the window beneath them, and moved towards it.

“I’m glad you told me that,” he said. “It may account for something that’s puzzled me a great deal⁠—I must think it out. But at present⁠—is that the old woman’s lamp?”

Avice led the way down to the hollow by a narrow path which took them into a little stonewalled enclosure where a single Scotch fir-tree stood sentinel over a typical moorland homestead of the smaller sort⁠—a one-storied house of rough stone, the roof of which was secured from storm and tempest by great boulders slung on stout ropes, and having built on to it an equally rough shelter for some small stock of cows and sheep. Out of a sheer habit of reflection on things newly seen, Brereton could not avoid wondering what life was like, lived in this solitude, and in such a perfect hermitage⁠—but his speculations were cut short by the opening of the door set deep within the whitewashed porch. An old woman, much bent by age, looked out upon him and Avice, holding a small lamp so that its light fell on their faces.

“Come your ways in, joy!” she said hospitably. “I was expecting you’d come up tonight: I knew you’d want to have a word with me as soon as you could. Come in and sit you down by the fire⁠—it’s coldish o’ nights, to be sure, and there’s frost in the air.”

“This gentleman may come in, too, mayn’t he, Mrs. Hamthwaite?” asked Avice as she and Brereton stepped within the porch. “He’s the lawyer-gentleman who’s defending my father⁠—you won’t mind speaking before him, will you?”

“Neither before him, nor behind him, nor yet to him,” answered Mrs. Hamthwaite with a chuckle. “I’ve talked to lawyers afore today, many’s the time! Come your ways in, sir⁠—sit you down.”

She carefully closed the door on her guests and motioned them to seats by a bright fire of turf, and then setting the lamp on the table, seated herself in a corner of her long-settle and folding her hands in her apron took a long look at her visitors through a pair of unusually large spectacles. And Brereton, genuinely interested, took an equally long look at her; and saw a woman who was obviously very old but whose face was eager, intelligent, and even vivacious. As this queer old face turned from one to the other, its wrinkles smoothed out into a smile.

“You’ll be wondering what I’ve got to tell, love,” said Mrs. Hamthwaite, turning to Avice. “And no doubt you want to know why I haven’t sent for you before now. But you see, since that affair happened down your way, I been away. Aye, I been to see my daughter⁠—as lives up the coast. And I didn’t come home till today. And I’m no hand at writing letters. However here we are, and better late than never and no doubt this lawyer gentleman’ll be glad to hear what I can tell him and you.”

“Very glad indeed!” responded Brereton. “What is it?”

The old woman turned to a box which stood in a recess in the inglenook at her elbow and took from it a folded newspaper.

“Me and my daughter and her husband read this here account o’ the case against Harborough as it was put before the magistrates,” she said. “We studied it. Now you want to know where Harborough was on the night that old fellow was done away with. That’s it, master, what?”

“That is it,” answered Brereton, pressing his arm against Avice, who sat close at his side. “Yes, indeed! And you⁠—”

“I can tell you where Harborough was between nine o’clock and ten o’clock that night,” replied Mrs. Hamthwaite, with a smile that was not devoid of cunning. “I know, if nobody else knows!”

“Where, then?” demanded Brereton.

The old woman leaned forward across the hearth.

“Up here on the moor!” she whispered. “Not five minutes’ walk from here. At a bit of a place⁠—Miss there’ll know it⁠—called Good Folks’ Lift. A little rise i’ the ground where the fairies used to dance, you know, master.”

“You saw him?” asked Brereton.

“I saw him,” chuckled Mrs. Hamthwaite. “And if I don’t know him, why then, his own daughter doesn’t!”

“You’d better tell us all about it,” said Brereton.

Mrs. Hamthwaite gave him a sharp look. “I’ve given evidence to law folks before today,” she said. “You’ll want to know what I could tell before a judge, like?”

“Of course,” replied Brereton.

“Well, then⁠—” she continued. “You see, master, since my old man died, I’ve lived all alone up here. I’ve a bit to live on⁠—not over much, but enough. All the same, if I can save a bit by getting a hare or a rabbit, or a bird or two now and then, off the moor⁠—well, I do! We all of us does that, as lives on the moor: some folks calls it poaching, but we call it taking our own. Now then, on that night we’re talking about, I went along to Good Folks’ Lift to look at some snares I’d set early that day. There’s a good deal of bush and scrub about that place⁠—I was amongst the bushes when I heard steps, and I looked out and saw a tall man in grey clothes coming close by. How did I know he were in grey clothes? Why, ’cause he stopped close by me to light his pipe! But he’d his back to me, so I didn’t see his full face, only a side of it. He were a man with a thin, greyish beard. Well, he walks past there, not far⁠—and then I heard other steps. Then I heard your father’s voice, miss⁠—and I see the two of ’em meet. They stood, whispering together, for a minute or so⁠—then they came back past me, and they went off across the moor towards Hexendale. And soon they were out of sight, and when I’d finished what I was after I came my ways home. That’s all, master⁠—but if yon old man was killed down in Highmarket

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