the late summer sunlight. To the southward, low down, a faint haze told where the sea lay. The stream at his feet sang its queer, crooning moor-song as it rambled onward, chuckling to meet a bed of
of the stream arrested his attention. A few concentric ripples widened, travelled towards him, and were absorbed in the current. His lips curved into a little smile and he reached for his rod.
ne in your favour," sa
thistledown on the surface. There was a tiny splash, a laugh, and the little greenheart rod flicked a trout high over his
nard. "That was meant
searched the heather, and as the fateful seconds sped, at last laid dow
nd closed round it a tiny flutter passed through the fingerling; it gave a final gasp and was still. Knitting his brows in almost comic
d encouragingly. "Oh, buck up! Y
" was all wrong. I
nard regarded the speckled atom
rnity would have made just the difference between li
ing moss had rounded its edges, and in places segments had crumbled away, giving foothold to clumps of fern and starry moor-flowers. On three sides the surrounding ground rose steeply, form
used, still holding the corpse. "You shall be a sacr
d from the top of the great stone. Then he retraced his steps and gathered a handful of bleached twigs that the winter floods had left stran
edibly still, even the voice of the stream ceasing to be a sound distinct. A wagtail bobbing in the shallows fled into the waste. Overhead the smoke trembled upwards, a faint stain against a cloudless sky. The stillness seeme
e, there ought to be mo
and had thick, fleshy leaves. Hastily, he snatched a handful and piled it on the fire.
fluttered across the stream and dabbled in a puddle among some stones. Rabbits began to show themselves and frisk with lengthened shadows in the clear spaces. Maynard l
sing bright-eyed upon his lawful occasion, paused on the border of the stream to consider the stranger, and was lost
atching the western sky turn from glory to glory. Over his head the smoke of the sacrifice still curled
and, rising, stood expecta
r climbed into view against the pure sky. A young girl, breeched, booted
rd acknowledged her presence by raisin
e considered the embers on the stone, and then her grey eye
slow way-a rather
ut!" He nodded gravely at the stone. "That was a burnt sacrifice." With
ing in his voice, the wholesome, lean face and humorous eyes,
at it? I w
reins and turned
tired shadows in her eyes. The faint droop of her mouth, too, betrayed intense fatigue. "You look fagged. I do
rooding in the twilight, and half hesita
ngry, too. Have you
at's more, my child, you'll have a little fainting
or a minute," he
d as he turned to his satchel she slipped out of
. She drank with a wry little face, and coughed. "I put
over her arm. The colour crept back into her cheeks.
myself twice," she explained between frank mouthfuls. "I'm
the way now
ss." She looked at him, her long-lashed eyes a little serious. "But you-ho
rd la
rm September night. "I think I shall sleep her
me the l
lave g
olly Heave
by her unsmiling eyes.
ere." The words came jerkily, as if she w
conventional mode of life, and was prepared for the u
superst
and shook
But what has that
ed, flushin
y that the moor here is haunted. There
hteen, perhaps. She had said her people "didn't fuss." That mean
s anyone be
ded, un
n and covered with mud. He had been run to death; there was no wound on his body, but his heart was broken." Her thoughts recurred to the stone against which they leant, an
but the seriousness
heathen deity-Ashtoreth, or Pugm, or Baal
rose to
e about here are superstitious, an
p with a qu
ll around is so beautiful." He helped her to mount and walked to the top of the mound at her stirrup. "Tell me
her hand with half-shy friendliness. "Thank you for your niceness to me." Her eyes grew s
a canter. Maynard stood looking after her till she was swallowed by the dusk
and had no nerves to speak of; yet, as his eyes followed the line of the ridge against the sky, he experienced terror, the elementary, nauseating terror of childhood, when the skin tingl
the splash of water about him, realised that it was the brook b
of courage and self-respect one conscious thought alone remained. Whatever it was that was even then at his heels, he must not see it. At all costs it must be behind him, and, resisting the sudden terrified impulse to look over h
wiry man at the height of his physical
ilt to run for his life. He was r
es, crashing through whortle and meadowsweet, stumbling over peat-cuttings and the workings of forgotten tin-mines. An idiotic popular tune
eathing behind him, and, redoubling his efforts, stepped into a rabbit hole. He was up
with a rattle in the stillness of the night; he bore away to the left. A moment later there was Something nearly at his left elbow, and he smelt again the nameless, f?tid reek. H
ness; and ever the same unreasoning terror urged him on. The moon and ragged skyline swam about him; the blood drummed deafeningly in his ears, and his eyeballs felt as
was running-shambling now-along a road. The loping pursuit of th
ll in wavelike undulations. Still he ran, with sobbing gasps and limbs that swerved under his weight; at his elbow hung death unnam
ening on the dew, showed the dark circular scars of the turf where, for a generation, the smith's peat fires had heated the great iron hoops that tyred the wheels of the wains. One of these was eve
people to death. But iron-
s the uneven tufts of grass. His feet caught in some obstruction and he pitched forward
e around him, and with it the be
ulling on his gloves. A big car was passing slowly up the village s
iver, a fair-haired girl, l
the matter here? Nothing wrong with
shook his h
steriously ill last night just outside the forge, and they brought him in. It's a most queer case, and very
her hand from the brake-lever. Something in
queried. "What diagnosis have you
tally he is in a great state of excitement and terror, lapsing into delirium at times-that is really the most serious feature
, holding her underlip
ike-in appearance, I
smile crossed th
remarkable athletic build. He is calmer now, and I have left Matthew
m her seat and steppe
or him, to ask him to lunch with us. Do you think I might see him for a minute?
ge. The doctor led the way upstairs and opened a door.
n with exhaustion, with shadows round his closed eyes, lay Maynard; one hand lying on the counte
now him?"
r firm, cool hand over
d I warned him. Tell
, careful nursing
es and looked away, a faint colour tingeing her cheeks. "Will you go and telephone
is very kind of you, Lady Dorothy, and I will go and tele
is feet go down the narrow stairs.
ghter, looked at each other, and there was in their glance t
old Jarge T
orothy
ve, these men! They think because they are so big a
round that us found un. Dogs barkin' wakened us up. But it'd ha' had un, else--" A sound downstair
of the room and
luttered and opened; his eyes rested full on the girl's face. For a moment there was n
id in a weak v
re that her hand was still on his, but the twitching
told y
head with a
ou that c
the iron hoop on the ground outside
aged her h
ight-since you say
e stairs. Maynard met he
d. "I have found somethi
came in. He glanced at Maynar
Lady Dorothy!" he sa