At last she arose, and when she had plucked and eaten
some handfuls of the strawberries which grew plenteously
on the sweet ground of the eyot, she went down to
the landward-looking shore, and took the water, and
swam slowly across the warm ripple till she came once
more to the strand and her raiment. She clad
herself, and set her hand to her pouch and drew forth
bread, and sat eating it on the bank above the smooth
sand. Then she looked around, and stood up with
her face toward the house, to see if the dame would
call to her. But she saw the witch come out
of the porch and stand there looking under the sharp
of her hand toward her, and thereafter she went back
again into the house without giving any sign.
Wherefore Birdalone deemed that she had leave that
day, and that she might take yet more holiday; so
she stepped lightly down from her place of vantage,
turned her face toward the east, and went quietly
along the very lip of the water.
CHAPTER X. BIRDALONE COMES ON NEW TIDINGS
Soon she had covered up the house from her, for on
that eastern end, both a tongue of the woodland shoved
out west into the meadow, and, withal, the whole body
of the wood there drew down to the water, and presently
cut off all the greensward save a narrow strip along
by the lake, off the narrowest whereof lay the rocky
eyot aforesaid, nigher unto the shore than lay Green
Eyot.
Now never had Birdalone gone so far east as to be
over against Rock Eyot. In her childish days
the witch had let her know that she might go where
she would, but therewith had told her a tale of a huge
serpent which dwelt in the dark wood over against Rock
Eyot, whose wont it was to lap his folds round and
round living things that went there, and devour them;
and many an evil dream had that evil serpent brought
to Birdalone. In after days belike she scarce
trowed in the tale, yet the terror of it abode with
her. Moreover the wildwood toward that side,
as it drew toward the water, was dark and dreary and
forbidding, running into black thickets standing amidst
quagmires, all unlike to the sweet, clean upland ridges,
oak begrown and greenswarded, of the parts which lay
toward the north, and which she mostly haunted.
But this summer day, which was so bright and hot,
Birdalone deemed she might harden her heart to try
the adventure; and she had a mind to enter the wood
thereby, and win her way up into the oakland whereas
she had met Habundia, and perchance she might happen
on her; for she would not dare to summon her so soon
after their first meeting. And if she met her,
there would be the holiday worthily brought to an
end!
On went Birdalone, and was soon at the narrowest of
the greensward, and had the wood black on her left
hand, for the trees of it were mostly alder.
But when she was come just over against Rock Eyot,
she found a straight creek or inlet of the water across
her way; and the said creek ran right up into the
alder thicket; and, indeed, was much overhung by huge
ancient alders, gnarled, riven, mossy, and falling
low over the water. But close on the mouth of
the creek, on Birdalone’s side thereof, lay
a thing floating on the dull water, which she knew
not how to call a boat, for such had she never seen,
nor heard of, but which was indeed a boat, oarless
and sailless.
Copyrights
The Water of the Wondrous Isles from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.