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The Wood Beyond the World: XVIII The Maid Gives Walter Tryst

The Wood Beyond the World
XVIII The Maid Gives Walter Tryst
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Imprint
  3. I: Of Golden Walter and His Father
  4. II: Golden Walter Takes Ship to Sail the Seas
  5. III: Walter Heareth Tidings of the Death of His Father
  6. IV: Storm Befalls the Bartholomew, and She Is Driven Off Her Course
  7. V: Now They Come to a New Land
  8. VI: The Old Man Tells Walter of Himself. Walter Sees a Shard in the Cliff-Wall
  9. VII: Walter Comes to the Shard in the Rock-Wall
  10. VIII: Walter Wends the Waste
  11. IX: Walter Happeneth on the First of Those Three Creatures
  12. X: Walter Happeneth on Another Creature in the Strange Land
  13. XI: Walter Happeneth on the Mistress
  14. XII: The Wearing of Four Days in the Wood Beyond the World
  15. XIII: Now Is the Hunt Up
  16. XIV: The Hunting of the Hart
  17. XV: The Slaying of the Quarry
  18. XVI: Of the King’s Son and the Maid
  19. XVII: Of the House and the Pleasance in the Wood
  20. XVIII: The Maid Gives Walter Tryst
  21. XIX: Walter Goes to Fetch Home the Lion’s Hide
  22. XX: Walter Is Bidden to Another Tryst
  23. XXI: Walter and the Maid Flee from the Golden House
  24. XXII: Of the Dwarf and the Pardon
  25. XXIII: Of the Peaceful Ending of That Wild Day
  26. XXIV: The Maid Tells of What Had Befallen Her
  27. XXV: Of the Triumphant Summer Array of the Maid
  28. XXVI: They Come to the Folk of the Bears
  29. XXVII: Morning Amongst the Bears
  30. XXVIII: Of the New God of the Bears
  31. XXIX: Walter Strays in the Pass and Is Sundered from the Maid
  32. XXX: Now They Meet Again
  33. XXXI: They Come Upon New Folk
  34. XXXII: Of the New King of the City and Land of Stark-Wall
  35. XXXIII: Concerning the Fashion of King-Making in Stark-Wall
  36. XXXIV: Now Cometh the Maid to the King
  37. XXXV: Of the King of Stark-Wall and His Queen
  38. XXXVI: Of Walter and the Maid in the Days of the Kingship
  39. Colophon
  40. Uncopyright

XVIII The Maid Gives Walter Tryst

Now, on the morrow, when Walter was awake, he found there was no one lying beside him, and the day was no longer very young; so he arose, and went through the garden from end to end, and all about, and there was none there; and albeit that he dreaded to meet the Lady there, yet was he sad at heart and fearful of what might betide. Howsoever, he found the gate whereby they had entered yesterday, and he went out into the little dale; but when he had gone a step or two he turned about, and could see neither garden nor fence, nor any sign of what he had seen thereof but lately. He knit his brow and stood still to think of it, and his heart grew the heavier thereby; but presently he went his ways and crossed the stream, but had scarce come up on to the grass on the further side, ere he saw a woman coming to meet him, and at first, full as he was of the tide of yesterday and the wondrous garden, deemed that it would be the Lady; but the woman stayed her feet, and, stooping, laid a hand on her right ankle, and he saw that it was the Maid. He drew anigh to her, and saw that she was nought so sad of countenance as the last time she had met him, but flushed of cheek and bright-eyed.

As he came up to her she made a step or two to meet him, holding out her two hands, and then refrained her, and said smiling: “Ah, friend, belike this shall be the last time that I shall say to thee, touch me not, nay, not so much as my hand, or if it were but the hem of my raiment.”

The joy grew up in his heart, and he gazed on her fondly, and said: “Why, what hath befallen of late?”

“O friend,” she began, “this hath befallen.”

But as he looked on her, the smile died from her face, and she became deadly pale to the very lips; she looked askance to her left side, whereas ran the stream; and Walter followed her eyes, and deemed for one instant that he saw the misshapen yellow visage of the dwarf peering round from a grey rock, but the next there was nothing. Then the Maid, though she were as pale as death, went on in a clear, steady, hard voice, wherein was no joy or kindness, keeping her face to Walter and her back to the stream: “This hath befallen, friend, that there is no longer any need to refrain thy love nor mine; therefore I say to thee, come to my chamber (and it is the red chamber over against thine, though thou knewest it not) an hour before this next midnight, and then thy sorrow and mine shall be at an end: and now I must needs depart. Follow me not, but remember!”

And therewith she turned about and fled like the wind down the stream.

But Walter stood wondering, and knew not what to make of it, whether it were for good or ill: for he knew now that she had paled and been seized with terror because of the upheaving of the ugly head; and yet she had seemed to speak out the very thing she had to say. Howsoever it were, he spake aloud to himself: Whatever comes, I will keep tryst with her.

Then he drew his sword, and turned this way and that, looking all about if he might see any sign of the Evil Thing; but nought might his eyes behold, save the grass, and the stream, and the bushes of the dale. So then, still holding his naked sword in his hand, he clomb the bent out of the dale; for that was the only way he knew to the Golden House; and when he came to the top, and the summer breeze blew in his face, and he looked down a fair green slope beset with goodly oaks and chestnuts, he was refreshed with the life of the earth, and he felt the good sword in his fist, and knew that there was might and longing in him, and the world seemed open unto him.

So he smiled, if it were somewhat grimly, and sheathed his sword and went on toward the house.

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The source text and artwork in this ebook edition are believed to be in the U.S. public domain. This ebook edition is released under the terms in the CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication, available at https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/. For full license information see the Uncopyright file included at the end of this ebook.
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