It was a tiresome and lonely occupation, this incessant watching, and Teddy had recourse to several expedients to while away the weary hours. The first and most natural was that of singing. He trolled forth every song that he could recall to remembrance, and it may be truly said that he awoke echoes in those forest-aisles never before heard there. As in the pauses he heard the volume of sound that seemed quivering and swaying among the tree-trunks, like the confined air in an organ, he was awed into silence.
“Whist, ye son of Patrick McFadden; don’t ye hear the responses all around ye, as if the spirits were in the organ loft, thinkin’ ye a praist and thimselves the choir-boys. I belaves, by me sowl, that ivery tree has got a tongue, for hear how they whispers and mutters. Niver did I hear the likes. No more singin’, Teddy my darlint, to sich an audience.”
He thereupon relapsed into silence, but it was only momentary. He suddenly looked out into the darkness which shrouded the still watchful beast from sight, and exclaimed:
“Ye owld shivering assassin, out there, did yees ever hear till how Tom O’Reilly got his wife? Yees never did, eh? Well, then, be aisy now, and I’ll give yees the truths of the matter.
“Tom was a great, rollicking boy, that had an eye gouged out at the widow Mulloney’s wake, and an ugly cut that made his mouth six inches wide: and, before he got the cut, it was as broad as yer own out there. Besides, his hair being of a fire’s own red, you may safely say that he was not the most beautiful young man in Limerick, and that there wasn’t many gals that were dying of a broken heart for the same Tom.
“But Tom thought a mighty sight of the gals and a great deal more of Kitty McGuire, that lived close by the brook as yees come a mile or two out of this side of Limerick. Tom was possessed after that same gal, and it only made him the more determined when he found that Kitty didn’t like him at all. He towld the boys he was bound to have her, and any one who said he wasn’t would get his head broke.
“There was a little orphan girl, whose father had gone to Ameriky and whose mother was dead, that was found one night, years before, in front of old Mrs. McGuire’s door. She was about the same age as Kitty, and the owld woman took her out of kindness and brought them up together. She got to be jist as ugly a looking a gal as Tom was a man. Her hair was redder than his, and her face was just that freckled that yees couldn’t tell which was the freckle and which was the skin itself. And her nose had a twist, on the ind of it, that made one think it had been made for a corkscrew, or some machine that you bore holes with.