<h2>VIII</h2>
<p>Oh! what a pace she was driving at! The farmer whipped up the gray stallion,
and sat looking steadily out over the fields, as if he had no suspicion that
any one was following him; but his wife certainly did not mind. She whipped the
bay as hard as she could, and did not care who saw her.</p>
<p>And it was in broad daylight that they were playing the fool like this on the
high-road, instead of keeping their quarrels within four walls as decent people
did! It was true enough that gentle folks had no feeling of shame in them!</p>
<p>Then she called out and stood up in the trap to beat the horse—with the
handle even! Couldn’t she let him drive out in peace to his fair charmer,
whoever she was, and make it warm for him when he came home? How could she do
the same thing over and over again for twenty years? Really women were
persevering creatures!</p>
<p>And how <i>he</i> could be bothered! Having everlasting disturbances at home
for the sake of some hotel landlady or some other woman, who could not be so
very different to be with than his own wife! It would take a long-suffering
nature to be a brute in that way; but that must be what they call love,
properly speaking.</p>
<p>The threshing-machine had come to a standstill, and the people at Stone Farm
were hanging out of the doors and windows, enjoying it royally. It was a race,
and a sight for the gods to see the bay mare gaining upon the stallion; why, it
was like having two Sundays in one week! Lasse had come round the corner, and
was following the mad race, his hand shading his eyes. Never had he known such
a woman; Bengta was a perfect lamb compared to her! The farmer at Kaase Farm,
who was standing at his gate when they dashed past, was secretly of the same
opinion; and the workers in the fields dropped their implements, stared and
were scandalized at the sight.</p>
<p>At last, for very shame, he had to stop and turn round. She crawled over into
his carriage, and the bay followed quietly with her empty vehicle. She put her
arm about his shoulder, and looked happy and triumphant, exactly like the
district policeman when he has had a successful chase; but he looked like a
criminal of the worst kind. In this way they came driving back to the farm.</p>
<p class="p2">
One day Kalle came to borrow ten krones and to invite Lasse and Pelle to the
christening-party on the following Sunday. Lasse, with some difficulty,
obtained the money from the bailiff up in the office, but to the invitation
they had to say “No, thank you,” hard though it was; it was quite
out of the question for them to get off again. Another day the head man had
disappeared. He had gone in the night, and had taken his big chest with him, so
some one must have helped him; but the other men in the room swore solemnly
that they had noticed nothing, and the bailiff, fume as he might, was obliged
to give up the attempt to solve the mystery.</p>
<p>One or two things of this kind happened that made a stir for a day or two, but
with these exceptions the winter was hard to get through. Darkness ruled for
the greater part of the twenty-four hours, and it was never quite light in the
corners. The cold, too, was hard to bear, except when you were in the
comfortable stable. In there it was always warm, and Pelle was not afraid of
going about in the thickest darkness. In the servants’ room they sat
moping through the long evenings without anything to occupy themselves with.
They took very little notice of the girls, but sat playing cards for gin, or
telling horrible stories that made it a most venturesome thing to run across
the yard down to the stable when you had to go to bed.</p>
<p>Per Olsen, on account of his good behavior, was raised to the position of head
man when the other ran away. Lasse and Pelle were glad of this, for he took
their part when they were put upon by any one. He had become a decent fellow in
every respect, hardly ever touched spirits, and kept his clothes in good order.
He was a little too quiet even for the old day-laborers of the farm and their
wives; but they knew the reason of it and liked him because he took the part of
the weak and because of the fate that hung over him. They said he was always
listening; and when he seemed to be listening within to the unknown, they
avoided as far as possible disturbing him.</p>
<p>“You’ll see he’ll free himself; the Evil One’ll have no
claim upon him,” was the opinion of both Lasse and the laborers’
wives when they discussed Per Olsen’s prospects at the Sunday milking.
“There are some people that even the Almighty can’t find anything
to blame for.”</p>
<p>Pelle listened to this, and tried every day to peep at the scar on Per
Olsen’s thumb. It would surely disappear when God removed his judgment!</p>
<p>During most of the winter Pelle drove the horse for the threshing- machine. All
day he trotted round upon the horse-way outside the farm, over his wooden shoes
in trodden-down snow and manure. It was the most intolerable occupation that
life had yet offered him. He could not even carve, it was too cold for his
fingers; and he felt lonely. As a herd-boy he was his own master, and a
thousand things called to him; but here he had to go round and round behind a
bar, always round. His one diversion was to keep count of the times he drove
round, but that was a fatiguing employment and made you even duller than the
everlasting going round, and you could not leave off. Time held nothing of
interest, and short as it was the day seemed endless.</p>
<p>As a rule, Pelle awoke happy, but now every morning when he woke he was weary
of everything; it was to be that everlasting trudging round behind the bar.
After a time doing this for about an hour used to make him fall into a state of
half-sleep. The condition came of itself, and he longed for it before it came.
