“No, no, I fancy he’s at sea. The poor fellow was pressed, you know.”

“But what are you doing here?” she demanded.

“Keeping the gate,” he replied promptly.

She was bewildered, but amused too. “Nonsense! How could you be a gatekeeper?”

“If you mean that I’m a bad one you must remember that I’m a novice. I shall learn.”

“Nothing of the sort! I mean—Oh, I believe you’re hoaxing me!”

“Indeed I’m not!”

“Where is Brean?” she demanded.

“Well, there you have me,” he confessed. “Like Ben—are you acquainted with Ben?—I dunno! That’s why I’m here.”

She wrinkled her brow. “Do you mean that Brean has gone away? But why should you take his place? Are you doing it for a wager?”

“No, but now that you come to suggest it I see that that might not be at all a bad notion,” he said..

“I wish you will be serious!” she begged, trying to frown and succeeding only in laughing.

“I am very serious. On the whole, I believe I shall do better to announce myself to be a cousin of Brean’s.”

“No one would credit such a tale, I assure you!”

“Don’t you think so? I can talk cant with the best, you know.”

She made a despairing gesture. “I don’t understand a word of this!”

The groom, who had been staring very hard at John, said: “Seems to me there’s something smoky going on here. If you ain’t playing a May-game, sir; nor cutting a sham—”

“I’m not, but I agree with you that there’s something smoky going on,” John interrupted. “The gatekeeper went off two nights ago, and hasn’t been seen since.”

“Well, that’s very bad,” acknowledged Miss Stornaway. “But I do not see why you should take his place!”

“But you must see that Ben is a great deal too young to remain here alone!” John pointed out.

“You are the oddest creature! How do you come here? Why—Oh, I wish you will explain it to me!”

“I will,” he promised. “It is quite a long story, however. Won’t you step down from your gig? I shan’t invite you to come into the toll-house, for although I have induced Ben to sweep out the kitchen it is not at all tidy, but we could sit on the bench.”

Her eyes danced; it seemed as if she were half inclined to fall in with this suggestion, but at that moment the groom said something to her in a low voice, directing her attention to the road ahead.

Coming towards the gate, on a showy-looking hack, was a thickset man, rather too fashionably attired for his surroundings. He wore white hunting-tops, a florid waistcoat with several fobs and seals depending from it, a blue coat with long tails and very large buttons, and a beaver hat with a exaggeratedly curled brim.

The laughter went out of Miss Stornaway’s eyes; she said rather hurriedly: “Some other time, perhaps. Please to open the gate now!”

John went to it immediately. It had a fifteen foot clearance, and the man on the gray hack reined in short of its sweep towards him. He looked rather narrowly at John for a moment, but rode forward as soon as the gate stood wide enough, and reined in alongside the gig. The beaver was doffed with a flourish, revealing exquisitely pomaded and curled black locks.

“Ah, Miss Nell, you stole a march on us, did you not?” challenged the gentleman jovially. “But I have found you out, you see, and come to meet you!”

“I have been to Church, sir, if that is what you mean,” Miss Stornaway replied coldly.

“Sweet piety! You will allow me to escort you home!”

“I cannot prevent you from doing so, sir, but I am sorry you should have put yourself to the trouble of coming to meet me. It was unnecessary,” said Miss Stornaway, whipping up her horse.

John shut the gate, and went back into the toll-house. A strong aroma of onions assailed him, from which he inferred that Ben considered it was time to start cooking dinner. He went into the kitchen, and said abruptly: “Ben, did you tell me that there is a woman who comes here to clean the place?”

“Ay, Mrs. Skeffling. She comes Wednesdays. She washes the duds too,” replied Ben. “We has a roast, Wednesdays, and a pudden, and all. Coo, she’s a prime cook, she is!”

“We must have her every day,” John said decidedly.

“Every day?” gasped Ben, nearly upsetting the pan he was holding over the fire. “Whatever for, gov’nor?”

“To keep the house clean, and cook the dinner, of course. Where does she live?”

“Down the road. But she has to have a sow’s baby every time!”

“In that case, I shall have to go to market and buy a litter of pigs,” said John. He perceived that Ben was looking quite amazed, and laughed. “Never mind! How much is a sow’s baby?”

“A half-horde—sixpence! Properly turned-up we’d be!”

“Don’t bother your head about that!” recommended John.

Ben eyed him with considerable respect. “You got a lot of mint-sauce, gov’nor?”

“I’m tolerably well-blunted,” responded John gravely. “Now, listen, Ben! I’m going to remain here—”

“You are?” cried Ben joyfully.

“Until your dad comes back, or, at any rate—”

“Coo, I hope he don’t never come back!”

“Quiet, you unnatural brat! If he doesn’t come back—lord, I’m dashed if I know what I’m to do with you, but I won’t throw you on the Parish, at all events! The thing is, if I’m to stay here I must make some purchases. How far off is the nearest town, and what is it?”

After reflection, Ben said that he thought Tideswell was only a matter of five miles or so. He added that his dad had bought the pig there, and a new coat for the winter. This sounded promising.

“I’ll ride there tomorrow,” John said. “You won’t be scared of minding the gate while I’m away, will you?”

“I ain’t scared—leastways, not in the day time I ain’t,” said Ben. “But I got to muck out Mr. Sopworthy’s henhouse, mind! He’ll tip me a meg, and likely want me to lend a hand at summat else. I dunno when I’ll be back.”

“Well, you must tell him that you’re needed here. What kind of a man is this Mr. Sopworthy?”

“He’s a leery cove, he is, me dad says. He ain’t one as’ll squeak beef on you, but it’s pound dealing with him, else he goes up in the boughs—proper, he does!”

