By day the place was inviting enough
and a child wouldn’t have feared to be there.
Dean Burn came down from its cradle far away in the
hills and threaded Dean Woods with ripple and flash
and song. The beck lifted its voice in stickles
and shouted over the mossy apron of many a little
waterfall; and then under the dark of the woods it
would go calm, nestle in a backwater here and there,
then run on again. And of all fine spots on a
sunny day the Hound’s Pool was finest, for here
Dean Burn had scooped a hole among the roots of forest
trees and lay snug from the scythe of the east wind,
so that the first white violet was always to be found
upon the bank and the earliest primrose also.
In winter time, when the boughs above were naked,
the sun would glint upon the water; and sometimes all
would be so still that you could hear a vole swimming;
and then again, after a Dartmoor freshet, the stream
would come down in spate, cherry-red, and roll big
waters for such a little river. And then Hound’s
Pool would be like to rise over its banks and drown
the woodman’s path that ran beside it and throw
up sedges and dead grasses upon the lowermost boughs
of the overhanging thicket to show where it could
reach sometimes.
’Twas haunted, and old folk John
Meadows among ’em stoutly maintained
that nothing short of Doomsday would lay the spectrum,
because they knew the ancient tale of Weaver Knowles,
and believed in it also; but the legend had gone out
of fashion, as old stories will, and it came as a new
and strange thing to the rising generation. ’Tis
any odds the young men and maidens would never have
believed in it; but by chance it happed to be a young
man who revived the story, and as he’d seen with
his own eyes, he couldn’t doubt. William
Parsloe he was, under-keeper at Dean, and he told
what he’d seen to John Meadows, the head-keeper;
but it weren’t till he heard old John on the
subject that he knew as he’d beheld something
out of another world than his own.
The two men met where a right of way
ran through the preserves a sore trial
to the keepers and the owners also, but sacred under
the law and Harry Wade, the returned native,
as had just come back to his birthplace, was walking
along with Parsloe at the time.
The keepers were a good bit fretted
and on their mettle just then, because there was a
lot of poaching afoot and pheasants going, and a dead
bird or two picked up, as had escaped the malefactors,
but died after and been found. So when Parsloe
stopped Mr. Meadows and said as he’d got something
to report, the old man hoped he might have a line to
help against the enemy. One or two law-abiding
men, Wade among ’em, had been aiding the keepers
by night, and the police had also lent a hand; but
as yet nobody was laid by the heels, nor even suspected.
So it looked like stranger men from down Plymouth
way; and the subject was getting on John Meadows’
nerves, because his master, a great sportsman who poured
out a lot of money on his pheasants, didn’t
like it and was grumbling a good bit.
Then William Parsloe told his tale:
“I was along the Woodman’s
Path last night working up to the covers,” he
said, “and beside Hound’s Pool I fell in
with a hugeous great dog. ’Twas a moony
night and I couldn’t be mistook. ’Twas
no common dog I knowed, but black as sin and near
so large as a calf. He didn’t make no noise,
but come like a blot of ink down to the pool and put
his nose down to drink, and in another moment I’d
have shot the creature, but he scented me, and then
he saw me, as I made to lift my gun, and was off like
a streak of lightning.”
John Meadows stared and then he showed
a good bit of satisfaction.
“Ah!” he said. “I’m
glad as it is one of the younger people seed it, and
not me, or some other old man; because now ’twill
be believed. Hound’s Pool, you say?”
Parsloe nodded and Harry Wade asked
a question. He was a tall, handsome chap tanned
by the foreign sun where he’d lived and worked
too.
“What of it, master?” he said.
“This of it,” answered
Meadows. “Bill Parsloe have seen the Hound
and no less. And the Hound ain’t no mortal
dog at all, but he was once a mortal man and the tale
be old history now, yet none the less true for that.
My father, as worked here before me, saw him thrice,
and his highest good came to him after; and Benny
Price, a woodman, saw him once ten year ago, and good
likewise came to him, for Mrs. Price ran away with
a baker’s apprentice at Buckfastleigh and was
never heard of again. And since you’ve
seen the Hound, Parsloe, I hope good will come to you.”
Neither of t’other men had heard
the tale and Harry Wade was very interested, because
he minded that, when a nipper, his mother had told
him something about it. And Parsloe, who was
pretty well educated and a very sharp man, felt inclined
to doubt he hadn’t seen a baggering poacher’s
mongrel; but old John wouldn’t tell ’em
then. He was a stickler for his job and never
wasted no time gossiping in working hours.
