Part 15
"Oh, it was that all right 'nough. But, why, ye're twice as tall: an' 'taren't so long, nayther." Amos paused, staring mightily at Johnny, and slapped his thigh. "Why," he said, "it's the curiousest thing in natur, seein' you now, an' here too. Did ye see e'er a funeral las' Wednesday?"
"No--where?"
"Up to chu'ch where yer gran'father's buried. But no--y'aren't livin' hereabout now, o' coase. Well it is the rarest conglomeration ever I see, me seein' you 'ere at this 'ere very pit, an' 'im buried on'y las' Wednesday, an' died in a accident too. Fell off a rick, he did."
"An' who was he?"
"Coopersale chap, he was, name o' Stiles. Lived here 'bout six year. But coase you wud'n' know 'bout him; 'twere he as did the accident."
"Did the accident? What d'ye mean?"
Amos Honeywell got up from his seat, and jerked his thumb toward the pit-bottom. "This here one," he said. "Yer gran'father."
"D' you mean he killed him?"
"Dun't much matter what ye call it now the chap's dead, but I wouldn't put it killed--not meanin'." Amos Honeywell came slouching along the pit-edge, talking as he came. "See, he was a Coopersale chap an' new here, an' knowed few. Well, he sees this here's a likely spot for a rabbit or so, an' he puts up a few pegs an' a wire or two, just arter dark: _you_ know. In the middle of it he sees a strange oad chap comin' with a lantern, searchin'--searchin' what for? Why for wires, he thinks, o' coase. He hides in some brambles, but t'oad chap gets nigher an' nigher an' presen'ly Stiles he sees he's about caught. So he ups on a sudden an' knocks the oad chap over, an' grabs the wires an' then he bolts. Oad chap goes over into pit of a lump, an' he falls awk'ard an'--an' well--there y'are!"
"And how long ha' you known this?"
"_Knowed_ it? Knowed it all time, same as others."
"An' never said a word of it, nor told the police?"
"Why no," Amos answered, with honest indignation. "Wudn't hev us get the poer chap in trouble, wud ye?"
And this was the mystery: nothing of wonder at all, nothing but a casual crossing of ways: just a chance from the hatful, like all the rest of it. And Amos--well, he was right, too, by such lights as he could see.
. . . . . .
Light was low behind the hills, and dusk dimmed the keeper's honest face as he waved his friends goodbye. Yes, he would come to them in London, one of these days. Soon? Well, then, soon.
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Together the three went down the scented lanes, where the white ghost-moths began to fly, and so into the world of new adventure.
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THE END.
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