It was a kind of vacuity, in which he wished for nothing and took no interest
in anything, but only staggered along mechanically at the back of the bar. The
machine buzzed unceasingly, and helped to maintain the condition; the dust kept
pouring out at the window, and the time passed imperceptibly. Generally now
dinner or evening surprised him, and sometimes it seemed to him that the horses
had only just been harnessed when some one came out to help him in with them.
He had arrived at the condition of torpor that is the only mercy that life
vouchsafes to condemned prisoners and people who spend their lives beside a
machine. But there was a sleepiness about him even in his free time; he was not
so lively and eager to know about everything; Father Lasse missed his
innumerable questions and little devices.</p>
<p>Now and again he was roused for a moment out of his condition by the appearance
at the window of a black, perspiring face, that swore at him because he was not
driving evenly. He knew then that Long Ole had taken the place of Per Olsen,
whose business it was to feed the machine. It sometimes happened, too, that the
lash of the whip caught on the axle and wound round it, so that the whole thing
had to be stopped and drawn backward; and that day he did not fall into a doze
again.</p>
<p>In March the larks appeared and brought a little life. Snow still lay in the
hollows, but their singing reminded Pelle warmly of summer and grazing cattle.
And one day he was wakened in his tramp round and round by seeing a starling on
the roof of the house, whistling and preening its feathers in delight. On that
day the sun shone brightly, and all heaviness was gone from the air; but the
sea was still a pale gray down there.</p>
<p>Pelle began to be a human being again. It was spring, and then, too, in a
couple of days the threshing would be finished. But after all, the chief thing
was that waistcoat-pocket of his; that was enough to put life into its owner.
He ran round in a trot behind the bar; he had to drive quickly now in order to
get done, for every one else was in the middle of spring ploughing already.
When he pressed his hand against his chest, he could distinctly feel the paper
it was wrapped in. For it was still there, wasn’t it? It would not do to
open the paper and look; he must find out by squeezing.</p>
<p>Pelle had become the owner of fifty öres—a perfectly genuine fifty-öre
piece. It was the first time he had ever possessed anything more than two and
one öre pieces, and he had earned it by his own cleverness.</p>
<p>It was on Sunday, when the men had had a visit from some quarrymen, and one of
them had hit upon the idea of sending for some birch-fat to have with their
dram. Pelle was to run to the village shop for it, and he was given a
half-krone and injunctions to go in the back way, as it was Sunday. Pelle had
not forgotten his experience at Christmas, and kept watch upon their faces.
They were all doing their best to smooth them out and busy themselves with one
thing and another; and Gustav, who gave him the money, kept turning his face
away and looking at something out in the yard.</p>
<p>When he stated his errand, the shopman’s wife broke into a laugh.
“I say, don’t you know better than that?” she exclaimed.
“Why, wasn’t it you who fetched the handle-turner too? You’ve
all found that very useful, haven’t you?”</p>
<p>Pelle turned crimson. “I thought they were making fun of me, but I
didn’t dare say no,” he said in a low voice.</p>
<p>“No, one has to play the fool sometimes, whether one is it or not,”
said the woman.</p>
<p>“What is birch-fat, then?” asked Pelle.</p>
<p>“Why, my gracious! You must have had it many a time, you little imp! But
it shows how often you have to put up with things you don’t know the name
of.”</p>
<p>A light dawned upon Pelle. “Does it mean a thrashing with a
birch-rod?”</p>
<p>“Didn’t I say you knew it?”</p>
<p>“No, I’ve only had it with a whip—on my legs.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, you needn’t mind that; the one may be just as good as
the other. But now sit down and drink a cup of coffee while I wrap up the
article for them.” She pushed a cup of coffee with brown sugar toward
him, and began ladling out soft soap on to a piece of paper.
“Here,” she said. “You give them that: it’s the best
birch-fat. And you can keep the money yourself.”</p>
<p>Pelle was not courageous enough for this arrangement.</p>
<p>“Very well, then,” she said. “I’ll keep the money for
you. They shan’t make fools of us both. And then you can get it yourself.
But now you must put on a bold face.”</p>
<p>Pelle did put on a bold face, but he was decidedly nervous. The men swore at
the loss of the half-krone, and called him the “greatest idiot upon
God’s green earth”; but he had the satisfaction of knowing that
that was because he had not been stupid enough. And the half-krone was his!</p>
<p>A hundred times a day he felt it without wearing it out. Here at last was
something the possession of which did not rob it of its lustre. There was no
end to the purchases he made with it, now for Lasse, now for himself. He bought
the dearest things, and when he lingered long enough over one purchase and was
satiated with the possession of it, he set about buying something else. And all
the while he kept the coin. At times he would be suddenly seized with an insane
fear that the money was gone; and then when he felt it, he was doubly happy.</p>
<p>Pelle had suddenly become a capitalist, and by his own cleverness; and he made
the most of his capital. He had already obtained every desirable thing that he
knew of—he had it all, at any rate, in hand; and gradually as new things
made their appearance in his world, he secured for himself the right to their
purchase. Lasse was the only person who knew about his wealth, and he had
reluctantly to allow himself to be drawn into the wildest of speculations.</p>
<p class="p2">
He could hear by the sound that there was something wrong with the machine. The
horses heard it too, and stopped even before some one cried “Stop!”
