I said, “What takes you out at this time of the morning?”
“Oh! I was just lookin’ round the traps. My father rents the hills from here to the Clough, and I work with him.”
“You find it chilly work this weather?”
“It’s grey and cold; but we haven’t to mind those things.”
“Are you busy all day?”
“No. I only go to the traps twice, and then drive the rabbits into the town, and the rest o’ the time I’m clear.”
“Then where do you live?”
“I stop by myself mostly in the wooden house at the Poachers’ Hollow, and old Betty Winthrop comes and does what’s wanted to keep the place right.”
We walked on exchanging small talk until we came to the hollow, and I saw the tiny hut where my new friend lived. The hollow was a gruesome place. It acted as a kind of funnel whereby the wind from the great woods was poured over the beach, and sent moaning away across the sea. In summer it was gay with bracken, and golden ragwort, and wild geranium, but in winter it looked only fit for adventurous witches to gambol in.
I said, “The wind must yell awfully here when it is a gusty night.”
A curious look came into the young fellow’s eye, and gave me a new interest in him. He answered:
“I like it. The wind here’s like nowhere else. It plays tunes on the trees there as it comes through, and I get the echoes of them. Sometimes I hear the men’s voices, and then I know what it is. It’s the old Norsemen going out over the sea to look at their tracks again. Bless you, I’ve heard them talk about the Swan’s bath. Sometimes the dead ladies come and whisper, and I know they’re walking in the woods all the time the dusk lasts.”
I stared very much. This speech did not sound very sane, and yet it was uttered by a quiet young lad who looked as if he might be trusted. I thought, “Oh! Here’s a kind of poet, or something of that sort,” and I said, smilingly, “How do you come to know about the Norsemen, then?”