“Peer, you’re surely not
going away just now? Oh, Peer, you mustn’t.
You won’t leave me alone, Peer!”
“Merle, dear, now do be sensible.
No, no do let go, dear.” He tried
to disengage her hands that were clasped behind his
neck.
“Peer, you have never been like
this before. Don’t you care for me any
more or the children?”
“Merle, dearest, you don’t
imagine that I like going. But you surely don’t
want me to have another big breach this year.
It would be sheer ruin, I do assure you. Come,
come now; let me go.”
But she held him fast. “And
what happens to those dams up there is more to you
now than what becomes of me!”
“You will be all right, dear.
The doctor and the nurse have promised to be on the
spot the moment you send word. And you managed
so well before. . . . I simply cannot stay now,
Merle. There’s too much at stake. There,
there, goodbye! Be sure you telegraph ”
He kissed her over the eyes, put her gently down into
a chair, and hurried out of the room, feeling her
terrified glance follow him as he went.
The April sun had cleared away the
snow from the lowlands, but when Peer stepped out
of the train up in Espedal he found himself back in
winter farms and fields still covered, and
ridges and peaks deep in white dazzling snow.
And soon he was sitting wrapped in his furs, driving
a miserable dun pony up a side-valley that led out
on to the uplands.
The road was a narrow track through
the snow, yellow with horse-dung, and a mass of holes
and ruts, worn by his own teams that had hauled their
heavy loads of cement this way all through that winter
and the last, up to the plateau and across the frozen
lakes to Besna.
The steel will on. The steel
cares nothing for human beings. Merle must come
through it alone.
When a healthy, happy man is hampered
and thwarted in a great work by annoyances and disasters,
he behaves like an Arab horse on a heavy march.
At first it moves at a brisk trot, uphill and downhill,
and it goes faster and faster as its strength begins
to flag. And when at last it is thoroughly out
of breath and ready to drop, it breaks into an easy
gallop.
This was not the work he had once
dreamed of finding. Now, as before, his hunger
for eternal things seemed ever at the side of his
accomplishment, asking continually: Whither?
Why? and What then?
But by degrees the difficulties had
multiplied and mounted, till at last his whole mind
was taken up by the one thought to put it
through. Good or bad in itself he
must make a success of it. He had undertaken it,
and he must see it through. He must not be beaten.
And so he fought on. It was merely
a trial of strength; a fight with material difficulties.
Aye, but was that all it was? Were there not
times when he felt himself struggling with something
greater, something worse? A new motive force
seemed to have come into his life misfortune.
A power outside his own will had begun to play tricks
with him.
Your calculations may be sound, correct
in every detail, and yet things may go altogether
wrong.
Who could include in his calculations
the chance that a perfectly sober engineer will get
drunk one day and give orders so crazy that it costs
tens of thousands to repair the damage? Who could
foresee that against all probability a big vein of
water would be tapped in tunnelling, and would burst
out, flooding the workings and overwhelming the workmen so
that the next day a train of unpainted deal coffins
goes winding out over the frozen lakes?
More than once there had been remarks
and questions in the newspapers: “Another
disaster at the Besna Falls. Who is to blame?”
It was because he himself was away
on a business journey and Falkman had neglected to
take elementary precautions that the big rock-fall
occurred in the tunnel, killing four men, and destroying
the new Belgian rock-drill, that had cost a good hundred
thousand, before it had begun to work. This sort
of thing was not faulty calculation it was
malicious fate.
“Come up, boy! We must
get there to-night. The flood mustn’t have
a chance this year to lay the blame on me because
I wasn’t on the spot.”
And then, to cap the other misfortunes,
his chief contractor for material had gone bankrupt,
and now prices had risen far above the rates he had
allowed for adding fresh thousands to the
extra expenditure.
But he would put the thing through,
even if he lost money by it. His envious rivals
who had lately begun to run down his projects in the
technical papers he would make them look
foolish yet.
And then?
Well, it may be that the Promethean
spirit is preparing a settling day for the universe
somewhere out in infinity. But what concern is
that of mine? What about my own immortal soul?
Silence push on, push on.
There may be a snowstorm any minute. Come up get
along, you scarecrow.
The dun struggles on to the end of
a twelve-mile stage, and then the valley ends and
the full blast from the plateau meets them. Here
lies the posting station, the last farm in the valley.
He swings into the yard and is soon sitting in the
room over a cup of coffee and a pipe.
