THE ANCIENT TREASURE HOUSE:
"THIS wasn't a garden," said Susan presently. "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 happened this queer day. I wonder
where we are and what it all means?"
While they were talking they had crossed the courtyard and gone through 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 become strangely excited), "don't you see?
That was the dais where the High Table was, where the King and the great lords
sat. Anyone would think you had forgotten that we ourselves were once Kings and
Queens and sat on a dais just like that, in our great hall."
"In our castle of Cair Paravel," continued Susan in a dreamy and rather
sing-song voice, "at the mouth of the great river of Narnia. How could I
forget?"
"How it all comes 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. "It's getting late, you
know. Look how long the shadows are. And have you noticed that it isn't so hot?"
"We shall need a camp-fire if we've got to spend the night here," said Peter.
"I've got matches. Let's go and see if we can collect some dry wood."
Everyone saw the sense of this, and for the next halfhour they were busy. The
orchard through which they had first come 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 nettles 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-cones in plenty. They went to and
fro with bundles until they had a good pile on the dais. At the fifth journey
they found the well, just outside the hall, hidden in weeds, but clean 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 pick some more apples and the boys built the fire, on the dais and fairly
close to the corner between two walls, which they thought would be the snuggest
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 faces to the fire. They tried roasting some of the
apples on the ends of sticks. But roast apples are not much good without sugar,
and they are too hot to eat with your fingers till they are too cold to be worth
eating. So they had to content themselves with raw apples, which, as Edmund
said, made one realize that school suppers weren't so bad after all - "I
shouldn't mind a good thick slice of bread and margarine this minute," he added.
But the spirit of adventure was rising in them all, and no one really wanted to
be back at school.
Shortly after the last apple had been eaten, Susan went out to the well to get
another drink. When she came back she was carrying something in her hand.
"Look," she said in a rather choking kind of voice. "I found it by the well."
She handed it to Peter and sat down. The others thought she looked and sounded
as if she might be going to cry. Edmund and Lucy eagerly bent forward to see
what was in Peter's hand - a little, bright thing that gleamed in the firelight.
"Well, I'm - I'm jiggered," said Peter, and his voice also sounded queer. Then
he handed it to the others.
All now saw what it was - a little chess-knight, ordinary in size but
extraordinarily heavy because it was made of pure gold; and the eyes in the
horse's head were two tiny little rubies or rather one was, for the other had
been knocked out.
"Why!" said Lucy, "it's exactly like one of the golden chessmen we used to play
with when we were Kings and Queens at Cair Paravel."
"Cheer up, Su," said Peter to his other sister.
"I can't help it," said Susan. "It brought back - oh, such lovely times. And I
remembered playing chess with fauns and good giants, and the mer-people singing
in the sea, and my beautiful horse - and - and -"
"Now," said Peter in a quite different voice, "it's about time we four started
using our brains."
"What about?" asked Edmund.
"Have none of you guessed where we are?" said Peter.
"Go on, go on," said Lucy. "I've felt for hours that there was some wonderful
mystery hanging over this place."
"Fire ahead, Peter," said Edmund. "We're all listening."
"We are in the ruins of Cair Paravel itself," said Peter.
"But, I say," replied Edmund. "I mean, how do you make that out? This place has
been ruined for ages. Look at all those big trees growing right up to the gates.
Look at the very stones. Anyone can see that nobody has lived here for hundreds
of years."
"I know," said Peter. "That is the difficulty. But let's leave that out for the
moment. I want to take the points one by one. First point: this hall is exactly
the same shape and size as the hall at Cair Paravel. Just picture a roof on
this, and a coloured pavement instead of grass, and tapestries on the walls, and
you get our royal banqueting hall."
No one said anything.
"Second point," continued Peter. "The castle well is exactly where our well was,
a little to the south of the great hall; and it is exactly the same size and
shape."
Again there was no reply.
"Third point: Susan has just found one of our old chessmen - or something as
like one of them as two peas."
Still nobody answered.
