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"You're mad," said I to Ragnhild.
But the girl had both heard and seen well enough, it seemed. She was grown so used to playing the spy that she could not help spying on her mistress as well. An uncommon sort, was Ragnhild.
I put on a lofty air at first and would have none of her tale-bearing, thank you, listening at keyholes. Fie!
But how could she help it, she replied. Her orders were to bring up the letter as soon as her mistress put out the light, and not before. But Fruen's windows looked out to the shrubbery, where the Captain was sitting with Elisabet from the vicarage. No place for Ragnhild there.
Better to wait upstairs in the pa.s.sage, and just take a look at the keyhole now and again, to see if the light was out.
This sounded a little more reasonable.
"But only think of it," said Ragnhild suddenly, shaking her head in admiration. "What a fellow he must be, that engineer, to get as near as that with Fruen."
As near as what! Jealousy seized me; I gave up my lofty pose, and questioned Ragnhild searchingly about it all. What did she say they were doing? How did it all come about?
Ragnhild could not say how it began. Fruen had given her orders about a letter that was to be fetched from Lars Falkenberg's, and when it arrived, she was to wait till the light went out in Fruen's room, and then bring it up. "Very good," said Ragnhild. "But not till I put out the light, you understand," said Fruen again. And Ragnhild had set herself to wait for the letter. But the time seemed endless, and she fell to thinking and wondering about it all; there was something strange about it. She went up into the pa.s.sage and listened. She could hear Fruen and the engineer talking easily and without restraint; stooping down to the keyhole, she saw her mistress loosening her hair, with the engineer looking on and saying how lovely she was. And then--ah, that engineer--he kissed her.
"On the lips, was it?..."
Ragnhild saw I was greatly excited, and tried to rea.s.sure me.
"Well, perhaps not quite. I won't be sure; but still ... and he's not a pretty mouth, anyway, to my mind.... I say, though, you've shaved all clean this evening. How nice! Let me see...."
"But what did Fruen say to that? Did she slip away?"
"Yes, I think so; yes, of course she did--and screamed."
"Did she, though?"
"Yes; out loud. And he said '_Sh_!' And every time she raised her voice he said '_Sh_!' again. But Fruen said let them hear, it didn't matter; they were sitting down there making love in the shrubbery themselves.
That's what she said, and it was the Captain and Elisabet from the vicarage she meant. 'There, you can see them,' she said, and went to the window. 'I know, I know,' says the engineer; 'but, for Heaven's sake, don't stand there with your hair down!' and he went over and got her away from the window. Then they said a whole heap of things, and every time he tried to whisper Fruen talked out loud again. 'If only you wouldn't shout,' he said. 'We could be ever so quiet up here.' Then she was quiet for a bit, and just sat there smiling at him without a word.
She was ever so fond of him."
"Was she?"
"Yes, indeed, I could see that much. Only fancy, a fellow like that! He leaned over towards her, and put his hand so--there."
"And Fruen sat still and let him?"
"Well, yes, a little. But then she went over to the window again, and came back, and put out her tongue like that--and went straight up to him and kissed him. I can't think how she could. For his mouth's not a bit nice, really. Then he said, 'Now we're all alone, and we can hear if anybody comes.' 'What about Bror and his partner?' said she. 'Oh; they are out somewhere, at the other end of the earth,' said he. 'We're all alone; don't let me have to keep on asking you now!' And then he took hold of her and picked her up--oh, he was so strong, so strong! 'No, no; leave go!' she cried."
"Go on!" I said breathlessly. "What next?"
"Why, it was just then you came up with the letter, and I didn't see what happened next. And when I went back, they'd turned the key in the lock, so I could hardly see at all. But I heard Fruen saying: 'Oh, what are you doing? No, no, we mustn't!' She must have been in his arms then.
And then at last she said: 'Wait, then; let me get down a minute.' And he let her go. 'Blow out the lamp,' she said. And then it was all dark ... oh!..."
