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"but what was in the letter?" asked shasta.
"be quiet, youngster," said bree. "youre spoiling the story. shell tell us all about the letter in the right place. go on, tarkheena.”
"then i called the maid who was to go with me to the woods and perform the rites of zardeenah and told her to wake me very early in the morning. and i became merry with her and gave her wine to drink; but i had mixed such things in her cup that i knew she must sleep for a night and a day. as soon as the household of my father had committed themselves to sleep i arose and put on an armour of my brothers which i always kept in my chamber in his memory. i put into my girdle all the money i had and certain choice jewels and provided myself also with food, and saddled the mare with my own hands and rode away in the second watch of the night. i directed my course not to the woods where my father supposed that i would go but north and east to tashbaan.
"now for three days and more i knew that my father would not seek me, being deceived by the words i had said to him. and on the fourth day we arrived at the city of azim balda. now azim balda stands at the meeting of many roads and from it the posts of the tisroc (may he live for ever) ride on swift horses to every part of the empire: and it is one of the rights and privileges of the greater tarkaans to send messages by them. i therefore went to the chief of the messengers in the house of imperial posts in azim balda and said, `o dispatcher of messages, here is a letter from my uncle ahoshta tarkaan to kidrash tarkaan lord of calavar. take now these five crescents and cause it to be sent to him. and the chief of the messengers said, `to hear is to obey. "this letter was feigned to be written by ahoshta and this was the signification of the writing: `ahoshta tarkaan to kidrash tarkaan, salutation and peace. in the name of tash the irresistible, the inexorable. be it known to you that as i made my journey towards your house to perform the contract of marriage between me and your daughter aravis tarkheena, it pleased fortune and the gods that i fell in with her in the forest when she had ended the rites and sacrifices of zardeenah according to the custom of maidens. and when i learned who she was, being delighted with her beauty and discretion, i became inflamed with love and it appeared to me that the sun would be dark to me if i did not marry her at once. accordingly i prepared the necessary sacrifices and married your daughter the same hour that i met her and have returned with her to my own house. and we both pray and charge you to come hither as speedily as you may that we may be delighted with your face and speech; and also that you may bring with you the dowry of my wife, which, by reason of my great charges and expenses, i require without delay.
and because thou and i are brothers i assure myself that you will not be angered by the haste of my marriage which is wholly occasioned by the great love i bear your daughter.
and i commit you to the care of all the gods. "as soon as i had done this i rode on in all haste from azim balda, fearing no pursuit and expecting that my father, having received such a letter, would send messages to ahoshta or go to him himself, and that before the matter was discovered i should be beyond tashbaan. and that is the pith of my story until this very night when i was chased by lions and met you at the swimming of the salt water.”
"and what happened to the girl - the one you drugged?" asked shasta.
"doubtless she was beaten for sleeping late," said aravis coolly. "but she was a tool and spy of my stepmothers. i am very glad they should beat her.”
"i say, that was hardly fair," said shasta.
"i did not do any of these things for the sake of pleasing you," said aravis.
"and theres another thing i dont understand about that story," said shasta. "youre not grown up, i dont believe youre any older than i am. i dont believe youre as old. how could you be getting married at your age?”
aravis said nothing, but bree at once said, "shasta, dont display your ignorance. theyre always married at that age in the great tarkaan families.”
shasta turned very red (though it was hardly light enough for the others to see this) and felt snubbed. aravis asked bree for his story. bree told it, and shasta thought that he put in a great deal more than he needed about the falls and the bad riding. bree obviously thought it very funny, but aravis did not laugh. when bree had finished they all went to sleep.
next day all four of them, two horses and two humans, continued their journey together.
shasta thought it had been much pleasanter when he and bree were on their own. for now it was bree and aravis who did nearly all the talking. bree had lived a long time in calormen and had always been among tarkaans and tarkaans horses, and so of course he knew a great many of the same people and places that aravis knew. she would always be saying things like, "but if you were at the fight of zulindreh you would have seen my cousin alimash," and bree would answer, "oh, yes, alimash, he was only captain of the chariots, you know. i dont quite hold with chariots or the kind of horses who draw chariots. thats not real cavalry. but he is a worthy nobleman. he filled my nosebag with sugar after the taking of teebeth." or else bree would say, "i was down at the lake of mezreel that summer," and aravis would say, "oh, mezreel! i had a friend there, 【创建和谐家园】raleen tarkheena. what a delightful place it is. those gardens, and the valley of the thousand perfumes!" bree was not in the least trying to leave shasta out of things, though shasta sometimes nearly thought he was. people who know a lot of the same things can hardly help talking about them, and if youre there you can hardly help feeling that youre out of it.
