The Birds (6 page)

Read The Birds Online

Authors: Tarjei Vesaas

BOOK: The Birds
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He recognized it all so well from past experience, he expected it. He carried on as best as he could, but his thoughts went darting
in all directions. After a while he noticed that he was pulling up turnips instead of goosefoot. He gave a start, got up to his feet and stood trembling.

Am I going—

No, no.

There were the farmer and the young couple coming back from the other side of the ridge, each busy with two new rows. As they appeared the girl lifted her head a little and gave a quick wave to Mattis who stood there helpless and forlorn. Nothing but a brief wave in between pulling up weeds. But to him it made all the difference.

I’ll reward her for that, he vowed, surely that isn’t against the rules. They’d be passing one another in a little while and he’d have the chance of telling her, boyfriend or no boyfriend.

For a while, too, his hands did what was expected of them. He crawled forward on his knees. And pulled up the right plants this time, and not turnips. Now that they were moving toward one another, it looked as if Mattis was really getting some speed up; the distance between them was rapidly growing smaller. But Mattis had stopped altogether. He was lost in contemplation of the young couple.

They were real sweethearts, there was no doubt about it.

No wonder the farmer was pleased with them, and gave them a brief smile from time to time. It couldn’t only be the work he
was thinking of – they made it pleasant for everyone in the field. They were laughing and chatting, and working properly the whole time as well. Now and then they managed to get really close to one another, and Mattis noticed carefully many small things they did then, things it might be useful to know.

This was what real sweethearts were like, then. The lucky farmer was keeping up with them, in the rows he was doing. Between the three of them and Mattis there was now a dark patch that had been weeded. His two rows lay in front of him, ugly and neglected.

But he couldn’t help it: he had to watch this sparkling young couple and listen to their talk, their bubbling joy, their strange eyes.

They were right opposite him now. Rippling laughter, forcing its way through all the grind and toil.

Mattis got to his feet.

“However much you’re sweethearts, I want to—” he began frantically, looking straight at the beautiful girl. But then he got stuck.

The others waited in surprise, both the girl and the young man. They weren’t laughing, either. Though he didn’t realize it, Mattis himself prevented this by the adoration on his face and in his voice.

The farmer, too, had quietly stopped where he was.

They waited in vain. At last the farmer said in a soft voice: “Well, go on then, Mattis.”

The girl said nothing, nor did the young man, they were both waiting anxiously.

They waited in vain, all of them. Mattis never got any further with what he’d started saying – but all the same it was as though he’d managed to establish some kind of contact and was no longer left struggling all alone. There was so much more he’d wanted to say, and in a different way, but as usual it had gone from him, had got mixed up with all kinds of other things.

“Because you are! Aren’t you?” he said finally, continuing where he’d left off.

“Yes,” replied the girl, “we are.”

“Yes, that’s how it ought to be for all of us,” he blurted out before realizing what he was saying.

“Well, something could be done about that,” said the girl, giving him a casual nod.

I could have told my dream to this girl from beginning to end, he thought.

“Well, there’s nothing more,” he mumbled, embarrassed. “I mean, nothing more I wanted to say.”

“Pity,” said the girl.

“One, two, three, pang,” said the young man, reminding the two of them that he was there as well, and that there was a weeding race on.

Behind them the lucky farmer who had these two splendid workers was chuckling. He obviously took no account of Simple Simon, nobody did.

“Alright, alright,” said the girl in reply. “I can hear you.”

Pang, said a quiet voice inside Mattis, directed at the young man who’d received this rap over the knuckles.

They all started working again.

The sun was getting hotter and hotter. In the furrows frail, uprooted plants lay withering and dejected. A warm smell rose from the soil.

Mattis looked behind him at the farmer. Was he feeling tired and fed up? Pretty unlikely, a strong, clever man like him. Mattis was both tired and thirsty by now, had lost all control over his fingers. The girl had revived his flagging spirits, but they sank again under the pressure of a job he couldn’t cope with. And now the three of them were moving away again, this time behind him, giving the whole place a sad and desolate air. Every now and again his thoughts got confused, and he found that he was pulling up turnips instead of weeds, and had to stop.