“’Tis too long to unfold
now,” he said, “because Bill and me have
got to be about our duty; but if you’ll drop
in o’ Sunday and drink a dish of tea, Wade,
you can hear the truth of the Hound; and you can look
in on your way to work, Bill, and hear likewise if
you’ve a mind to it.”
They promised to come and upon the
appointed hour both turned up at the gamekeeper’s
cottage on Thurlow Down, where the woods end and the
right of way gives to the high road. And there
was John and his wife, Milly, and their daughter,
Millicent, for she was called after her mother and
always went by her full name to distinguish her.
Meadows had married late in life and Milly was forty
when he took her, and they never had but one child.
A very lovely, shy, woodland sort of creature was
Millicent Meadows, and though a good few had courted
her, William Parsloe among ’em, none had won
her, or tempted her far from her mother’s apron-strings
as yet. Dark and brown-eyed and lively she was,
with a power of dreaming, and she neighboured kindlier
among wild things than tame, and belonged to the woods
you might say. She was a nervous maiden, however,
and owing to her gift of make-believe, would people
the forest with strange shadows bred of her own thoughts
and fancies. So she better liked the sunshine
than the moonlight and didn’t travel abroad
much after dark unless her father, or some other male,
was along with her.
Another joined the tea-party a
very ancient man, once a woodman, and a crony of John’s;
and the keeper explained to the younger chaps why he’d
asked Silas Belchamber to come to tea and meet ’em.
“Mr. Belchamber’s the
oldest servant on the property and a storehouse of
fine tales, and when I told him the Hound had been
seen, he was very wishful to see the man as had done
so,” explained Mr. Meadows. “You may
say the smell of a saw-pit clings to Silas yet, for
he moved and breathed in the dust of pine and larch
for more’n half a century.”
“And now I be waiting for the
grey woodman to throw me myself,” said Mr. Belchamber.
“But I raised up as well as threw down, didn’t
I, John?”
“Thousands o’ dozens of
saplings with those hands you planted, and saw lift
up to be trees,” answered Meadows, “and
scores of dozens of timber you’ve felled; and
now, if you’ve took your tea, Silas, I’d
have you tell these chaps the story of Weaver Knowles,
because you’ll do it better than what I can.”
The old man sparked up a bit.
“For my part, knowing all I
know, I never feared the Hound’s Pool,”
he said, “though a wisht place in the dimpsey
and after dark as we know. But when a lad I drew
many a sizeable trout out of it afore your
time, John, when it weren’t poaching to fish
there as it be now. Not that I ever see the Hound;
but I’ve known them that have, and if I don’t
grasp the truth of the tale, who should, for my grandfather
acksually knowed the son of old Weaver Knowles, and
he heard it from the man’s own lips, and I heard
it from grandfather when he was eighty-nine year old
and I was ten.”
“Then we shall have gospel truth
for certain,” said Harry Wade, with his eyes
on Millicent Meadows.
“Oh, yes,” answered Silas,
“because my grandfather could call home the
taking of Canada and many such like far-off things,
so that shows you the sort of memory he’d gotten.
But nowadays the learning of the past be flouted a
good bit and what our fathers have told us don’t
carry no weight at all. Holy spells and ghostesses
and ”
“You get on to Hound Pool, Silas,”
said John Meadows, “because Parsloe will have
to go to his work in ten minutes.”
“The solemn truth be easily
told,” declared Mr. Belchamber. “Back
along in dim history there was a weaver by name of
Knowles who lived to Dean Combe. Him and his
son did very well together and he was a widower with
no care but for his work. Old Weaver, he stuck
to his yarn and was a silent and lonely fashion of
man by all accounts. Work was his god, and ’twas
said he sat at his loom eighteen hours out of every
twenty-four. Then, coming home one evening, the
man’s son heard the loom was still and went in
and found old Knowles fallen forward on the top of
his work, dead. So they buried him at Buckfastleigh.
“Then young Knowles, coming
home to his empty house after the funeral, suddenly
heard the music of the loom and thought his ears had
played him false. But the loom hummed on and
he crept up over to see who was weaving. In a
pretty good rage he was, no doubt, to think of such
a thing; but then his blood turned from hot to cold
very quick, I warn ’e, for there was his father
sitting on the old seat and working weft through warp
as suent and clever as if he was alive!
