<h2>XXIII</h2>
<p>On Sunday morning, between watering and midday feed, Lasse and Pelle ascended
the high stone steps. They took off their wooden shoes in the passage, and
stood and shook themselves outside the door of the office; their gray
stocking-feet were full of chaff and earth. Lasse raised his hand to knock, but
drew it back. “Have you wiped your nose properly?” he asked in a
whisper, with a look of anxiety on his face. Pelle performed the operation once
more, and gave a final polish with the sleeve of his blouse.</p>
<p>Lasse lifted his hand again; he looked greatly oppressed. “You might keep
quiet then!” he said irritably to Pelle, who was standing as still as a
mouse. Lasse’s knuckles were poised in the air two or three times before
they fell upon the door; and then he stood with his forehead close to the panel
and listened. “There’s no one there,” he whispered
irresolutely.</p>
<p>“Just go in!” exclaimed Pelle. “We can’t stand here all
day.”</p>
<p>“Then you can go first, if you think you know better how to
behave!” said Lasse, offended.</p>
<p>Pelle quickly opened the door and went in. There was no one in the office, but
the door was open into the drawing-room, and the sound of Kongstrup’s
comfortable breathing came thence.</p>
<p>“Who’s there?” he asked.</p>
<p>“It’s Lasse and Pelle,” answered Lasse in a voice that did
not sound altogether brave.</p>
<p>“Will you come in here?”</p>
<p>Kongstrup was lying on the sofa reading a magazine, and on the table beside him
stood a pile of old magazines and a plateful of little cakes. He did not raise
his eyes from his book, not even while his hand went out to the plate for
something to put in his mouth. He lay nibbling and swallowing while he read,
and never looked at Lasse and Pelle, or asked them what they wanted, or said
anything to give them a start. It was like being sent out to plough without
knowing where. He must have been in the middle of something very exciting.</p>
<p>“Well, what do you want?” asked Kongstrup at last in slow tones.</p>
<p>“Well—well, the master must excuse us for coming like this about
something that doesn’t concern the farm; but as matters now stand,
we’ve no one else to go to, and so I said to the laddie: ‘Master
won’t be angry, I’m sure, for he’s many a time been kind to
us poor beggars—and that.’ Now it’s so in this world that
even if you’re a poor soul that’s only fit to do others’
dirty work, the Almighty’s nevertheless given you a father’s heart,
and it hurts you to see the father’s sin standing in the son’s
way.”</p>
<p>Lasse came to a standstill. He had thought it all out beforehand, and so
arranged it that it should lead up, in a shrewd, dignified way, to the matter
itself. But now it was all in a muddle like a slattern’s
pocket-handkerchief, and the farmer did not look as if he had understood a
single word of it. He lay there, taking a cake now and then, and looking
helplessly toward the door.</p>
<p>“It sometimes happens too, that a man gets tired of the single
state,” began Lasse once more, but at once gave up trying to go on. No
matter how he began, he went round and round the thing and got no hold
anywhere! And now Kongstrup began to read again. A tiny question from him might
have led to the very middle of it; but he only filled his mouth full and began
munching quite hard.</p>
<p>Lasse was outwardly disheartened and inwardly angry, as he stood there and
prepared to go. Pelle was staring about at the pictures and the old mahogany
furniture, making up his mind about each thing.</p>
<p>Suddenly energetic steps sounded through the rooms; the ear could follow their
course right up from the kitchen. Kongstrup’s eyes brightened, and Lasse
straightened himself up.</p>
<p>“Is that you two?” said Fru Kongstrup in her decided way that
indicated the manager. “But do sit down! Why didn’t you offer them
a seat, old man?”</p>
<p>Lasse and Pelle found seats, and the mistress seated herself beside her
husband, with her arm leaning upon his pillow. “How are you getting on,
Kongstrup? Have you been resting?” she asked sympathetically, patting his
shoulder. Kongstrup gave a little grunt, that might have meant yes, or no, or
nothing at all.</p>
<p>“And what about you two? Are you in need of money?”</p>
<p>“No, it’s the lad. He’s to be dismissed from the
confirmation- class,” answered Lasse simply. With the mistress you
couldn’t help being decided.</p>
<p>“Are you to be dismissed?” she exclaimed, looking at Pelle as at an
old acquaintance. “Then what have you been doing?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I kicked the parson’s son.”</p>
<p>“And what did you do that for?”</p>
<p>“Because he wouldn’t fight, but threw himself down.”</p>
<p>Fru Kongstrup laughed and nudged her husband. “Yes, of course. But what
had he done to you?”</p>
<p>“He’d said bad things about Father Lasse.”</p>
<p>“What were the things?”</p>
<p>Pelle looked hard at her; she meant to get to the bottom of everything.