hwin the mare was rather shy before a great war-horse like bree and said very little. and aravis never spoke to shasta at all if she could help it.
soon, however, they had more important things to think of. they were getting near tashbaan. there were more, and larger, villages, and more people on the roads. they now did nearly all their travelling by night and hid as best they could during the day. and
at every halt they argued and argued about what they were to do when they reached tashbaan. everyone had been putting off this difficulty, but now it could be put off no longer. during these discussions aravis became a little, a very little, less unfriendly to shasta; one usually gets on better with people when one is making plans than when one is talking about nothing in particular.
bree said the first thing now to do was to fix a place where they would all promise to meet on the far side of tashbaan even if, by any ill luck, they got separated in passing the city. he said the best place would be the tombs of the ancient kings on the very edge of the desert. "things like great stone bee-hives," he said, "you cant possibly miss them.
and the best of it is that none of the calormenes will go near them because they think the place is haunted by ghouls and are afraid of it." aravis asked if it wasnt really haunted by ghouls. but bree said he was a free narnian horse and didnt believe in these calormene tales. and then shasta said he wasnt a calormene either and didnt care a straw about these old stories of ghouls. this wasnt quite true. but it rather impressed aravis (though at the moment it annoyed her too) and of course she said she didnt mind any number of ghouls either. so it was settled that the tombs should be their assembly place on the other side of tashbaan, and everyone felt they were getting on very well till hwin humbly pointed out that the real problem was not where they should go when they had got through tashbaan but how they were to get through it.
"well settle that tomorrow, maam," said bree. "time for a little sleep now.”
but it wasnt easy to settle. araviss first suggestion was that they should swim across the river below the city during the night and not go into tashbaan at all. but bree had two reasons against this. one was that the river-mouth was very wide and it would be far too long a swim for hwin to do, especially with a rider on her back. (he thought it would be too long for himself too, but he said much less about that). the other was that it would be full of shipping and of course anyone on the deck of a ship who saw two horses swimming past would be almost certain to be inquisitive.
shasta thought they should go up the river above tashbaan and cross it where it was narrower. but bree explained that there were gardens and pleasure houses on both banks of the river for miles and that there would be tarkaans and tarkheenas living in them and riding about the roads and having water parties on the river. in fact it would be the most likely place in the world for meeting someone who would recognize aravis or even himself.
"well have to have a disguise," said shasta.
hwin said it looked to her as if the safest thing was to go right through the city itself from gate to gate because one was less likely to be noticed in the crowd. but she approved of the idea of disguise as well. she said, "both the human will have to dress in rags and look like peasants or slaves and all araviss armour and our saddles and things must be made into bundles and put on our backs, and the children must pretend to drive us and people will think were on pack-horses.”
"my dear hwin!" said aravis rather scornfully. "as anyone could mistake bree for anything but a war-hors however you disguised him!”
"i should think not, indeed," said bree, snorting an letting his ears go ever so little back.
"i know its not a very good plan," said hwin. "but i think its our only chance. and we havent been groomed for ages and were not looking quite ourselves (at least, im sure im not). i do think if we get well plastered with mud and go along with our heads down as if were tired and lazy -and dont lift our hooves hardly at all - we might not be noticed.
and our tails ought to be cut shorter: not neatly, you know, but all ragged.”
"my dear madam," said bree. "have you pictured to yourself how very disagreeable it would be to arrive in narnia in that condition?”
