CHAPTER SIX THE ADVENTURES OF EUSTACE

AT that very moment the others were washing hands and faces in the river and generally getting ready for dinner and a rest.The three best archers had gone up into the hills north of the bay and returned laden with a pair of wild goats which were now roasting over a fire.Caspian had ordered a cask of wine ashore,strong wine of Archenland which had to be mixed with water before you drank it,so there would be plenty for all.The work had gone well so far and it was a merry meal.Only after the second helping of goat did Edmund say,“Where’s that blighter Eustace ?”

Meanwhile Eustace stared round the unknown valley.It was so narrow and deep,and the precipices which surrounded it so sheer,that it was like a huge pit or trench.The floor was grassy though strewn with rocks,and here and there Eustace saw black burnt patches like those you see on the sides of a railway embankment in a dry summer.About fifteen yards away from him was a pool of clear,smooth water.There was,at first,nothing else at all in the valley;not an animal,not a bird,not an insect. The sun beat down and grim peaks and horns of mountains peered over the valley’s edge.

Eustace realized of course that in the fog he had come down the wrong side of the ridge,so he turned at once to see about getting back.But as soon as he had looked he shuddered.Apparently he had by amazing luck found the only possible way down—a long green spit of land,horribly steep and narrow,with precipices on either side.There was no other possible way of getting back.But could he do it,now that he saw what it was really like ? His head swam at the very thought of it.

He turned round again,thinking that at any rate he’d better have a good drink from the pool first.But as soon as he had turned and before he had taken a step forward into the valley he heard a noise behind him.It was only a small noise but it sounded loud in that immense silence.It froze him dead-still where he stood for a second.Then he slewed round his neck and looked.

At the bottom of the cliff a little on his left hand was a low, dark hole—the entrance to a cave perhaps.And out of this two thin wisps of smoke were coming.And the loose stones just beneath the dark hollow were moving(that was the noise he had heard)just as if something were crawling in the dark behind them.

Something was crawling.Worse still,something was coming out.Edmund or Lucy or you would have recognized it at once, but Eustace had read none of the right books.The thing that came out of the cave was something he had never even imagined—a long lead-coloured snout,dull red eyes,no feathers or fur,a long lithe body that trailed on the ground,legs whose elbows went up higher than its back like a spider’s cruel claws,bat’s wings that made a rasping noise on the stones,yards of tail.And the lines of smoke were coming from its two nostrils.He never said the word Dragon to himself.Nor would it have made things any better if he had.

But perhaps if he had known something about dragons he would have been a little surprised at this dragon’s behaviour.It did not sit up and clap its wings,nor did it shoot out a stream of flame from its mouth.The smoke from its nostrils was like the smoke of a fire that will not last much longer.Nor did it seem to have noticed Eustace.It moved very slowly towards the pool—slowly and with many pauses.Even in his fear Eustace felt that it was an old,sad creature.He wondered if he dared make a dash for the ascent.But it might look round if he made any noise.It might come more to life.Perhaps it was only shamming.Anyway, what was the use of trying to escape by climbing from a creature that could fly ?

It reached the pool and slid its horrible scaly chin down over the gravel to drink:but before it had drunk there came from it a great croaking or clanging cry and after a few twitches and convulsions it rolled round on its side and lay perfectly still with one claw in the air.A little dark blood gushed from its wide-opened mouth.The smoke from its nostrils turned black for a moment and then floated away.No more came.