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"You don't say so."
"And no spectacles."
"And when he walks, he shakes the planks."
"And here am I in bed."
These last words gave me a pang.
"G.o.d will help," mother consoled him.
"Only she--she--," sighed my mother, and glanced toward my box, "she is growing taller and taller, do you see?"
"Of course, I see!"
"And a face--bright as the sun."
There is a silence.
"Sarah'le, we are not doing our duty."
"In what respect?"
"In respect to her. How old were you when you married?"
"I was younger than she is."
"Well?"
"Well--what?"
At that moment there were two raps at the shutter.
Mother sprang out of bed; in one minute she had torn down the string by which the shutter was held to, and thrown open the window, which had long been without a fastening.
"What is it?" she called into the street.
"Rebekah Zeinwill is dead!"
Mother left the window.
"Blessed be the righteous Judge!" said my father. "To die is nothing."
"Blessed be the righteous Judge!" said my mother. "We were just talking about her."
I was very restless in those days. I don't know myself what ailed me.
Sometimes I would lie awake all night. Hammers beat in my temples, and my heart pained me as though filled with fear, or else with a longing after something for which it had no name. At other times it grew so warm and tender, I could have taken everything and everyone round me in my arms and kissed them and hugged them.
Only whom? The little brothers wouldn't let me--even the five-year old Yochanan b.u.t.ted and screamed; he wouldn't play with a girl. My mother, besides my being afraid of her, was always cross and overdriven; my father--growing from bad to worse.
In a short time he was as gray as a pigeon, his face shrivelled like parchment, and his eyes had such a helpless, pleading stare, it needed only one glance at them to send me out of the room crying.
Then I used to think of Beril. I could have told him everything, I could have hugged and kissed him. Now he lay in the cold earth, and I cried more bitterly than ever.
Indeed, the tears often came without any reason at all. Sometimes I would be looking out of the window into the yard and see the moon swimming nearer and nearer to the whitewashed fence opposite, and not able to swim over it.
And I would be seized with pity for the moon and feel a sudden contraction of the heart, and the tears flowed and flowed.
Other days I was listless. I hung round with no energy and a pale face with drooping eyelids. There was a rus.h.i.+ng in my ears, my head was heavy, and life seemed so little worth living, it would be best to die.
At these times I envied Beril his lot. He lay in the earth, where it is quiet.
And I often dreamt that I was dead; that I lay in the grave, or else that I was flying about in heaven in a s.h.i.+ft with my hair loose, and that I looked down to see what people were about on the earth.
Just about then I lost all the companions with whom I used to play at marbles in days gone by, and they were not replaced. One of them already went out on Sabbath with a satin skirt and a watch and chain. It was soon to be her wedding. Others were "Kallah-Madlich";[13] match-makers and future fathers-in-law were "breaking in the doors," and there was combing and was.h.i.+ng and dressing, when _I_ was still going barefoot, in an old bodice and a short skirt and a faded cotton waist, which had burst in several places right in front, and which I had patched with calico of a different color. The "Kallah-Madlich" avoided me, and I was ashamed to play with younger children; besides, marbles amused me no longer. So I never showed myself in the street by day. Mother never sent me out on errands, and one day when I intended to go somewhere, she prevented me. I often used to slip out after dark, and walk about behind the house near the barns, or else sit down beside the river.
In summer time, I sat there till quite late at night.
Some evenings, mother would come out after me. She never came up to me, but would stand in the gateway, look round--and I could almost hear the sigh she gave as she watched me in the distance.
That also came to an end in time; I would sit by myself there for hours, listening to the noise of the little mill stream, watching the frogs jump out of the gra.s.s into the water, or following a cloud through the sky.
At times I would fall half asleep with my eyes open.
One evening I heard a melancholy song. The voice was young and fresh, and yet the song thrilled me with emotion; it was a Jewish song.
"That is the Rofeh-boy singing," I said to myself. "Another would have sung hymns, not a song."
I also said to myself that one should go indoors, so as not to hear it or meet the Rofeh-boy, and yet I remained sitting; I was in a dreamy state, with no energy to move, and I sat on, though my heart was beating anxiously.
The song drew nearer; it was coming from the opposite bank--across the bridge.
Already I hear steps in the sand, I want to run away, but my limbs are disobedient, and I remain sitting.
At last he comes to the spot where I am.
"Is it you, Leah?"
I do not answer.
The noise in my ears is louder than ever, the hammering in my temples, busier, and it seems to me the kindest and sweetest voice I ever heard.
My not answering matters little to him, he sits down beside me on the log, and looks me straight in the face.
I do not _see_ his look, because I dare not raise my eyes, but I feel how it is scorching me.