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    A WAYSIDE ADVE was nearly noon on the following day when Shasta was wakened by  something warm and soft moving over his face. He opened his eyes and found himself staring  into the long face of a horse; its nose and lips were almost toug his. He remembered  the exg events of the previous night and sat up. But as he did so he groaned.

    "Ow, Bree," he gasped. "Im so sore. All over. I  hardly move.”

    "Good m, small one," said Bree. "I was afraid you might feel a bit  stiff. It t be the falls. You didnt have more than a dozen or so, and it was all lovely,  soft springy turf that must have been almost a pleasure to fall on. And the only ohat  might have been nasty was broken by that gorse bush. No: its the riding itself that es  hard at first.

    What about breakfast? Ive had mine.”

    "Oh bother breakfast. Bother everything," said Shasta. "I tell you I t  move." But the horse nuzzled at him with its nose and pawed him gently with a hoof till he  had to get up.

    And then he looked about him and saw where they were. Behind them lay a  little copse.

    Before them the turf, dotted with white flowers, sloped down to the brow of  a cliff. Far below them, so that the sound of the breaking waves was very faint, lay the  sea. Shasta had p://..r seen it from such a height and never seen so much of it before,  nor dreamed how many colours it had. Oher hand the coast stretched away, headland  after headland, and at the points you could see the white foam running up the  rocks but making no noise because it was so far off. There were gulls flying overhead and  the heat shivered on the ground; it was a blazing day. But what Shasta chiefly noticed was  the air. He couldnt think what was missing, until at last he realized that there was  no smell of fish in it. For of course, her itage nor among the s, had he ever  been away from

    that smell in his life. And this new air was so delicious, and all his old  life seemed so far away, that he fot for a moment about his bruises and his ag muscles  and said:  "I say, Bree, didnt you say something about breakfast?”

    "Yes, I did," answered Bree. "I think youll find something in the saddle- bags. Theyre over there on that tree where you hung them up last night - or early this  m, rather.”

    They iigated the saddle-bags and the results were cheering- a meat  pasty, only slightly stale, a lump of dried figs and another lump of green cheese, a  little flask of wine, and some money; about forty crests in all, which was more than Shasta  had ever seen.

    While Shasta sat down - painfully and cautiously - with his back against a  tree and started on the pasty, Bree had a few more mouthfuls of grass to keep him pany.

    "Wont it be stealing to use the money?" asked Shasta.

    "Oh," said the Horse, looking up with its mouth full of grass, "I hought of that. A free horse and a talking horse mustnt steal, of course. But I think its  all right. Were prisoners and captives in enemy try. That money is booty, spoil.  Besides, how are we to get any food for you without it? I suppose, like all humans, you  wo natural food like grass and oats.”

    "I t.”

    "Ever tried?”

    "Yes, I have. I t get it down at all. You couldher if you were  me.”

    "Youre rum little creatures, you humans," remarked Bree.

    When Shasta had finished his breakfast (which was by far the  he had  ever eaten), Bree said, "I think Ill have a nice roll before we put on that saddle  again." And he proceeded to do so. "Thats good. Thats very good," he said, rubbing his  ba the turf and waving all fs in the air. "You ought to have ooo, Shasta,"  he snorted. "Its most refreshing.”

    But Shasta burst out laughing and said,"You do look funny when youre on  your back!”

    "I look nothing of the sort," said Bree. But then suddenly he rolled round  on his side, raised his head and looked hard at Shasta, blowing a little.

    "Does it really look funny?" he asked in an anxious voice.

    "Yes, it does," replied Shasta. "But what does it matter?”

    "You dont think, do you," said Bree, "that it might be a thing talking  horses never do - a silly, ish trick Ive learned from the dumb ones? It would be dreadful  to find, when I get back to Narnia, that Ive picked up a lot of low, bad habits. What do  you think, Shasta? Holy, now. Dont spare my feelings. Should you think the real,  free horses - the talking kind - do roll?”

    "How should I know? Anyway I dont think I should bother about it if I were  you. Weve got to get there first. Do you know the way?”

    "I know my way to Tashbaan. After that es the desert. Oh, well mahe desert somehow, never fear. Why, well be in sight of the Northern mountains then.  Think of it!

    To Narnia and the North! Nothing will stop us then. But Id be glad to be  past Tashbaan.

    You and I are safer away from cities.”

    "t we avoid it?”

    "Not without going along way inland, and that would take us into cultivated  land and main roads; and I wouldnt know the way. No, well just have to creep along  the coast. Up here on the downs well meet nothing but sheep and rabbits and gulls and a  few shepherds. And by the way, what about starting?”

    Shastas legs ached terribly as he saddled Bree and climbed into the  saddle, but the Horse was kindly to him a at a soft pace all afternoon. When evening  twilight came they dropped by steep tracks into a valley and found a village. Before they got  into it Shasta dismounted aered it on foot to buy a loaf and some onions and  radishes. The Horse trotted round by the fields in the dusk a Shasta at the far side.  This became their regular plan every sed night.