"Fourth point. Don't you remember - it was the very day before the ambassadors
came from the King of Calormen don't you remember planting the orchard outside
the north gate of Cair Paravel? The greatest of all the wood-people, Pomona
herself, came to put good spells on it. It was those very decent little chaps
the moles who did the actual digging. Can you have forgotten that funny old
Lilygloves, the chief mole, leaning on his spade and saying, `Believe me, your
Majesty, you'll be glad of these fruit trees one day.' And by Jove he was
right."
"I do! I do!" said Lucy, and clapped her hands.
"But look here, Peter," said Edmund. "This must be all rot. To begin with, we
didn't plant the orchard slap up against the gate. We wouldn't have been such
fools."
"No, of course not," said Peter. "But it has grown up to the gate since."
"And for another thing," said Edmund, "Cair Paravel wasn't on an island."
"Yes, I've been wondering about that. But it was a what-do-you-call-it, a
peninsula. Jolly nearly an island. Couldn't it have been made an island since
our time? Somebody has dug a channel."
"But half a moment!" said Edmund. "You keep on saying since our time. But it's
only a year ago since we came back from Narnia. And you want to make out that in
one year castles have fallen down, and great forests have grown up, and little
trees we saw planted ourselves have turned into a big old orchard, and goodness
knows what else. It's all impossible."
"There's one thing," said Lucy. "If this is Cair Paravel there ought to be a
door at this end of the dais. In fact we ought to be sitting with our backs
against it at this moment. You know - the door that led down to the treasure
chamber."
"I suppose there isn't a door," said Peter, getting up.
The wall behind them was a mass of ivy.
"We can soon find out," said Edmund, taking up one of the sticks that they had
laid ready for putting on the fire. He began beating the ivied wall. Tap-tap
went the stick against the stone; and again, tap-tap; and then, all at once,
boomboom, with a quite different sound, a hollow, wooden sound.
"Great Scott!" said Edmund.
"We must clear this ivy away," said Peter.
"Oh, do let's leave it alone," said Susan. "We can try it in the morning. If
we've got to spend the night here I don't want an open door at my back and a
great big black hole that anything might come out of, besides the draught and
the damp. And it'll soon be dark."
"Susan! How can you?" said Lucy with a reproachful glance. But both the boys
were too much excited to take any notice of Susan's advice. They worked at the
ivy with their hands and with Peter's pocket-knife till the knife broke. After
that they used Edmund's. Soon the whole place where they had been sitting was
covered with ivy; and at last they had the door cleared.
"Locked, of course," said Peter.
"But the wood's all rotten," said Edmund. "We can pull it to bits in no time,
and it will make extra firewood. Come on."
It took them longer than they expected and, before they had done, the great hall
had grown dusky and the first star or two had come out overhead. Susan was not
the only one who felt a slight shudder as the boys stood above the pile of
splintered wood, rubbing the dirt off their hands and staring into the cold,
dark opening they had made.
"Now for a torch," said Peter.
"Oh, what is the good?" said Susan. "And as Edmund said -"
"I'm not saying it now," Edmund interrupted. "I still don't understand, but we
can settle that later. I suppose you're coming down, Peter?"
"We must," said Peter. "Cheer up, Susan. It's no good behaving like kids now
that we are back in Narnia.
You're a Queen here. And anyway no one could go to sleep with a mystery like
this on their minds."
They tried to use long sticks as torches but this was not a success. If you held
them with the lighted end up they went out, and if you held them the other way
they scorched your hand and the smoke got in your eyes. In the end they had to
use Edmund's electric torch; luckily it had been a birthday present less than a
week ago and the battery was almost new. He went first, with the light. Then
came Lucy, then Susan, and Peter brought up the rear.
"I've come to the top of the steps," said Edmund.
"Count them," said Peter.
"One - two - three," said Edmund, as he went cautiously down, and so up to
sixteen. "And this is the bottom," he shouted back.
"Then it really must be Cair Paravel," said Lucy. "There were sixteen." Nothing
more was said till all four were standing in a knot together at the foot of the
stairway. Then Edmund flashed his torch slowly round.
"O - o - o - oh!!" said all the children at once.
