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"Ay, it's had to look after itself while I've been out," answered Lars Peter in excuse. "And this trouble with the wife didn't make things better either. Maybe you've heard all about it over there?"
Johannes nodded. "That oughtn't to make any difference to you, though," said he.
That day Lars Peter had to go down to the marsh and dig a ditch, to drain a piece of the land. Johannes got a spade and went with him.
He worked with such a will that Lars Peter had some difficulty in keeping up with him. "'Tis easy to see you're young," said he, "the way you go at it."
"Why don't you ditch the whole and level it out? 'Twould make a good meadow," said Johannes.
Ay, why not? Lars Peter did not know himself. "If only a fellow had some one to work with," said he.
"Do you get any peat here?" asked Johannes once when they were taking a breathing s.p.a.ce.
"No, nothing beyond what we use ourselves; 'tis a hard job to cut it."
"Ay, when you use your feet! But you ought to get a machine to work with a horse; then a couple of men can do ever so many square feet in a day."
Lars Peter became thoughtful. Ideas and advice had been poured into him and he would have liked to go thoroughly through them and digest them one by one. But Johannes gave him no time.
The next minute he was by the clay-pit. There was uncommonly fine material for bricks, he thought.
Ay, Lars Peter knew it all only too well. The first summer he was married, Sorine had made bricks to build the outhouse and it had stood all kinds of weather. But one pair of hands could not do everything.
And thus Johannes went from one thing to the other. He was observant and found ways for everything; there was no end to his plans. Lars Peter had to attend; it was like listening to an old, forgotten melody. Marsh, clay-pit and the rest had said the same year after year, though more slowly; now he had hardly time to follow. It was inspiriting, all at once to see a way out of all difficulties.
"Look here, brother," said he, as they were at dinner, "you put heart into a man again. How'd you like to stay on here? Then we could put the place in order together. There's not much in that roving business after all."
Johannes seemed to like the idea--after all, the highroad was unsatisfactory as a means of livelihood!
During the day they talked it over more closely and agreed how to set about things; they would share as brothers both the work and what it brought in. "But what about the machine?" said Lars Peter.
"That must be returned."
"Oh, never mind that," said Johannes. "The man can't use it; he's ill."
"Ay, but when he gets up again, then he'll have nothing to earn his living; we can't have that on our conscience. I'm going down to the beach tomorrow for a load of herrings, so I'll drive round by Hundested and put it off there. There's sure to be a fisherman who'll take it over with him. I'd really thought of giving up the herring trade; but long ago I bound myself to take a load, and there should be a good catch these days."
At three o'clock next morning Lars Peter was ready in the yard to drive to the fis.h.i.+ng village; at the back of the cart was the wonderful machine. As he was about to start, Johannes came running up, unwashed and only half awake; he had just managed to put on his cap and tie a handkerchief round his neck. "I think I'll go with you," he said with a yawn.
Lars Peter thought for a minute--it came as a surprise to him. "Very well, just as you like," said he at last, making room. He had reckoned on his brother beginning the ditching today; there was so little water in the meadow now.
"Do me good to get out a bit!" said Johannes as he clambered into the cart.
Well--yes--but he had only just come in. "Don't you want an overcoat?" asked Lars Peter. "There's an old one of mine you can have."
"Oh, never mind--I can turn up my collar."
The sun was just rising; there was a white haze on the sh.o.r.es of the lake, hanging like a veil over the rushes. In the green fields dewdrops were caught by millions in the spiders' webs, sparkling like diamonds in the first rays of suns.h.i.+ne.
Lars Peter saw it all, and perhaps it was this which turned his mind; at least, today, he thought the Crow's Nest was a good and pretty little place; it would be a sin to leave it. He had found out all he wanted to know about his relations and home and what had happened to every one in the past years and his longing for home had vanished; now he would prefer to stay where he was. "Just you be thankful that you're away from it all!" Johannes had said. And he was right--it wasn't worth while moving to go back to the quarreling and jealousies of relations. As a matter of fact there was no inducement to leave: no sense in chasing your luck like a fool, better try to keep what there was.
Lars Peter could not understand what had happened to him--everything looked so different today. It was as if his eyes had been rubbed with some wonderful ointment; even the meager lands of the Crow's Nest looked beautiful and promising. A new day had dawned for him and his home.
"'Tis a glorious morning," said he, turning towards Johannes.
Johannes did not answer. He had drawn his cap down over his eyes and gone to sleep. He looked somewhat dejected and his mouth hung loosely as if he had been drinking. It was extraordinary how he resembled his mother! Lars Peter promised himself that he would take good care of him.
CHAPTER VII
THE SAUSAGE-MAKER
Nothing was done to the land round the Crow's Nest this time; it was a fateful moment when Johannes, instead of taking his spade and beginning the ditching, felt inclined to go with his brother carting herrings. On one of the farms where they went to trade, a still-born calf lay outside the barn; Johannes caught sight of it at once. With one jump he was out of the cart and beside it.
"What do you reckon to do with it?" asked he, turning it over with his foot.
"Bury it, of course," answered the farm-lad.
"Don't folks sell dead animals in these parts?" asked Johannes when they were in the cart again.
"Why, who could they sell them to?" answered Lars Peter.
"The Lord preserve me, you're far behind the times. D'you know what, I've a good mind to settle down here as a cattle-dealer."
"And buy up all the still-born calves?" Lars Peter laughed.
"Not just that. But it's not a bad idea, all the same; the old butcher at home often made ten to fifteen crowns out of a calf like that."
"I thought we were going to start in earnest at home," said Lars Peter.
"We'll do that too, but we shall want money! Your trade took up all your time, so everything was left to look after itself, but cattle-dealing's another thing. A hundred crowns a day's easily earned, if you're lucky. Let me drive round once a week, and I'll promise it'll give us enough to live on. And then we've the rest of the week to work on the land."
"Sounds all right," said Lars Peter hesitatingly. "There's trader's blood in you too, I suppose?"
"You may be sure of that, I've often earned hundreds of crowns for my master at home in Knarreby."
"But how'd you begin?" said Peter. "I've got fifty crowns at the most, and that's not much to buy cattle with. It's put by for rent and taxes, and really oughtn't to be touched."
"Let me have it, and I'll see to the rest," said Johannes confidently.
The very next day he set off in the cart, with the whole of Lars Peter's savings in his pocket. He was away for two days, which was not rea.s.suring in itself. Perhaps he had got into bad company, and had the money stolen from him--or frittered it away in poor trade.
The waiting began to seem endless to Lars Peter. Then at last Johannes returned, with a full load and singing at the top of his voice. To the back of the cart was tied an old half-dead horse, so far gone it could hardly move.
"Well, you seem to have bought something young!" shouted Lars Peter scoffingly. "What've you got under the sacks and hay?"
Johannes drove the cart into the porch, closed the gates, and began to unload. A dead calf, a half-rotten pig and another calf just alive. He had bought them on the neighboring farms, and had still some money left.