your medicine. Creep into that cave
and lie down."
"What do you intend to do?" he demanded, interested and amused.
"If it's one of Harrod's game-keepers," said the girl, drily, "it only
means a summons and a fine for me. And if it's a State Trooper, who is
prowling in the woods yonder hunting crooks, he'll find nobody here but
a trespasser. Keep quiet. I'll stand him off."
* * * * *
IV
When State Trooper Stormont came out on the edge of Owl Marsh, the girl
was kneeling by the water, washing deer blood from her slender,
sun-tanned fingers.
"What are you doing here?" she enquired, looking up over her shoulder
with a slight smile.
"Just having a look around," he said pleasantly. "That's a nice fat
buck you have there."
"Yes, he's nice."
"You shot him?" asked Stormont.
"Who else do you suppose shot him?" she enquired, smilingly. She rinsed
her fingers again and stood up, swinging her arms to dry her hands, -- a
lithe, grey-shirted figure in her boyish garments, straight, supple, and
strong.
"I saw you hurrying into the woods," said Stormont.
"Yes, I was in a hurry. We need meat."
"I didn't notice that you carried a rifle when I saw you leave the house
-- by the back door."
"No; it was in the woods," she said indifferently.
"You have a hiding place for your rifle?"
"For other things, also," she said, letting her eyes of gentian-blue
rest on the young man.
"You seem to be very secretive."
"Is a girl more so than a man?" she asked smilingly.
Stormont smiled too, then became grave.
"Who else was here with you?" he asked quietly.
She seemed surprised. "Did you see anybody else?"
He hesitated, flushed, pointed down at the wet sphagnum. Smith's
foot-prints were there in damning contrast to her own. Worse than that,
Smith's pipe lay on an embedded log, and a rubber tobacco pouch beside
it.
She said with a slight catch in her breath: "It seems that somebody has
been here. ... Some hunter, perhaps, -- or a game warden. ..."
"Or Hal Smith," said Stormont.
A painful colour swept the girl's face and throat. The man, sorry for
her, looked away.
After a silence: "I know something about you," he said gently. "And now
that I've seen you -- heard you speak -- met your eyes -- I know enough
about you to form an opinion. ... So I don't ask you to turn informer.
But the law won't stand for what Clinch is doing -- whatever provocation
he has had. And he must not aid or a
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