“Well, young Knowles he glared
upon his dead parent and felt the hair rising on his
niddick and the sweat running down his face; but he
kept his nerve pretty clever and crept away and ran
for all his might to the village and went to see Parson.
They believed more in those days than what they do
now, and Parson, whatever he may have thought, knew
young Knowles for a truth-teller and obeyed his petition
to come at once. But the good man stopped in
the churchyard and gathered up a handful of sacred
ground; and then he went along to the dead weaver’s
house.
“Sure enough the loom was a-working
busy as ever; but it couldn’t drown Parson’s
voice, for he preached from one of they old three-decker
pulpits, like a ship o’ war, and his noise,
when the holy man was in full blast, would rise over
a thunderstorm.
“‘Knowles! Knowles!’
he cried out; ’Come down this instant. This
is no place for you!’
“And then, hollow as the wind
in a winter hedge, the ghost made answer.
“‘I will obey so soon
as I have worked out my quill, your reverence,’
replied the spirit of Weaver Knowles, and Parson didn’t
raise no objection to that, but bade the dead man’s
son kneel down; and he done so; and the priest also
knelt and lifted his voice in prayer for five minutes.
“Then the loom stopped and old
Knowles came forth and glided downstairs; and not
a step creaked under him, for young Knowles specially
noted that wonder when he told my grandfather the
adventure.
“At sight of Old Weaver, Parson
took his churchyard dust and boldly threw it in the
face of the vision, and afore you could cross your
heart the shadow had turned into a gert black dog so
dark as night. The poor beast whimpered and yowled
something cruel, but Parson was short and stern with
it, well knowing you can’t have half measures
with spirits, no more than you can with living men
if you will to conquer ’em. So he takes
a high line with the weaver, as one to be obeyed.
“‘Follow me, Knowles,’
he said to the creature. ’Follow me in the
name of the Father, Son, and Ghost’; which the
forlorn dog did do willy-nilly; and he led it down
the Burn, to Hound’s Pool, and there bade it
halt. Then the man of God took a nutshell just
a filbert with a hole in it bored by a squirrel and
he gave it boldly into the dog’s mouth.
“‘Henceforth,’ he
said, ’you shall labour here to empty the pool,
using nought but this nutshell to do so; and when
you have done your work, but no sooner, then you shall
go back whence you came.’
“And the Hound will be on the
job till the end of the world afore he gets peace,
no doubt, and them with ears to hear, may oft listen
to a sound in the water like the rattling of a loom
to this day; but ’tis no more than that poor
devil-dog of a Knowles at his endless task.”
Millicent poured the old man another
cup of tea and Parsloe went to work and Wade applauded
the tale-teller.
“A very fine yarn, uncle,”
he said, “and I’m glad to know the rights
of it; and if the Hound brings luck, I hope I’ll
see him.”
“More would see him if faith
was there,” answered old Belchamber. “But
where do you find faith in these days? For all
I can see the childer taught in school don’t
believe in nothing on earth but themselves. In
fact, you may say a bald head be a figure of scorn
to ’em, same as it was in the prophet’s
time.”
“Youth will run to youth, like
water to the sea,” said Harry Wade. “But
a very fine tale, master, and I hope I may be the
next to meet thicky ghost Hound I’m sure.”
“You’ve had your luck,
Mr. Wade, by all accounts,” laughed Millicent,
but the returned native was doubtful. They chatted
and he told ’em some of his adventures and how,
at the last gasp, prospecting along with two other
men, they had found a bit of gold at last.
“Not any too much for three,
however,” said Harry; “but enough for a
simple customer like me. They say lucky in life
unlucky in love; but I much hope I haven’t been
too lucky in life to spoil my chance of a home-grown
partner.”
Mr. Belchamber departed then, because
he was rather tired after his tale, but Harry stopped
on, because Mrs. Meadow had took a liking to his talk
and found he’d got a very civil way with old
women. He’d listen to her and, as she loved
to chatter, though she’d got nothing whatever
to say, as so often happens with the great talkers,
his attention pleased her and she asked him if he’d
bide to supper. And Millicent liked him also,
being drawn to the man by his account of great hardships
and perils borne with bravery; for though Harry wasn’t
the hero of his own tales no more than his mates had
been, yet he had gone through an amazing lot and done
some bold and clever things. And the girl, being
one of the timid sort, liked to hear of the courage
of a man, as they will. Wade was an open speaker,
and had no secrets from ’em. He confessed
that he’d got a clear four hundred pounds a
year out of his battle with life.
