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But if she asked, "Why are you doing this?" he would put on a knowing look, and reply, "I am learning to make gold."
"My poor boy," she would answer, stroking his hand.
One night, immediately after the Whitsuntide holidays, she again could not sleep.
"Read me something from those learned books," she said; "they bore one so nicely. Perhaps they will send me to sleep."
And he did as she asked him; but when he had been reading almost an hour, he saw that she was gazing at him with big, feverish eyes, and was further than ever from sleep.
"So with that you want to make gold?" she asked.
"Yes, mother," he answered, confusedly, for the return of fever made him anxious.
"How will you do it?"
"You will see in good time," he answered, as usual.
But this time she would not be put off. "Tell me, my boy," she pleaded, "tell me now.... Who knows what may happen?... I should like at least to have that little bit of comfort before I fall asleep forever."
"Mother!" he cried, terrified.
"Be still, my boy," she said; "what does it matter? But tell me, tell me!" she pleaded with growing anxiety, as if in the next moment it might already be too late.
With bated breath and confused words he spoke of the plans which he had in his head: how he wanted to reawaken "Black Susy" to life, so that the moor could be utilized to its innermost depths; but in the middle of his speech, anxiety overcame him; he fell sobbing on his knees before the bed with his face on her breast.
She bade him look up, and said: "It was not right of me to make you anxious. If G.o.d so wills it, all may turn out differently yet. What you tell me has given me great joy. I know that if you take anything in hand, you do not soon let it drop. I only wish I could live to see it."
So, gently, imperceptibly, she restored his courage; as to herself, she had nothing left to hope for.
Another night when, overtired, he had fallen asleep in his chair, she called his name.
"What do you want, mother?" he asked, starting up.
"Nothing," she said. "Forgive me, I ought to have let you sleep. But who knows how long we shall still be able to talk together? I should like to make the most of the time."
This time he was too much overcome with sleep to understand the meaning of her words. He sat down closer to her and took her hand, but his eyes closed again directly.
She thought he was awake and began to speak.
"I was once a very merry young creature, not very different from your sisters.... My heart was nearly ready to burst with joy, and my eyes always gazed into the distance, as if from there something unspeakably beautiful would come--a prince, or something of that sort. Once, too, I began to love--with that other kind of love, that great heavenly love which comes upon one like fate. But he would not have me; he was fair and slender and had a blemish on his chin. I always longed to kiss the spot, but could never do it. He saw my love well enough, and, one day, when he was especially daring, he took me in his arms and fondled me, and then let me go again. But I was happy; it made me glad that he had once held me in his arms."
She stopped, her eyes sparkled, a rosy, almost maidenly blush tinted her cheeks; she had grown wonderfully young again. Then she saw that he had fallen asleep, and sadly relapsed into silence.
When he awoke, Paul said, "It seems to me, mother, that you were telling me something."
"You must have been dreaming," she said, smiling; but her thoughts meanwhile had been wandering back through her whole life, seeking in every corner of her memory for the remnants of joy which lay concealed there.
"I don't really know," she said, "why I have been so sad all my life.
When I come to think of it, a great misfortune has never really happened to ne. Of course it was not nice when we had to leave Helenenthal, and when I saw the room lit up blood-red by the burning barn, it gave me a bad enough fright, but, on the whole, life has treated me tolerably well. I have reared all you children, I have not lost one by death-we have always had food and drink, too. Father has sometimes grumbled, it is true, but that is always the case in married life; you will find it so yourself some day. You children have always loved me. You boys have grown up able men, and the girls will be able women, if G.o.d wills it, and you keep your eye upon them. What more do I want?"
And so this poor woman, who was gradually being hara.s.sed to death, worried herself to discover _what_ was hara.s.sing her to death. Slowly Dame Care lifted the veil from her head that Death might breathe in her face.
And one evening she died.... Her eyes closed; she scarcely knew how herself. The doctor who was called in spoke of weakness, anaemia. It is only sentimental people who say in such cases, "She died of a broken heart."
The twins knelt at her bedside, crying bitterly; their father, who had been carried in in his chair, sobbed aloud, and tried to bring her back forcibly to life.... Paul stood at the head of the bed biting his lips.
"I was right, after all," he thought; "she died before luck came. She has had to get up hungry from the table of life, just as I said."
He wondered that the pain he felt was not so great as he had fancied it would be. Only the confused thoughts about all sorts of stupid things flitting through his head like bats at dusk showed him the state of his mind.
It struck midnight; then his father said, "We will go to rest, children; let him sleep who can!... Hard days lie before us."
He embraced the twins, shook hands with Paul, and had himself carried to his room.
"How good father is to-day!" thought Paul; "he was never like that while she was alive." His sisters clung to his neck, sobbing, and implored him to watch near them, they were so afraid.
Paul spoke to them consolingly, took them to their room, and promised to come and look after them within an hour.
When at the end of this time he stepped to their bedside with a candle in his hand he found them fast asleep. They lay locked in a close embrace, and on their rosy cheeks the tears were still wet.
Then he went to his father's door to listen, and when there, too, he heard no sound, he crept on tiptoe to the room where the dead slept. For the last time he would watch by her side.
His sisters, on going away, had spread a white handkerchief over her face; he took it off, folded his hands, and watched how the flickering light played on her waxen features. She was little changed; only the blue veins in her temples were more prominent, and her eyelashes threw deeper shadows on the haggard cheeks.
He lit the night-light, which during her illness had been burning at her bedside every night, seated himself on the chair in which he always used to sit, and thought he would say a quiet prayer for the dead.
But suddenly it flashed through his mind that he had forgotten to send to the joiner to come early and take the measure.
It was to be a simple pine-wood coffin, painted black, and round it a garland of heather, for she had loved the delicate, unpretending little plant above all others.
"What will the coffin cost?" he went on thinking, and was suddenly struck with terror, for he had nothing to bury the dead with. He began to count and calculate, but could come to no conclusion.
"It is the first time that she wants anything for herself," he said, softly, and thought of the faded dress which she had worn from year's end to year's end.
He added up all that he could get together in a hurry from outstanding debts, but the sum was not sufficient by half to cover the expenses of the funeral.
The three cart-loads of peat, too, which he could send into town to-morrow and the day after, would make but little difference.
Then he took a piece of paper and began to calculate the expenses:
A coffin ....... 15 thalers.
The place in the church-yard 10 thalers.
For the verger ..... 5 thalers.
Linen for the shroud ... 2 thalers.
Then the expenses of the funeral, which his father undoubtedly would wish to have conducted as grandly as possible:
10 bottles of port-wine .. 10 thalers.
1 box of cigars ..... 2 thalers.