Time slipped away rapidly at the golden
house. There had been many pleasant family scenes,
both within and around the cottage, since Nono had
been so tenderly welcomed there, eight years before.
It was a bright July morning.
The bit of a rye-field on the other side of the road
stood in the summer sunshine in tempting perfection.
The harvesting had begun, in a slow though it might
be a sure manner. A tall, spare old man, his
hat laid aside, and his few scattered gray locks fluttering
in the gentle breeze, was the only reaper. His
shirt sleeves rolled up above the elbows showed his
meagre, bony arms. His thin neck and breast
were bare, as he suffered from heat from his unwonted
labour. The scythe moved slowly, and the old
man stopped often to draw a long breath. Near
him stood a fair-haired, sturdy little girl, who held
up her apron full of corn flowers, as blue as the
eyes that looked so approvingly upon them. They
were in the midst of a chat in a moment of rest, when
a figure, strange and interesting to them both, came
along the road with a light, free step.
The new-comer was a tall young girl,
with a white parasol in her hand, though her wide-brimmed
hat seemed enough to keep her fair face from being
browned by the glad sunshine. She stopped suddenly
when she came in front of the cottage, and fixed her
eyes on the old man and the child with an expression
of astonished delight. “Charming! beautiful!
I must paint them,” she said to herself.
The stranger put down the camp-stool
she had on her arm, and screwed into its back her
parasol with the long handle. She sat down at
once and opened her box, where paper and pallet and
all manner of conveniences for amateur painters were
admirably arranged. “Please, please stand
still,” she said; “just as you are.
I want to paint you.”
“I have to stop often to rest;
but I must work while I can. I don’t want
to be idle if I am old. I can’t do a real
day’s work; but I can get something done if
I am industrious,” said the gray-haired labourer
hesitatingly.
The child seemed to notice something
sorrowful in the tone of her companion’s voice,
and she came quickly to his aid, saying,
“Uncle Pelle is the best man
in the world. Mother says he’ll never
teach us anything that isn’t just right.
He does a good bit of work, father says, and he knows.”
The little girl was evidently accustomed
to be listened to, and did not stand in awe of this
stranger or any other.
“I shall pay you both if you
hold still awhile and let me take your picture; and
that will be just as well for Uncle Pelle as cutting
grain, and lighter work, too. You can talk if
you want to, but you must not stir while I am making
a real likeness of you.”
“As the young lady pleases,”
said the old man, with a look of resignation.
“I want to be useful.”
“Is that your uncle, child?”
asked the young artist. “I thought, of
course, it was your grandfather.” Then
looking towards the old man she added, “Do you
live here?” and she nodded towards the golden
house.
“I don’t live anywhere,”
said the old man sorrowfully. “The poorhouse
in Aneholm parish and the poorhouse in Tomtebacke,
some way from here, can’t agree which should
keep me, and now they are lawing about it. I’ve
had a fever, and I seem to be broke down. I don’t
belong anywhere just now, but Karin there in the house
says I’m a kind of relation of hers, though
it puzzles me to see how. She wants me to stay
with them till all is settled; and Jan, who mostly
lets her have her way, tells me he hasn’t anything
against it. So you see I like to do a turn of
work if I can, if it’s only to show I’m
thankful. Karin says she’s used to a big
family, and it seems lonesome since her oldest son
went to America, and I must take his place.
I don’t live in the cottage. There are
enough of ’em there without me. They’ve
fixed me up a place alongside of Star that’s
the cow.”
“It’s a dear little room,”
said the child, “and we all like to be there;
but Uncle Pelle shuts the door sometimes, and won’t
let us in.”
“Old folks must have their quiet
spells,” said the old man apologetically.
“It isn’t just to be quiet,
you know, Uncle Pelle. Mother says Uncle Pelle
reads good books when he is alone, and makes good prayers,
too; and he’s a blessing to the family,”
said the little girl, who seemed to consider herself
the friend and patron of her companion.
“She’s a bit spoiled.
The only girl, you see. There were six boys
before, not counting Nono or the two boys that died.”
“Nono!” exclaimed the
stranger. “That was the name of the little
brown baby I saw baptized in Aneholm church, eight
years ago, when I was at home before, just for a few
days.”
“It is a queer name,”
said Uncle Pelle. “The pastor said it meant
the ninth, as the Italians talk; and so when this
little girl came, he said Karin and Jan might as well
call her Decima, which was like the tenth, in Swedish.