    These were great days for Shasta, and every day better than the last as his  muscles hardened and he fell less often. Even at the end of his training Bree still  said he sat like a bag of flour in the saddle. "And even if it was safe, young un, Id be  ashamed to be seen with you on the main road." But in spite of his rude words Bree atient teacher. No one  teach riding so well as a horse. Shasta learo trot, to ter,  to jump, and to keep his seat even when Bree pulled up suddenly or swung uedly to  the left or the right - which, as Bree told him, was a thing you might have to do at any  moment in a battle. And then of course Shasta begged to be told of the battles and wars  in which Bree had carried the Tarkaan. And Bree would tell of forced marches and the  f of swift rivers, of charges and of fierce fights between cavalry and cavalry when  the war horses fought as well as the men, being all fierce stallions, traio bite and  kick, and to rear at the right moment so that the horses weight as well as the riders would  e down on a enemys crest iroke of sword or battleaxe. But Bree did not want to  talk about the wars as often as Shasta wao hear about them. "Dont speak of them,  youngster," he would say. "They were only the Tisrocs wars and I fought in them as a  slave and a dumb beast. Give me the Narnian wars where I shall fight as a free Horse among  my own people! Those will be wars worth talking about. Narnia and the North! Bra- ha-ha! Broo hoo!”

    Shasta soon learned, when he heard Bree talking like that, to prepare for a  gallop.

    After they had travelled on for weeks and weeks past more bays and  headlands and rivers and villages than Shasta could remember, there came a moonlit night when  they started their jour evening, having slept during the day. They had left the  downs behind them and were crossing a wide plain with a forest about half a mile away on  their left.

    The sea, hidden by low sandhills, was about the same distan their  right. They had jogged along for about an hour, sometimes trotting and sometimes walking,  when Bree suddenly stopped.

    "Whats up?" said Shasta.

    "S-s-ssh!" said Bree, ing his neck round and twitg his ears. "Did  you hear something? Listen.”

    "It sounds like another horse - between us and the wood," said Shasta after  he had listened for about a minute.

    "It is another horse," said Bree. "And thats what I dont like.”

    "Isnt it probably just a farmer riding home late?" said Shasta with a  yawn.

    "Dont tell me!" said Bree. "Thats not a farmers riding. Nor a farmers  horse either. t you tell by the sound? Thats quality, that horse is. And its being ridden  by a real horseman. I tell you what it is, Shasta. Theres a Tarkaan uhe edge  of that wood.

    Not on his war horse - its too light for that. On a fine blood mare, I  should say.”

    "Well, its stopped now, whatever it is," said Shasta.

    "Youre right," said Bree. "And why should he stop just when we do? Shasta,  my boy, I do believe theres someone shadowing us at last.”

    "What shall we do?" said Shasta in a lower whisper than before. "Do you  think he  see us as well as hear us?”

    "Not in this light so long as we stay quite still," answered Bree. "But  look! Theres a cloud ing up. Ill wait till that gets over the moon. Then well get off  tht as quietly as we , down to the shore. We  hide among the sandhills if  the worst es to the worst.”

    They waited till the cloud covered the moon and then, first at a walking  pad afterwards at a gerot, made for the shore.

    The cloud was bigger and thicker than it had looked at first and soon the  night grew very dark. Just as Shasta was saying to himself, "We must be nearly at those  sandhills by

    now," his heart leaped into his mouth because an appalling noise had  suddenly risen up out of the darkness ahead; a long snarling roar, melancholy and utterly  savage. Instantly Bree swerved round and began galloping inland again as fast as he could  gallop.

    "What is it?" gasped Shasta.

    "Lions!" said Bree, without cheg his pace or turning his head.

    After that there was nothing but sheer galloping for some time. At last  they splashed across a wide, shallow stream and Bree came to a stop on the far side.  Shasta noticed that he was trembling and sweating all over.

    "That water may have thrown the brute off our st," panted Bree when he  had partly got his breath again. "We  walk for a bit now.”

    As they walked Bree said, "Shasta, Im ashamed of myself. Im just as  frightened as a on, dumb ene horse. I am really. I dont feel like a Talking  Horse at all. I dont mind swords and lances and arrows but I t bear - those creatures.  I think Ill trot for a bit.”

    About a mier, however, he broke into a gallop again, and no wonder.  For the roar broke out again, this time on their left from the dire of the forest.

    "Two of them," moaned Bree.

    When they had galloped for several minutes without any further noise from  the lions Shasta said, "I say! That other horse is galloping beside us now. Only a  stohrow away.”

    "All the b-better," panted Bree. "Tarkaan on it - will have a sword -  protect us all.”

    "But, Bree!" said Shasta. "We might just as well be killed by lions as  caught. Or 1 mig99lib?.

    Theyll hang me for horsestealing." He was feeling less frightened of lions  than Bree because he had never met a lion; Bree had.

