“Well, Jane, what’s up now, lass?” inquired the farmer.
“Hush, master. This way.” She drew him back towards the entrance to the kitchen, and said in a low, mysterious tone of voice, “Are the guns loaded?”
“Two of them are. But what of that?”
“Load the others.”
“Why, dash it—what ails thee, girl?”
“Nothing, master. I can’t tell why, but I feel timmersome like, and fancy something bad is going to happen.”
“If loading the other guns will do thee any good the remedy is easy enough,” observed the good-natured farmer, who at once proceeded to charge the other weapons.
“Thanks, Mr. Richard, thanks!” exclaimed the girl, in a tone of evident satisfaction.
The farmer repaired to his bedroom, taking the two guns—his own and his brother’s—with him. At his suggestion his two friends had carried up their weapons into their bedroom in the earlier portion of the evening. This might appear a little singular, but John Ashbrook had playfully observed to Cheadle and Jamblin that there was sometimes a hare to be seen out of the bedroom window, feeding on the orchard grass of a morning.
“And so,” he observed jocosely, “if you see one to-morrow morning you will of course be able to knock him over.”