And they did. They about make a fool of her
in the family; and I ain’t much better.
That’s Nono behind you.”
A slight dark boy had been standing
quietly watching the young stranger while she skilfully
handled her brushes. He now stepped forward,
took off the little straw hat of his own braiding,
and bowed, without any sheepish confusion.
“Here’s Nono!” said
Decima, placing herself beside him, as if she had a
special right to exhibit him to the stranger.
“And so you are Nono,”
said Alma. “I have always felt as if you
belonged in a way to me. Where did the people
who live here find you?”
“They didn’t find me at
all; they took me, and have brought me up as if I
was their own child,” said Nono, his eyes sparkling.
The story of the Italians and the
bear was told by Nono, as usual, and the scene most
vividly described by word and gesture. Decima
did not pretend that she knew more than he did on
this subject, and indeed he was quite her oracle in
all matters. She thought Nono a pink of perfection;
and well she might, for he had been her playmate and
guardian ever since she could remember. It was
confidently affirmed in the family that Nono could,
from the first, make her laugh and show her dimples
as she would not for any one else. Nono had soon
learned that he could be a help to Karin with the
baby, and was always more willing than were her rough
brothers to be tied to the child’s little apron-string.
Nono had hardly finished his story
when the young lady took out the smallest watch imaginable
and looked hastily at it. She gathered up her
painting apparatus in a great hurry, and was off with
a hasty good-bye, saying her father would be expecting
her home to dinner, but she would see them again soon
and finish her picture. She had almost forgotten
in her hurry the money she had promised, but she suddenly
remembered that part of the transaction, and left in
the old man’s hand, as he said, “more
than enough to pay for a whole day’s work, just
for standing still, that little bit, to be painted.”
Alma was soon out of sight of Pelle
and Decima, who followed her with their wondering
eyes as she sped along the road towards her pleasant
home. The one thing about which her father could
be severe with her was being late at meals.
But for this severity, he would often have dined without
her; for Alma was full of absorbing hobbies, and when
anything interested her, food and sleep were to her
matters of no consequence. Now her brain was
revolving a new scheme. Alma had been for years
in a Swiss boarding-school, and there, among many
accomplishments, had acquired a thorough knowledge
of the English language. She had been charmed
with the accounts she had read of the work of the
English ladies among the cottagers on their large estates.
She had determined to “do just so” when
she was fairly settled at home. She would now
begin at once with Nono. She felt she had a kind
of charge over him. Had not her own dear mother
died in Italy, where his mother came from? That
baptism, too, she could never forget! He should
not grow up like a heathen in Sweden if she could prevent
it. She would have him up at “the big house”
every day for a Scripture lesson. She wanted
to paint him too; how lovely he would be in a picture!
She must have the old man with him. How charming
it would be to sketch youth and age working in the
garden together! She could pay them for their
time, and they would look up to her as a kind of guardian
angel. Alma flitted along, almost as if she had
wings already, as these pleasant thoughts floated
through her mind.
The angel seemed suddenly to change
to a fury as a shout arose from behind a dark evergreen,
and a nondescript-looking individual, ragged and dirty,
came out upon her, exclaiming,
“I suppose I must not come near
your highness, looking as I do!”
Streaked with mud on face and clothing,
his feet bare, and his trousers rolled up to his knees,
her brother stood before her, his eyes gleaming with
delight in spite of her evident displeasure.
“I’ve got a basket of
polywogs, and some delicious bugs, and a big caterpillar
that would make your mouth water if you were addicted
to vermicelli. See here!”
He moved as if he were about to open
up his treasures for her inspection.
“Do keep away, Frans!”
exclaimed Alma, as she drew her befrilled and beflounced
skirt about her, as if to escape dangerous contagion.
At this moment she swept in at the
gate that led to the house, and shut it hastily behind
her.
“I’m going in the back
way, anyhow,” said Frans, with a merry laugh.
“Your grace and my grace cannot well make our
entree together.”
“The most troublesome boy in
the world!” said Alma to herself, and she expressed
her sincere conviction.
At this moment Alma saw the bent form
of her father riding slowly before her. Her
whole expression changed again, and she quickened her
steps into a run, and was soon at his side.
“Are you very tired, papa, after
your little ride?” she said tenderly.
“No, darling. But how
fresh and rosy you look! The air of old Sweden
suits you, I see.”
How happy the two were together! how
gentle and loving were they both! Alma really
looked like the guardian angel she meant to be to Nono
and Uncle Pelle.