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    THE STORM AND WHAT CAME OF IT  IT was nearly three weeks after their landing that the Dawn Treader was  towed out of Narrowhaven harbour. Very solemn farewells had been spoken and a great  crowd had assembled to see her departure. There had been cheers, and tears too, when  Caspian made his last speech to the Lone Islanders and parted from the Duke and his  family, but as the ship, her purple sail still flapping idly, drew further from the shore, and  the sound of Caspians trumpet from the poop came fainter across the water, everyone  became silent.

    Then she came into the wind. The sail swelled out, the tug cast off and  began rowing back, the first real wave ran up uhe Dawn Treaders prow, and she was  a live ship again. The men off duty went below, Drinian took the first wat the  poop, and she turned her head eastward round the south of Avra.

    The  few days were delightful. Lucy thought she was the most fortunate  girl in the world; as she woke each m to see the refles of the sunlit water  dang on the ceiling of her  and looked round on all the niew things she had  got in the Lone Islands - seaboots and buskins and cloaks and jerkins and scarves. And then  she would go on ded take a look from the forecastle at a sea which was a brighter  blue each m and drink in an air that was a little warmer day by day. After that  came breakfast and su appetite as one only has at sea.

    She spent a good deal of time sitting otle ben the stern  playing chess with Reepicheep. It was amusing to see him lifting the pieces, which were far  too big for him, with both paws and standing on tiptoes if he made a move he tre of  the board.

    He was a good player and when he remembered what he was doing he usually  won. But every now and then Lucy won because the Mouse did something quite  ridiculous like sending a knight into the danger of a queen and castle bihis  happened because he had momentarily fotten it was a game of chess and was thinking of a  real battle and making the knight do what he would certainly have done in its place. For  his mind was full of forlorn hopes, death-lory charges, and last stands.

    But this pleasant time did not last. There came an evening when Lucy,  gazing idly astern at the long furrow or wake they were leaving behind them, saw a great rack  of clouds building itself up in the west with amazing speed.

    Then a gap was torn in it and a yellow su poured through the gap. All  the waves behind them seemed to take on unusual shapes and the sea was a drab or  yellowish colour like dirty vas. The air grew cold. The ship seemed to move uneasily as  if she felt danger behihe sail would be flat and limp one minute and wildly the  . While she was noting these things and w at a sinister ge which had  e over the very he wind, Drinian cried, "All hands on deck." In a moment  everyone became frantically busy. The hatches wet battened down, the galley fire ut  out, me aloft to reef the sail. Before they had fihe storm struck them. It  seemed to Lucy that a great valley in the sea opened just before their bows, and they  rushed down in it, deeper down than she would have believed possible. A great grey hill of  water, far higher than the mast, rushed to meet them; it looked certaih but they were  tossed to the top of it. Then the ship seemed to spin round. A cataract of water poured over  the deck; the poop and forecastle were like two islands with a fierce sea between them.  aloft the sailors were lying out along the yard desperate trying to get trol of the sail.  A broken rope stood out sideways in the wind as straight and stiff as if it oker.

    "Get below, Maam," bawled Drinian. And Luowing that landsmen - and landswomen - are a nuisao the crew, began to obey. It was not easy.  The Dawn Treader was listing terribly to starboard and the deck sloped like the roof  of a house. She had to clamber round to the top of the ladder, holding on to the rail, and  the stand by while two men climbed up it, and the down as best she could. It was  well she was already holding tight for at the foot of the ladder another wave roar  across the deck, up to her shoulders. She was already almost wet through with spray and rain but  this was colder. Then she made a dash for the  door and got in and shut out for  a moment the appalling sight of the speed with which they were rushing into the dark,  but not of course the horrible fusion of creakings, groanings, snappings, clatterings,  rs and boomings whily sounded more alarming below than they had done on the  poop.

    And all  day and all the  it went on. It went on till one could  hardly even remember a time before it had begun. And there always had to be three men  at the tiller and it was as much as three could do to keep any kind of a course. And  there always had to be men at the pump<u></u>. And there was hardly a for anyone, and  nothing could be cooked and nothing could be dried, and one man was lost overboard, and they  never saw the sun.

    When it was over Eustace made the followiry in his diary.

    &quot;3 September. The first day fes when I have been able to write. We had  been driven before a hurrie for thirteen days and nights. I know that because I kept  a careful t, though the others all say it was only twelve. Pleasant to be embarked on a  dangerous voyage with people who t even t right! I have had a ghastly time,  up and down enormous waves hour after hour, usually wet to the skin, and not even an  attempt at giving us proper meals. Needless to say theres no wireless or even a  rocket, so no ce of signalling anyone for help. It all proves what I keep on telling them,  the madness of setting out in a rotten little tub like this. It would be bad enough even  if one was with

    det people instead of fiends in human form. Caspian and Edmund are  simply brutal to me. The night we lost our mast (theres only a stump left now), though I  was not at all well, they forced me to e on ded work like a slave. Lucy shoved her  oar in by saying that Reepicheep was longing to go only he was too small. I wonder  she doeshat everything that little beast does is all for the sake of showing off.  Even at her age she ought to have that amount of seoday the beastly boat is level at last  and the suns out and we have all been jawing about what to do. We have food enough,  pretty beastly stuff most of it, to last for sixteen days. (The poultry were all washed  overboard. Even if they hadnt been, the storm would have stopped them laying.) The real  trouble is water.