For now all knew that it was indeed the ancient treasure chamber of Cair Paravel
where they had once reigned as Kings and Queens of Narnia. There was a kind of
path up the middle (as it might be in a greenhouse), and along each side at
intervals stood rich suits of armour, like knights guarding the treasures. In
between the suits of armour, and on each side of the path, were shelves covered
with precious things - necklaces and arm rings and finger rings and golden bowls
and dishes and long tusks of ivory, brooches and coronets and chains of gold,
and heaps of unset stones lying piled anyhow as if they were marbles or potatoes
- diamonds, rubies, carbuncles, emeralds, topazes, and amethysts. Under the
shelves stood great chests of oak strengthened with iron bars and heavily
padlocked. And it was bitterly cold, and so still that they could hear
themselves breathing, and the treasures were so covered with dust that unless
they had realized where they were and remembered most of the things, they would
hardly have known they were treasures. There was something sad and a little
frightening about the place, because it all seemed so forsaken and long ago.
That was why nobody said anything for at least a minute.
Then, of course, they began walking about and picking things up to look at. It
was like meeting very old friends. If you had been there you would have heard
them saying things like, "Oh look! Our coronation rings - do you remember first
wearing this? - Why, this is the little brooch we all thought was lost - I say,
isn't that the armour you wore in the great tournament in the Lone Islands? - do
you remember the dwarf making that for me? - do you remember drinking out of
that horn? - do you remember, do you remember?"
But suddenly Edmund said, "Look here. We mustn't waste the battery: goodness
knows how often we shall need it. Hadn't we better take what we want and get out
again?"
"We must take the gifts," said Peter. For long ago at a Christmas in Narnia he
and Susan and Lucy had been given certain presents which they valued more than
their whole kingdom. Edmund had had no gift, because he was not with them at the
time. (This was his own fault, and you can read about it in the other book.)
They all agreed with Peter and walked up the path to the wall at the far end of
the treasure chamber, and there, sure enough, the gifts were still hanging.
Lucy's was the smallest for it was only a little bottle. But the bottle was made
of diamond instead of glass, and it was still more than half full of the magical
cordial which would heal almost every wound and every illness. Lucy said nothing
and looked very solemn as she took her gift down from its place and slung the
belt over her shoulder and once more felt the bottle at her side where it used
to hang in the old days. Susan's gift had been a bow and arrows and a horn. The
bow was still there, and the ivory quiver, full of wellfeathered arrows, but -
"Oh, Susan," said Lucy. "Where's the horn?"
"Oh bother, bother, bother," said Susan after she had thought for a moment. "I
remember now. I took it with me the last day of all, the day we went hunting the
White Stag. It must have got lost when we blundered back into that other place -
England, I mean."
Edmund whistled. It was indeed a shattering loss; for this was an enchanted horn
and, whenever you blew it, help was certain to come to you, wherever you were.
"Just the sort of thing that might come in handy in a place like this," said
Edmund.
"Never mind," said Susan, "I've still got the bow." And she took it.
"Won't the string be perished, Su?" said Peter.
But whether by some magic in the air of the treasure chamber or not, the bow was
still in working order. Archery and swimming were the things Susan was good at.
In a moment she had bent the bow and then she gave one little pluck to the
string. It twanged: a chirruping twang that vibrated through the whole room. And
that one small noise brought back the old days to the children's minds more than
anything that had happened yet. All the battles and hunts and feasts came
rushing into their heads together.
Then she unstrung the bow again and slung the quiver at her side.
Next, Peter took down his gift - the shield with the great red lion on it, and
the royal sword. He blew, and rapped them on the floor, to get off the dust. He
fitted the shield on his arm and slung the sword by his side. He was afraid at
first that it might be rusty and stick to the sheath. But it was not so. With
one swift motion he drew it and held it up, shining in the torchlight.
"It is my sword Rhindon," he said; "with it I killed the Wolf." There was a new
tone in his voice, and the others all felt that he was really Peter the High
King again. Then, after a little pause, everyone remembered that they must save
the battery.
They climbed the stair again and made up a good fire and lay down close together
for warmth. The ground was very hard and uncomfortable, but they fell asleep in
the end.