Page:Three stories by Vítězslav Hálek (1886).pdf/40

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
22
Under the Hollow Tree.

After this Krista began to implore forgiveness, for she felt that perhaps she had been hasty. But the peasant woman would not hear a word. “Dont let me see you in the house a moment longer,” she roared, and Krista did not venture to address her again.

She collected her clothes, tied them in a bundle, and with the bundle tramped off to Venik on the hillside.

“Now I am going, now it is all over,” she said when she came there. “Now I dare not venture into the cottage.” She said it with a smile, for her grief assumed the guise of smiles, which were indeed a kind of determination. And then she said what had happened.

“Where shall you go?” said Venik, as if beside himself: for indeed he had never before had to face so horrible a calamity.

“I know not,” said Krista, “I only know that I must say good bye to you in earnest. And again she laughed a short constrained laugh, so that Venik began to be embarrassed to know whether it was all jest or earnest.

But it was all so perfectly true, that Venik for a long time lost the power of speech. When he found words to speak the first he uttered were “you shall not go alone; I will go with you.”

“Where would you go,” said Krista with surprise and terror.