“I won’t tell you!” he said firmly.</p>
<p>“Oh, very well! But then we can’t do anything about it
either.”</p>
<p>“I may just as well tell you,” Lasse interrupted. “He called
me Madam Olsen’s concubine—from the Bible story, I suppose.”</p>
<p>Kongstrup tried to suppress a chuckle, as if some one had whispered a coarse
joke in his ear, and he could not help it. The mistress herself was serious
enough.</p>
<p>“I don’t think I understand,” she said, and laid a repressing
hand upon her husband’s arm. “Lasse must explain.”</p>
<p>“It’s because I was engaged to Madam Olsen in the village, who
every one thought was a widow; and then her husband came home the other day.
And so they’ve given me that nickname round about, I suppose.”</p>
<p>Kongstrup began his suppressed laughter again, and Lasse blinked in distress at
it.</p>
<p>“Help yourselves to a cake!” said Fru Kongstrup in a very loud
voice, pushing the plate toward them. This silenced Kongstrup, and he lay and
watched their assault upon the cake-plate with an attentive eye.</p>
<p>Fru Kongstrup sat tapping the table with her middle finger while they ate.
“So that good boy Pelle got angry and kicked out, did he?” she said
suddenly, her eyes flashing.</p>
<p>“Yes, that’s what he never ought to have done!” answered
Lasse plaintively.</p>
<p>Fru Kongstrup fixed her eyes upon him.</p>
<p>“No, for all that the poorer birds are for is to be pecked at! Well, I
prefer the bird that pecks back again and defends its nest, no matter how poor
it is. Well, well, we shall see! And is that boy going to be confirmed? Why, of
course! To think that I should be so forgetful! Then we must begin to think
about his clothes.”</p>
<p class="p2">
“That’s two troubles got rid of!” said Lasse when they went
down to the stable again. “And did you notice how nicely I let her know
that you were going to be confirmed? It was almost as if she’d found it
out for herself. Now you’ll see, you’ll be as fine as a shop-boy in
your clothes; people like the master and mistress know what’s needed when
once they’ve opened their purse. Well, they got the whole truth straight,
but confound it! they’re no more than human beings. It’s always
best to speak out straight.” Lasse could not forget how well it had
turned out.</p>
<p>Pelle let the old man boast. “Do you think I shall get leather shoes of
them too?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Yes, of course you will! And I shouldn’t wonder if they made a
confirmation-party for you too. I say <i>they</i>, but it’s her
that’s doing it all, and we may be thankful for that. Did you notice that
she said <i>we</i>—<i>we</i> shall, and so on—always? It’s
nice of her, for he only lies there and eats and leaves everything to her. But
what a good time he has! I think she’d go through fire to please him; but
upon my word, she’s master there. Well, well, I suppose we oughtn’t
to speak evil of any one; to you she’s like your own mother!”</p>
<p>Fru Kongstrup said nothing about the result of her drive to the parson; it was
not her way to talk about things afterward. But Lasse and Pelle once more trod
the earth with a feeling of security; when she took up a matter, it was as good
as arranged.</p>
<p>One morning later in the week, the tailor came limping in with his scissors,
tape-measure, and pressing-iron, and Pelle had to go down to the
servants’ room, and was measured in every direction as if he had been a
prize animal. Up to the present, he had always had his clothes made by
guess-work. It was something new to have itinerant artisans at Stone Farm;
since Kongstrup had come into power, neither shoemaker nor tailor had ever set
foot in the servants’ room. This was a return to the good old
farm-customs, and placed Stone Farm once more on a footing with the other
farms. The people enjoyed it, and as often as they could went down into the
servants’ room for a change of air and to hear one of the tailor’s
yarns. “It’s the mistress who’s at the head of things
now!” they said to one another. There was good peasant blood in her
hands, and she brought things back into the good old ways. Pelle walked into
the servants’ room like a gentleman; he was fitted several times a day.</p>
<p>He was fitted for two whole suits, one of which was for Rud, who was to be
confirmed too. It would probably be the last thing that Rud and his mother
would get at the farm, for Fru Kongstrup had carried her point, and they were
to leave the cottage in May. They would never venture to set foot again in
Stone Farm. Fru Kongstrup herself saw that they received what they were to
