And, children, there come a man in the big broad daylight. I could see him as pretty as I'm a-lookin' at you. Come all the way down that ditch bank. I says to myself, I says, I kept a-lookin' at the man; he was a-lookin' in the ditch just like there was somebody in there ditchin'. You know how a man would walk. Could you imagine a man--two men in the ditch a-ditchin' and a man a-walkin' down side of that ditch a-lookin' at them in there throwing that dirt? that's just the way he was a-lookin' into this ditch, this man was, in the broad open daytime. And, honey, he come right on down that ditch. And I spoke and I says, "How in the world did Uncle Pat get through in here by mule?" I knew he couldn't 'cause there wasn't but one road a-comin' into my place, back in them woodses. I says "He couldn't, I don't see no car nor nothin'." And when he got to the--uh, crossed this ditch. He crossed the ditch and went halfway to the field and come on down this other ditch. There’s was a little path through, went through my yard and went all across the woodses there. Well, when he got halfway to that little ditch on this side, before it come out here to the road. I was a-lookin' at him plumb good. Honey, just as su-by the time you- just as say, if you'd have said to me, "Lucille, that's Harley Locklear." Honey, I ain't never got so--He had on a brown coat, he had on a pair of brown britches, he had on a brown hat, just like if you'd have spoke to me and said, "Lucille, that's Harley Locklear." Honey, I ain't never got so scared in all the days of my life.