“Not much for what I endured,”
he said, “yet a lot more than many poor chaps,
who went through worse. And now I’m in a
mind to settle down and find a bit of work and stick
to Dean Prior for evermore.”
Mrs. Meadows laughed at her daughter
when Harry was gone, for she had quick senses and
was a good bit amused to see her shy girl open out
and show interest in the man; but to chaff Millicent
was always the way to shut her up, and she wouldn’t
let her mother poke fun at her.
“Now I’ll never see him
again,” vowed Millicent, “and all along
of you, mother, for I’d blush to the roots of
my hair if he spoke to me any more while I knew your
cruel sharp eye was on me.”
However, see him again she did, because
Wade had asked ’em all to come and drink tea
long with him and witness the curiosities he’d
fetched home from Australia; and though the girl made
a hard try to escape the ordeal, her father bade her
go along with him. Mrs. Meadows didn’t go
when the day came, because she weren’t feeling
very well; and out of her ailments sprang a surprising
matter that shook ’em all to the roots.
Harry Wade lived in a little house
all alone and did for himself very clever as old campaigners
know how to do. He’d planned a very nice
meal for ’em and laid out his treasures and
was very sorry when John and his daughter explained
the absence of Mrs. Meadows. And sorrier still
he declared himself to be when they cut their visit
a bit short, because for the need to get home pretty
quick to the suffering woman.
He was engaged for the most part with
Millicent’s father that visit, though he pressed
food of his own cooking upon her and tried to make
her chatter a bit. But he got little out of her,
for she weren’t a talker at best, and she couldn’t
forget her mother had laughed at her for being so
interested in the man, and so she was shyer than usual.
But though she said nought, she liked
to hear her father praise Harry as they went home
along, for John thought well upon him.
“He’s a man who have got
a regular mind despite his dangerous past,” said
the old chap. “You might think such a venturesome
way of life would make him reckless and lawless; but
far from it. His experience have made him see
the high value of law and order.”
“He’s brave as a lion
seemingly,” ventured Millicent, and her father
allowed it was so.
“An undaunted man,” he
admitted, “and his gifts will run to waste now,
because, unless you’re in the police, or else
a gamekeeper, there’s little call for courage.”
Mrs. Meadows was a lot worse when
they came home and they got her to bed and put a hot
brick in flannel to her feet; but she’d had the
like attacks before and John weren’t feared
for her till the dead of night; and then she went
off her head and he touched her and found she was living
fire. So he had to call up his girl and explain
that, for all he could tell, death might be knocking
at the door.
Such things we say, little knowing
we be prophets; but in truth a fearful peril threatened
the Meadows folk that night, though ’twas Millicent
and not her mother was like to be in highest danger.
“’Tis doctor,” said
John, “and I can’t leave her, for she may
die in my arms, so you must go; and best to run as
never you run before. Go straight through Dean
Wood and don’t draw breath till you’ve
got to the man.”
She was up and rayed in less than
no time and away quick-footed through the forest;
and so swift had been her actions that she hoped to
cheat her own fear of the darkness and get through
Dean Woods afore she had time to quail. But you
can’t hoodwink Nature that way, and not long
afore the trees had swallowed her up Millicent felt
nameless dread pulling at her heart and all her senses
tingling with terror. She kept her mind on her
mother, however, and sped on with her face set before
her, though a thousand instincts cried to her to look
behind for the nameless things that might be following
after.
’Twas a frosty night with a
winter moon high in the sky, and Millicent, who knew
the Woodman’s Path blindfold, much wished it
had been darker, for the moonlight was strong enough
to show queer faces in every tree-hole and turn the
shadows from the trees into monsters upon her path
at every yard. She prayed as she went along.
“My duty my duty,”
she said. “God help me to do my duty and
save mother!”
Then she knew she was coming close
to the Hound’s Pool and hesitated for fear,
and wondered if she might track into the woods and
escape the ordeal. But that wasn’t possible
without a lot of time wasted, and so she lifted up
another petition to her Maker and went on. She’d
travelled a mile by now and there was another mile
to go. And then she came alongside the Pool and
held her hands to her breast and kept her eyes away
from the water, where it spread death-still with the
moon looking up very peaceful out of it. But
a moment later and poor Millicent got the fearfullest
shock of her life, for right ahead, suddenly without
a sound of warning, stark and huge with the moonlight
on his great open mouth, appeared the Hound.