have, but she did not give money if she could help it.</p>
<p>Pelle and Rud were never together now, and they seldom went to the parson
together. It was Pelle who had drawn back, as he had grown tired of being on
the watch for Rud’s continual little lies and treacheries. Pelle was
taller and stronger than Rud, and his nature —perhaps because of his
physical superiority—had taken more open ways. In ability to master a
task or learn it by heart, Rud was also the inferior; but on the other hand he
could bewilder Pelle and the other boys, if he only got a hold with his
practical common sense.</p>
<p>On the great day itself, Karl Johan drove Pelle and Lasse in the little
one-horse carriage. “We’re fine folk to-day!” said Lasse,
with a beaming face. He was quite confused, although he had not tasted anything
strong. There was a bottle of gin lying in the chest to treat the men with when
the sacred ceremony was over; but Lasse was not the man to drink anything
before he went to church. Pelle had not <i>touched</i> food; God’s Word
would take best effect in that condition.</p>
<p>Pelle was radiant too, in spite of his hunger. He was in brand-new twill, so
new that it crackled every time he moved. On his feet he wore elastic-sided
shoes that had once belonged to Kongstrup himself. They were too large, but
“there’s no difficulty with a sausage that’s too long,”
as Lasse said. He put in thick soles and paper in the toes, and Pelle put on
two pairs of stockings; and then the shoes fitted as if they had been cast for
his foot. On his head he wore a blue cap that he had chosen himself down at the
shop. It allowed room for growing, and rested on his ears, which, for the
occasion, were as red as two roses. Round the cap was a broad ribbon in which
were woven rakes, scythes, and flails, interlaced with sheaves all the way
round.</p>
<p>“It’s a good thing you came,” said Pelle, as they drove up to
the church, and found themselves among so many people. Lasse had almost had to
give up thought of coming, for the man who was going to look after the animals
while he was away had to go off at the last moment for the veterinary surgeon;
but Karna came and offered to water and give the midday feed, although neither
could truthfully say that they had behaved as they ought to have done to her.</p>
<p>“Have you got that thing now?” whispered Lasse, when they were
inside the church. Pelle felt in his pocket and nodded; the little round piece
of lignum-vitae that was to carry him over the difficulties of the day lay
there. “Then just answer loud and straight out,” whispered Lasse,
as he slipped into a pew in the background.</p>
<p>Pelle did answer straight out, and to Lasse his voice sounded really well
through the spacious church. And the parson did absolutely nothing to revenge
himself, but treated Pelle exactly as he did the others. At the most solemn
part of the ceremony, Lasse thought of Karna, and how touching her devotion
was. He scolded himself in an undertone, and made a solemn vow. She should not
sigh any longer in vain.</p>
<p>For a whole month indeed, Lasse’s thoughts had been occupied with Karna,
now favorably, now unfavorably; but at this solemn moment when Pelle was just
taking the great step into the future, and Lasse’s feelings were touched
in so many ways, the thought of Karna’s devotion broke over him as
something sad, like a song of slighted affection that at last, at last has
justice done to it.</p>
<p>Lasse shook hands with Pelle. “Good luck and a blessing!” he said
in a trembling voice. The wish also embraced his own vow and he had some
difficulty in keeping silence respecting his determination, he was so moved.
The words were heard on all sides, and Pelle went round and shook hands with
his comrades. Then they drove home.</p>
<p>“It all went uncommonly well for you to-day,” said Lasse proudly;
“and now you’re a man, you know.”</p>
<p>“Yes, now you must begin to look about for a sweetheart,” said Karl
Johan. Pelle only laughed.</p>
<p>In the afternoon they had a holiday. Pelle had first to go up to his master and
mistress to thank them for his clothes and receive their congratulations. Fru
Kongstrup gave him red-currant wine and cake, and the farmer gave him a
two-krone piece.</p>
<p>Then they went up to Kalle’s by the quarry. Pelle was to exhibit himself
in his new clothes, and say good-bye to them; there was only a fortnight to May
Day. Lasse was going to take the opportunity of secretly obtaining information
concerning a house that was for sale on the heath.</p>
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