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"It's nearly full--only four days more. Put one in for Tutti."
As the setting sun streamed into the long room, Tutti crept in, holding Father Giacomo's hand; carrying the broken _fiasco_.
Tuttu awoke from a restless sleep as they entered, and smiled with a faint reflection of his old happy laugh. "That's right, Tutti. You _have_ been good, haven't you?"
"Yes," quavered Tutti, lifting his terrified, tear-stained face to his brother.
"Put your bean in then, Tutti, and give me mine. It's getting so late, it's almost night-time."
Tutti held out the bean with a trembling hand, and as it dropped into the old bottle, little Tuttu gave a quiet sigh.
"It only wants four more," he said happily.
Only four more! But Tuttu might never put them in. That night he started on a long, long journey, and as the old grandmother with choking sobs placed the broken bottle on a shelf among her treasures, she turned to Tutti who was lying, worn out with grief, upon the doorstep.
"Come, my Tutti," she said, "there are only us two now. We must try and be very good to each other."
Years afterwards, Tutti, coming home on leave--for he had clung to his childish idea of being a soldier--found the broken _fiasco_ in the corner where his grandmother had hidden it; and taking out the beans that had been lying there so long, he carried them to a little grave with a small white cross at the head of it.
"Dear Tuttu! He would like to have these growing round him," he thought, and planted them carefully amongst the flowers and gra.s.ses.
Grandmother Maddalena was too old to move out of the house now, but Father Giacomo watered the beans lovingly, and in the soft spring air they grew rapidly, so that they soon formed a beautiful tangle, hiding the cross and even the name that still stood there clearly in black letters
"TUTTU."
THE STONE-MAIDEN.
Atven was the son of a fisherman, and lived with his father on a flat sandy coast far away in the North-land.
Great rocks strewed the sh.o.r.e about their hut, and the child had often been told how, long, long ago, the giant Thor fought single-handed against a s.h.i.+pload of wild men who attempted to land in the little bay; and drove them off--killing some, and changing others into the wonderful stones that remained there to that day.
The country people called them "Thor's b.a.l.l.s;" and Atven often wandered about amongst them, trying to find likenesses to the old warriors in their weather-worn surfaces; and peering into every hole and cranny--half dreading, half hoping to see a stone hand stretched out to him from the misty shadows of the past.
Here and there, a row of smaller boulders lay half sunk in the sand, with only their rounded tops, covered with long brown seaweed, appearing above the surface.
These, Atven decided, must be the heads of the ancient Nors.e.m.e.n, and further on stood their huge mis-shapen bodies, twisted into every imaginable form, and covered by myriads of sh.e.l.l-fish, that clung to their grey sides like suits of s.h.i.+ning armour.
Atven was often lonely; for he had no brothers or sisters, and his mother had died many years before. He was a shy, wild boy--more at home with the sea birds that flew about the lonely sh.o.r.e, than with the children he met sometimes as he wandered about the country; but in spite of his shyness he had friends who loved him everywhere he went.
The house dogs on every farm knew his step, and ran out to greet him; the horses rubbed their noses softly upon his homespun tunic; the birds cl.u.s.tered on his shoulders; the cats came purring up, and the oxen lowed and shook their bells as soon as they caught sight of him.
The very hens cackled loudly for joy--and Atven would caress them all with his brown hand, and had a kind word for every one of them.
All the short Northern summer, Atven spent his evenings in searching about amongst "Thor's b.a.l.l.s" for traces of the warriors of the old legend; and one night, in the soft clearness of the twilight, he came upon something that rewarded him for all his patient perseverance.
Lifting a ma.s.s of seaweed that had completely covered one of the larger rocks, he saw before him the graceful form of a little Stone-maiden!
There she lay, as though quietly sleeping, her long dress falling in straight folds to her feet, her rippled hair spreading about her. One small hand grasped a chain upon her neck, the other was embedded in the rock on which she was lying.
Atven was so astonished that he stared at the child-figure as if turned into a statue himself.
Then he realized that his long search had been rewarded, and he fell on his knees and prayed that the Stone-maiden might be released from her prison, and given to him to be a little playfellow.
As soon as it was daylight the next morning, he started off to ask the advice of his one friend, the old Priest of Adgard.
The day was fine, with a crisp northern air, and a bright sun that danced on the long stretches of sandy gra.s.s, and on the swaying boughs of the fir trees.
Atven's heart beat hopefully as he neared the neat wooden house in which the old Priest lived.
Father Johannes welcomed him kindly, as he always did; and listened attentively whilst Atven told his story.
"It must have consideration, my child," he said. "I will come down to the sh.o.r.e to-morrow--perhaps I may be able to think of something."
Atven took up his cap humbly, and started on his homeward journey.
As he threaded his way beneath the shadows of the pine-trees, the sun's fingers darted through the branches and drew a golden pattern on the mossy ground under his feet; the mosquitoes hummed drowsily, the air was full of soft summer warmth and brightness--but Atven's thoughts were far away with the ancient legend and the Stone-maiden.
How had she come to be amongst the s.h.i.+pload of "wild-men" in the misty ages when Thor yet walked the earth? Had she a father and mother who loved her, and perhaps brothers and sisters--and how long had she been sleeping so quietly in the arms of the great rock?
It was a strange cradle, with only the sea to sing her lullaby, and wash her lovingly, like a tender mother!
Atven hurried on; and as he peered before him with sun-dazzled eyes, he thought he saw a figure flitting in and out between the brown tree stems.
It was a small, light figure, with a strange kind of loose dress, and long floating hair of a beautiful gold colour. It glided along so rapidly that Atven had some difficulty in keeping pace with it.
Every now and again it seemed to be beckoning to him with one little hand; and at last as he ran faster and faster, it suddenly turned its head, and he saw the face of a beautiful young woman. Her brown eyes were soft and clear, and her cheeks tinted with a colour so delicate, it reminded Atven of the little pink sh.e.l.ls he sometimes found after a storm upon the sea-sh.o.r.e.
"Atven! Atven!" she murmured, "You have found my child. Give her life!
Give her life!"
"Tell me what I am to do!" cried Atven, and stretched out his hands towards the beautiful young woman; but at that moment she reached the sh.o.r.e, and gliding between the boulders, disappeared amongst their dark shadows.
Atven threw himself down beside the rock on which the Stone-maiden lay sleeping. He grieved for her so much that tears rolled slowly down his cheeks, and as they touched the stone, the great boulder shook and crumbled, and a shudder pa.s.sed over the figure of the Stone-maiden.
She seemed to Atven to sigh gently, and half open her eyes; but in a moment they closed again; the rock settled into its place, and everything was motionless.
"To-morrow! To-morrow!" he said to himself, "When Father Johannes comes, he will help me."
Early next morning the old Priest knocked at the door of the fisherman's hut. He had started at daybreak, for he knew that Atven would be anxiously awaiting him.
They went down together to the sh.o.r.e; and when Father Johannes saw the figure of the sleeping child, he took out of his bark basket, a little jar of water from the Church Well, and sprinkled it over her.
The Stone-maiden stirred and opened her eyes. She raised her hands, breathed gently, and lifting her head, gazed at the old Priest and the boy with wistful brown eyes, like those of the figure Atven had met in the forest.
"Where is my father? Where am I?" she asked, in a low soft voice, as she rose up from the rock, and shook out the folds of her long dress.
Father Johannes took her hand, and gently repeated the old legend; while the Stone-maiden listened with wide-open eyes.