"well," said hwin humbly (she was a very sensible mare), "the main thing is to get there.”
though nobody much liked it, it was hwins plan which had to be adopted in the end. it was a troublesome one and involved a certain amount of what shasta called stealing, and bree called "raiding". one farm lost a few sacks that evening and another lost a coil of rope the next: but some tattered old boys clothes for aravis to wear had to be fairly bought and paid for in a village. shasta returned with them in triumph just as evening was closing in. the others were waiting for him among the trees at the foot of a low range of wooded hills which lay right across their path. everyone was feeling excited because this was the last hill; when they reached the ridge at the top they would be looking down on tashbaan. "i do wish we were safely past it," muttered shasta to hwin. "oh i do, i do,”
said hwin fervently.
that night they wound their way through the woods up to the ridge by a wood-cutters track. and when they came out of the woods at the top they could see thousands of lights in the valley down below them. shasta had had no notion of what a great city would be like and it frightened him. they had their supper and the children got some sleep. but the horses woke them very early in the morning.
the stars were still out and the grass was terribly cold and wet, but daybreak was just beginning, far to their right across the sea. aravis went a few steps away into the wood and came back looking odd in her new, ragged clothes and carrying her real ones in a bundle. these, and her armour and shield and scimitar and the two saddles and the rest of the horses fine furnishings were put into the sacks. bree and hwin had already got themselves as dirty and bedraggled as they could and it remained to shorten their tails. as the only tool for doing this was araviss scimitar, one of the packs had to be undone again in order to get it out. it was a longish job and rather hurt the horses.
"my word!" said bree, "if i wasnt a talking horse what a lovely kick in the face i could give you! i thought you were going to cut it, not pull it out. thats what it feels like.”
but in spite of semi-darkness and cold fingers all was done in the end, the big packs bound on the horses, the rope halters (which they were now wearing instead of bridles and reins) in the childrens hands, and the journey began.
"remember," said bree. "keep together if we possibly can. if not, meet at the tombs of the ancient kings, and whoever gets there first must wait for the others.”
"and remember," said shasta. "dont you two horses forget yourselves and start talking, whatever happens.”
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CHAPTER FOUR
!小@说#txt$天^堂&
shasta falls in with the narnians at first shasta could see nothing in the valley below him but a sea of mist with a few domes and pinnacles rising from it; but as the light increased and the mist cleared away he saw more and more. a broad river divided itself into two streams and on the island between them stood the city of tashbaan, one of the wonders of the world. round the very edge of the island, so that the water lapped against the stone, ran high walls strengthened with so many towers that he soon gave up trying to count them. inside the walls the island rose in a hill and every bit of that hill, up to the tisrocs palace and the great temple of tash at the top, was completely covered with buildings - terrace above terrace, street above street, zigzag roads or huge flights of steps bordered with orange trees and lemon trees, roofgardens, balconies, deep archways, pillared colonnades, spires, battlements, minarets, pinnacles. and when at last the sun rose out of the sea and the great silver-plated dome of the temple flashed back its light, he was almost dazzled.
"get on, shasta," bree kept saying.
the river banks on each side of the valley were such a mass of gardens that they looked at first like forest, until you got closer and saw the white walls of innumerable houses peeping out from beneath the trees. soon after that, shasta noticed a delicious 【创建和谐家园】ell of flowers and fruit. about fifteen minutes later they were down among them, plodding on a level road with white walls on each side and trees bending over the walls.
"i say," said shasta in an awed voice. "this is a wonderful place!”
"i daresay," said bree. "but i wish we were safely through it and out at the other side.
narnia and the north!”
at that moment a low, throbbing noise began which gradually swelled louder and louder till the whole valley seemed to be swaying with it. it was a musical noise, but so strong and solemn as to be a little frightening.
"thats the horns blowing for the city gates to be open," said bree. "we shall be there in a minute. now, aravis, do droop your shoulders a bit and step heavier and try to look less like a princess. try to imagine youve been kicked and cuffed and called names all your life.”
"if it comes to that," said aravis, "what about you drooping your head a bit more and arching your neck a bit less and trying to look less like a war-horse?”
"hush," said bree. "here we are.”
and they were. they had come to the rivers edge and the road ahead of them ran along a many-arched bridge. the water danced brightly in the early sunlight; away to the right nearer the rivers mouth, they caught a glimpse ships masts. several other travellers were before them on the bridge, mostly peasants driving laden donkeys and mules or carrying baskets on their heads. the children and horses joined the crowd.