“If that means that he’s an honest man, I fancy I had best make his acquaintance. I gather you don’t think he’d be likely to inform against your dad, so we shall tell him that your dad’s been called away for a few days, and left me to take his place. I’m a cousin of yours,” said the Captain.

“He won’t never swallow a rapper like that!” objected Ben. “He ain’t no chub! He’d know you was a flash cull, sure as check!”

“Not he!” grinned John.

“Soon as you opens your mummer, he will!” insisted Ben. “’Cos you talks flash, and you got a lot of cramp-words, like all the gentry-coves.”

“I’ll take care not to use ’em,” promised John.

“Yes, and what about that mish you got on, and them stampers?” demanded Ben, quite unconvinced.

“If you mean my shirt, I am going to buy some others, in Tideswell, and a stout pair of brogues as well. Don’t shake your head at me! I’ve been discharged from the Army, understand? Trooper, 3rd Dragoon Guards—and batman (that means a servant) to an officer. That’s how I come to talk a trifle flash. You remember that, and we shall come off all right!”

Ben looked dubious, but all he said was: “What’ll I call you, gov’nor?”

“Jack. What I must have is decent stabling for Beau. He can’t remain cooped up in a hen-house, and it seems to me that the Blue Boar’s the best place for him.”

“Why couldn’t you stable him in Farmer Huggate’s barn?” asked Ben captiously.

“I could, if I knew where it was,” John retorted.

“It’s nobbut a step, back of here,” Ben said. “Farmer Huggate and me dad’s as thick as hops. If you was to grease him in the fist, likely he’d let you have fodder for Beau, too, ’cos he’s got two big prads of his own.”

This suggestion pleased the Captain so well that he sent Ben to see Farmer Huggate as soon as he had eaten his dinner. He himself remained on duty, but was only twice called upon to open the gate. Whatever might happen during the week, the road seemed to be very little used on Sundays. Having discovered some clean sheets in a chest, John was able to make up his bed. He did some energetic work with the broom, drastically tidied the kitchen, and then sat down to compile a list of the various commodities which were needed to make life in a toll-house tolerable. He was engaged on this task when an imperative voice summoned him to the gate. He got up rather quickly, for he recognized the voice, and strode out.

Miss Stornaway, mounted on a good-looking hack, and unattended, said, with a slight smile: “Well, sir, I’ve come to hear that long story, if you please! You must know that they call me the Squire in these parts: that must serve as an excuse for my curiosity!”

“You need none,” he said, opening the gate a little way.

She touched her horse with her heel, saying as she went past John: “Do you mean to demand toll of me? I warn you, I shall inform against you if you do! I don’t go above a hundred yards from the gate: not as much!”

“Is that the rule?” he asked, going to her horse’s head.

“Of course!” She transferred the bridle to her right hand, brought one leg neatly over the pommel, and slipped to the ground. Shaking out the folds of her shabby riding-dress, she glanced up at John. “Heavens, how big you are!”

He smiled. “Why, yes! You told me so, this morning!”

She laughed, blushed faintly, and retorted: “I did not know how big until now, when I find myself on a level with you. You must know that in general I look over men’s heads.”

He could see that this must be so. She did not seem to him to be an inch too tall, but he realized that she was taller even than his sister, and built on more magnificent lines. Hitching her horse to the gate post, he said sympathetically: “It’s a trial, isn’t it? I feel it myself, and my sister tells me it has been the bane of her existence. Do you always ride unattended, Miss Stornaway?”

She had seated herself on the bench outside the tollhouse, under the fascia board, which bore, in staring black capitals, the name of Edward Brean. “Yes, invariably! Does it offend your sense of propriety? I am not precisely a schoolgirl, you know!”

“Oh, no!” he replied seriously, coming to sit down beside her. “I like you for it—if you don’t think it impertinent in me to tell you so. I’ve thought, ever since I came home, that there’s a deal too much propriety in England.”

She raised her brows. “Came home?”

“Yes. I’m a soldier—that is to say, I was one.”

“Were you in the Peninsula?” He nodded. “My brother was, too,” she said abruptly. “He was killed.”

“I’m sorry,” he said. “Where?”

“At Albuera. He was in the 7th.”

“You should be proud,” he said. “I was at Albuera, too. I saw the Fusiliers go into action.”

She lifted her chin. “I am proud. But he was my grandfather’s heir, and——Oh, well! What was your regiment?”

“3rd Dragoon Guards. I sold out after Toulouse.”

“And your name?”

“John Staple. I have told Ben to set it about that I’m a trooper—an officer’s batman. He says I talk flash, you see.”

She laughed. “Perfectly! But how do I address you?”

“In general, my friends call me Jack.”

“I cannot be expected to do so, however!”

“Well, if you call me Captain Staple you will undo me,” he pointed out. “I’m only a gatekeeper. Don’t be afraid I shall encroach! I won’t—Miss Nell!”

“You are certainly mad!” she said. “Pray, how do you come to be a gatekeeper?”

“Oh, quite by chance! I had been staying with one of my cousins, up in the north—the head of my family, in fact, and a very dull dog, poor fellow! There was no bearing it, so I made my excuses, and set out to ride into Leicestershire, to visit a friend of mine. Then my horse cast a shoe, up on the moors, I lost my bearings, became weather-bound, and reached this gate in darkness and drenching rain. Ben came out to open it for me. That seemed to me an odd circumstance. Moreover, it was easy to see he was scared. He told me his father had gone off on Friday evening, and hadn’t returned; so I thought the best thing I could do would be to put up here for the night.”

“Ah, that was kind!” she said warmly.

“Oh, no! not a bit!” he said. “I was deuced sick of the weather, and glad to have a roof over my head. I’m curious, too: I want to know what has become of Edward Brean.”