The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Side 41

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Side 41
SPRING /SUMMER 1995 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 151 written the longer letter before he left Fort Garry, but the other he wrote in bed, in pencil, the day after he came here to the abbey. Whether the letters have ever been delivered, I do not know. But I have valid reasons to believe that they have gone amiss in some way, — at least the letter which was written on Ambrosius’ Mass (April 4th), and they who read these lines to the end may be of the same opinion. The first days that Mr. Berg was here in the abbey, he was often well enough to speak and could sit propped up in bed with a cushion behind his shoulders for an hour or more. He used this time to write some lines, either in the writing book or on the loose sheets of paper. He wrote each line quickly and although he was not educated, his handwriting was beautiful, but quite peculiar, and showed clearly that he was more painstaking than men generally are nowadays. The day after Godson and Villon left the abbey, Mr. Berg said to Jean and me, “What do you think about my illness?” “Your illness is very serious,” said Brother Jean. “Do you think my death is near?” “I think it will be soon,” answered Brother Jean. “It gladdens me to know that my suffer- ing is about to end,” said Mr. Berg, and a glow of happiness seemed to spread over his face. “Pain submits best to rest! I am sated with life and men. Nor am I unpre- pared. I am ready whenever the call comes.” The next day (April 8th), he was feeling better, for he had slept rather peacefully during the night. In the morning he asked me to lend him pen and ink, which I did immediately. He sat up in bed for a full hour with the cushion behind his shoul- ders and wrote furiously. It was then that he started the letter that will accompany this narrative of mine. After midday that day, he said to me, “I have a secret matter that I wish to discuss because I know you are discreet and trustworthy and God-fear- ing.” “What is your secret about?” I said, after a short silence. I half feared that he would let me hear a long confession of some youthful offence. “It is about a treasure buried in the earth,” said he, gazing into space. “Is it a large sum?” I asked. “It comes to several thousand American dollars in banknotes, not gold or silver, and also a small bankbook.” “Where is this treasure buried?” “It is buried on the banks of the Red River, near the inn I lived in while I was in Fort Garry in Canada. It was I who buried it there this fall, just before the first snow.” “Why did you bury money in the ground?” I asked. “I knew I had not much time left and I was afraid the money might get into the hands of the rebels in Fort Garry. I myself did not own the banknotes I buried. But I did own the bankbook. — It was my friend, William Trent, who gave me the notes on his dying day and asked me to take them to his brother who lives in the city of Brooklyn. This fall I wrote a long letter to my sister in the north of Iceland. I told her as clearly as I could about this money, where it was buried and how to go about finding it. I asked my sister to send her son, if she had one, when he was old enough, or some other trustworthy man to find William Trent’s brother or his heirs and go with him or them west to Fort Garry to get the treas- ure. I sent this letter to my sister with a white man by the name of Smith who went to St. Paul before Christmas last winter. After New Year’s, I wrote my sister another letter con- taining the same information. I sent this letter with an Indian going to Pembina about the middle ofjanuary. I wrote a third letter to her a few days before I left Fort Garry and in it I included the main infor- mation from the earlier letters but added that I was leaving, for life or death, to find a doctor in the city of St. Paul. And I told her, as well, that the money I buried this

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