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I came home, handed in the Lensmand's post, and went out into the wood.
I was dreaming all the time. My comrade, no doubt, must have found me an incomprehensible man, seeing me read a letter again and again, and put it back with my money.
How splendid of her to have found me! She must have held the envelope up to the light, no doubt, and read the Lensmand's name under the stamps; then laid her beautiful head on one side and half closed her eyes and thought for a moment: he is working for the Lensmand at Hersaet now....
That evening, when we were back home, the Lensmand came out and talked to us of this and that, and asked:
"Didn't you say you'd been working for Captain Falkenberg at vreb?"
"Yes."
"I see he's invented a machine."
"A machine?"
"A patent saw for timber work. It's in the papers."
I started at this. Surely he hadn't invented my patent saw?
"There must be some mistake," I said. "It wasn't the Captain who invented it."
"Oh, wasn't it?"
"No it wasn't. But the saw was left with him."
And I told the Lensmand all about it. He went in to fetch the paper, and we both read what it said: "New Invention.... Our Correspondent on the spot.... Of great importance to owners of timber lands.... Principle of the mechanism is as follows:..."
"You don't mean to say it's your invention?"
"Yes, it is."
"And the Captain is trying to steal it? Why, this'll be a pretty case, a mighty pretty case. Leave it to me. Did any one see you working on the thing?"
"Yes, all his people on the place did."
"Lord save me if it's not the stiffest bit of business I've heard for a long time. Walk off with another man's invention! And the money, too ...
why, it might bring you in a million!"
I was obliged to confess I could not understand the Captain.
"Don't you? Haha, but I do! I've not been Lensmand all this time far nothing. No; I've had my suspicions that he wasn't so rich as he pretended. Well, I'll send him a bit of a letter from me, just a line or so--what do you say to that? Hahaha! You leave it to me."
But at this I began to feel uneasy. The Lensmand was too violent all at once; it might well be that the Captain was not to blame in the matter at all, and that the newspaper man had made the mistake himself. I begged the Lensmand to let me write myself.
"And agree to divide the proceeds with that rascal? Never! You leave the whole thing in my hands. And, anyhow, if you were to write yourself, you couldn't set it out properly the way I can."
But I worked on him until at last he agreed that I should write the first letter, and then he should take it up after. I got some of the Lensmand's paper again.
I got no writing done that evening; it had been an exciting day, and my mind was all in a turmoil still. I thought and reckoned it out; for Fruen's sake I would not write directly to the Captain, and risk causing her unpleasantness as well; no, I would send a line to my comrade, Lars Falkenberg, to keep an eye on the machine.
That night I had another visit from the corpse--that miserable old woman in her night-s.h.i.+ft, that would not leave me in peace on account of her thumbnail. I had had a long spell of emotion the day before, so this night she took care to come. Frozen with horror, I saw her come gliding in, stop in the middle of the room, and stretch out her hand. Over against the other wall lay my fellow-woodcutter in his bed, and it was a strange relief to me to hear that he too lay groaning and moving restlessly; at any rate there were two of us to share the danger. I shook my head, to say I had buried the nail in a peaceful spot, and could do no more. But the corpse stood there still. I begged her pardon; but then, suddenly, I was seized with a feeling of annoyance; I grew angry, and told her straight out I'd have no more of her nonsense.
I'd borrowed that nail of hers at a pinch, but I'd done all I could do months ago, and buried it again.... At that she came gliding sideways over to my pillow, trying to get behind me. I flung myself up in bed and gave a shriek.
"What is it?" asked the lad from the other bed.
I rub my eyes and answer I'd been dreaming, that was all.
"Who was it came in just now?" asks the boy.
"I don't know. Was there any one in here?"
"I saw some one going..."
x.x.xI
After a couple of days, I set myself down calmly and loftily to write to Falkenberg. I had a bit of a saw thing I'd left there at vreb, I wrote; it might be a useful thing for owners of timber lands some day, and I proposed to come along and fetch it away shortly. Please keep an eye on it and see it doesn't get damaged.
Yes, I wrote in that gentle style. That was the most dignified way.
And since Falkenberg, of course, would mention it in the kitchen, and perhaps show the letter round, it had to be delicacy itself. But it was not all delicacy and nothing else; I fixed a definite date, to make it serious: I will come for the machine on Monday, 11th December.
I thought to myself: there, that's clear and sound; if the machine's not there that Monday, why, then, something will happen.
I took the letter to the post myself, and stuck a strip of stamps across the envelope as before....
My beautiful ecstasy was still on me. I had received the loveliest letter in the world; here it was in my breast pocket; it was to me.
_Skriv ikke_. No, indeed, but I could come. And then a dash at the end.
There wasn't anything wrong, by any chance, about that underlining the word: as, for instance, meaning to emphasize the whole thing as an order? Ladies were always so fond of underlining all sorts of words, and putting in dashes here, there, and everywhere. But not she; no, not she!
A few days more, and the work at the Lensmand's would be at an end; it fitted in very well, everything worked out nicely; on the 11th I was to be at vreb. And that perhaps not a minute too soon. If the Captain really had any idea of his own about my machine, it would be necessary to act at once. Was a stranger to come stealing my hard-earned million?
Hadn't I toiled for it? I almost began to regret the gentleness of my letter to Falkenberg; I might have made it a good deal sharper; now, perhaps, he would imagine I was too soft to stand up for myself. Why, he might even take it into his head to bear witness against me, and say I hadn't invented the machine at all! Hoho, Master Falkenberg, just try it on! In the first place, 'twill cost you your eternal salvation; and if that's not enough, I'll have you up for perjury before my friend and patron, the Lensmand. And you know what that'll mean.
"Of course you must go," said the Lensmand when I spoke to him about it.
"And just come back here to me with your machine. You must look after your interests, of course; it may be a question of something considerable."
The following day's post brought a piece of news that changed the situation in a moment; there was a letter from Captain Falkenberg himself in the paper, saying it was due to a misunderstanding that the new timber saw had been stated as being of his invention. The apparatus had been designed by a man who had worked on his estate some time back.
As to its value, he would not express any opinion.--Captain Falkenberg.
The Lensmand and I looked at each other.
"Well, what do you say now?" he asked.
"That the Captain, at any rate, is innocent."
"Ho! D'you know what I think?"