THE HILL OF THE STRANGE TRENCHES:
THERE Is no denying it was a beast of a day. Overhead was a sunless sky,
muffled in clouds that were heavy with snow; underfoot, a black frost; blowing
over it, a wind that felt as if it would take your skin off. When they got down
into the plain they found that this part of the ancient road was much more
ruinous than any they had yet seen. They had to pick their way over great broken
stones and between boulders and across rubble: hard going for sore feet. And,
however tired they got, it was far too cold for a halt.
At about ten o'clock the first tiny snow flakes came loitering down and settled
on Jill's arm. Ten minutes later they were falling quite thickly. In twenty
minutes the ground was noticeably white. And by the end of half an hour a good
steady snowstorm, which looked as if it meant to last all day, was driving in
their faces so that they could hardly see.
In order to understand what followed, you must keep on remembering how little
they could see. As they drew near the low hill which separated them from the
place where the lighted windows had appeared, they had no general view of it at
all. It was a question of seeing the next few paces ahead, and, even for that,
you had to screw up your eyes. Needless to say, they were not talking.
When they reached the foot of the hill they caught a glimpse of what might be
rocks on each side - squarish rocks, if you looked at them carefully, but no one
did. All were more concerned with the ledge right in front of them which barred
their way. It was about four feet high. The Marsh-wiggle, with his long legs,
had no difficulty in jumping onto the top of it, and he then helped the others
up. It was a nasty wet business for them, though not for him, because the snow
now lay quite deep on the ledge. They then had a stiff climb - Jill fell once -
up very rough ground for about a hundred yards, and came to a second ledge.
There were four of these ledges altogether, at quite irregular intervals.
As they struggled on to the fourth ledge, there was no mistaking the fact that
they were now at the top of the flat hill. Up till now the slope had given them
some shelter; here, they got the full fury of the wind. For the hill, oddly
enough, was quite as flat on top as it had looked from a distance: a great level
tableland which the storm tore across without resistance. In most places the
snow was still hardly lying at all, for the wind kept catching it up off the
ground in sheets and clouds, and hurling it in their faces. And round their feet
little eddies of snow ran about as you sometimes see them doing over ice. And,
indeed, in many places, the surface was almost as smooth as ice. But to make
matters worse it was crossed and crisscrossed with curious banks or dykes, which
sometimes divided it up into squares and oblongs. All these of course had to be
climbed; they varied from two to five feet in height and were about a couple of
yards thick. On the north side of each bank the snow already lay in deep drifts;
and after each climb you came down into a drift and got wet.
Fighting her way forward with hood up and head down and numb hands inside her
cloak, Jill had glimpses of other odd things on that horrible tableland - things
on her right that looked vaguely like factory chimneys, and, on her left, a huge
cliff, straighter than any cliff ought to be. But she wasn't at all interested
and didn't give them a thought. The only things she thought about were her cold
hands (and nose and chin and ears) and hot baths and beds at Harfang.
Suddenly she skidded, slid about five feet, and found herself to her horror
sliding down into a dark, narrow chasm which seemed that moment to have appeared
in front of her. Half a second later she had reached the bottom. She appeared to
be in a kind of trench or groove, only about three feet wide. And though she was
shaken by the fall, almost the first thing she noticed was the relief of being
out of the wind; for the walls of the trench rose high above her. The next thing
she noticed was, naturally, the anxious faces of Scrubb and Puddleglum looking
down at her from the edge.
"Are you hurt, Pole?" shouted Scrubb.
"Both legs broken, I shouldn't wonder," shouted Puddleglum.
Jill stood up and explained that she was all right, but they'd have to help her
out.
"What is it you've fallen into?" asked Scrubb.
"It's a kind of trench, or it might be a kind of sunken lane or something," said
Jill. "It runs quite straight."
"Yes, by Jove," said Scrubb. "And it runs due north! I wonder is it a sort of
road? If it was, we'd be out of this infernal wind down there. Is there a lot of
snow at the bottom?"
"Hardly any. It all blows over the top, I suppose."
"What happens farther on?"
"Half a sec. I'll go and see," said Jill. She got up and walked along the
trench; but before she had gone far, it turned sharply to the right. She shouted
this information back to the others.
"What's round the corner?" asked Scrubb.
Now it happened that Jill had the same feeling about twisty passages and dark
places underground, or even nearly underground, that Scrubb had about the edges
of cliffs. She had no intention of going round that corner alone; especially
when she heard Puddleglum bawling out from behind her:
"Be careful, Pole. It's just the sort of place that might lead to a dragon's
cave. And in a giant country, there might be giant earth-worms or giant
beetles."
"I don't think it goes anywhere much," said Jill, coming hastily back.
"I'm jolly well going to have a look," said Scrubb. "What do you mean by
anywhere much, I should like to know?" So he sat down on the edge of the trench
(everyone was too wet by now to bother about being a bit wetter) and then
dropped in. He pushed past Jill and, though he didn't say anything, she felt
sure that he knew she had funked it. So she followed him close, but took care
not to get in front of him.
