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SHIANA
99

that person in the eyes, cut off my ear if he asks a second question."

"He is the most extraordinary man I ever met," said Mary. "It was a long time before I could make out whether he was a bad man or a good one. The first time I saw that look of his, I thought that the Evil One—the sign of the Cross between us and him!—was in his heart, so that I didn't like to meet him on the road, or to speak a word to him. But one night I was coming home from the town, and as I was going along the Broad Road, I had a touch of faintness, and I sat down on a stone in a bend of the fence of the road. I fell asleep, and when I woke up, the little faintness was gone, but it was the very dead of night. I jumped up and set out for home, and I promise you there was no numbness in my feet. It was a fine, sky-bright[1] night. When I was about twenty yards from the cross-roads, who should come up Bohar na Bro[2] but John of the Moon, the cut-throat of a thief!"

Sheila.—Who was he, Peg?
Peg.—He was an evil spirit that used to show himself there, and he used to kill people.

"When I saw him," said she, "I thought at once that I was done for. With that I heard somebody walking behind me. I looked over my shoulder. Who should be there but Shiana, with his two eyes blazing, and holding a drawn knife in his hand, a black-handled knife. He passed by me and faced the spirit. At the same moment I saw a flash of flame, and immediately after I saw Shiana in the place, alone.

  1. i.e., bright by reflection, the moon itself not being visible.
  2. Bóṫar na Bró, "the road of the big flat stone."