Ormarr took a cigar and lit it, covertly watching the expression of the old man’s face.
“Sit there, Ormarr, where I can see you; that’s it. I was thinking, there’s not much left of the peasant lad who came up here that morning ten years ago. The eyes are the same, yes; and a look about the face—I’ve noticed it the last few days.... Anyhow, it was as well I didn’t send you away that day after all.”
Ormarr felt his cheeks flush, and bent forward in his chair.
“My dear Grahl, I feel myself a man now in most things, but there’s one thing that has stuck to me since I was a child. I never could thank any one in words. And I don’t know how to thank you in any other way.... I’m sure no father ever did more for his son than you have done for me. I hardly know how any one could do more for a fellow-creature than you have.”
“Oh.... And what is this, if you please, if not thanking me in words?”
“You know yourself how much I owe you—you know I don’t exaggerate things as a rule....”
“There, Ormarr, that’s enough. You must have seen what it meant to me all along—the joy and delight of teaching you. No more pupils now for Abel Grahl. You are my last—and my greatest. If I could find one greater still...? I don’t think I shall live to be roused from my bed a second time at six in the morning by a lad with his fiddle in a calfskin bag and the promise of fame in his eyes.”
Ormarr laughed at the thought. A moment later he was serious once more. And Grahl went on:
“You’ll go travelling about the world, giving concerts here, there, and everywhere. I wish I were strong enough to go with you.”
Ormarr laughed again, but without heartiness.