Little Erik of Sweden. Brandeis Madeline

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had sung another one, she was fast asleep. Now this was exactly what Erik wanted, and he tiptoed quietly out of the room.

      Carefully he made his way through the big house that had once been a castle, through the hall, with its stone floor and whitewashed walls. A fire crackled in the grate. It threw weird light upon the suits of armor which glittered in the corners. They looked like live knights.

      Erik hurried up the stairs and hid himself in an empty room. He waited there until the household was asleep, and then he crept out upon the roof.

      Nearly every room had its own fireplace, and there were two huge chimneys. Erik knew Hanssonborg well. He knew which chimney led down into Baron Karl's bedroom. He began to sing into it.

      He sang one of the wildest songs that has ever been written. It is called "The Cry of the Valkyries" (văl-kir´is) and it is from an opera, based upon a Norse myth.

      The Valkyries were warrior maidens who guarded Valhalla (văl-hăl´ȧ), the home of the gods. They rode through the sky crying, "Hoyotoho!"; and that is the song Erik now sang.

      Greta had taught it to him, because Greta loved all the wonderful operas of Richard Wagner. She had seen and heard them performed at the Stockholm Opera House.

      "Hoyotoho!" shrieked Erik in his shrill, boyish voice. "Hoyotoho!"

      It must have sounded ghostly. When he thought that he had been a Valkyrie long enough, he stopped and let himself into the house again.

      He hoped that nobody had heard him, except, of course, the Baron. The Baron could not have helped hearing him. But suppose Fru Hansson had been awakened and were to catch him as he made his way out of the house. That was a dreadful thought.

      All at once, he heard a noise. Someone was up. Someone was after him. Had Erik been a Valkyrie, riding on the fleetest steed in all Valhalla, he could not have sped out of that house any faster than he did.

      CHAPTER III

      THE PLAN

      Greta and her mother sat together in one of the downstairs sitting rooms. A fire burned in a fine old porcelain stove. Bright-colored, woven mats covered the wooden floor, which shone with a good scrubbing. Morning light filtered through the high windows.

      Fru Hansson's white brows were drawn together in worried lines. She was deeply troubled. For though Fru Hansson lived in a castle, she was really poor. She was finding it more and more difficult to run her large estate.

      Many of her neighbors had been forced to give up their lands because they could not afford to keep them. But Fru Hansson could not bear to think of giving up Hanssonborg.

      That was why she hoped Baron Karl would ask Greta to marry him. Baron Karl was wealthy, and his money could save Hanssonborg.

      It was not so much for her sake that she wished to keep it as for the sake of the tenants who lived on the land. They depended upon it for their living.

      Greta was gazing out of the window. The oak trees in the courtyard were covered with snow. Their bare, black arms stuck out like chopsticks in a bowl of rice.

      A knock sounded on the door. Fru Hansson said, "Come in," and the Baron came in. He wore heavy, warm clothing and had a muffler wrapped about his throat. He looked peevish.

      "Good morning," said Fru Hansson. "I hope Baron Karl rested well."

      The Baron frowned. "I did not rest at all," he replied. "Is breakfast ready?"

      At the breakfast table, Greta watched the Baron's servant pour out his medicine. He took medicine before and after every meal, and Greta felt sorry for him. It was unpleasant to be ill.

      Yet Greta could not help comparing the Baron to Nils, just as Erik had done last night. Nils was so very different – big and strong and fearless!

      "The doctor says – " whined Karl's voice.

      Always the doctor, thought Greta. He should marry a pill box or a bottle of castor oil!

      " – I must have perfect quiet," continued Karl, "and so I'm afraid I shall have to leave Hanssonborg."

      Fru Hansson gave a start. "But what has happened to Baron Karl?" she asked. "Has he been disturbed?"

      The Baron balanced a herring on his fork and nervously blinked his watery eyes. "Yes," he answered. "In the middle of the night and by the most horrible noises!"

      "Noises?" Fru Hansson looked astonished. "I heard nothing at all."

      Neither had Greta; and the Baron began to wonder whether he had merely imagined those ghostly cries.

      He coughed. "Er – well," he said, "it might have been the wind. Every sound upsets me so. The doctor says – "

      "There was no wind last night," said Greta, and the Baron dropped a herring on the floor. One of the dogs gobbled it up.

      The Baron's face turned red, but Fru Hansson laughed and said, "Ah, but Baron Karl really must stay – at least until after the Christmas celebration. I am sure there will be no more noises. Hanssonborg is extremely quiet."

      The Baron toyed with a potato. He hesitated. Then he looked up and fastened his gaze upon Greta. Her hair was golden and her lovely eyes were as blue as Swedish lakes in summer. He did not want to go away from Hanssonborg and leave Greta.

      "Very well," he said. "I shall stay. But if I should hear that horrible noise again, I shall leave, because the doctor says – "

      The doctor again! Karl looked like a smacked pussycat. Greta speared a fried egg.

      In the kitchen Fru Svenson told Erik what the butler had heard at the breakfast table. "So Fru Hansson persuaded the Baron to stay," she said, setting a pot of sausages on the stove. "And he will, too, unless he should be disturbed again."

      "And what disturbed him, Fru Svenson?" asked Erik, his eyes upon the pot.

      "A terrible racket in the night, it seems," she replied. "Though what it could have been I'm sure I can't imagine."

      "A ghost, perhaps, Fru Svenson?" asked Erik innocently, moving closer to the stove.

      "Certainly not," she scoffed, "because there are no ghosts. And take your hands out of that pot."

      Erik, full of sausages, returned to his cottage on the edge of the forest, his mind full of a new plan. If the Baron intended to remain at Hanssonborg unless he heard the ghost again, well, then he should certainly hear it.

      Erik would repeat his song, and that would put the final scare into the Baron. Hanssonborg would then be rid of him forever.

      Christmas Eve would be a good time, thought Erik. On Christmas Eve the peasants were invited to the big house. Erik would slip away from the crowd of children and conceal himself in the house as he had done before. When all was still, he would become a Valkyrie and cry down the chimney.

      He had his scheme nicely laid out. But there is a poem about "the best-laid schemes of mice and men" often going wrong; and Erik's went wrong.

      This is how it happened. Upon St. Lucy's Day, according to the custom, a little girl awakened the household at an early hour. She wore a white nightgown and a wreath with seven candles in it round her head. She served coffee and buns.

      She

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