From nowhere he’d come, but there he stood within
ten yards of her, barring the way. And she heard
him growl and saw him come forward to meet her.
One scream she gave, though not so
loud as a screech owl, and then she tottered, swayed,
and lost her senses. If she’d fallen to
the left no harm had overtook her; but to the right
she fell and dropped unconscious, face forward into
Dean Burn.
The waters ran shallow there, above
the Pool, yet, shallow or deep, she dropped with her
head under the river and knew it not.
Many a day passed afore the mystery
of her escape from death got to Millicent’s
ears; but for the moment all she could mind was that
presently her senses returned to her and she found
herself with her back against a tree and her face
and bosom wet with water. Slowly her wits worked
and she looked around, but found herself a hundred
yards away from the Pool. Then she called home
what had befallen her and rose to her feet; and presently
her blood flowed again and she felt she was safe and
the peril over-got. ’Twas clear the Hound
had done her no hurt and she felt only puzzled to
know why for she was so wet and why, when she went
fainty beside the Pool, she’d come to again
a hundred yards away from it. But that great mystery
she put by for another time and thanked God for saving
her and cleared the woods and sped to doctor with
her bad news.
And he rose up and let her in and,
hearing the case was grave, soon prepared to start.
And while he dressed, Millicent made shift to dry
herself by the heat of a dying fire. Then he put
his horse in the trap and very quick they drove away
up to the gamekeeper’s house. But no word
of her amazing adventure did the woman let drop in
doctor’s ear; and the strange thing was that
peace had come upon her now and fear was departed
from her heart.
Milly Meadows had got the influenza
very bad and, guessing what he’d find, the physician
had brought his cautcheries along with him, so he ministered
a soothing drug and directed her treatment and spoke
hopeful words about it. He was up again next
day and found all going very orderly, and foretold
that, if the mischief could be kept out of Milly’s
lungs, she’d recover in due course. So
the mind of her husband and her daughter grew at peace
when Milly’s body cooled down; and then the girl
told her father of what had befell her by Hound’s
Pool, and he was terrible interested and full of wonder.
In fact, naught would do but they
went there together the morning after, and there in
the chill light of a January day, Millicent pointed
out where she stood when the vision come to her and
presently the very tree under which she had returned
to life.
But John, being skilled in all woodland
craft, took a pretty close look round and soon smelled
out signs and wonders hid from common sight. He’d
been much pleased with the tale at first, for though
sorrowful that his girl had suffered so much, he hadn’t
got enough mind himself to measure the agony she’d
been through; and, whether or no, since the Hound brought
good luck, he counted on some bright outcome for Millicent
presently, if it was only that her mother should be
saved alive. But when he got to his woodcraft,
John Meadows weren’t so pleased by any means,
because he found another story told. Where the
girl had fainted and dropped in the water on seeing
the Hound was clear to mark; but more than that John
discovered, for all round about was the slot of a
big dog with a great pad and claws; and, as if that
weren’t enough, the keeper found something else
also.
He stared then and stood back and
scratched the hair on his nape.
“Beggar my shoes!” said
John. “This weren’t no devil-dog,
but a living creature! The Hound be a spirit
and don’t leave no mark where he runs; but the
dog that made these tracks weighs a hundred and fifty
pound if he weighs an ounce; and look you here.
What be this?”
Well, Millicent looked and there weren’t
no shadow of doubt as to what her father had found,
for pressed in the mire and gravel at river edge was
the prints of a tidy large boot.
William Parsloe came along at the
moment; but he knew nought, though he put two and
two together very clever.
“’Tis like this,”
he said; “you ran into the poachers, Millicent,
though what the blackguards was up to with a hugeous
dog I couldn’t tell you. And now I’ll
lay my life that what I saw back along was the same
creature and he whipped away and warned his masters.”
“But me?” asked the girl.
“Why for if I fainted and fell into the river,
didn’t I drown there for you or father to find
next day?”
“Yes,” added John. “How came
that to be, Bill?”
“I see it so clear as need be,”
explained Parsloe, who had a quick mind. “You
fell in the water and the dog gave tongue. The
blackguards came along and, not wishful to add murder
to their crimes, haled you out. Then they carried
you away from the water, loosened your neckerchief
and finding you alive, left you to recover.”
“Dear God!” said Millicent,
shivering all down her spine, “d’you mean
to tell me an unknown poaching man carried me in his
arms a hundred yards, William?”
