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They walked again. At the next stop she paid for them both without discussion--for the evening meal, for bed and breakfast. It grew to be a habit. They walked on once more. They reached the end of the valley by the sea, and here she revolted again.
"Go away--go on by yourself; I don't want you in my room any more!"
The old argument no longer held good. When he repeated that they saved money by it, she replied that she for her part required no more than one room, and was quite able to pay for it. He joked again, whimpered, "Ingeborg!" and left her. He was beaten, and his back was bent.
She ate alone that evening.
"Isn't your husband coming in?" asked the woman of the house.
"Perhaps he doesn't want anything," she replied.
There he stood, away by the tiny barn pretending to be interested in the roof, in the style of building, and walked round looking at it, pursing his lips and whistling. But she could see perfectly well from the window that his face was blue and dejected. When she had eaten, she walked down to the sh.o.r.e, calling as she pa.s.sed him:
"Go in and eat!"
But he had not sunk quite so low; he would not go in to eat, and slept under no roof that night.
It ended as such things usually end: when she found him at last next morning, regretting her action and shaken by his appearance, everything slipped back again to where it had been.
They stopped at this place a few days, waiting for the mail boat, when one evening an elderly man came to the house. She knew him, and he knew them both; she was thrown into a state of the greatest excitement, made ready to leave at once, wept and beat her breast, and wanted to go home, immediately, at once. It ended as such things usually end: when she had calmed down, she went to bed for the night. She was not the center of the universe, and the old acquaintance who had happened to pa.s.s that way did not appear to be looking only at her. Nevertheless, she staged a sort of flight early next morning, in the gray dawn, before other people were up.
This much she did.
Aboard the mail boat she met no more acquaintances, and had leisure to think things over calmly. She now broke with her companion in earnest. She had a minor disagreement with him again, for he had no ticket, and one word gave rise to the next. It was all very well for her, he said; she had her return ticket in her pocket. Besides, had he not got himself involved in all these trials and tribulations because of her letter last summer, and was she not ashamed of herself? He would not have moved a foot outside the town had it not been for that letter of hers. Then she gave him her purse and all her money and asked him to leave her. There was probably enough to buy him a ticket, and now she would be rid of him.
"Of course I shouldn't accept this, but there's no other way," he said, and left her.
She stood gazing across the water, and wondering what to do. She was in a bad way now, so very different from what she had once thought; what shame, what utter futility she had wandered into! She brooded till she was worn out; then she began to listen to what people about her were saying. Two men were huddled on benches trying to shelter from the wind; she heard one of them say he was a schoolmaster, and the other that he was an artisan.
The schoolmaster did not remain seated long, but got up and swaggered toward her. She pa.s.sed him in silence and took his place on the bench.
It was a raw autumn day, and it did her good to get out of the wind. The artisan probably thought this tall, well-dressed lady had a berth, but when she sat down, he moved over on his own bench. He was on the point of lighting his pipe, but stopped.
"Go on, don't mind me," she said.
So he lit it, but he was careful not to blow the smoke into her face.
He was only a youngster, a little over twenty, with thick reddish hair under his cap, and whitish eyebrows high up on his forehead. His chest was broad and flat, but his back was round and his hands ma.s.sive. A great horse.
Then a tray was brought him, sandwiches and coffee, which he had evidently been waiting for; he paid, but went on smoking and let the food stand.
"Please eat," she said. "You don't mind my sitting here?"
"Not at all," he replied. He knocked out his pipe slowly, taking plenty of time over it; then sat still again.
"I don't really need anything to eat yet, either," he said.
"Oh--haven't you come far?"
"No, only last night. Where do you come from, lady?"
"From the town. I've been on holiday."
"That's what I thought," he said, nodding his head.
"I've been up at the Tore Peak farm," she added.
"The Tore Peak? So."
"Do you know it?"
"No, but I know some of the people there."
A pause.
"Josephine's there," he resumed.
"Yes. Do you know her?"
"Oh, no."
They talked a little more. The boat sailed on, and they sat there talking; it was all they had to do. She asked where he came from and what his trade was, and it seemed he was nothing important, only a paltry carpenter, and his mother had a small farm. Would the lady like a simple cup of coffee?
"Why, yes, thank you." Could she have a little of his, "just a little in the saucer?"
She poured some of the coffee into the saucer and asked for a bite of food as well. Never had food tasted so good, and when she had finished, she thanked him for that, too.
"Haven't you a berth?" he asked.
"Yes, but I'd rather stay here," she said. "If I go below, I'll be sick."
"That's what I thought. Well, now I wonder--"
With that he got up and walked slowly and heavily away. She watched his back disappearing down the companion to the lower deck.
She waited for him a long time, fearing that someone else might come and take his place. Coffee from the saucer, a good-sized sandwich with the carpenter: nothing wily or unnatural about that; this sheltered corner seemed to her like a tiny foothold in life.
There he was, coming back with more food and coffee, a whole tray in his big hands. He laughed good-naturedly at himself for walking so carefully.
She threw up her hands and overdid things a little:
"Great heavens! Really, you're much, much too kind!"
"Well, I thought since you were sitting here anyhow--"
They both ate; she grew warm and sleepy, and leaned back half-dozing.
Every time she opened her eyes, she saw the carpenter lighting his pipe; he struck two or three matches at once, but he was in no hurry; they were always half burned before he put his pipe in his mouth and began to suck at it. The schoolmaster called something to him, drew his attention to something far inland, but the carpenter merely nodded and said nothing.
"I wonder if he's afraid he'll wake me," she thought.