Weird Tales from Northern Seas Read online

Page 4


  "THE EARTH DRAWS"

  There was once a young salesman at the storekeeper's at Soervaag.

  He was fair, with curly hair, shrewd blue eyes, and so smart, andobliging, and handsome, that all the girls in the town got themselvessent on errands, and made pilgrimages to the shop on purpose to see him.Moreover, he was so smart and skilful in everything he put his hand to,that the storekeeper never would part with him.

  Now it happened one day that he went out to a fishing station for hisprincipal.

  The current was dead against him, so he rode close in shore.

  All at once he saw a little ring in the rocky wall a little abovehigh-water mark. He thought it was the sort of ring which is used forfastening boats to, so he fancied it wouldn't do any harm to rest a bitand lay to ashore, and have a snack of something, for he had beenpulling at the oars from early morn.

  But when he took hold of the ring to run his boatline through it, itfitted round his finger so tightly that he had to tug at it. He tugged,and out of the mountain side with a rush came a large drawer. It wasbrimful of silk neckerchiefs and women's frippery.

  He was amazed, and began pondering the matter over.

  Then he saw what looked like rusty flakes of iron in rows right over thewhole mountain side, exactly resembling the slit of his own drawer.

  He had now got the ring on his finger, and must needs try if it wouldopen the other slits also. And out he drew drawer after drawer full ofgold bracelets and silver bracelets, glass pearls, brooches and rings,bracelets and laced caps, yarn, night-caps and woollen drawers, coffee,sugar, groats, tobacco pipes, buttons, hooks and eyes, knives, axes, andscythes.

  He drew out drawer after drawer; there was no end to the display theymade.

  But all round about him he heard, as it were, the humming of a crowd andthe tramp of sea-boots. There was a hubbub, as if they were rollinghogsheads over a bridge and hoisting sails against the wind, and outfrom the sea sounded the stroke of oars and the bumping of boats puttingashore.

  Then he began to have an inkling that he had laid to his boat at amooring-ring belonging to the underground folk, and had lit right upontheir landing-place where they deposited their wares.

  He stood there looking into a drawer of meerschaum pipes. They werefiner than any he had thought it possible to find in the whole world.

  Then he felt, as it were, the blow of a heavy hand which tried to thrusthim aside; but, at the same time, some one laughed so merrily close by.The same instant he saw a young woman in the fore-part of his boat. Shewas leaning, with broad shoulders and hairy arms, over a meal-sack. Hereyes laughed and shot forth sparks as from a smithy in the dark, but herface was oddly pale.

  Then she vanished altogether like a vision.

  He was glad when he got down into his boat again, and pushed off androde away.

  But when he got out into the sound, and slackened speed a bit, heperceived that the ring still sat upon his finger.

  His first thought was to tear it off and fling it into the sea; but thenit sat tighter than ever.

  It was so curiously wrought and fretted and engraved that he must needsexamine it more curiously; and the longer he looked at it the strangerthe gold whereof it was wrought gleamed and glistened. Turn it as hewould to examine its spirals, he could never make out where they beganand where they ended.

  But as he sat there and looked and looked at it, the black crackling andsparkling eyes of that pale face stood out more and more plainly beforehis eyes. He didn't exactly know whether he thought her ugly orhandsome--the uncanny creature!

  The ring he now meant to keep, come what might.

  And home he rowed, and said not a word to anybody of what had happenedto him.

  But from that day forth a strange restlessness came over him.

  When he was sweeping out the shop or measuring goods, he would suddenlystand there in a brown study, and fancy he was right away at thelanding-stage in the mountain-side, and the black woman was laughing athim over the meal-sack.

  Out yonder he must needs venture once more, and put his ring to thetest, though it cost him his life.

  And in the course of the summer his boat lay over at the mountain-sidein the self-same place as before.

  When he had opened the drawer with his gold ring, he caught sight of thebroad-shouldered woman. Her eyes sparkled, and had a wild look aboutthem, and she peered curiously at him.

  And, every time he came, he seemed to be more expected, and she was moreand more gladsome. They became quite old acquaintances, and she wasalways waiting for him there.

  But at home he grew gloomy and silent. Yet, although he bethought himthat it was all sorcery, and her arms were hairy almost like a beast's,and although he determined and really tried to keep away, neverthelesshe could not help going thither, and whenever he had been away from hera whole week, she grew quite unmanageable, and laughed and shrieked whenshe saw him coming again.