"is anything wrong?" whispered shasta to aravis, who had an odd look on her face.
"oh its all very well for you," whispered aravis rather savagely. "what would you care about tashbaan? but i ought to be riding in on a litter with soldiers before me and slaves behind, and perhaps going to a feast in the tisrocs palace (may he live for ever) - not sneaking in like this. its different for you.”
shasta thought all this very silly.
at the far end of the bridge the walls of the city towered high above them and the brazen gates stood open in the gateway which was really wide but looked narrow because it was so very high. half a dozen soldiers, leaning on their spears, stood on each side. aravis couldnt help thinking, "theyd all jump to attention and salute me if they knew whose daughter i am." but the others were only thinking of how theyd get through and hoping the soldiers would not ask any questions. fortunately they did not. but one of them picked a carrot out of a peasants basket and threw it at shasta with a rough laugh, saying: "hey! horse-boy! youll catch it if your master finds youve been using his saddle-horse for pack work.”
this frightened him badly for of course it showed that no one who knew anything about horses would mistake bree for anything but a charger.
"its my masters orders, so there!" said shasta. but it would have been better if he had held his tongue for the soldier gave him a box on the side of his face that nearly knocked him down and said, "take that, you young filth, to teach you how to talk to freemen." but
they all slunk into the city without being stopped. shasta cried only a very little; he was used to hard knocks.
inside the gates tashbaan did not at first seem so splendid as it had looked from a distance. the first street was narrow and there were hardly any windows in the walls on each side. it was much more crowded than shasta had expected: crowded partly by the peasants (on their way to market) who had come in with them, but also with watersellers, sweetmeat sellers, porters, soldiers, beggars, ragged children, hens, stray dogs, and bare-footed slaves. what you would chiefly have noticed if you had been there was the 【创建和谐家园】ells, which came from unwashed people, unwashed dogs, scent, garlic, onions, and the piles of refuse which lay everywhere.
shasta was pretending to lead but it was really bree, who knew the way and kept guiding him by little nudges with his nose. they soon turned to the left and began going up a steep hill. it was much fresher and pleasanter, for the road was bordered by trees and there were houses only on the right side; on the other they looked out over the roofs of houses in the lower town and could see some way up the river. then they went round a hairpin bend to their right and continued rising. they were zigzagging up to the centre of tashbaan. soon they came to finer streets. great statues of the gods and heroes of calormen - who are mostly impressive rather than agreeable to look at- rose on shining pedestals. palm trees and pillared arcades cast shadows over the burning pavements. and through the arched gateways of many a palace shasta caught sight of green branches, cool fountains, and 【创建和谐家园】ooth lawns. it must be nice inside, he thought.
at every turn shasta hoped they were getting out of the crowd, but they never did. this made their progress very slow, and every now and then they had to stop altogether. this usually happened because a loud voice shouted out "way, way, way, for the tarkaan", or "for the tarkheena", or "for the fifteenth vizier", "or for the ambassador", and everyone in the crowd would crush back against the walls; and above their heads shasta would sometimes see the great lord or lady for whom all the fuss was being made, lolling upon a litter which four or even six gigantic slaves carried on their bare shoulders. for in tashbaan there is only one traffic regulation, which is that everyone who is less important has to get out of the way for everyone who is more important; unless you want a cut from a whip or punch from the butt end of a spear.
it was in a splendid street very near the top of the city (the tisrocs palace was the only thing above it) that the most disastrous of these stoppages occurred.
"way! way! way!" came the voice. "way for the white barbarian king, the guest of the tisroc (may he live for ever)! way for the narnian lords.”
shasta tried to get out of the way and to make bree go back. but no horse, not even a talking horse from narnia, backs easily. and a woman with a very edgy basket in her hands, who was just behind shasta, pushed the basket hard against his shoulders, and said, "now then! who are you shoving!" and then someone else jostled him from the side and in the confusion of the moment he lost hold of bree. and then the whole crowd
behind him became so stiffened and packed tight that he couldnt move at all. so he found himself, unintentionally, in the first row and had a fine sight of the party that was coming down the street.