    Two casks seem to have got a leak knocked in them and are empty. (Narnian  efficy again.) On short rations, half a pint a day each, weve got enough for  twelve days.

    (Theres still lots of rum and wi even they realize that would only  make them thirstier.)

    &quot;If we could, of course, the sensible thing would be to tur at once  and make for the Lone Islands. But it took us eighteen days to get where we are, running  like mad with a gale behind us. Even if we got a wind it might take us far loo  get back. And at present theres no sign of a wind - in fact theres no wind at all.  As for rowing back, it would take far too long and Caspian says the men couldnt row on half a  pint of water a day. Im pretty sure this is wrong. I tried to explain that perspiration  really cools people down, so the men would need less water if they were w. He didnt take  any notice of this, which is always his way when he t think of an ahe  others all voted foing on in the hope of finding land. I felt it my duty to point out  that we didnt know there was any land ahead and tried to get them to see the dangers of  wishful thinking.

    Instead of produg a better plan they had the cheek to ask me what I  proposed. So I just explained <q>?</q>coolly and quietly that I had been kidnapped and brought away on  this idiotic voyage without my sent, and it was hardly my busio get them out of  their scrape.

    &quot;4 September. Still becalmed. Very short rations for dinner and I got less  than anyone.

    Caspian is very clever at helping and thinks I dont see! Lucy for some  reason tried to make up to me by  me some of hers but that interfering prig Edmund  would her. Pretty hot sun. Terribly thirsty all evening.

    &quot;5 September. Still becalmed and very hot. Feeling rotten all day and am  sure Ive got a temperature. Of course they havent the seo keep a thermometer on  board.

    &quot;6 September. A horrible day. Woke up in the night knowing I was feverish  and must have a drink of water. Any doctor would have said so. Heaven knows Im the  last person to try to get any unfair adva I never dreamed that this water- rationing would be meant to apply to a sick man. In fact I would have wokehers up and  asked fo<samp>.</samp>r some only I thought it would be selfish to wake them. So I got up and took  my cup and tiptoed out of the Black Hole we slept in, taking great care not to disturb  Caspian and Edmund, for theyve been sleeping badly sihe heat and the short water  began. I always try to sider others whether they are o me or not. I got out  all right into the big room, if you  call it a room, where the rowing benches and the  luggage are. The

    thing of water is at this end. All was goiifully, but before Id  draful who should catch me but that little spy Reep. I tried to explain that I was  going on deck for a breath of air (the business about the water had nothing to do with him) and  he asked me why I had a cup. He made such a hat the whole ship was roused. They  treated me sdalously. I asked, as I think anyone would have, why Reepicheep was  sneaking about the water cask in the middle of the night. He said that as he was too small  to be any use on deck, he did sentry over the water every night so that one more man  could go to sleep.

    Now es their rotten unfairness: they all believed him.  you beat it?

    &quot;I had to apologize or the dangerous little brute would have been at me  with his sword.

    And then Caspian showed up in his true colours as a brutal tyrant and said  out loud for everyoo hear that anyone found &quot;stealing&quot; water in future would &quot;get  two dozen&quot;. I didnt know what this meant till Edmund explaio me. It es in the  sort of books those Pevensie kids read.

    &quot;After this cowardly threat Caspian ged his tune and started being  patronizing. Said he was sorry for me and that everyo just as feverish as I did and we  must all make the best of it, etc., etc. Odious stuck-up prig. Stayed in bed all day  today.

    &quot;7 September. A little wind today but still from the west.

    Made a few miles eastward with part of the sail, set on what Drinian calls  the jury-mast-that means the bowsprit set upright and tied (they call it &quot;lashed&quot;) to the  stump of the real mast. Still terribly thirsty.

    &quot;8 September. Still saili. I stay in my bunk all day now and see no  one except Lucy till the two fiends e to bed. Lucy gives me a little of her water  ration. She says girls do as thirsty as boys. I had often thought this but it ought  to be menerally known at sea.

    &quot;9 September. Land in sight; a very high mountain a long way off to the  south-east.

    &quot;10 September. The mountain is bigger and clearer but still a long way off.  Gulls again today for the first time since I dont know how long.

    &quot;11 September. Caught some fish and had them for dinner. Dropped anchor at  about 7 p.m. in three fathoms of water in a bay of this mountainous island. That  idiot Caspian would us go ashore because it was getting dark and he was afraid of  savages and wild beasts. Extra water ration tonight.”