  And he always heard the noise and the bustle of many people all abouthim, but never could he see anything. It seemed to him, however, as ifthey all lay a little way off and pulled their boat aside for him topass. His boat, too, was always nicely baled out, and the oars and sailsrighted and trimmed. The cable, too, was fastened for him whenever hecame, and thrown to him whenever he went away.

  Now and then she so managed it that he caught a glimpse into theirwarehouses and their bright halls in the mountain side, and at suchtimes she seemed to be enticing him after her. And then, on his wayhome, he would shudder. "What," thought he, "if the mountain wall wereto shut to behind me?" and every time he was right glad that he had beenso far on his guard and had come off scot free.

  And now, towards autumn, he grew more at his ease. He really made up hismind to try to give up these journeys. He set to work in real earnest,so that he had no time for thought, and plunged into his business withfiery impetuosity.

  But when Christmas-tide drew nigh with its snowflakes and darkness, suchstrange fancies came over him.

  Whenever he went into the dark draughty nooks and corners, he saw thestrong, heavily built shape before him. She laughed and called to him,and shrieked and sent him messages by the blast. And then a strongdesire came upon him.

  And one day he was unable to hold out any longer, so off he went.

  He fancied he caught a glimpse of her a long way off. She was castinghuge boulders aside so as to see and follow the course of the boat, andshe beckoned and greeted him through the drizzle and the mist. It was asthough the current was bearing him thither all the time.

  When he came up, the sea seethed and boiled for the crowds that were init, though he saw them not. They waded out to him and drew his boatashore, and steps and a bridge lay there ready for his feet. But rightat the top stood she, and her breath came heavily, and she leanedtowards him and drew him with those bold eyes of hers set in that faceas pale as night. She went swiftly inland, looked behind her, andbeckoned him after her; and then she threw open the door of an old ironsafe in the midst of the wall.

  On its shelves sparkled a bridal crown, and a shining girdle andbreastplate and a kirtle, and all manner of bridal finery.

  There she stood, and her breath came straining hot and heavy through herwhite teeth, and she smiled and ogled him archly. He felt her take holdof him, and it was as though a darkness fell around him.

  Then all at once, as if in a gleam of twilight, he saw the wholetrading-place, vast and wealthy and splendid, all round about him withits haven, warehouses, and trading-ships. She stretched out her handsand pointed to it, as if she would say that he should be the lord andmaster of the whole of it.

  A cold shiver ran through him; he perceived that it led right into themountain.

  And out he rushed.

  He cut the cable through with his knife, and wrenched the ring from hisfinger, and cast it into the sea, and off he rowed, so that the sea waslike a foaming foss around him.

  When he got home to his work again, and the bustle of the Christmasseason began, he felt as if h
e had awakened from a heavy nightmare or anevil dream. He felt so light of heart. He chatted gaily with customersover the counter, and his old life went on much the same as before. Andeverything he put his hand to went along as smooth as butter.

  But the tradesman's daughter stuck her head into the shop not once nortwice. She looked and smiled at him in shy admiration. Never had heremarked before what taking ways were hers, or noticed how bonnie andbright the lassie was, and how graceful and supple she looked as shestood in the doorway. And ever since the tradesman's daughter had lookedso strangely at him, he had no thought for any one but her. He wasalways thinking what a way she had of holding her head, and how slim shelooked when she walked about, and what quick and lively blue eyes shehad, just like merry twinkling stars.

  He would lay awake o' nights, and reflect upon his grievous abominablesin in lowering himself to the level of an uncanny monster, and rightglad was he that he had cast the ring away.

  But on Christmas Eve, when the shop was shut and the house folks andservants were making ready for the festival in kitchen and parlour, theshopkeeper took him aside into his counting-house. If he liked hisdaughter, said he, there was no impediment that he could see. Let himtake heart and woo her, for it hadn't escaped him how she was mopingabout all love-sick on his account. He himself, said the shopkeeper, wasold, and would like to retire from business.

  The good-looking shopman did not wait to be asked twice. He wooedstraightway, and, before the Christmas cheer was on the table, he gotyes for an answer.

  Then years and years passed over them, and they thrived and prospered inhouse and home.

  They had pretty and clever children. He rejoiced in his wife; nothingwas good enough for her, and honour and ease were her portion, both athome and abroad.