“I mean that,” answered
Parsloe, “and if we had the chap’s boot,
we should know who ’twas.”
So they parted, and John he went home
very angry indeed at such triumphant malefactors,
and though Millicent tried her bestest to be angry
also, such is the weakness of human nature that she
couldn’t work up no great flood of rage.
And when she was alone in her bed that night, for it
was her father’s turn to watch over her mother,
she felt that unknown sinner’s arms around her
again and his wicked hands at her neckerchief, and
couldn’t help wondering what it would have been
like if she’d come to and found herself in that
awful position.
Then Milly Meadows recovered and John,
along with William Parsloe, Harry Wade, and a few
more stout men, plotted a plot for the poachers and
combed the plantations on a secret night in a way
as they’d never done afore; but they failed
and had Dean Woods all to themselves, though the very
next night there was another slaughter and a lot of
birds lost.
And a bit after the pheasant season
finished, John Meadows heard that the master reckoned
’twas time his head-keeper made a dignified retirement
and let a younger man William Parsloe in
fact take his place.
But while John felt sorry for himself
in this matter, yet was far too sane and common-sensible
to resent it, another wondrous thing fell out, and
Harry Wade got in a rare sort of fix that promised
more fret and strain than all his other adventures
put together. For, along of one thing and another,
though the true details never reached but two ears,
he was up against a new and tremendous experience
and from being a heart-whole man with no great admiration
on the women, he felt a wakening and a stir and knew
’twas love.
For Millicent Meadows he went through
the usual torments, and his case weren’t bettered
by William Parsloe neither, because when he confessed
to the man, who had got to be his friend, that Millicent
was a piece very much out of the common, Bill told
him that he weren’t the first by many as had
thought the same.
“But she’s not for men,”
said Parsloe. “All sorts have offered, and
good ’uns, including myself I may tell
you in confidence; but the man ain’t born to
win Millicent Meadows.”
However, Wade, he set to it, and after
a lot of patient skirmishing he began to see faint
signs of hope. He held in, however, so powerful
as his nature would let him until the signs heartened
the man for a dash at last, and ’twas by Hound’s
Pool on a May day with the bluebells beside the water,
and the cherry blossom tasselling over their heads that
he told the girl she was the light of his spring and
the breath of his life.
And she just put her hand in his’n
and looked up in his face and took him without any
fuss whatever.
Not for a week, however, till he felt
safe in his promised state, did Harry ever open out
his dark secrets to her; but then, for her ears only,
out it came.
“You mind that fatal night?”
he asked; and they were beside the Pool again, for
she loved it now, because ’twas there he begged
her to marry him.
“Ess fay and I do, but I don’t
hate the Pool no more not after you told
me you loved me there,” said Millicent.
“’Twas I that saved you,”
he confessed. “At a loose end and for a
bit of a lark just sport, you understand,
not wickedness I done a bit of poaching
and picked off a good few birds, I fear.”
She looked at him round-eyed.
“You wretch!” she cried;
but his arms were close about her, and she was powerless.
“Oh, yes. And my great
dog it was as I kept hid on a chain by day. And
when he frightened you into the water that night, I
was behind him and had you out again and in my arms
in half a second. And then I carried you away
from the river, and when I held you in my arms I knew
you’d be my wife or nobody would.”
“Thank the watching Lord ’twas you!”
she gasped.
“I waited till I see you come
to and knew you’d be all right then; but I followed
you, to see what you was up to, and didn’t go
home till I saw you drive away with the doctor.
My dog was my joy till that night a great
mongrel I picked up when I was to Plymouth and kept
close of a day. Clever as Satan at finding fallen
birds in the dark, though unfortunately he didn’t
find ’em all. But after the happenings I
took him back to Plymouth again on the quiet, and
he won’t frighten nobody no more.”
Then ’twas her turn and she
dressed him down properly and gave him all the law
and the prophets, and made him promise on his oath
that he’d never do no more crimes, or kill fur
or feather that didn’t belong by rights to him.
And he swore and kept his oath most steadfast.
“I’ve catched the finest
creature as ever harboured in Dean Woods,” he
said, “and her word be my law for evermore.”
But nobody else heard the truth that
Wade was the unknown sinner, for Millicent felt as
her father would have been cruel vexed about it.
They was wed in the summer and Wade
found open-air work to his taste not a mile from their
home. But often, good lovers still, they’ll
go to Hound’s Pool for memory’s sake and
sit and hear Weaver Knowles working unseen about his
task.