Page:The Sundering Flood - Morris - 1898.djvu/62

This page has been validated.
48
THE SUNDERING FLOOD

older than was my mother. Are they kind to thee? said the lad, laughing that he must cast back her question. Whiles, said she, laughing also, and whiles not: maybe that is because I am not always kind to them, as thou art to thy folk. He answered nought, and she was silent awhile; then he said: What is in thy mind, maiden? This, she said, that I am thinking how fair a chance it was that I should have seen thee, for thou hast made me so glad. Said he: We can see each other again belike and make it less of a chance. O yea, she said, and was silent awhile. Said he: I wot not why it was that thou wert in the cave: and tell me, is it not exceeding perilous, the climbing up and down? why wilt thou do that? Also I must tell thee, that this was another cause why I thought thou wert of Faery, that thou camest out of the cave.

Said she: I will tell thee all about the cave; but first as to the peril of going thither and coming thence: wouldst thou be very sorry if I were lost on the way? Yea, said he, exceeding sorry. Well, said she, then fear it not, for it is so much a wont of mine that to me there is no peril therein: yet am I glad that thou wert afraid for me. I was sore afraid, said Osberne. Now as to the cave, said the maiden. I found it out two years ago, when I was very little, and the women had been less than kind to me. And thither may I go whenas I would that they should seek me not; because folk say that it is a dwelling of the Dwarfs, and they fear to enter it. Besides, when I think