Garman and Worse eBook

Alexander Kielland
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 275 pages of information about Garman and Worse.

Garman and Worse eBook

Alexander Kielland
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 275 pages of information about Garman and Worse.

She regretted the word the moment it was spoken.  She said it because she had just used the same expression in her conversation with Johnsen; but, however, without saying anything further, she went into the house.

Jacob Worse remained thoughtfully contemplating his cigar.  At last, then, the storm had burst.  The ill humour he had so long noticed in her had found vent.  He knew she meant what she said.  She thought he was a coward.  There had hitherto been a kind of friendly comradeship between them, which excluded any attempts at courtesy.  She had told him that their friendship must be on this footing, if he wished it to continue.  He had accepted his position, and they had often talked freely together, but latterly less than had formerly been the case.

Jacob Worse turned round, and found himself face to face with Mr. Johnsen, who was coming up the path with his eyes fixed on the ground.  He at once perceived that here was to be found the cause for Rachel’s extraordinary conduct, and the discovery did not tend to put him in a better humour.

Mr. Hiorth the magistrate, and Mr. Aalbom the schoolmaster, were seated together in the old summer-house near the pond.  They were generally to be found together on these Sunday afternoons at Sandsgaard.  The opportunity for talking scandal was one not to be neglected.

Hiorth’s family had been for a long time in the service of the State, a fact of which he was not a little proud; and after his daughter’s marriage with Morten Garman, who was one of the most eligible young men of the district, his somewhat sensitive feelings began to revolt against the self-satisfaction which the Garman family seemed to have inherited with their solid prosperity.

Aalbom was, therefore, not afraid to give free play to his bitter tongue, and after a good dinner he was just in the vein for so doing.

“They are asleep,” said he.  “I dare bet they are both of them fast asleep.  Have you not noticed that both the Consul and his brother disappear after dinner every Sunday?”

“Yes, I have remarked that I don’t generally see them when the coffee comes; but it is only for about a quarter of an hour,” answered the magistrate, as he brushed some cigar-ash off his coat, just where his new North Star Order hung.

“They are not treating you properly,” continued Aalbom; “especially when Richard calls himself an attache, and has some pretensions to good manners.”

“Oh! well, as far as he is concerned,” answered the other, “he means to show his contempt for people in office.  Richard Garman, like all people who have led shady lives, is an ultra-Radical.”

“No doubt, sir.  And I am not very certain about the Consul either; he has no respect for a cultivated intellect.”

“But can you expect anything better from a man in trade?”

“A shopkeeper, you might say,” whispered Aalbom, looking cautiously around.  “There, now,” he added, “I declare if it is not raining!  Just what one might have expected.  We had a little sunshine in the morning, and so of course it must rain in the afternoon.  What a climate! what a country!” and, amid a torrent of ejaculations and anathemas, they both went hurriedly round the pond, and reached the house just as the rain began to fall in earnest.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Garman and Worse from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.