CHAPTER TWELVE SORCERY AND SUDDEN VENGEANCE(第2/5页)

“You’d better have shoved your grey snout in a hornets’ nest,Badger,than suggest that I am the blab,”said Nikabrik.“Take it back,or—”

“Oh,stop it,both of you,”said King Caspian.“I want to know what it is that Nikabrik keeps on hinting we should do.But before that,I want to know who those two strangers are whom he has brought into our council and who stand there with their ears open and their mouths shut.”

“They are friends of mine,”said Nikabrik.“And what better right have you yourself to be here than that you are a friend of Trumpkin’s and the Badger’s? And what right has that old dotard in the black gown to be here except that he is your friend? Why am I to be the only one who can’t bring in his friends?”

“His Majesty is the King to whom you have sworn allegiance,”

said Trufflehunter sternly.

“Court manners,court manners,”sneered Nikabrik.“But in this hole we may talk plainly.You know—and he knows that this Telmarine boy will be king of nowhere and nobody in a week unless we can help him out of the trap in which he sits.”

“Perhaps,”said Cornelius,“your new friends would like to speak for themselves? You there,who and what are you?”

“Worshipful Master Doctor,”came a thin,whining voice.“So please you,I’m only a poor old woman,I am,and very obliged to his Worshipful Dwarfship for his friendship,I’m sure.His Majesty,bless his handsome face,has no need to be afraid of an old woman that’s nearly doubled up with the rheumatics and hasn’t two sticks to put under her kettle.I have some poor little skill—not like yours,Master Doctor,of course—in small spells and cantrips that I’d be glad to use against our enemies if it was agreeable to all concerned.For I hate’em.Oh yes.No one hates better than me.”

“That is all most interesting and—er—satisfactory,”said Doctor Cornelius.“I think I now know what you are,Madam.Perhaps your other friend,Nikabrik,would give some account of himself?”

A dull,grey voice at which Peter’s flesh crept replied,“I’m hunger.I’m thirst.Where I bite,I hold till I die,and even after death they must cut out my mouthful from my enemy’s body and bury it with me.I can fast a hundred years and not die.I can lie a hundred nights on the ice and not freeze.I can drink a river of blood and not burst.Show me your enemies.”

“And it is in the presence of these two that you wish to disclose your plan?”said Caspian.

“Yes,”said Nikabrik.“And by their help that I mean to execute it.”

There was a minute or two during which Trumpkin and the boys could hear Caspian and his two friends speaking in low voices but could not make out what they were saying.Then Caspian spoke aloud.

“Well,Nikabrik,”he said,“we will hear your plan.”

There was a pause so long that the boys began to wonder if Nikabrik was ever going to begin; when he did,it was in a lower voice,as if he himself did not much like what he was saying.

“All said and done,”he muttered,“none of us knows the truth about the ancient days in Narnia.Trumpkin believed none of the stories.I was ready to put them to the trial.We tried first the Horn and it has failed.If there ever was a High King Peter and a Queen Susan and a King Edmund and a Queen Lucy,then either they have not heard us,or they cannot come,or they are our enemies—”

“Or they are on the way,”put in Trufflehunter.

“You can go on saying that till Miraz has fed us all to his dogs.As I was saying,we have tried one link in the chain of old legends,and it has done us no good.Well.But when your sword breaks,you draw your dagger.The stories tell of other powers beside the ancient Kings and Queens.How if we could call them up?”

“If you mean Aslan,”said Trufflehunter,“it’s all one calling on him and on the Kings.They were his servants.If he will not send them (but I make no doubt he will),is he more likely to come himself?”