When at long last he reached the ridge and had to work his way down the other side, he felt even lonelier. The others seemed to be gone for good.

His shiny green rows stretched out like a challenge. He dug about, thinking: I must at least earn my food. After that he sat down for a while. Nobody could see him, and the confusion he was in upset
all the movements of his hands. Besides, it was so nice to sit down when you were tired.

When he saw the three of them appearing over the ridge again a little later, he gave a start. Already! He started fumbling about, destroying a lot of good turnips. But still, it was nice that someone was coming. It was so desolate on this side of the ridge. The young sweethearts weren’t chirping quite as much as before, but all the same. And the farmer didn’t seem to be tired. When you’ve got a field as large as this you don’t get tired, you just get on with the work. He didn’t even look up.

A very odd sound jolted them: it was Mattis.

“Please stop!” he cried. It was a shout forcing its way out.

The farmer straightened up quickly, dashing the sweat off his brow with a hand covered in earth. He was certainly sweating.

“What’s the matter, Mattis?”

Mattis was in a bad way. Although he hadn’t finished one trip across the field, he felt worn out. The dust had formed a faint moustache under his nose. The others might look the same, but it didn’t seem to matter on them. Hesitantly Mattis walked over to the farmer.

“Can’t you see I’m getting left behind?”

“Well, what of it?” the farmer replied reluctantly.

“Did you realize?”

The farmer dismissed the topic, “Yes, yes.”

“I’m afraid I don’t like complicated work like this,” said Mattis in a serious tone.

“No, I suppose not,” answered the farmer, bending right down over the turnips.

Mattis was tempted to ask: Do you want me to stop? But he didn’t. The farmer mumbled something to himself. The sweethearts took advantage of the pause to give each other a pinch or two.

Suddenly the farmer asked straight out: “Do you want us to do your rows?”

A gray cloud drifted in front of his eyes. Something familiar from his old life, just as it was before the woodcock arrived.

“Not yet,” he answered stiffly.

“Alright then.”

The farmer stooped over his hoe.

Mattis started to walk back to the place where he’d been working, but on the way he gave the girl a glance, a glance imploring her to do something to help and comfort him – after all, she was so young and happy, and she had a boyfriend.

He cleared his throat, as a sign he needed help quickly.

She seemed to understand. She smiled at him as if reminding him: Here we are, you and I, waving to each other in the field.

That was all he needed. What was more, he heard it so distinctly that he put it into words and repeated it.

“Yes, here we are, you and I, in the field,” he said, just as warm and gently, but not as secretively as she had done.

“Yes, we are,” said the girl.

It was really true. She was standing looking at him, awkward and helpless though he was; she was quite spellbound.

“One two three, pang!” said the young man, giving her leg a pinch – this seemed to be his favorite pastime – and at once the girl became completely absorbed by her boyfriend again.

“Yes,” said the farmer too.

The farmer with the big field. They glanced at him quickly and knew what he meant; pang!

Once again the three of them moved quickly past Mattis. He looked across them. They seemed to have all the things he longed for: the three things. These people were nothing but the three things. They were full of them and yet they didn’t give them a thought, weren’t even aware of them, as far as he could see. How could they go around, calmly thinning out a turnip field?

He lay flat on his stomach pulling things up, his thoughts roaming wildly. Help me, he thought.

But his thoughts flitted aimlessly as before. Although he meant to pull up weeds, he pulled up turnips.

Nobody wants to help me, that’s the trouble, he thought, and colors began dancing in front of his eyes.

The precious turnips infuriated him. They lay there puny and
threadlike when he’d pulled up the things they were resting against. Mattis wanted to shout abuse at them in his wretchedness, wanted to call them dreary little weaklings, not worth lying here for, feeling miserable. His thoughts wandered back and forth. This was what always happened when he tried to work – nothing had changed. And that was what was really bothering him today: no change, just the same old routine.

