Away went Archie and his rough friend, and were just finishing a long debate about flies and fishing when Kate and Peter, and Branson and Bounder, came up the turret stairs and entered the room.
Archie then told them all of what he had seen that night at the cottage.
"Mark my words for it," said Bob, shaking his head, "they're up to some black work to-night."
"You mustn't go yet awhile, Bob," Archie said. "We'll have some fun, and you're as well where you are."
CHAPTER VIII.
IN THE WIDOW'S LONELY HUT.
Bob Cooper bade Archie and Branson good-bye that night at the bend of the road, some half mile from his own home, and trudged sturdily on in the starlight. There was sufficient light "to see men as trees walking."
"My mother'll think I'm out in th' woods," Bob said to himself. "Well, she'll be glad when she knows she's wrong this time."
Once or twice he started, and looked cautiously, half-fearfully, round him; for he felt certain he saw dark shadows in the field close by, and heard the stealthy tread of footsteps.
He grasped the stout stick he carried all the firmer, for the poacher had made enemies of late by separating himself from a well-known gang of his old associates—men who, like the robbers in the ancient ballad—