Absalom's Hair

CHAPTER 1
Harald Kaas was
sixty.
He had given up his free, uncriticised bachelor
life; his yacht was no longer seen off the coast in summer; his
tours to England and the south had ceased; nay, he was rarely to be
found even at his club in Christiania. His gigantic figure was
never seen in the doorways; he was failing.
Bandy-legged he had always been, but this defect had
increased; his herculean back was rounded, and he stooped a little.
His forehead, always of the broadest - no one else's hat would fit
him--was now one of the highest, that is to say, he had lost all
his hair, except a ragged lock over each ear and a thin fringe
behind. He was beginning also to lose his teeth, which were strong
though small, and blackened by tobacco; and now, instead of "deuce
take it" he said "deush take it."
He had always held his hands half closed as though
grasping something; now they had stiffened so that he could never
open them fully. The little finger of his left hand had been bitten
off "in gratitude" by an adversary whom he had knocked down:
according to Harald's version of the story, he had compelled the
fellow to swallow the piece on the spot.
He was fond of caressing the stump, and it often
served as an introduction to the history of his exploits, which
became greater and greater as he grew older and quieter.
His small sharp eyes were deep set and looked at one
with great intensity. There was power in his individuality, and,
besides shrewd sense, he possessed a considerable gift for
mechanics. His boundless self-esteem was not devoid of greatness,
and the emphasis with which both body and soul proclaimed
themselves made him one of the originals of the country.
Why was he nothing more?
He lived on his estate, Hellebergene, whose large
woods skirted the coast, while numerous leasehold farms lay along
the course of the river. At one time this estate had belonged to
the Kurt family, and had now come back to them, in so far as that
Harald's father, as every one knew, was not a Kaas at all, but a
Kurt; it was he who had got the estate together again; a book might
be written about the ways and means that he had employed.
The house looked out over a bay studded with
islands; farther out were more islands and the open sea. An
immensely long building, raised on an old and massive foundation,
its eastern wing barely half furnished, the western inhabited by
Harald Kaas, who lived his curious life here.
These wings were connected by two covered galleries,
one above the other, with stairs at each end.
Curiously enough, these galleries did not face the
sea, that is, the south, but the fields and woods to the north. The
portion of the house between the two wings was a neutral territory
- namely, a large dining-room with a ballroom above it, neither of
which was used in later years.
Harald Kaas's suite of rooms was distinguished from
without by a mighty elk's head with its enormous antlers, which was
set up over the gallery.
In the gallery itself were heads of bear, wolf, fox
and lynx, with stuffed birds from land and sea. Skins and guns hung
on the walls of the anteroom, the inner rooms were also full of
skins and impregnated with the smell of wild animals and
tobacco-smoke. Harald himself called it "Man-smell;" no one who had
once put his nose inside could ever forget it.
Valuable and beautiful skins hung on the walls and
covered the floors; his very bed was nothing else; Harald Kaas lay,
and sat, and walked on skins, and each one of them was a welcome
subject of conversation, for he had shot and flayed every single
animal himself. To be sure, there were those who hinted that most
of the skins had been bought from Brand and Company, of Bergen, and
that only the stories were shot and flayed at home.
I for my part think that this was an exaggeration;
but be that as it may, the effect was equally thrilling when Harald
Kaas, seated in his log chair by the fireside, his feet on the
bearskin, opened his shirt to show us the scars on his hairy chest
(and what scars they were!) which had been made by the bear's
teeth, when he had driven his knife, right up to the haft, into the
monster's heart. All the queer tankards, and cupboards, and carved
chairs listened with their wonted impassiveness.
Harald Kaas was sixty, when, in the month of July,
he sailed into the bay accompanied by four ladies whom he had
brought from the steamer - an elderly lady and three young ones,
all related to him. They were to stay with him until August.
They occupied the upper storey. From it they could
hear him walking about and grunting below them. They began to feel
a little nervous. Indeed, three of them had had serious misgivings
about accepting the invitation; and these misgivings were not
diminished when, next morning, they saw Kaas composedly strolling
up from the sea stark naked!
They screamed, and, gathering together, still in
their nightgowns, held a council of war as to the advisability of
leaving at once; but when one of them cried "You should not have
called us, Aunt, and then we should not have seen him," they could
not help laughing, and therewith the whole affair ended. Certainly
they were a little stiff at breakfast; but when Harold Kaas began a
story about an old black mare of his which was in love with a young
brown horse over at the Dean's, and which plunged madly if any
other horse came near her, but, on the other hand, put her head
coaxingly on one side and whinnied "like a dainty girl" whenever
the parson's horse came that way - well, at that they had to give
in, as well first as last.
If they had strayed here out of curiosity they must
just put up with the "NIGHT side of nature," as Harald Kaas
expressed it, with the stress on the first word.
For all that they were nearly frightened out of
their wits the very next night, when he discharged his gun right
under their windows. The aunt even asserted that he had shot
through her open casement. She screamed loudly, and the others,
starting from their sleep, were out on the floor before they knew
where they were. Then they crouched in the windows and peeped out,
although their aunt declared that they would certainly be shot -
they really must see what it was.
Yes! there they saw him among the cherry and apple
trees, gun in hand, and they could hear him swearing. In the
greatest trepidation they crept back into bed again. Next morning
they learned that he had shot at some night prowlers, one of whom
had got "half the charge in his leg, that he had, Deush take him!
It ain't the prowling I mind, but that he should prowl here. We
bachelors will have no one poaching on our preserves."
The four ladies sat as stiff as four church candles,
till at length one of them sprang up with a scream, the others
joining in chorus.
The visitors were not bored; Harald Kaas dealt too
much in the unexpected for that. There was a charm, too, in the
great woods, where there had been no felling since he had come into
the property, and there were merry walks by the riverside and
plenty of fish in the river.
They bathed, they took delightful sails in the
cutter and drives about the neighbourhood, though certainly the
turn-out was none of the smartest.
The youngest of the girls, Kristen Ravn, presently
became less eager to join in these expeditions. She had fallen in
love with the disused east wing of the house, and there she spent
many a long hour, alone by the open window, gazing out at the great
lime-trees which stood straggling, gaunt, and mysterious.
"You ought to build a balcony here, out towards the
sea," she said. "Look how the water glitters between the
limes."
When once she had hit upon a plan, Kristen Ravn
never relinquished it, and when she bad suggested it some four or
five times, he promised that it should be done. But on the heels of
this scheme came another.
"Below the first balcony there must be another wider
one," said she in her soft voice, "and it must have steps at each
end down to the lawn - the lawn is so lovely just here."
The unheard-of presumption of her demand inoculated
him with the idea, and at length he consented to this as well.
"The rooms must be refurnished," she gravely
commanded. "The one next to the balcony which is to be built under
here shall be in yellow pine, and the floor must be polished." She
pointed with her long delicate hand. "ALL the floors must be
polished.
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