The Dangerous Age Part 11
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To-day I inspected my linen cupboard with all the care of the lady superior of an aristocratic convent. I delighted in the spectacle of the snowy-white piles, and counted it all. I am careful with my money, and yet I like to have great supplies in the house. The more bottles, cases, and bags I see in the larder, the better pleased I am. In that respect Torp and I are agreed. If we were cut off from the outer world by flood, or an earthquake, we could hold out for a considerable time.
If I had more sensibility, and a little imagination--even as much as Torp, who makes verses with the help of her hymn-book--I think I should turn my attention to literature. Women like to wade in their memories as one wades through dry leaves in autumn. I believe I should be very clever in opening a series of whited sepulchres, and, without betraying any personalities, I should collect my exhumed mummies under the general t.i.tle of, "Woman at the Dangerous Age." But besides imagination, I lack the necessary perseverance to occupy myself for long together with other people's affairs.
We most of us sail under a false flag; but it is necessary. If we were intended to be as transparent as gla.s.s, why were we born with our thoughts concealed?
If we ventured to show ourselves as we really are, we should be either hermits, each dwelling on his own mountain-top, or criminals down in the valleys.
Torp has gone to evening service. Angelic creature! She has taken a lantern with her, therefore we shall probably not see her again before midnight. In consequence of her religious enthusiasm, we dined at breakfast-time. Yes, Torp knows how to grease the wheels of her existence!
Naturally she is about as likely to attend church as I am. Her vespers will be read by one of the sailors whose s.h.i.+p has been laid up near here for the winter. Peace be with her--but I am dreadfully bored.
I have a bitter feeling as though Jeanne and I were doing penance, each in a dark corner of our respective quarters. The Sundays of my childhood were not worse than this.
In the distance a cracked, tinkling bell "tolls the knell of parting day." Jeanne and I are depressed by it. I have taken up a dozen different occupations and dropped them all.
If it were only summer! I am oppressed as though I were sitting in a close bower of jasmine; but we are in mid-winter, and I have not used a drop of scent for months.
But, after all, Sundays were no better in the Old Market Place. There I had Richard from morning till night. To be bored alone is bad; to be bored in the society of one other person is much worse. And to think that Richard never even noticed it! His incessant talk reminded me of a mill-wheel, and I felt as though all the flour was blowing into my eyes.
I will take a brisk const.i.tutional.
What is the matter with me? I am so nervous that I can scarcely hold my pen. I have never seen a fog come on so suddenly; I thought I should never find my way back to the house. It is so thick I can hardly see the nearest trees. It has got into the room, and seems to be hanging from the ceiling. I am damp through and through.
The fire has gone out, and I am freezing. It is my own fault; I ought to have rung for Jeanne, or put on some logs myself, but I could not summon up resolution even for that.
What has become of Torp, that she is staying out half the day? How will she ever find her way home? With twenty lanterns it would be impossible to see ten yards ahead of one. My lamp burns as though water was mixed with the oil.
Overhead I hear Jeanne pacing up and down. I hear her, although she walks so lightly. She too is restless and upset. We have a kind of influence on each other, I have noticed it before.
If only she would come down of her own accord. At least there would be two of us.
I feel the same cold s.h.i.+vers down my back that I remember feeling long ago, when my nurse induced me to go into a churchyard. I thought I saw all the dead coming out of their graves. That was a foggy evening, too.
How strange it is that such far-off things return so clearly to the mind.
The trees are quite motionless, as though they were listening for something. What do they hear? There is not a soul here--only Jeanne and myself.
Another time I shall forbid Torp to make these excursions. If she must go to church, she shall go in the morning.
It is very uncanny living here all alone in the forest, without a watch-dog, or a man near at hand. One is at the mercy of any pa.s.serby.
For instance, the other day, some tipsy sailors came and tried the handle of the front-door.... But then, I was not in the least frightened; I even inspired Torp with courage.
I have a feeling that Jeanne is sitting upstairs in mortal terror. I sit here with my pen in my hand like a weapon of defence. If I could only make up my mind to ring....
There, it is done! My hand is trembling like an aspen leaf, but I must not let her see that I am frightened. I must behave as though nothing had happened.
Poor girl! She rushed into the room without knocking, pale as a corpse, her eyes starting from her head. She clung to me like a child that has just awakened from a bad dream.
What is the matter with us? We are both terrified. The fog seems to have affected our wits.
I have lit every lamp and candle, and they flicker fitfully, like Jeanne's eyes.
The fog is getting more and more dense. Jeanne is sitting on the sofa, her hand pressed to her heart, and I seem to hear it beating, even from here.
I feel as though some one were dying near me--here in the room.
Joergen, is it you? Answer me, is it you?
Ah! I must have gone mad.... I am not superst.i.tious, only depressed.
All the doors are locked and the shutters barred. There is not a sound.
I cannot hear anything moving outside.
It is just this dead silence that frightens us.... Yes, that is what it is....
Now Jeanne is asleep. I can hardly see her through the fog.
She sits there like a shadow, an apparition, and the fog floats over her red hair like smoke over a fire.
I know nothing whatever about her. She is as reserved about her own concerns as I am about mine. Yet I feel as though during this hour of intense fear and agitation I had seen into the depths of her soul. I understand her, because we are both women. She suffers from the eternal unrest of the blood.
She has had a shock to her inmost feelings. At some time or other she has been so deeply wounded that she cannot live again in peace.
She and I have so much in common that we might be blood-relations. But we ought not to live under the same roof as mistress and servant.
Gradually the fog is dispersing, and the lights burn brighter. I seem to follow Jeanne's dreams as they pa.s.s beneath her brow. Her mouth has fallen a little open, as if she were dead. Every moment she starts up; but when she sees me she smiles and drops off again. Good heavens, how utterly exhausted she seems after these hours of fear!
But somebody _is_ there! Yes ... outside ... there between the trees ...
I see somebody coming....
It is only Torp, with her lantern, and the dressmaker from the neighbouring village. The moment she opened the bas.e.m.e.nt door and I heard her voice I felt quite myself again.
The Dangerous Age Part 11
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The Dangerous Age Part 11 summary
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