The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1968, Side 32

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1968, Side 32
30 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Spring 1968 do so, and I wasn’t so ill that I couldn’t be on my feet. I had only a tiny little cough, this tickling cough. I perspired at night and I felt tired. That was all. I think I could very well be on my feet, but that doesn’t seem to be the custom here. I am certainly not that ill.” Soley looked at me with a question- ing gaze, as if to divine what I thought or knew. I studiously avoided her eyes and busied myself with making criss- cross creases in the bedspread. “See”, I said. “Now I have made a ship, and we can sail to any country we wish.” She smiled and said, “I have thought about that. I have a longing to sail. When I get over this indisposition I shall go to America, to Mother and Dad. I have often thought about this trip and longed for it.” She stared into space as if she saw something there that invited close in- spection. A gleam in her eyes indicated a pleasant thought. I understood that she had travelled in spirit all the way to America. Soley had read much and was better informed than is usually the case with young people of her age. She was familiar with all the Icelandic sagas; she had read them many times over. The parts that had especially thrilled her, she knew practically verbatim. She absorbed learning like a sponge and had a vivid memory. She played chess, and was much better at the game than I, as she was in so many other things. She was an avid player and I had to play several times a day. Somehow, it was not pos- sible to refuse Soley when she asked for something. Her eyes were then so wonderfully soft and beseeching. She studied and planned every move, and moved her pieces with precision, as I have seen experienced players do. When I made some foolish move, she obviously did not like it at all, and would make a sound of exasperation: “This is utter nonsense. Why do you do this! Now you’ll lose a pawn. You expose your pieces to mortal danger”. After such miscues of mine, the game was soon ended, with me being check- mated. We would then put the board away, but it would not be long before she suggested beginning again. After one such game, Soley remark- ed: “I have so often thought of life be- ing like a game of chess. I realize when I hold one of these pieces in my hand that it is made of wood, but what do we know about ourselves, or the meaning of life, or what is expect- ed of us? “Sometimes I think life is governed by chance. Chance seems often to decide, not we. For example, when my parents went to America, I was so small that they had to leave me be- hind, because they didn’t dare to take me with them on such a long ocean voyage. If I had gone with them, I certainly would not be here now. Per- haps I would never have become ill. But, like many others, they went to seek their fortune in the New World. “When I am well, I am going on a large ship to America, to the Rocky Mountains. I can imagine how my parents will welcome the child they left behind”. Soley leaned back and gazed into the distance, as if in a trance. I think she saw the Rocky Mountains and all she expected to await her there. Now I began to dress and to be on my feet all day, but Soley was always in bed. Her temperature rose and her cough became more pronounced and unremitting. Red spots showed on her cheeks, with pallor between. The breathing became shorter and more difficult. But she never complained.

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