“Beautiful!” cried the boy ecstatically. “I am glad that we came up here to stay. So is dear old uncle. He’s revelling in the specimens he gets, and we shall have another jolly night with the microscope. He’ll give me a lecture upon all the little Latin beggars he pops into his bottle, and another for being so stupid in not recollecting all their cranky names. Never mind; it is jolly. Pity it isn’t later, for then there’d be plenty of blackberries and whorts. I dare say there’d be lots of the little tiny button mushrooms, too, in the lower parts among the soft grass. But what’s the use of grumbling? Uncle says that I am never satisfied, and that I am always restless, and I suppose it’s because I am a boy. Well, I can’t help being a boy,” he mused thoughtfully. “I might have been a girl. Well, girls are restless too. I say, what’s that?”
He shaded his eyes again and gazed at a speck of something that looked bright scarlet in the distance, and then not very far away he made out another, and again another speck or blotch of bright red. “Now, I wonder what’s growing there,” muttered the boy. “I don’t remember anything scarlet growing and blowing. Poppies? No, I don’t think they are poppies. They are at the edges of the cornfields, and there are no cornfields up here.”
He fixed his eyes more intently upon the scarlet specks, and then burst out laughing.
“Well, they are not poppies,” he said aloud. “Poppies don’t move, and those are moving, sure enough. There, one of them has gone behind that block of stone. Pooh, how stupid! Why, of course!”
He jerked himself round to look in another direction, so sharply that his creel swung out for a moment from the strap, and came back against his hip with a bang, as he stood with his back to the sun, gazing at a distant grey, gloomy-looking pile of stone building, and then nodded his head with satisfaction.
“Poppies, indeed! My grandmother! That’s what they are. Soldiers from over yonder. Part of the guard from the great prison, I suppose. Oh, poor beggars! How miserable, when you come to think of it—shut up yonder in that great gloomy place, for I don’t suppose they let them come out much without soldiers to watch them—and all for doing nothing. Doing nothing! Mustn’t say that, though, before Uncle Paul, or he’ll go into a rage and begin preaching about Bony and the war, and going on about the French. Hullo!”
The boy started, for there was a dull thud, apparently from the prison, miles away, followed by a loud echo which seemed to come from close at hand, making him turn again as if to look for the spot from which it came, and seeing it too, for the report of the gun had as it were struck against the face of the tor above him, and then glanced off to strike elsewhere.
“How queer echoes are!” he muttered. “Yes, and how queer I feel—all hollow. That’s made me think about it. I suppose that means twelve or one o’clock dinner-time. Oh, how stupid to go right away from uncle like this! I wish he’d come. But I won’t go till I have made my fifty trout.”
Turning his attention now to the stream, he began whipping away again, and finding that the little trout were rising as well as ever, with the result that Rodney Harding once more forgot everything else in his pursuit and went on up-stream nearer and nearer to the great tor, till at last he found himself in a little hollow amongst the rocks where the river had widened into a pool, hollowed out as it were at the base of a great cliff.
“Why, this is the end of it,” he said, pausing to look round and upward at the towering pile of rocks. “No, it isn’t. It must be the beginning—the source, I suppose they call it. Yes, the stream begins here, comes right from under that cliff. Why, it’s like a little cave out of which the water streams.”