it was quite unlike any other party they had seen that day. the crier who went before it shouting "way, way!" was the only calormene in it. and there was no litter; everyone was on foot. there were about half a dozen men and shasta had never seen anyone like them before. for one thing, they were all as fair-skinned as himself, and most of them had fair hair. and they were not dressed like men of calormen. most of them had legs bare to the kneee. their tunics were of fine, bright, hardy colours - woodland green, or gay yellow, or fresh blue. instead of turbans they wore steel or silver caps, some of them set with jewels, and one with little wings on each side of it. a few were bare-headed. the swords at their sides were long and straight, not curved like calormene scimitars. and instead of being grave and mysterious like most calormenes, they walked with a swing and let their arms and shoulders free, and chatted and laughed. one was whistling. you could see that they were ready to be friends with anyone who was friendly and didnt give a fig for anyone who wasnt. shasta thought he had never seen anything so lovely in his life.
but there was not time to enjoy it for at once a really dreadful thing happened. the leader of the fair-headed men suddenly pointed at shasta, cried out, "there he is! theres our runaway!" and seized him by the shoulder. next moment he gave shasta a 【创建和谐家园】ack - not a cruel one to make you cry but a sharp one to let you know you are in disgrace and added, shaking: "shame on you, my lord! fie for shame! queen susans eyes are red with weeping because of you. what! truant for a whole night! where have you been?”
shasta would have darted under brees body and tried to make himself scarce in the crowd if he had had the least chance; but the fair-haired men were all round him by now and he was held firm.
of course his first impulse was to say that he was only poor arsheesh the fishermans son and that the foreign lord must have mistaken him for someone else. but then, the very last thing he wanted to do in that crowded place was to start explaining who he was and what he was doing. if he started on that, he would soon be asked where he had got his horse from, and who aravis was - and then, goodbye to any chance of getting through tashbaan. his next impulse was to look at bree for help. but bree had no intention of letting all the crowd know that he could talk, and stood looking just as stupid as a horse can. as for aravis, shasta did not even dare to look at her for fear of drawing attention.
and there was no time to think, for the leader of the narnians said at once: "take one of his little lordships hands, peridan, of your courtesy, and ill take the other.
and now, on. our royal sisters mind will be greatly eased when she sees our young scapegrace safe in our lodging.”
and so, before they were half-way through tashbaan, all their plans were ruined, and without even a chance to say good-bye to the others shasta found himself being marched off among strangers and quite unable to guess what might be going to happen next. the narnian king - for shasta began to see by the way the rest spoke to him that he must be a king - kept on asking him questions; where he had been, how he had got out, what he had done with his clothes, and didnt he know that he had been very naughty. only the king called it "naught" instead of naughty.
and shasta said nothing in answer, because he couldnt think of anything to say that would not be dangerous.
"what! all mum?" asked the king. "i must plainly tell you, prince, that this hangdog silence becomes one of your blood even less than the scape itself. to run away might pass for a boys frolic with some spirit in it. but the kings son of archenland should avouch his deed; not hang his head like a calormene slave.”
this was very unpleasant, for shasta felt all the time that this young king was the very nicest kind of grown-up and would have liked to make a good impression on him.
the strangers led him-held tightly by both hands-along a narrow street and down a flight of shallow stairs and then up another to a wide doorway in a white wall with two tall, dark cypress trees, one on each side of it. once through the arch, shasta found himself in a courtyard which was also a garden. a marble basin of clear water in the centre was kept continually rippling by the fountain that fell into it. orange trees grew round it out of 【创建和谐家园】ooth grass, and the four white walls which surrounded the lawn were covered with climbing roses. the noise and dust and crowding of the streets seemed suddenly fad away. he was led rapidly across the garden and then into a dark doorway. the crier remained outside. after that they took him along a corridor, where the stone floor felt beautifully cool to his hot feet, and up some stairs. a moment later he found himself blinking in the light of a big, airy room with wide open windows, all looking north so that no sun came in. there was a carpet on the floor more wonderfully coloured than anything he had ever seen and his feet sank down into it as if he were treading in thick moss. all round the walls there were low sofas with rich cushions on them, and the room seemed to be full of people; very queer people some of them, thought shasta. but he had no time to think of that before the most beautiful lady he had ever seen rose from her place and threw her arms round him and kissed him, saying: "oh corin, corin, how could you? and thou and i such close friends ever since thy mother died. and what should i have said to thy royal father if i came home without thee? would have been a cause almost of war between archenland and narnia which are friends time out of mind. it was naught, playmate, very naught of thee to use us so.”
