CHAPTER EIGHT HOW THEY LEFT THE ISLAND

“AND so,”said Trumpkin (for,as you have realized,it was he who had been telling all this story to the four children,sitting on the grass in the ruined hall of Cair Paravel)—“and so I put a crust or two in my pocket,left behind all weapons but my dagger,and took to the woods in the grey of the morning.I’d been plugging away for many hours when there came a sound that I’d never heard the like of in my born days.Eh,I won’t forget that.The whole air was full of it,loud as thunder but far longer,cool and sweet as music over water,but strong enough to shake the woods.And I said to myself,‘If that’s not the Horn,call me a rabbit. ’ And a moment later I wondered why he hadn’t blown it sooner—”

“What time was it?”asked Edmund.

“Between nine and ten of the clock,”said Trumpkin.

“Just when we were at the railway station!”said all the children,and looked at one another with shining eyes.

“Please go on,”said Lucy to the Dwarf.

I could pelt.I kept on all night—and then,when it was half light this morning,as if I’d no more sense than a Giant,I risked a short cut across open country to cut off a big loop of the river,and was caught.Not by the army,but by a pompous old fool who has charge of a little castle which is Miraz’s last stronghold towards the coast.I needn’t tell you they got no true tale out of me,but I was a Dwarf and that was enough.But,lobsters and lollipops! it is a good thing the seneschal was a pompous fool.Anyone else would have run me through there and then.But nothing would do for him short of a grand execution: sending me down‘ to the ghosts’in the full ceremonial way.And then this young lady”,(he nodded at Susan)“does her bit of archery—and it was pretty shooting,let me tell you—and here we are.And without my armour,for of course they took that.”He knocked out and refilled his pipe.

“Great Scott!”said Peter.“So it was the horn—your own horn,Su—that dragged us all off that seat on the platform yesterday morning! I can hardly believe it; yet it all fits in.”

“I don’t know why you shouldn’t believe it,”said Lucy,“if you believe in magic at all.Aren’t there lots of stories about magic forcing people out of one place—out of one world—into another? I mean,when a magician in The Arabian Nights calls up a Jinn,it has to come.We had to come,just like that.”

“Yes,”said Peter,“I suppose what makes it feel so queer is that in the stories it’s always someone in our world who does the calling.One doesn’t really think about where the Jinn’s coming from.”

“And now we know what it feels like for the Jinn,”said Edmund with a chuckle.“Golly! It’s a bit uncomfortable to know that we can be whistled for like that.It’s worse than what Father says about living at the mercy of the telephone.”

“But we want to be here,don’t we,”said Lucy,“if Aslan wants us?”

“Meanwhile,”said the Dwarf,“what are we to do? I suppose

I’d better go back to King Caspian and tell him no help has come.”

“No help?”said Susan.“But it has worked.And here we are.”

“Um—um—yes,to be sure.I see that,”said the Dwarf,whose pipe seemed to be blocked (at any rate he made himself very busy cleaning it).“But—well—I mean—”

“But don’t you yet see who we are?”shouted Lucy.“You are stupid.”

“I suppose you are the four children out of the old stories,”said Trumpkin.And I’m very glad to meet you of course.And it’s very interesting,no doubt.But—no offence?—and he hesitated again.

“Do get on and say whatever you’re going to say,”said Edmund.

“Well,then—no offence,”said Trumpkin.“But,you know,the King and Trufflehunter and Doctor Cornelius were expecting—well,if you see what I mean,help.To put it in another way,I think they’d been imagining you as great warriors.As it is—we’re awfully fond of children and all that,but just at the moment,in the middle of a war—but I’m sure you understand.”