Lina IT was Lina.All at once Curdie recognized her - the frightful creature he had seen at the princess's.He dropped his pickaxes and held out his hand.She crept nearer and nearer, and laid her chin in his palm, and he patted her ugly head.Then she crept away behind the tree, and lay down, panting hard.
Curdie did not much like the idea of her being behind him.
Horrible as she was to look at, she seemed to his mind more horrible when he was not looking at her.But he remembered the child's hand, and never thought of driving her away.Now and then he gave a glance behind him, and there she lay flat, with her eyes closed and her terrible teeth gleaming between her two huge forepaws.
After his supper and his long day's journey it was no wonder Curdie should now be sleepy.Since the sun set the air had been warm and pleasant.He lay down under the tree, closed his eyes, and thought to sleep.He found himself mistaken, however.But although he could not sleep, he was yet aware of resting delightfully.
Presently he heard a sweet sound of singing somewhere, such as he had never heard before - a singing as of curious birds far off, which drew nearer and nearer.At length he heard their wings, and, opening his eyes, saw a number of very large birds, as it seemed, alighting around him, still singing.It was strange to hear song from the throats of such big birds.
And still singing, with large and round but not the less birdlike voices, they began to weave a strange dance about him, moving their wings in time with their legs.But the dance seemed somehow to be troubled and broken, and to return upon itself in an eddy, in place of sweeping smoothly on.
And he soon learned, in the low short growls behind him, the cause of the imperfection: they wanted to dance all round the tree, but Lina would not permit them to come on her side.
Now curdie liked the birds, and did not altogether like Lina.But neither, nor both together, made a reason for driving away the princess's creature.Doubtless she had been the goblins' creature, but the last time he saw her was in the king's house and the dove tower, and at the old princess's feet.So he left her to do as she would, and the dance of the birds continued only a semicircle, troubled at the edges, and returning upon itself.
But their song and their motions, nevertheless, and the waving of their wings, began at length to make him very sleepy.All the time he had kept doubting whether they could really be birds, and the sleepier he got, the more he imagined them something else, but he suspected no harm.