Well he knew those buck-skin breeches, those mud-spattered tops, those tall knees.
"Who"s that bloke?" whispered a voice at his ear.
"The officer commanding the French. Hush!"
"Crikey!" whispered Knapp, much impressed, and peering through the tamarisk. "Ain"t he got a pair o legs on him neether?"
Before Kit could stop him, he had brushed past and dropped into the creek, light as a feather.
For a moment he squatted there, monkey-fashion, blinking after the darkness.
The sun shone on his naked back, ridged and rippling. A little man, he was solid as a boulder: thighs tremendous, shin-bones great and bowed.
Such fists too! such feet!
Kit leaned out. For better or worse, the thing was done now. No good calling him back, no good cursing him. Better make the best of it.
"You"ve got a clear run," whispered the boy. "Hug the far bank, so the sentry on the Wish can"t see you; stick to the creek as far as you can; and when you leave the sh.o.r.e, take a wide sweep towards the Downs, to avoid their sentries; and then _run_, man!--_run_ as you never ran before!"
"I"ll run, man, run fast enough soon as you done talkin," replied the c.o.c.kney cheekily, hopping across the creek to the shelter of the far bank. "Be in Lewes afore you"re back to the guv"nor, I"ll lay. Ta-ta."
He was away down the creek, running like a monkey, finger-tips touching the ground.
Kit, thankful to tears, watched the sun on the man"s ridged back, as he stole away.
Surely, he was through now.
A sound made him look up.
III
The Gentleman had not stirred. He was reading aloud, and loving what he read.
"Little lamb, who made thee?
Dost thou know who made thee?"
Heaven send Knapp had not heard; but he had.
Up bobbed the black shaven pate out of the creek, much as Kit had often seen the head of a coot bob up in one of the moorland tarns of his own Northumberland.
The little man stood listening, the sun on his shoulders, careless of discovery.
The voice on the hill, loving and laughing, drew him like a syren"s.
Was the man mad?
He was climbing up out of the creek on to the gra.s.s.
Kit swept the tamarisk aside, and waved at him furiously. The little man soothed him with mocking hand, and crept on.
Kit dared not shout; he could not catch the other. What could he do?
Watch and pray, with sickening heart.
"Little lamb, I"ll tell thee, Little lamb, I"ll tell thee: He is called by thy name."
Beautiful as it was, the boy could not listen. His soul was in his eyes, and his eyes on Knapp.
The little man was now behind the reader, and stalking him on hands and knees.
What on earth was he up to?
A horrible thought wrenched the boy"s heart.
Would Knapp stab the other as he lay?
If so, could he stand by and see that little baboon-thing with the hairy bosom and leg-of-mutton fists murder in cold blood a n.o.ble gentleman to whom he owed his life?
Then he remembered thankfully that Knapp had no weapons.
"Little Lamb, G.o.d bless thee!
Little Lamb, G.o.d bless thee!"
Knapp had stopped now, and seemed bending over the other. Then he deliberately thrust his hand into the face beneath him.
The Gentleman sat up, s.n.a.t.c.hing for his sword.
"Tweak his conk!" popped a c.o.c.kney voice--"the conk of a lord!" And he was up and away, and down the slope with the merriest spurt of laughter.
The Gentleman was on his feet in a second, pursuing, a smear of blood at his nose.
Knapp heard him.
"Chise me!" he called, and came swinging down the slope at his ease, a smug grin on his face.
He was the fastest man but one South of Thames that day, and how was he to know that one was after him?
If he was not aware of it, Kit, watching with all his eyes, was.
The Gentleman was hounding at the other"s heels, swift, silent, terrible.
"Run!" screamed the boy.
The rifleman glanced over his shoulder.
"G.o.d A"mighty!" he yelled. "E"s catchin me."
The light went out of his face. Fists and knees woke to sudden life and began to hammer furiously. The long easy swing became a terrific pitter-patter. Flinging back his head, he set himself to run the race of his life.