Invisible Links eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 251 pages of information about Invisible Links.

Invisible Links eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 251 pages of information about Invisible Links.

He had changed his ways, and the Spirit of Fasting had protected him.  He had never needed to go farther than to the big town, for he was never followed.  And in its working quarter the Spirit of Fasting had her dwelling.  Petter Nord found work in a machine shop.  He grew strong and energetic.  He became serious and thrifty.  He had fine Sunday clothes; he acquired new knowledge, borrowed books and went to lectures.  There was nothing really left of little Petter Nord but his white hair and his brown eyes.

That night had broken something in him, and the heavy work at the machine-shop made the break ever bigger, so that the wild Vaermland boy had crept quite out through it.  He no longer talked nonsense, for no one was allowed to speak in the shop, and he soon learned silent ways.  He no longer invented anything new, for since he had to look after springs and wheels in earnest, he no longer found them amusing.  He never fell in love, for he could not be interested in the women of the working quarter, after he had learned to know the beauties of his native town.  He had no mice, no squirrels, nothing to play with.  He had no time; he understood that such things were useless, and he thought with horror of the time when he used to fight with street boys.

Petter Nord did not believe that life could be anything but gray, gray, gray.  Petter Nord always had a dull time, but he was so used to it that he did not notice it.  Petter Nord was proud of himself because he had become so virtuous.  He dated his good behavior from that night when Joy failed him and Fasting became his companion and friend.

But how could the virtuous Petter Nord be coming to the village on a work-day, accompanied by three boon companions, who were loafers and drunken?

He had always been a good boy, poor Petter Nord.  And he had always tried to help those three good-for-nothings as well as he could, although he despised them.  He had come with wood to their miserable hovel, when the winter was most severe, and he had patched and mended their clothes.  The men held together like brothers, principally because they were all three named Petter.  That name united them much more than if they bad been born brothers.  And now they allowed the boy on account of that name to do them friendly services, and when they had got their grog ready and settled themselves comfortably on their wooden chairs, they entertained him, sitting and darning the gaping holes in their stockings, with gallows humor and adventurous lies.  Petter Nord liked it, although he would not acknowledge it.  They were now for him almost what the mice had been formerly.

Now it happened that these wharf-rats had heard some gossip from the village.  And after the space of six years they brought Petter Nord information that Halfvorson had put the fifty crowns out for him to disqualify him as a witness.  And in their opinion Petter Nord ought to go back to the town and punish Halfvorson.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Invisible Links from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.