"Don't go down to the waterfall or the Fair Folk will take you."
That's what the mothers told all of the village children, and for a while they all believed it, as children do. No one believed it more than Aisling, who was always a daydreamer as a girl. But as children grow up they put aside childish things, including the stories meant to keep them safe. And so as Aisling grew up, she became the strongest voice against all those old wives' tales of hobgoblins and cobs. Her mother's warning about the Falls was just one more ridiculous fairy-tale that a sensible young woman like her gave no heed to.
But perhaps this tale should not be so easily dismissed.
One fine summer's day, Aisling set out into the woods on her own to gather berries. She'd found a wonderful patch of brambles and spent the morning plucking sweet, dark fruits from among the thorns. Though she was careful enough, the bushes were thick and some of the berries were old and soft, leaking purple juice that stained her skirts as she passed them.
The day was hot and sunny, so Aisling decided to wash her dress in the Falls and leave it dry on a rock while she swam. She knew that nobody else from the village would be out in this part of the forest today, and there was no highroad for miles nearby. There was not so much as a spoken word or a whiff of chimney smoke as far as the ear could hear or the eye could see. The only voices that spoke were the birds of the air and the laughing gurgle of the Falls.
These were no Bridal Veil falls. They were not the kind that plummet from a great height in a single, dramatic spout to punish the water below. They were gentle and spreading: low, mossy tables of stone over which the water cascaded in innumerable streams and rivulets, here just drip-dropping, there spilling over in a steady stream. The riverbed above the Falls was shallow, so the water was warmer than one might expect in the Highlands. The pool below was chin-high to a young lass, deep enough to swim in but not enough to fear.
Safe. Gentle. Tame. That is how Aisling thought of the Falls her mother had warned her about as a child. Surely, a child might drown in these waters, but not Aisling. She was a strong, clever, grown-up young woman now, one who knew how to handle the natural world and everything in it -including a little dribble of a waterfall and a shallow pond.
Lulled by the warmth, safety, and sheer physical delight of swimming, Aisling's body began to stir. She had been having strange dreams lately, nighttime sensations of a soft grey mist without form or content that covered her all over and swirled around her limbs, twining between them, winding around her torso and throat and lips, wrapping her all over in a soft, wet blanket of dew. She awoke from these dreams with a sheen of sweat on her skin and a slippery, hot sensation between her legs. Some of her friends whispered about dreaming of the village boys and feeling the same kind of heat. So, even though there were no boys in her dreams, Aisling thought it must be normal. As she swam in the Falls, however, the dreamlike feeling of being wrapped and caressed came to her again even more vividly. It filled her with a sudden, sensual impulse.
Why not lie beneath the Falls and let the water splash on her skin?
Why not let it trickle and run down her belly?
Why not open her legs under the flow and cool the heat burning there?