Thank goodness! There was a call from the others on the far side of the ridge.

“Mattis!”

It was the farmer himself, the wise one. The beautiful one and the strong one said nothing, but they were there all right. All the three things were there.

“Food?” Mattis shouted back, quick as lightning.

“Yes, come along!” cried the farmer, still out of sight. The pleasant calls rang back and forth across the ridge. Mattis was already on the move.

Mattis still had a bit of his first two rows left to do. But the end was at least in sight, so it might have been worse, he reflected, feeling a little better now he was on his way to a good meal.

The others didn’t say a word about his poor work when he joined them to leave the field. Not a single word was said – but Mattis was
sure they were thinking of nothing else. He bottled it up inside him for a while, but in the end he exploded: “You can come out with whatever it is you’re thinking!” he said to them as they washed their dirty hands in the stream.

“What is it we’re thinking, then?” asked the young man. It was the first time he had spoken to Mattis.

“I know it alright,” said Mattis who was in a state of great agitation and had to go on tormenting himself.

“Ah well,” said the farmer, “let’s go back to the house and get something to eat. Have a little rest and—”

They washed their hands in a clear little stream that flowed near the edge of the field. The girl washed her hands in the same pool as Mattis. Down in the water, made turbid by their mud, their hands touched for a brief moment as they plunged them in. A shock ran right through him. Gradually the running water swept the pool and the hands in it clean again. But now he dared not go anywhere near her.

The girl looked at him, and he had no time to think.

“It was almost like touching an electric fence,” he blurted out.

Afterward he thought he had put it rather well, but all she did was turn away. Surely she wasn’t laughing? Her boyfriend was washing his hands nearby, too, and when he’d finished he put his arm round her as if it were the most natural thing in the world – and in this way they walked across to the farm where the meal was waiting.
Perhaps they weren’t even tired. Mattis thought of the young man’s arm bulging inside his shirt – to think he put the whole of it round her waist. That was how things ought to be.

“Hello Mattis.”

It was the farmer’s wife. She gave Mattis a friendly welcome. Her food was good and Mattis ate heartily. There’s something to be said for this after all, he thought. The heavy meal made him tired and sleepy, so he lay down on the grass outside. He didn’t see what became of the sweethearts. He fell asleep.

11

WHEN MATTIS WOKE up after having lain asleep in the midday sun he was absolutely scorched. The first thing he noticed when his head cleared was the three turnip-thinners in that awful field. Far away in the distance they were stooping down over rows of turnips. And they had been there for a long time, that was obvious from the work that had been done.

They had left without waking him. The disgrace was probably no more than he deserved. As he stood there trying to face up to the situation, the farmer’s wife came out of the house. She walked up to him and said without hesitation: “It was me that told them not to wake you. He wanted to give you a shake, but you were so fast asleep I thought it’d be better to let you sleep on. It’s a couple of hours since they went.”

Mattis blinked, not knowing what to say. The woman was friendly. And now he understood why he had left the road so suddenly this morning. The memory of this face was fixed in his mind, from a previous occasion. He had seen it once before.

“Perhaps you didn’t get much sleep last night, either?” the woman asked, offering him a reasonable excuse.

“No, I didn’t!” he said, “I haven’t slept for two nights. There’s a woodcock begun a flight over our house.”

The way he said it made her start, but it was only for a brief moment, until she remembered who stood in front of her. He did not fail to notice it.

“My goodness,” she said quietly. “In that case it’s not surprising you need to catch up on some sleep. How did the flight start, then?” she asked patiently.

Mattis’s face lit up.

“It just came. Late one evening. I’ve had such strange dreams since, too.”

“Have you really? Still, dreams are rather private things, don’t you think, so we won’t discuss them,” said the woman who had a lot to get on with.

She was a wise woman, he could see that. He looked uneasily in the direction of the turnip thinners sweating in the field. The woman understood.

“Now which would you rather,” she said, “join the others in the field or come in with me and have a cup of coffee?”

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