  But in the seventh year, when it was drawing towards Yule-tide, such astrange restlessness came over him. He wandered about all by himself,and could find peace nowhere.

  His wife fretted and sorrowed over it. She knew not what it could be,and it seemed to her that he oddly avoided her. He would wander forhours together about the dark packhouse loft, among coffers and casksand barrels and sacks, and it was as though he didn't like folks to comethither when he was there.

  Now it chanced on the day before Little Christmas Eve[1] that one of theworkpeople had to fetch something from the loft.

  There stood the master, deep in thought, by one of the meal sacks,staring down on the ground before him.

  "Don't you see the iron ring down in the floor there?" he asked.

  But the man saw no ring.

  "I see it there--the earth draws," he sighed heavily.

  On Little Christmas Eve he was nowhere to be found, nor on the dayafter, though they searched for him high and low, and made inquiriesabout him everywhere amidst the Yule-tide bustle and merriment.

  But late on Christmas Eve, while they were all running about in theutmost anxiety, not knowing whether they should lay the table or not,all at once in he came through the door.

  He longed so much for both meat and drink, he said, and he was so happyand merry and jovial the whole evening through, that they all cleanforgot the fright they had been in.

  For a whole year afterwards he was chatty and sociable as before, and hemade so much of his wife that it was quite absurd. He bore her in hishands, so to speak, and absolutely could not do enough for her.

  But when it drew towards Yule-tide again, and the darkest time of theyear, the same sort of restlessness came over him. It was as though theyonly saw his shadow amongst them, and he went moping about the packhouseloft again, and lingering there.

  On Little Christmas Eve the same thing happened as before--hedisappeared.

  His wife and the people of the house went about in a terrible way, andwere filled with astonishment and alarm.

  And on Christmas Eve he suddenly stepped into the room again, and wasmerry and jovial, as he generally was. But when the lights had burntout, and they all had gone to bed, his wife could hold her tongue nolonger: she burst into tears, and begged him to tell her where he hadbeen.

  Then he thrust her roughly from him, and his eyes shot sparks, as if hewere downright crazy. He implored her, for their mutual happiness' sake,never to ask him such a question again.

  Time went on, and the same thing happened every year.

  When the days grew dark, he moped about by himself, all gloomy andsilent, and seemed bent upon hiding himself away from people; and onLittle Christmas Eve he always disappeared, though nobody ever saw himgo. And punctually on Christmas Eve, at the very moment when they wereabout to lay the table, he all at once came in at the door, happy andcontented with them all.

  But just before every autumn, towards the dark days, always earlier thanthe year before, this restlessness came over him, and he moped aboutwith it, moodier, and shyer of people than ever.

  His wife never questioned him; but a load of sorrow lay upon her, and itseemed to her to grow heavier and more crushing, since she seemed nolonger able to take care of him, and he no longer seemed to belong toher.

  Now one year, when it was again drawing nigh to Yule-tide, he beganroaming about as usual, heavy and cast down; and the day before LittleChristmas Eve he took his wife along with him into the packhouse loft.

  "Do you see anything there by the meal sack?" he asked.

  But she saw nothing.

  Then he gripped her by the hand, and begged and implored her to remain,and go with him there at night. As his life was dear to him, said he, hewould fain try and stay at home that day.

  In the course of the night he tightly grasped her hand time after time,and sighed and groaned. She felt that he was holding on to her, andstriving hard, and with all his might, against _something_.

  When morning came, it was all over. He was happier and lighter of moodthan she had seen him for a long, long time, and he remained at home.

  On that Christmas Eve there was such a hauling and a-carrying upstairsfrom both shop and cellar, and the candles shone till all thewindow-panes sparkled again. It was the first real festival he had everspent in his own house, he said, and he meant to make a regular banquetof it.

  But when, as the custom was, the people of the house came in one by one,and drank the healths of their master and mistress, he grew paler andpaler and whiter and whiter, as if his blood were being sucked out ofhim and drained away.

  "The earth draws!" he shrieked, and there was a look of horror in hiseyes.

  Immediately afterwards he sat there--dead!

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  [1] _Lille Jule-aften_, i.e., the day before Christmas Eve(_Jule-aften_).

  * * * * *

  _THE CORMORANTS OF ANDVAER_

  _THE TWELVE CORMORANTS_.]