peter tried to reason her out of it.
Little Povl came home from the beach one morning feeling ill. He was sick, and his head ached, he was hot one moment and cold the next.
Ditte undressed him and put him to bed; then called her father, who was asleep in the attic.
Lars Peter hurried down. He had been out at sea the whole night and stumbled as he walked.
"Why, Povl, little man, got a tummy-ache?" asked he, putting his hand on the boy's forehead. It throbbed, and was burning hot. The boy turned his head away.
"He looks really bad," he said, seating himself on the edge of the bed, "he doesn't even know us. It's come on quickly, there was nothing the matter with him this morning."
"He came home a few minutes ago--he was all gray in the face and cold, and he's burning hot now. Just listen to the way he's breathing."
They sat by the bedside, looking at him in silence; Lars Peter held his little hand in his. It was black, with short stumpy fingers, the nails almost worn down into the flesh. He never spared himself, the little fellow, always ready; wide awake from the moment he opened his eyes. Here he lay, gasping. It was a sad sight! Was it serious?
Was there to be trouble with the children again? The accident with his first children he had shaken off--but he had none to spare now!
If anything happened to them, he had nothing more to live for--it would be the end. He understood now that they had kept him up--through the business with Sorine and all that followed. It was the children who gave him strength for each new day. All his broken hopes, all his failures, were dimmed in the cheery presence of the children; that was perhaps why he clung to them, as he did.
Suddenly Povl jumped up and wanted to get out of bed. "Povl do an'
play, do an' play!" he said over and over again.
"He wants to go out and play," said Ditte, looking questioningly at her father.
"Then maybe he's better already," broke out Lars Peter cheerily.
"Let him go if he wants to."
Ditte dressed him, but he drooped like a withered flower, and she put him to bed again.
"Shall I fetch Lars Jensen's widow?" she asked. "She knows about illness and what to do."
No--Lars Peter thought not. He would rather have a proper doctor.
"As soon as Kristian comes home from school, he can run up to the inn, and ask for the loan of the nag," said he. "They can hardly refuse it when the child's ill."
Kristian came back without the horse and cart, but with the inn-keeper at his heels. He came in without knocking at the door, as was his custom.
"I hear your little boy's ill," he said kindly. "I thought I ought to come and see you, and perhaps give you a word of comfort. I've brought a bottle of something to give him every half hour; it's mixed with prayers, so at all events it can't do him any harm. Keep him well wrapped up in bed." He leaned over the bed, listening to the child's breathing. Povl's eyes were stiff with fear.
"You'd better keep away from the bed," said Lars Peter. "Can't you see the boy's afraid of you?" His voice trembled with restrained fury.
"There's many that way," answered the inn-keeper good-naturedly, moving away from the bed. "And yet I live on, and thrive--and do my duty as far as I can. Well, I comfort myself with the thought that the Lord has some reward in store. Perhaps it does folks no harm to be afraid of something, Lars Peter! But give him the mixture at once."
"I'd rather fetch the doctor," said Lars Peter, reluctantly giving the child the medicine. He would have preferred to throw it out of the window--and the inn-keeper with it.
"Ay, so I understood, but I thought I'd just have a talk to you first. What good's a doctor? It's only an expense, and he can't change G.o.d's purpose. Poor people should learn to save."
"Ay, of course, when a man's poor he must take things as they come!"
Lars Peter laughed bitterly.
"Up at the inn we never send for the doctor. We put our lives in G.o.d's keeping. If so be it's His will, then----"
"It seems to me there's much that happens that's not His will at all--and in this place too," said Lars Peter defiantly.
"And yet I'll tell you that not even the smallest cod is caught--in the hamlet either--without the will of the Father." The inn-keeper's voice was earnest; it sounded like Scripture itself, but there was a look in his eyes, which made Lars Peter uncomfortable all the same.
He was quite relieved when this unpleasant guest took his departure and disappeared over the downs.
Ditte came down from the attic, where she had hidden. "What d'you want to hide from that hunch-back for?" shouted Lars Peter. He needed an outlet for his temper. Ditte flushed and turned away her face.
Soon afterwards a knock sounded on the wall. It was their lame neighbor. The daughter-in-law was at home, and sat with the twins in her arms.
"I heard he was in your house," said the old one--"his strong voice sounded through the walls. You be careful of him!"
"He was very kind," said Ditte evasively. "He spoke kindly to father, and brought something for little Povl."
"So he brought something--was it medicine? Pour it into the gutter at once. It can't do any harm there."
"But Povl's had some."