Then one after another came the shouts: “Stop! Drive on! Stop! On again!
Stop! Pull!” And Pelle pulled the bar back, drove on and pulled until the
whole thing whizzed again. Then he knew that it was Long Ole feeding the
machine while Per Olsen measured the grain: Ole was a duffer at feeding.</p>
<p>It was going smoothly again, and Pelle was keeping an eye on the corner by the
cow-stable. When Lasse made his appearance there, and patted his stomach, it
meant that it was nearly dinner-time.</p>
<p>Something stopped the bar, the horses had to pull hard, and with a jerk it
cleared the invisible hindrance. There was a cry from the inside of the
threshing-barn, and the sound of many voices shouting “Stop!” The
horses stopped dead, and Pelle had to seize the bar to prevent it swinging
forward against their legs. It was some time before any one came out and took
the horses in, so that Pelle could go into the barn and see what was the
matter.</p>
<p>He found Long Ole walking about and writhing over one of his hands. His blouse
was wrapped about it, but the blood was dripping through on to the floor of the
barn. He was bending forward and stumbling along, throwing his body from side
to side and talking incoherently. The girls, pale and frightened, were standing
gazing at him while the men were quarreling as to what was the best thing to do
to stop the flow of blood, and one of them came sliding down from the loft with
a handful of cobwebs.</p>
<p>Pelle went and peered into the machine to find out what there was so voracious
about it. Between two of the teeth lay something like a peg, and when he moved
the roller, the greater part of a finger dropped down on to the barn floor. He
picked it up among some chaff, and took it to the others: it was a thumb! When
Long Ole saw it, he fainted; it could hardly be wondered at, seeing that he was
maimed for life. But Per Olsen had to own that he had left the machine at a
fortunate moment.</p>
<p>There was no more threshing done that day. In the afternoon Pelle played in the
stable, for he had nothing to do. While he played, he suggested plans for their
future to his father: they were engrossed in it.</p>
<p>“Then we’ll go to America, and dig for gold!”</p>
<p>“Ye-es, that wouldn’t be a bad thing at all. But it would take a
good many more half-krones to make that journey.”</p>
<p>“Then we can set up as stone-masons.”</p>
<p>Lasse stood still in the middle of the foddering-passage, and pondered with
bent head. He was exceedingly dissatisfied with their position; there were two
of them toiling to earn a hundred krones, and they could not make ends meet.
There was never any liberty either; they were simply slaves. By himself he
never got any farther than being discontented and disappointed with everything;
he was too old. The mere search for ways to something new was insuperable
labor, and everything looked so hopeless. But Pelle was restless, and whenever
he was dissatisfied with anything, made plans by the score, some of the
wildest, and some fairly sensible; and the old man was carried away by them.</p>
<p>“We might go to the town and work too,” said Lasse meditatively.
“They earn one bright krone after another in there. But what’s to
be done with you? You’re too little to use a tool.”</p>
<p>This stubborn fact put a stop for the moment to Pelle’s plans; but then
his courage rose again. “I can quite well go with you to the town,”
he said. “For I shall——” He nodded significantly.</p>
<p>“What?” asked Lasse, with interest.</p>
<p>“Well, perhaps I’ll go down to the harbor and be doing nothing, and
a little girl’ll fall into the water and I shall save her. But the little
girl will be a gentleman’s daughter, and so——” Pelle
left the rest to Lasse’s imagination.</p>
<p>“Then you’d have to learn to swim first,” said Lasse gravely.
“Or you’d only be drowned.”</p>
<p>Screams were heard from the men’s bedroom. It was Long Ole. The doctor
had come and was busy with his maimed hand. “Just run across and find out
what’ll happen to it!” said Lasse. “Nobody’ll pay any
attention to you at such a time, if you make yourself small.”</p>
<p>In a little while Pelle came back and reported that three fingers were quite
crushed and hanging in rags, and the doctor had cut them off.</p>
<p>“Was it these three?” asked Lasse, anxiously, holding up his thumb,
forefinger, and middle finger. Truth to tell, Pelle had seen nothing, but his
imagination ran away with him.</p>
<p>“Yes, it was his swearing-fingers,” he said, nodding emphatically.</p>
<p>“Then Per Olsen is set free,” said Lasse, heaving a deep sigh.
“What a <i>good</i> thing it has been—quite providential!”</p>
<p>That was Pelle’s opinion too.</p>
<p>The farmer himself drove the doctor home, and a little while after he had gone,
Pelle was sent for, to go on an errand for the mistress to the village-shop.</p>
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