Short Fiction Selma Lagerlöf (best book club books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Selma Lagerlöf
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âThe ĂlvĂ„kra folk are jealous of their honor, like the rest,â remarked the father. âAnd you may as well know, Gudmund, that when I left home this morning I was thinking that I must tell the Juryman your position if you did not decide to do so yourself. I never could have stood silently by and let Hildur marry a man who at any moment might be accused of murder.â
He cracked the whip and drove on, faster and faster. âThis will be the hardest thing for you,â said he, âbut weâll try and have it over with quickly. I believe that, to the Jurymanâs mind, it will be right for you to give yourself up, and they will be kind to you, no doubt.â
Gudmund said nothing. His torture increased the nearer they approached ĂlvĂ„kra. The father continued talking to keep up his courage.
âI have heard something of this sort before,â said he. âThere was a bridegroom once who happened to shoot a comrade to death during a hunt. He did not do it intentionally, and it was not discovered that he was the one who had fired the fatal shot. But a day or two later he was to be married, and when he came to the home of the bride, he went to her and said: âThe marriage cannot take place. I do not care to drag you into the misery which awaits me.â But she stood, dressed in bridal wreath and crown, and took him by the hand and led him into the drawing-room, where the guests were assembled and all was in readiness for the ceremony. She related in a clear voice what the bridegroom had just said to her. âI have told of this, that all may know you have practised no deceit on me.â Then she turned to the bridegroom. âNow I want to be married to you at once. You are what you are, even though you have met with misfortune, and whatever awaits you, I want to share it equally with you.âââ
Just as the father had finished the narrative, they were on the long avenue leading to ĂlvĂ„kra. Gudmund turned to him with a melancholy smile. âIt will not end thus for us,â he said.
âWho knows?â said the father, straightening in the cart. He looked upon his son and was again astonished at his beauty this day. âIt would not surprise me if something great and unexpected were to come to him,â thought he.
There was to have been a church ceremony, and already a crowd of people were gathered at the brideâs home to join in the wedding procession. A number of the Jurymanâs relatives from a distance had also arrived. They were sitting on the porch in their best attire, ready for the drive to church. Carts and carriages were strung out in the yard, and one could hear the horses stamping in the stable as they were being curried. The parish fiddler sat on the steps of the storehouse alone, tuning his fiddle. At a window in the upper story of the cottage stood the bride, dressed and waiting to have a peep at the bridegroom before he had time to discover her.
Erland and Gudmund stepped from the carriage and asked immediately for a private conference with Hildur and her parents. Soon they were all standing in the little room which the Juryman used as his study.
âI think you must have read in the papers of that fight in town last Saturday night, where a man was killed,â said Gudmund, as rapidly as if he were repeating a lesson.
âOh, yes, Iâve read about it, of course,â said the Juryman.
âI happened to be in town that night,â continued Gudmund. Now there was no response. It was as still as death. Gudmund thought they all glared at him with such fury that he was unable to continue. But his father came to his aid.
âGudmund had been invited out by a few friends. He had probably drunk too much that night, and when he came home he did not know what he had been doing. But it was apparent that he had been in a fight, for his clothes were torn.â
Gudmund saw that the dread which the others felt increased with every word that was said, but he himself was growing calmer. There awoke in him a sense of defiance, and he took up the words again: âWhen the paper came on Saturday evening and I read of the fight and of the knife-blade which was imbedded in the manâs skull, I took out my knife and saw that a blade was missing.â
âIt is bad news that Gudmund brings with him,â said the Juryman. âIt would have been better had he told us of this yesterday.â
Gudmund was silent; and now his father came to the rescue again. âIt was not so easy for Gudmund. It was a great temptation to keep quiet about the whole affair. He is losing much by this confession.â
âWe may be glad that he has spoken now, and that we have not been tricked and dragged into this wretched affair,â said the Juryman bitterly.
Gudmund kept his eyes fixed on Hildur all the while. She was adorned with veil and crown, and now he saw how she raised her hand and drew out one of the large pins which held the crown in place. She seemed to do this unconsciously. When she observed that Gudmundâs glance rested upon her, she stuck the pin in again.
âIt is not yet fully proved that Gudmund is the slayer,â said his father, âbut I can well understand that you wish the wedding postponed until everything has been cleared up.â
âIt is not worth while to talk of postponement,â said the Juryman. âI think that Gudmundâs case is clear enough for us to decide that all is over between him and Hildur now.â
Gudmund did not at once reply to this judgment.
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