Merle? How are things with Merle now?
Ah! here comes his own horse, the
big black stallion from Gudbrandsdal. This beast’s
trot is a different thing from the poor dun’s the
sleigh flies up to the door. And in a moment
Peer is sitting in it again in his furs.
Ah! what a relief to have a fresh
horse, and one that makes light of the load behind
him. Away he goes at a brisk trot, with lifted
head and bells jingling, over the frozen lakes.
Here and there on the hillslopes a grey hut or two
show out saeters, which have lain there
unchanged for perhaps a couple of thousand years.
But a new time is coming. The saeter-horns will
be heard no longer, and the song of the turbines will
rise in their place.
An icy wind is blowing; the horse
throws up its head and snorts. Big snowflakes
come driving on the wind, and soon a regular snowstorm
is raging, lashing the traveller’s face till
he gasps. First the horse’s mane and tail
grow white with snow, then its whole body. The
drifts grow bigger, the black has to make great bounds
to clear them. Bravo, old boy! we must get there
before dark. There are brushwood brooms set out
across the ice to mark the way, but who could keep
them in sight in a driving smother like this?
Peer’s own face is plastered white now, and
he feels stunned and dazed under the lash of the snow.
He has worked under the burning suns
of Egypt and now here. But the steel
will on. The wave rolls on its way over all the
world.
If this snow should turn to rain now,
it will mean a flood. And then the men will have
to turn out to-night and work to save the dams.
One more disaster, and he would hardly
be able to finish within the contract time. And
that once exceeded, each day’s delay means a
penalty of a thousand crowns.
It is getting darker.
At last there is nothing to be seen
on the way but a shapeless mass of snow struggling
with bowed head against the storm, wading deep in the
loose drifts, wading seemingly at haphazard and
trailing after it an indefinable bundle of white dead
white. Behind, a human being drags along, holding
on for dear life to the rings on the sleigh. It
is the post-boy from the last stage.
At last they were groping their way
in the darkness towards the shore, where the electric
lights of the station showed faintly through the snow-fog.
And hardly had Peer got out of the sleigh before the
snow stopped suddenly, and the dazzling electric suns
shone over the place, with the workmen’s barracks,
the assistants’ quarters, the offices, and his
own little plank-built house. Two of the engineers
came out to meet him, and saluted respectfully.
“Well, how is everything getting on?”
The greybeard answered: “The men have struck
work to-day.”
“Struck? What for?”
“They want us to take back the
machinist that was dismissed the other day for drunkenness.”
Peer shook the snow from his fur coat,
took his bag, and walked over to the building, the
others following. “Then we’ll have
to take him back,” he said. “We can’t
afford a strike now.”
A couple of days later Peer was lying
in bed, when the post-bag was brought in. He
shook the letters out over the coverlet, and caught
sight of one from Klaus Brook.
What was this? Why did his hand
tremble as he took it up? Of course it was only
one of Klaus’s ordinary friendly letters.
Dear friend, This
is a hard letter to write. But I do hope you have
taken my advice and got some of your money at any rate
over to Norway. Well, to be as brief as possible!
Ferdinand Holm has decamped, or is in prison, or possibly
worse you know well enough it’s no
good asking questions in a country like this when
a big man suddenly disappears. He had made enemies
in the highest places; he was playing a dangerous
game and this is the end of it.
You know what it means when a business
goes into liquidation out here, and no strong man
on the spot to look after things. We Europeans
can whistle for our share.
You’ll take it coolly, I know.
I’ve lost every penny I had but you’ve
still got your place over there and the workshops.
And you’re the sort of fellow to make twice
as much next time, or I don’t know you.
I hope the Besna barrage is to be a success.
Yours ever,
Klaus Brock.
P.S. Of course you’ll
understand that now my friend has been thrown overboard
it will very likely be my turn next. But I can’t
leave now to try would rouse suspicion
at once. We foreigners have some difficult balancing
to do, to escape a fall. Well, if by chance you
don’t hear from me again, you’ll know
something has happened!
Outside, the water was streaming down
the channels into the fall. Peer lay still for
a while, only one knee moving up and down beneath the
clothes. He thought of his two friends. And
he thought that he was now a poor man and
that the greater part of the burden of the security
would fall now on old Lorentz D. Uthoug.
Clearly, Fate has other business on
hand than making things easy for you, Peer. You
must fight your fight out single-handed.