"But now I was at my wits' end what to do," Ragnhild went on. "I stood a minute all in a flurry, and was just going to knock at the door all at once--"
"Yes, yes; why didn't you? What on earth made you wait at all?"
"Why, if I had, then Fruen'd have known in a moment I'd been listening outside," answered the girl. "No, I slipped away from the door and down the stairs, then turned back and went up again, treading hard so Fruen could hear the way I came. The door was still fastened, but I knocked, and Fruen came and opened it. But the engineer was just behind; he'd got hold of her clothes, and was simply wild after her. 'Don't go! don't go!' he kept on saying, and never taking the slightest notice of me. But then, when I turned to go, Fruen came out with me. Oh, but only think.
It was as near as could be!..."
A long, restless night.
At noon, when we men came home from the fields next day, the maids were whispering something about a scene between the Captain and his wife.
Ragnhild knew all about it. The Captain had noticed his wife with her hair down the night before, and the lamp out upstairs, and laughed at her hair and said wasn't it pretty! And Fruen said nothing much at first, but waited her chance, and then she said: "Yes, I know. I like to let my hair down now and again, and why not? It isn't yours!" She was none so clever, poor thing, at answering back in a quarrel.
Then Elisabet had come up and put in her word. And she was smarter--_prrr_! Fruen did manage to say: "Well, anyhow we were in the house, but you two were sitting out among the bushes!" And Elisabet turned sharp at that, and snapped out: "We didn't put out the light!"
"And if we did," said Fruen, "it made no difference; we came down directly after."
Heavens! I thought to myself, why ever didn't she say they put the light out _because_ they were going down?
That was the end of it for a while. But then, later on, the Captain said something about Fruen being so much older than Elisabet. "You ought always to wear your hair down," he said. "On my word, it made you look quite a girl!" "Oh yes, I dare say I need it now," answered Fruen. But seeing Elisabet turn away laughing, she flared up all of a sudden and told her to take herself off. And Elisabet put her hands on her hips, and asked the Captain to order her carriage. "Right!" says the Captain at that; "and I'll drive you myself!"
All this Ragnhild had heard for herself standing close by.
I thought to myself they were jealous, the pair of them--she, of this sitting out in the shrubbery, and he, of her letting her hair down and putting out the light.
As we came out of the kitchen, and were going across for a rest, there was the Captain busy with Elisabet's carriage. He called me up and said:
"I ought not to ask you now, when you're having your rest, but I wish you'd go down and mend the door of the summer-house for me."
"Right!" I said.
Now that door had been wrong ever since the engineer burst it open several nights before. What made the Captain so anxious to have it put right just at this moment? He'd have no use for the summerhouse while he was driving Elisabet home. Was it because he wanted to shut the place up so no one else should use it while he was away? It was a significant move, if so.
I took some tools and things and went down to the shrubbery.
And now I had my first look at the summer-house from inside. It was comparatively new; it had not been there six years before. A roomy place, with pictures on the walls, and even an alarm clock--now run down--chairs with cus.h.i.+ons, a table, and an upholstered settee covered with red plush. The blinds were down.
I set a couple of pieces in the roof first, where I'd smashed it with my empty bottle; then I took off the lock to see what was wrong there.
While I was busy with this the Captain came up. He had evidently been drinking already that day, or was suffering from a heavy bout the night before.
"That's no burglary," he said. "Either the door must have been left open, and slammed itself to bits, or some one must have stumbled up against it in the dark. One of the visitors, perhaps, that left the other day."
But the door had been roughly handled, one could see: the lock was burst open, and the woodwork on the inside of the frame torn away.
"Let me see! Put a new bolt in here, and force the spring back in place," said the Captain, examining the lock. He sat down in a chair.
Fru Falkenberg came down the stone steps to the shrubbery, and called:
"Is the Captain there?"
"Yes," said I.
Then she came up. Her face was twitching with emotion.