Egholm and his God. Buchholtz Johannes

Egholm and his God - Buchholtz Johannes


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      Egholm and his God

      I

      Sivert stands leaning his elbows on the window ledge, digging all ten fingers into his curly hair, and looking down at the muddy court below.

      Not a soul.

      He looks at the wet roofs, and the raindrops splashing tiny rings in the water all along the gutter.

      Not so much as a sparrow in sight. Only the sullen November drizzle, flung now and then into gusts, and whipping the panes with a lash of rain.

      But that is enough for Sivert. He looks out into the grey desolation, highly amused at it all.

      Now he purses up his lips and whispers something, raises his eyebrows, mutters something in reply, and giggles.

      Let him, for Heaven’s sake, as long as he can, thinks his mother.

      And Sivert finds it more amusing still. Wonderful, so much there is going on inside him. He shakes his poodle mop of hair, and gives way to a long-drawn, gasping laugh – simply can’t help it – leans his forehead against the pane, thrusts both hands suddenly deep into his pockets, and gives a curious wriggle.

      “You great big boy, what’s the matter now?” says his mother gently.

      Sivert turns his head away and answers with an evasive laugh:

      “All that rain … it tickles so.”

      Fru Egholm does not question him again; for a moment she really feels as if the boy were right. And, anyhow, it would be no use asking him. If only he can find his little pleasure in it, so much the better.

      And there’s no saying how long … Egholm had said it was time the boy found something to do, now he was confirmed. Find him a place at once. And Sivert, poor weakly lad – how would it go with him?

      Fru Egholm shakes her head, and sends a loving glance at the boy, who is plainly busy in his mind with something new and splendid.

      Then suddenly his face changes, as if at the touch of death itself. His eyes grow dull, his jaw drops; the childish features with their prematurely aged look are furrowed with dread as he stares down at something below.

      “Is it Father?” she whispers breathlessly. “Back already?”

      She lays down her sewing and hurries to the window; mother and son stand watching with frightened eyes each movement of the figure below.

      Egholm walks up from the gate, lithe and erect, just as in the old days when he came home from the office. But at every step his knees give under him, he stumbles, and his wet cloak hangs uncomfortably about him. At last he comes to a standstill, heedless of the fact that his broad boots are deep in a puddle of water.

      Once he looks up, and Sivert and his mother hold their breath. But the flower-pots in the window hide them. His head droops forward, he stands there still. A little after, they see him trudging along close to the wall, past his own door.

      The watchers stand on tiptoe, pressing their temples against the cold glass, straining to see what next.

      Egholm stops at the Eriksens’ gate, glances round, and kneels.

      Kneels down full in the mire, while the gale flings the cape of his ulster over his head. Now he snatches off his hat and crushes it in his fingers; his bald head looks queerly oblong, like a pumpkin, seen from above.

      “He’s praying!”

      And the two at the window shudder, as if they were witnessing some dreadful deed.

      “Where am I to hide?” blubbers Sivert.

      The mother pulls herself together – she must find strength for two.

      “You need not hide to-day. Take your little saw and be doing some work. You’ll see, it will be all right to-day.”

      “But suppose he counts the money?”

      “Oh, heaven…!”

      “Hadn’t we better tell him at once? Shout out and tell him as soon as he comes in, and say Hedvig took it?”

      “No, no.”

      “Or go and kill ourselves?”

      “No, no. Sit still, Sivert dear, and don’t say a word. Maybe God will help us. We might put something over the bowl … no. Better leave it as it is.”

      Heavy steps on the stairs outside. Egholm walks in, strong and erect again now.

      He hangs up his wet things, and fumbles with a pair of sodden cuffs.

      “Didn’t get a place, I suppose?” asks his wife, looking up from the machine. Sivert sits obediently at a little table at the farther end of the room.

      “Is it likely?” Egholm’s face is that of one suffering intensely. And he speaks in an injured tone.

      “I only thought… You’re home earlier than usual.”

      No answer. Egholm walks over to the window and stares into the greyness without, his long, thin fingers pulling now and again at his dark beard.

      Lost in thought…

      His wife does not venture to disturb him, though he is shutting out the fading light. She keeps the machine audibly in motion, making pretence of work.

      A long, long time he stands there. Sivert has been sawing away conscientiously all the time, but at last he can bear it no longer, and utters a loud sigh. Fru Egholm reaches stealthily for the matches, and lights the lamp. Her fingers tremble as she lifts the glass.

      Egholm turns at the sound. And now he is no longer Egholm the upright, nor Egholm the abject; Egholm the Great he is now. His eyes glow like windows in a burning house; he stands there filling the room with Egholm; Egholm the invincible. The mother cowers behind her sewing-machine; and her seam runs somewhat awry.

      What terrible thing can he be thinking of now? The “Sect,” as usual? – Heaven have mercy on them, now that Egholm has joined the Brotherhood.

      Surely something terrible must happen soon; he has rarely been as bad as this before.

      He moves, and his wife looks up with a start. But now he has changed again, to something less terrible now – not quite so deadly terrible as before.

      He is far away in his dreamings now, without a thought for his earthbound fellow-creatures.

      He stands in his favourite attitude, with one hand on his hip, as if posing to a sculptor. A fine figure of a man. His watch-chain hangs in a golden arc from one waistcoat pocket to the other. Only one who knew of the fact would ever notice that one of the oval links is missing, and a piece of string tied in its place.

      After a little he begins walking up and down, stopping now and again at the window, with a gesture of the hand, as if addressing an assembly without.

      Then suddenly he swings round, facing his wife, and utters these words:

      “Now I know what it means. At last!”

      Fru Egholm checks the wheel of her machine, and looks up at him with leaden-grey, shadow-fringed eyes. But he says no more, and she sets the machine whirring once more.

      Peace for a little while longer, at any rate, she thinks to herself.

      Sivert looks up stealthily every time his father turns his back; the boy is flushed with repressed excitement, the tip of his tongue keeps creeping out.

      “Mark you,” says Egholm after a long pause, “I’m wiser perhaps – a good deal wiser – than you take me for.”

      He throws out his chest with conscious dignity, lifting his head, and placing one hand on his hip as before.

      Oh, so he’s still thinking of that quarrel of theirs this morning. Well, well, of course it would be something to do with the Brotherhood some way or other.

      “You said I was wasting my time.”

      “I didn’t say that.”

      “You said I was throwing money out of the window.”

      Fru Egholm shifts in her seat, pulling nervously at her work. She would like to mitigate the sharpness of her


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