the coolest air in the world and talked about the
weather, and I could take my oath he had not been outside
the door that morning. “How’s it
getting on to-day — is it coming?”
Amundsen looks with interest at the mysterious bowl.
Lindstrom takes another peep under the cloth.
“Yes, it’s coming at last; but I’ve
had to give it a lot to-day.” — "
Yes, it feels like it,” answers the other, and
goes out. My interest is now divided between “it
" in the bowl and Amundsen’s return, with the
meteorological discussion that will ensue. It
is not long before he reappears; evidently the temperature
outside is not inviting. “Let’s hear
again, my friend " — he seats himself on
the camp-stool beside which I am sitting on the floor
— “what kind of weather did you say
it was?” I prick up my ears; there is going
to be fun. “It was an easterly breeze and
thick as a wall, when I was out at six o’clock.”
— “Hm! then it has cleared remarkably
quickly. It’s a dead calm now, and quite
clear.” — “Ah, that’s
just what I should have thought! I could see it
was falling light, and it was getting brighter in
the east.” He got out of that well.
Meanwhile it was again the turn of the bowl. It
was taken down from the shelf over the range and put
on the bench; the various cloths were removed one
by one until it was left perfectly bare. I could
not resist any longer; I had to get up and look.
And indeed it was worth looking at. The bowl
was filled to the brim with golden-yellow dough, full
of air-bubbles, and showing every sign that he had
got it to rise. Now I began to respect Lindstrom;
he was a devil of a fellow. No confectioner in
our native latitudes could have shown a finer dough.
It was now 7.25; everything seems to go by the clock
here.
Lindstrom threw a last tender glance at his bowl,
picked up a little bottle of spirit, and went into
the next room. I saw my chance of following him
in. There was not going to be any fun out there
with Amundsen, who was sitting on the camp-stool half
asleep. In the other room it was pitch-dark,
and an atmosphere — no, ten atmospheres
at least! I stood still in the doorway and breathed
heavily. Lindstrom stumbled forward in the darkness,
felt for and found the matches. He struck one,
and lighted a spirit-holder that hung beneath a hanging
lamp. There was not much to be seen by the light
of the spirit flame; one could still only guess.
Hear too, perhaps. They were sound sleepers,
those boys. One grunted here and another there;
they were snoring in every corner. The spirit
might have been burning for a couple of minutes, when
Lindstrom had to set to work in a hurry. He was
off just as the flame went out, leaving the room in
black darkness. I heard the spirit bottle and
the nearest stool upset, and what followed I don’t
know, as I was unfamiliar with the surroundings —
but there was a good deal of it. I heard a click
— had no idea what it was —
and then the same movement back again to the lamp.