The Were-Wolf eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about The Were-Wolf.

The Were-Wolf eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about The Were-Wolf.
wake impatience in the carver, and crossing his own legs round Sweyn’s ankle, clasping with his arms too, laid his head against the knee.  Such act is evidence of a child’s most wonderful hero-worship.  Quite content was Rol, and more than content when Sweyn paused a minute to joke, and pat his head and pull his curls.  Quiet he remained, as long as quiescence is possible to limbs young as his.  Sweyn forgot he was near, hardly noticed when his leg was gently released, and never saw the stealthy abstraction of one of his tools.

[Illustration:  Rol’s Worship]

Ten minutes thereafter was a lamentable wail from low on the floor, rising to the full pitch of Rol’s healthy lungs; for his hand was gashed across, and the copious bleeding terrified him.  Then was there soothing and comforting, washing and binding, and a modicum of scolding, till the loud outcry sank into occasional sobs, and the child, tear-stained and subdued, was returned to the chimney-corner settle, where Trella nodded.

In the reaction after pain and fright, Rol found that the quiet of that fire-lit corner was to his mind.  Tyr, too, disdained him no longer, but, roused by his sobs, showed all the concern and sympathy that a dog can by licking and wistful watching.  A little shame weighed also upon his spirits.  He wished he had not cried quite so much.  He remembered how once Sweyn had come home with his arm torn down from the shoulder, and a dead bear; and how he had never winced nor said a word, though his lips turned white with pain.  Poor little Rol gave another sighing sob over his own faint-hearted shortcomings.

The light and motion of the great fire began to tell strange stories to the child, and the wind in the chimney roared a corroborative note now and then.  The great black mouth of the chimney, impending high over the hearth, received as into a mysterious gulf murky coils of smoke and brightness of aspiring sparks; and beyond, in the high darkness, were muttering and wailing and strange doings, so that sometimes the smoke rushed back in panic, and curled out and up to the roof, and condensed itself to invisibility among the rafters.  And then the wind would rage after its lost prey, and rush round the house, rattling and shrieking at window and door.

In a lull, after one such loud gust, Rol lifted his head in surprise and listened.  A lull had also come on the babel of talk, and thus could be heard with strange distinctness a sound outside the door—­the sound of a child’s voice, a child’s hands.  “Open, open; let me in!” piped the little voice from low down, lower than the handle, and the latch rattled as though a tiptoe child reached up to it, and soft small knocks were struck.  One near the door sprang up and opened it.  “No one is here,” he said.  Tyr lifted his head and gave utterance to a howl, loud, prolonged, most dismal.

Sweyn, not able to believe that his ears had deceived him, got up and went to the door.  It was a dark night; the clouds were heavy with snow, that had fallen fitfully when the wind lulled.  Untrodden snow lay up to the porch; there was no sight nor sound of any human being.  Sweyn strained his eyes far and near, only to see dark sky, pure snow, and a line of black fir trees on a hill brow, bowing down before the wind.  “It must have been the wind,” he said, and closed the door.

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The Were-Wolf from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.