"apparently," thought shasta to himself, "im being mistaken for a prince of archenland, wherever that is. and these must be the narnians. i wonder where the real corin is?" but these thoughts did not help him say anything out loud.
"where hast been, corin?" said the lady, her hands still on shastas shoulders.
"i- i dont know," stammered shasta.
"there it is, susan," said the king. "i could get no tale out of him, true or false.”
"your majesties! queen susan! king edmund!" said a voice: and when shasta turned to look at the speaker he nearly jumped out of his skin with surprise. for this was one of these queer people whom he had noticed out of the corner of his eye when he first came into the room. he was about the same height as shasta himself. from the waist upwards he was like a man, but his legs were hairy like a goats, and shaped like a goats and he had goats hooves and a tail. his skin was rather red and he had curly hair and a short pointed beard and two little horns. he was in fact a faun, which is a creature shasta had never seen a picture of or even heard of. and if youve read a book called the lion, the witch and the wardrobe you may like to know that this was the very same faun, tumnus by name, whom queen susans sister lucy had met on the very first day when she found her way into narnia. but he was a good deal older now for by this time peter and susan and edmund and lucy had been kings and queens of narnia for several years.
"your majesties," he was saying, "his little highness has had a touch of the sun. look at him! he is dazed. he does not know where he is.”
then of course everyone stopped scolding shasta and asking him questions and he was made much of and laid on a sofa and cushions were put under his head and he was given iced sherbet in a golden cup to drink and told to keep very quiet.
nothing like this had ever happened to shasta in his life before. he had never even imagined lying on anything so comfortable as that sofa or drinking anything so delicious as that sherbet. he was still wondering what had happened to the others and how on earth he was going to escape and meet them at the tombs, and what would happen when the real corin turned up again. but none of these worries seemed so pressing now that he was comfortable. and perhaps, later on, there would be nice things to eat!
meanwhile the people in that cool airy room were very interesting. besides the faun there were two dwarfs (a kind of creature he had never seen before) and a very large raven.
the rest were all humans; grown-ups, but young, and all of them, both men and women, had nicer faces and voices than most calormenes. and soon shasta found himself taking an interest in the conversation. "now, madam," the king was saying to queen susan (the lady who had kissed shasta). "what think you? we have been in this city fully three weeks. have you yet settled in your mind whether you will marry this dark- faced lover of yours, this prince rabadash, or no?”
the lady shook her head. "no, brother," she said, "not for all the jewels in tashbaan.”
("hullo!" thought shasta. "although theyre king and queen, theyre brother and sister, not married to one another.")
"truly, sister," said the king, "i should have loved you the less if you had taken him. and i tell you that at the first coming of the tisrocs ambassadors into narnia to treat of this marriage, and later when the prince was our guest at cair paravel, it was a wonder to me that ever you could find it in your heart to show him so much favour.”
"that was my folly, edmund," said queen susan, "of which i cry you mercy. yet when he was with us in narnia, truly this prince bore himself in another fashion than he does now in tashbaan. for i take you all to witness what marvellous feats he did in that great tournament and hastilude which our brother the high king made for him, and how meekly and courteously he consorted with us the space of seven days. but here, in his own city, he has shown another face.”
"ah!" croaked the raven. "it is an old saying: see the bear in his own den before you judge of his conditions.”
"thats very true, sallowpad," said one of the dwarfs. "and another is, come, live with me and youll know me.”
"yes," said the king. "we have now seen him for what he is: that is, a most proud, bloody, luxurious, cruel, and selfpleasing tryant.”
"then in the name of aslan," said susan, "let us leave tashbaan this very day.”
"theres the rub, sister," said edmund. "for now i must open to you all that has been growing in my mind these last two days and more. peridan, of your courtesy look to the door and see that there is no spy upon us. all well? so. for now we must be secret.”
everyone had begun to look very serious. queen susan jumped up and ran to her brother.
"oh, edmund," she cried. "what is it? there is something dreadful in your face.”
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CHAPTER FIVE