正文 CHAPTER TWO

THE AREASURE HOUSE "THIS wasnt a garden," said Susaly. "It was a castle and this must have been the courtyard.」

"I see what you mean," said Peter. "Yes. That is the remains of a tower. And there is what used to be a flight of steps going up to the top of the walls. And look at those other steps - the broad, shallow ones - going up to that doorway. It must have been the door into the great hall.」

"Ages ago, by the look of it," said Edmund.

"Yes, ages ago," said Peter. "I wish we could find out who the people were that lived in this castle; and how long ago.」

"It gives me a queer feeling," said Lucy.

"Does it, Lu?" said Peter, turning and looking hard at her. "Because it does the same to me. It is the queerest thing that has happehis queer day. I wonder where we are and what it all means?」

While they were talking they had crossed the courtyard and gohrough the other doorway into what had once been the hall. This was now very like the courtyard, for the roof had long since disappeared and it was merely another space of grass and daisies, except that it was shorter and narrower and the walls were higher. Across the far end there was a kind of terrace about three feet higher than the rest.

"I wonder, was it really the hall?" said Susan. "What is that terrace kind of thing?」

"Why, you silly," said Peter (who had bee strangely excited), "dont you see? That was the dais where the High Table was, where the King and the great lords sat. Anyone would think you had fotten that we ourselves were once Kings and Queens and sat on a dais just like that, in reat hall.」

"In our castle of Cair Paravel," tinued Susan in a dreamy and rather sing-song voice, "at the mouth of the great river of Narnia. How could I fet?」

"How it all es back!" said Lucy. "We could pretend we were in Cair Paravel now.

This hall must have been very like the great hall we feasted in.」

"But unfortunately without the feast," said Edmund. "Its getting late, you know. Look how long the shadows are. And have you noticed that it isnt so hot?」

"We shall need a camp-fire if weve got to spend the night here," said Peter. "Ive got matches. Lets go and see if we collee dry wood.」

Everyone saw the sense of this, and for the halfhour they were busy. The orchard through which they had first e into the ruins turned out not to be a good place for firewood. They tried the other side of the castle, passing out of the hall by a little side door into a maze of stony humps and hollows which must once have been passages and smaller rooms but was now all les and wild roses. Beyond this they found a wide gap in the castle wall and stepped through it into a wood of darker and bigger trees where they found dead branches and rotten wood and sticks and dry leaves and fir -es iy. They went to and fro with bundles until they had a good pile on the dais. At the fifth jourhey found the well, just outside the hall, hidden in weeds, but and fresh and deep when they had cleared these away.

The remains of a stone pavement ran half-way round it. Then the girls went out to piore apples and the boys built the fire, on the dais and fairly close to the er between two walls, which they thought would be the s and warmest place. They had great difficulty in lighting it and used a lot of matches, but they succeeded in the end.

Finally, all four sat down with their backs to the wall and their

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