Now, when one is waiting and thinking, one will play with an idle pastime for the sake of keeping one’s hands amused as it were, and so I went on working the long slit in the stone, which the blade was making, deeper and deeper. The sand trickled from it in a stream, and then all of a sudden I became aware that I had pierced through the stone into a hole behind, and I bent over to see how this could be.
The stone was not more than an inch or two thick, and there was certainly a hollow which it closed, and when I saw that I broke and worked away more of it until I could get my hand in. Then I found that I could feel nothing, for the place was deep. So I made the hole bigger yet, and put my arm in. Then I found the back and one side of a stone-cased chest in the wall, as it were, of which the stone I had bored was the door, though this was to all appearance like several other of the larger blocks that the place was built of.
When I reached downwards my hand could just touch what felt like rotten canvas, and at that I began to work again at the hole. The stone was too strong to break, though it seemed thin, and I was so intent on this, that the voices I had longed to hear made me start.
“He was hereabouts, master, when I last saw him,” said one whom I thought was Spray the smith.
“I will hang you up if he is lost,” said Wulfnoth’s voice.
Then I sprang up and shouted, and the vault rang painfully in my ears. It was Olaf who called back to me.
“Ho, Redwald where are you?”
“Under the house, in a pit,” I answered, standing under the opening.
Then someone came tramping above me, and the next moment Spray’s leather-hosed leg came through the hole, and he nearly joined me. Thereat others laughed, and he climbed up quickly enough, for it was an ill feeling to be hanging over an unknown depth.
“Lower me down a rope,” I said, as I saw his face peering into the place with some others.
There seemed to be a ladder handy, for the next minute its end came down, and at once I picked up my sword and climbed out. Olaf stood in the doorway now with Relf.
“It is easy to see how my cousin got into that place,” he said to Relf, pointing to my helm, which was sorely dinted.
The big thane looked and laughed.
“That is what felled him. But I knew not of this pit,” he said, looking past me into the house where Spray and the men stood round the hole.
Then the smith said:
“Nor did I, master. But this has been found by the forest men—here are their tools.”
And when we looked, all the floor of the house was broken up, and the stone paving was piled in corners, and a pick or two lay on them with a spade and crowbar.
“They have been digging for treasure,” said Relf, “and that has kept them from my house. There are always tales of gold hidden in these old places. I have seen that they have done the like elsewhere in the village.”