Part 12 (1/2)

And now they came in sight of the cottage, and Bob rubbed his eyes and looked again and again, for no smoke came from the chimney, no signs of life was about.

The icicles hung long and strong from the eaves; one side of the hut was entirely overblown with drift, and the door in the other looked more like the entrance to some cave in Greenland north. Bad enough this was; but ah, in the inside of the poor little house the driven snow met them as they pushed open the door! It had blown down the wide chimney, covered the hearth, formed a wreath like a sea-wave on the floor, and even o'er-canopied the bed itself. And the widow, the mother, lay underneath. No, not dead; she breathed, at least.

When the room had been cleared and swept of snow; when a roaring fire had been built on the hearth, and a little warm tea poured gently down her throat, she came gradually back again to life, and in a short time was able to be lifted into a sitting position, and then she recognised her son and Archie.

”Oh, mother, mother!” cried Bob, the tears streaming over his sun-browned face, ”the Maker'll never forgive me for all the ill I've done ye.”

”Hus.h.!.+ Bobbie, hus.h.!.+ What, lad, the Maker no' forgive ye! Eh, ye little know the grip o' His goodness! But you're here, you're innocent.

Thank Him for that.”

”Ye'll soon get better, mother, and I'll be so good. The Squire is to give me work too.”

”It's o'er late for me,” she said. ”I'd like to live to see it, but His will be done.”

Archie rode home the giant hunter, but in two hours he was once more mounted on Scallowa, and feathering back through the snow towards the little cottage. The moon had risen now, and the night was starry and fine.

He tied Scallowa up in the peat shed, and went in unannounced.

He found Bob Cooper sitting before the dying embers of the fire, with his face buried in his hands, and rocking himself to and fro.

”She--just blessed me and wore away.”

That was all he said or could say. And what words of comfort could Archie speak? None. He sat silently beside him all that livelong night, only getting up now and then to replenish the fire. But the poacher scarcely ever changed his position, only now and then he stretched out one of his great hands and patted Archie's knee as one would pet a dog.

A week pa.s.sed away, and the widow was laid to rest beneath the frozen ground in the little churchyard by the banks of the river. Archie went slowly back with Bob towards the cottage. On their way thither, the poacher--poacher now no more though--entered a plantation, and with his hunting-knife cut and fas.h.i.+oned a rough ash stick.

”We'll say good-bye here, Master Archie.”

”What! You are not going back with me to Burley Old Farm?”

Bob took a small parcel from his pocket, and opening it exposed the contents.

”Do you know them, Master Archie?”

”Yes, your poor mother's gla.s.ses.”

”Ay, lad, and as long as I live I'll keep them. And till my dying day, Archie, I'll think on you, and your kindness to poor poacher Bob. No, I'm not goin' back to Burley, and I'm not going to the cottage again.

I'm going away. Where? I couldn't say. Here, quick, shake hands, friend. Let it be over. Good-bye.”

”Good-bye.”

And away went Bob. He stopped when a little way off, and turned as if he had forgotten something.

”Archie!” he cried.

”Yes, Bob.”

”Take care of my mother's cat.”

Next minute he leapt a fence, and disappeared in the pine wood.