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The Bridal March
by
She was sitting one day near the soeter, herding the goats and sheep, because one of the herd-boys had played truant and she had to do his work. It was a warm midday; she was sitting in the shade of a hillock overgrown with birch and underwood; she had thrown off her jacket and taken her knitting in her hand, and was expecting Inga. Something rustled behind her. “There she comes,” thought Mildrid, and looked up.
But there was more noise than Inga was likely to make, and such a breaking and cracking among the bushes. Mildrid turned pale, got up, and saw something hairy and a pair of eyes below it–it must be a bear’s head! She wanted to scream, but no voice would come; she wanted to run, but could not stir. The thing raised itself up–it was a tall, broad-shouldered man with a fur cap, a gun in his hand. He stopped short among the bushes and looked at her sharply for a second or two, then took a step forward, a jump, and stood in the field beside her. Something moved at her feet, and she gave a little cry; it was his dog, that she had not seen before.
“Oh, dear!” she said; “I thought it was a bear breaking through the bushes, and I got such a fright!” And she tried to laugh.
“Well, it might almost have been that,” said he, speaking in a very quiet voice; “Kvas and I were on the track of a bear; but now we have lost it; and if I have a ‘Vardoeger,'[1] it is certainly a bear.”
He smiled. She looked at him. Who can he be? Tall, broad-shouldered, wiry; his eyes restless, so that she could not see them rightly; besides, she was standing quite close to him, just where he had suddenly appeared before her with his dog and his gun.
She felt the inclination to say, “Go away!” but instead she drew back a few steps, and asked: “Who are you?” She was really frightened.
“Hans Haugen,” answered the man rather absently; for he was paying attention to the dog, which seemed to have found the track of the bear again. He was just going to add, “Good-bye!” but when he looked at her she was blushing; cheeks, neck, and bosom crimson.
“What’s the matter?” said he, astonished.
She did not know what to do or where to go, whether to run away or to sit down.
“Who are you?” asked Hans in his turn.
Once again she turned crimson, for to tell him her name was to tell him everything.
“Who are you?” he repeated, as if it were the most natural question in the world, and deserved an answer.
And she could not refuse the answer, though she felt ashamed of herself, and ashamed of her parents, who had neglected their own kindred. The name had to be said. “Mildrid Tingvold,” she whispered, and burst into tears.
It was true enough; the Tingvold people had given him little reason to care for them. Of his own free will he would scarcely have spoken to one of them. But he had never foreseen anything like this, and he looked at the girl in amazement. He seemed to remember some story of her mother having cried like that in church on her wedding-day. “Perhaps it’s in the family,” he thought, and turned to go. “Forgive me for having frightened you,” he said, and took his way up the hillside after his dog.
By the time she ventured to look up he had just reached the top of the ridge, and there he turned to look at her. It was only for an instant, for at that moment the dog barked on the other side. Hans gave a start, held his gun in readiness, and hurried on. Mildrid was still gazing at the place where he had stood, when a shot startled her. Could that be the bear? Could it have been so near her?