Part 3 (1/2)

”What are you doing there?” he demanded.

”Obviously, sunning myself,” replied the boy.

”Where do you live?”

”Here, in these woods.”

”You can't live in the woods,” said Van Cheele.

”They are very nice woods,” said the boy, with a touch of patronage in his voice.

”But where do you sleep at night?”

”I don't sleep at night; that's my busiest time.”

Van Cheele began to have an irritated feeling that he was grappling with a problem that was eluding him.

”What do you feed on?” he asked.

”Flesh,” said the boy, and he p.r.o.nounced the word with slow relish, as though he were tasting it.

”Fles.h.!.+ What Flesh?”

”Since it interests you, rabbits, wild-fowl, hares, poultry, lambs in their season, children when I can get any; they're usually too well locked in at night, when I do most of my hunting. It's quite two months since I tasted child-flesh.”

Ignoring the chaffing nature of the last remark Van Cheele tried to draw the boy on the subject of possible poaching operations.

”You're talking rather through your hat when you speak of feeding on hares.” (Considering the nature of the boy's toilet the simile was hardly an apt one.) ”Our hillside hares aren't easily caught.”

”At night I hunt on four feet,” was the somewhat cryptic response.

”I suppose you mean that you hunt with a dog?” hazarded Van Cheele.

The boy rolled slowly over on to his back, and laughed a weird low laugh, that was pleasantly like a chuckle and disagreeably like a snarl.

”I don't fancy any dog would be very anxious for my company, especially at night.”

Van Cheele began to feel that there was something positively uncanny about the strange-eyed, strange-tongued youngster.

”I can't have you staying in these woods,” he declared authoritatively.

”I fancy you'd rather have me here than in your house,” said the boy.

The prospect of this wild, nude animal in Van Cheele's primly ordered house was certainly an alarming one.

”If you don't go. I shall have to make you,” said Van Cheele.

The boy turned like a flash, plunged into the pool, and in a moment had flung his wet and glistening body half-way up the bank where Van Cheele was standing. In an otter the movement would not have been remarkable; in a boy Van Cheele found it sufficiently startling. His foot slipped as he made an involuntarily backward movement, and he found himself almost prostrate on the slippery weed-grown bank, with those tigerish yellow eyes not very far from his own. Almost instinctively he half raised his hand to his throat. They boy laughed again, a laugh in which the snarl had nearly driven out the chuckle, and then, with another of his astonis.h.i.+ng lightning movements, plunged out of view into a yielding tangle of weed and fern.

”What an extraordinary wild animal!” said Van Cheele as he picked himself up. And then he recalled Cunningham's remark ”There is a wild beast in your woods.”

Walking slowly homeward, Van Cheele began to turn over in his mind various local occurrences which might be traceable to the existence of this astonis.h.i.+ng young savage.