It proved, however, a disappointing exploration. They went round the right-hand
turn and straight on for a few paces. Here there was a choice of ways: straight
on again, or sharp to the right. "That's no good," said Scrubb, glancing down
the right-hand turn, "that would be taking us back - south." He went straight
on, but once more, in a few steps, they found a second turn to the right. But
this time there was no choice of ways, for the trench they had been following
here came to a dead end.
"No good," grunted Scrubb. Jill lost no time in turning and leading the way
back. When they returned to the place where Jill had first fallen in, the
Marsh-wiggle with his long arms had no difficulty in pulling them out.
But it was dreadful to be out on top again. Down in those narrow slits of
trenches, their ears had almost begun to thaw. They had been able to see clearly
and breathe easily and hear each other speak without shouting. It was absolute
misery to come back into the withering coldness. And it did seem hard when
Puddleglum chose that moment for saying:
"Are you still sure of those signs, Pole? What's the one we ought to be after,
now?"
"Oh, come on! Bother the signs," said Pole. "Something about someone mentioning
Aslan's name, I think. But I'm jolly well not going to give a recitation here."
As you see, she had got the order wrong. That was because she had given up
saying the signs over every night. She still really knew them, if she troubled
to think: but she was no longer so "pat" in her lesson as to be sure of reeling
them off in the right order at a moment's notice and without thinking.
Puddleglum's question annoyed her because, deep down inside her, she was already
annoyed with herself for not knowing the Lion's lesson quite so well as she felt
she ought to have known it. This annoyance, added to the misery of being very
cold and tired, made her say, "Bother the signs." She didn't perhaps quite mean
it.
"Oh, that was next, was it?" said Puddleglum. "Now I wonder, are you right? Got
'em mixed, I shouldn't wonder. It seems to me, this hill, this flat place we're
on, is worth stopping to have a look at. Have you noticed -"
"Oh Lor!" said Scrubb, "is this a time for stopping to admire the view? For
goodness' sake let's get on."
"Oh, look, look, look," cried Jill and pointed. Everyone turned, and everyone
saw. Some way off to the north, and a good deal higher up than the tableland on
which they stood, a line of lights had appeared. This time, even more obviously
than when the travellers had seen them the night before, they were windows:
smaller windows that made one think deliciously of bedrooms, and larger windows
that made one think of great halls with fires roaring on the hearth and hot soup
or juicy sirloins smoking on the table.
"Harfang!" exclaimed Scrubb.
"That's all very well," said Puddleglum. "But what I was saying was -"
"Oh, shut up," said Jill crossly. "We haven't a moment to lose. Don't you
remember what the Lady said about their locking up so early? We must get there
in time, we must, we must. We'll die if we're shut out on a night like this."
"Well, it isn't exactly a night, not yet," began Puddleglum; but the two
children both said, "Come on," and began stumbling forward on the slippery
tableland as quickly as their legs would carry them. The Marsh-wiggle followed
them: still talking, but now that they were forcing their way into the wind
again, they could not have heard him even if they had wanted to. And they didn't
want. They were thinking of baths and beds and hot drinks; and the idea of
coming to Harfang too late and being shut out was almost unbearable.
In spite of their haste, it took them a long time to cross the flat top of that
hill. And even when they had crossed it, there were still several ledges to
climb down on the far side. But at last they reached the bottom and could see
what Harfang was like.
It stood on a high crag, and in spite of its many towers was more a huge house
than a castle. Obviously, the Gentle Giants feared no attack. There were windows
in the outside wall quite close to the ground - a thing no one would have in a
serious fortress. There were even odd little doors here and there, so that it
would be quite easy to get in and out of the castle without going through the
courtyard. This raised the spirits of Jill and Scrubb. It made the whole place
look more friendly and less forbidding.
At first the height and steepness of the crag frightened them, but presently
they noticed that there was an easier way up on the left and that the road wound
up towards it. It was a terrible climb, after the journey they had already had,
and Jill nearly gave up. Scrubb and Puddleglum had to help her for the last
hundred yards.
But in the end they stood before the castle gate. The portcullis was up and the
gate open.
However tired you are, it takes some nerve to walk up to a giant's front door.
In spite of all his previous warnings against Harfang, it was Puddleglum who
showed most courage.
"Steady pace, now," he said. "Don't look frightened, whatever you do. We've done
the silliest thing in the world by coming at all: but now that we are here, we'd
best put a bold face on it."
With these words he strode forward into the gateway, stood still under the arch
where the echo would help his voice, and called out as loud as he could.
"Ho! Porter! Guests who seek lodging."
And while he was waiting for something to happen, he took off his hat and
knocked off the heavy mass of snow which had gathered on its wide brim.
"I say," whispered Scrubb to Jill. "He may be a wet blanket, but he has plenty
of pluck - and cheek."
