He got into the by-road that skirts the marsh, and to the gate which he had always used for entrance.
There was the scene as he had known it always, the rich growth of reeds and flags and rushes, the mild black cattle grazing on the “islands” of firm turf, the scented procession of the meadowsweet, the royal glory of the loosestrife, flaming pennons, crimson and golden, of the giant dock.
But they were bringing out a dead man’s body through the gate.
A laboring man was holding open the gate on the marsh. Merritt, horrified, spoke to him and asked who it was, and how it had happened.
“They do say he was a visitor at Porth. Somehow he has been drowned in the marsh, whatever.”
“But it’s perfectly safe. I’ve been all over it a dozen times.”
“Well, indeed, we did always think so. If you did slip by accident, like, and fall into the water, it was not so deep; it was easy enough to climb out again. And this gentleman was quite young, to look at him, poor man; and he has come to Meirion for his pleasure and holiday and found his death in it!”
“Did he do it on purpose? Is it suicide?”
“They say he had no reasons to do that.”
Here the sergeant of police in charge of the party interposed, according to orders, which he himself did not understand.