    What awaited them on this island was going to  Eustace more than  anyone else, but it ot be told in his words because after September 11 he fot  about keeping his diary <samp>.</samp>for a long time.

    When m came, with a low, grey sky but very hot, the adventurers found  they were in a bay encircled by such cliffs and crags that it was like a Nian  fjord. In front of

    them, at the head of the bay, there was some level land heavily rown  with trees that appeared to be cedars, through which a rapid stream came out. Beyond that  was a steep ast ending in a jagged ridge and behind that a vague darkness of  mountains which ran into dull-coloured clouds so that you could not see their tops. The nearer  cliffs, at each side of the bay, were streaked here and there with lines of white which  everyone ko be waterfalls, though at that distahey did not show any movement or  make any noise. Ihe whole place was very silent and the water of the bay as  smooth as glass.

    It reflected every detail of the cliffs. The se would have beey  in a picture but was rather oppressive in real life. It was not a try that weled  visitors.

    The whole ships pa ashore in two boatloads and everyone drank  and washed deliciously in the river and had a meal and a rest before Caspia four  men back to keep the ship, and the days work began. There was everything to be dohe casks must be brought ashore and the faulty ones mended if possible and all  refilled; a tree - a pine if they could get it - must be felled and made into a new mast; sails  must be repaired; a hunting party ao shoot any game the land might yield; clothes  to be washed and mended; and tless small breakages on board to be set right. For the  Dawn Treader herself - and this was more obvious now that they saw her at a  distance - could hardly be reized as the same gallant ship which had left Narrowhaven.  She looked a crippled, discoloured hulk whiyone might have taken for a wreck. And  her officers and crew were er - lean, pale, red-eyed from lack of sleep, and  dressed in rags.

    As Eustace lay under a tree and heard all these plans being discussed his  heart sank. Was there going to be ? It looked as if their first day on the longed- for land was going to be quite as hard work as a day at sea. Then a delightful idea occurred  to him. Nobody was looking they were all chattering about their ship as if they actually  liked the beastly thing. Why shouldnt he simply slip away? He would take a stroll inland,  find a cool, airy place up in the mountains, have a good long sleep, and not rejoihers till the days work was over. He felt it would do him good. But he would take great care  to keep the bay and the ship in sight so as to be sure of his way back. He wouldnt  like to be left behind in this try.

    He at o his plan into a. He rose quietly from his plad  walked away among the trees, taking care to go slowly and in an aimless manner so that  anyone who saw him would think he was merely stretg his legs. He was surprised to  find how quickly the noise of versation died away behind hiin and how very silent  and warm and dark green the wood became. Soon he felt he could venture on a quicker  and more determiride.

    This soht him out of the wood. The ground began sloping steeply up  in front of him. The grass was dry and slippery but manageable if he used his hands as  well as his feet, and though he panted and mopped his forehead a good deal, ..plugged  away steadily. This showed, by the way, that his new life, little as he  suspected it, had already done him some good; the old Eustace, Harold and Albertas Eustace, would  have given up the climb after about ten minutes.

    Slowly, and with several rests, he reached the ridge. Here he had expected  to have a view into the heart of the island, but the clouds had now e lower and nearer  and a sea of fog was rolling to meet him. He sat down and looked back. He was now so  high that the bay looked small beh him and miles of sea were visible. Then the fog  from the mountains closed in all round him, thick but not cold, and he lay down and  turhis way and that to find the most fortable position to enjoy himself.

    But he didnt enjoy himself, or not for very long. He began, almost for the  first time in his life, to feel lonely. At first this feeling grew very gradually. And then  he began to worry about the time. There was not the slightest sound. Suddenly it occurred to  him that he might have been lying there for hours. Perhaps the others had gone! Perhaps  they had let him wander away on purpose simply in order to leave him behind! He leaped  up in a panid began the dest.

    At first he tried to do it too quickly, slipped oeep grass, and  slid for several feet.

    Thehought this had carried him too far to the left - and as he came  up he had seen precipices on that side. So he clambered up again, as near as he could  guess to the place he had started from, and began the dest afresh, bearing to his right.  After that things seemed to be goier. He went very cautiously, for he could not see  more than a yard ahead, and there was still perfect silence all around him. It is very  unpleasant to have to go cautiously when there is a voiside you saying all the time, &quot;Hurry,  hurry, hurry.”

    For every moment the terrible idea of bei behind grew stronger. If  he had uood Caspian and the Peve all he would have known, of course,  that there was not the least ce of their doing any such thing. But he had  persuaded himself that they were all fiends in human form.

    &quot;At last!&quot; said Eustace as he came slithering down a slide of loose stones  (scree, they call it) and found himself on the level. &quot;And now, where are those trees? There  is something dark ahead. Why, I do believe the fog is clearing.”

    It was. The light increased every moment and made him blink. The fog  lifted. He was in an utterly unknown valley and the sea was nowhere in sight.

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