A door opened, letting out a delicious glow of firelight, and the Porter
appeared. Jill bit her lips for fear she should scream. He was not a perfectly
enormous giant; that is to say, he was rather taller than an apple tree but
nothing like so tall as a telegraph pole. He had bristly red hair, a leather
jerkin with metal plates fastened all over it so as to make a kind of mail
shirt, bare knees (very hairy indeed) and things like puttees on his legs. He
stooped down and goggled at Puddleglum.
"And what sort of creature do you call yourself," he said.
Jill took her courage in both hands. "Please," she said, shouting up at the
giant. "The Lady of the Green Kirtle salutes the King of the Gentle Giants, and
has sent us two Southern children and this Marsh-wiggle (his name's Puddleglum)
to your Autumn Feast. - If it's quite convenient, of course," she added.
"Oho!" said the Porter. "That's quite a different story. Come in, little people,
come in. You'd best come into the lodge while I'm sending word to his Majesty."
He looked at the children with curiosity. "Blue faces," he said. "I didn't know
they. were that colour. Don't care about it myself. But I dare say you look
quite nice to one another. Beetles fancy other beetles, they do say."
"Our faces are only blue with cold," said Jill. "We're not this colour really."
"Then come in and get warm. Come in, little shrimps," said the Porter. They
followed him into the lodge. And though it was rather terrible to hear such a
big door clang shut behind them, they forgot about it as soon as they saw the
thing they had been longing for ever since supper time last night - afire. And
such a fire! It looked as if four or five whole trees were blazing on it, and it
was so hot they couldn't go within yards of it. But they all flopped down on the
brick floor, as near as they could bear the heat, and heaved great sighs of
relief.
"Now, youngster," said the Porter to another giant who had been sitting in the
back of the room, staring at the visitors till it looked as if his eyes would
start out of his head, "run across with this message to the House." And he
repeated what Jill had said to him. The younger giant, after a final stare, and
a great guffaw, left the room.
"Now, Froggy," said the Porter to Puddleglum, "you look as if you wanted some
cheering up." He produced a black bottle very like Puddleglum's own, but about
twenty times larger. "Let me see, let me see," said the Porter. "I can't give
you a cup or you'll drown yourself. Let me see. This salt-cellar will be just
the thing. You needn't mention it over at the House. The silver will keep on
getting over here, and it's not my fault."
The salt-cellar was not very like one of ours, being narrower and more upright,
and made quite a good cup for Puddleglum, when the giant set it down on the
floor beside him. The children expected Puddleglum to refuse it, distrusting the
Gentle Giants as he did. But he muttered, "It's rather late to be thinking of
precautions now that we're inside and the door shut behind us." Then he sniffed
at the liquor. "Smells all right," he said. "But that's nothing to go by. Better
make sure," and took a sip. "Tastes all right, too," he said. "But it might do
that at the first sip. How does it go on?" He took a larger sip. "Ah!" he said.
"But is it the same all the way down?" and took another. "There'll be something
nasty at the bottom, I shouldn't wonder," he said, and finished the drink. He
licked his lips and remarked to the children, "This'll be a test, you see. If I
curl up, or burst, or turn into a lizard, or something, then you'll know not to
take anything they offer you." But the giant, who was too far up to hear the
things Puddleglum had been saying under his breath, roared with laughter and
said, "Why, Froggy, you're a man. See him put it away!"
"Not a man . . . Marsh-wiggle," replied Puddleglum in a somewhat indistinct
voice. "Not frog either: Marshwiggle."
At that moment the door opened behind them and the younger giant came in saying,
"They're to go to the throne-room at once."
The children stood up but Puddleglum remained sitting and said, "Marsh-wiggle.
Marsh-wiggle. Very respectable Marsh-wiggle. Respectowiggle."
"Show them the way, young 'un," said the giant Porter. "You'd better carry
Froggy. He's had a drop more than's good for him."
"Nothing wrong with me," said Puddleglum. "Not a frog. Nothing frog with me. I'm
a respectabiggle."
But the young giant caught him up by the waist and signed to the children to
follow. In this undignified way they crossed the courtyard. Puddleglum, held in
the giant's fist, and vaguely kicking the air, did certainly look very like a
frog. But they had little time to notice this, for they soon entered the great
doorway of the main castle - both their hearts beating faster than usual - and,
after pattering along several corridors at a trot to keep up with the giant's
paces, found themselves blinking in the light of an enormous room, where lamps
glowed and a fire roared on the hearth and both were reflected from the gilding
of roof and cornice. More giants than they could count stood on their left and
right, all in magnificent robes; and on two thrones at the far end, sat two huge
shapes that appeared to be the King and Queen.
About twenty feet from the thrones, they stopped. Scrubb and Jill made an
awkward attempt at a bow (girls are not taught how to curtsey at Experiment
House) and the young giant carefully put Puddleglum down on the floor, where he
collapsed into a sort of sitting position. With his long limbs he looked, to
tell the truth, uncommonly like a large spider.