    Bree only snorted in answer but he did sheer away to his right. Oddly  enough the other horse seemed also to be sheering away to the left, so that in a few seds  the space between them had widened a good deal. But as soon as it did so there came  two more lions roars, immediately after one another, one on the right and the other  on the left, the horses began drawing ogether. So, apparently, did the lions. The  r of the brutes on each side was horribly close and they seemed to be keeping up  with the galloping horses quite easily. Then the cloud rolled away. The moonlight,  astonishingly bright, showed up everything almost as if it were broad day. The two horses  and two riders were gallopio ned ko knee just as if they were in  a race. Indeed Bree said (afterwards) that a finer race had never been seen in en.

    Shasta now gave himself up for lost and began to wonder whether lions  killed you quickly or played with you as a cat plays with a mouse and how much it  would hurt. At the same time (one sometimes does this at the most frightful moments) he  noticed everything. He saw that the other rider was a very small, slender person,  mail-clad (the moon shone on the mail) and riding magnifitly. He had no beard.

    Something flat and shining read out before them. Before Shasta had  time even to guess what it was there was  a great splash and he found his mouth half full of salt water. The shining  thing had been a long i of the sea. Both horses were swimming and the water  to  Shastas knees.

    There was an angry r behind them and looking back Shasta saw a great,  shaggy, and terrible shape crouched oers edge; but only one. "We must  have shaken off the other lion," he thought.

    The lion apparently did not think its prey worth a wetting; at any rate it  made no attempt to take the water in pursuit. The two horses, side by side, were now well  out into the middle of the creek and the opposite shore could be clearly seen. The  Tarkaan had not yet spoken a word. "But he will," thought Shasta. "As soon as we have landed.  What am I to say? I must begin thinking out a story.”

    Then, suddenly, two voices spoke at his side.

    "Oh, I am so tired," said the one. "Hold your tongue, Hwin, and dont be a  fool," said the other.

    "Im dreaming," thought Shasta. "I could have sworn that other horse  spoke.”

    Soon the horses were no longer swimming but walking and soon with a great  sound of water running off their sides and tails and with a great g of  pebbles under eight hoofs, they came out on the farther beach of the ihe Tarkaan, to  Shastas surprise, showed no wish to ask questions. He did not even look at Shasta but seemed  anxious te his horse straight on. Bree, however, at once shouldered himself in  the other horses way.

    "Broo-hoo-hah!" he snorted. "Steady there! I heard you, I did. Theres no  good pretending, Maam. 1 heard you. Youre a Talking Horse, a Narnian horse  just like me.”

    "Whats it got to do with you if she is?" said the strange rider fiercely,  laying hand on sword-hilt. But the voi which the words were spoken had already told  Shasta something.

    "Why, its only a girl!" he exclaimed.

    "And what business is it of yours if I am only a girl?" she  stranger. "Youre probably only a boy: a rude, on little boy - a slave probably, whos  stolen his masters horse.”

    "Thats all you know," said Shasta.

    "Hes not a thief, little Tarkheena," said Bree. "At least, if theres been  any stealing, you might just as well say I stole him. And as for its not being my business,  you wouldnt expect me to pass a lady of my own ra this strange try without  speaking to her?

    Its only natural I should.”

    "I think its very natural too," said the mare.

    "I wish youd held your tongue, Hwin," said the girl. "Look at the trouble  youve got us into.”

    "I dont know about trouble," said Shasta. "You  clear off as soon as  you like. We shant keep you.”

    "No, you shant," said the girl.

    "What quarrelsome creatures these humans are," said Bree to the mare.  "Theyre as bad as mules. Lets try to talk a little sense. I take it, maam, your story is  the same as mine?

    Captured in early youth - years of slavery among the enes?”

    "Too true, sir," said the mare with a melancholy whinny.

    "And now, perhaps - escape?”

    "Tell him to mind his own business, Hwin," said the girl.

    "No, I wont, Aravis," said the mare putting her ears back. "This is my  escape just as much as yours. And Im sure a noble war-horse like this is not going to  betray us. We are trying to escape, to get to Narnia.”

    "And so, of course, are we," said Bree. "Of course you guessed that at  once. A little boy in rags riding ( to ride) a war-horse at dead of night couldnt  mean anything but an escape of some sort. And, if I may say so, a highborn Tarkheena riding  alo night - dressed up in her brothers armour - and very anxious for everyoo mind  their own business and ask her no questions - well, if thats not fishy, call me a  cob!”

    "All right then," said Aravis. "Youve guessed it. Hwin and I are running  away. We are trying to get to Narnia. And now, what about it?”

    "Why, in that case, what is to prevent us all going together?" said Bree.  "I trust, Madam Hwin, you will accept such assistand prote as I may be able to  give you on the journey?”

    "Why do you keep talking to my horse instead of to me?" asked the girl.

    "Excuse me, Tarkheena," said Bree (with just the slightest backward tilt of  his ears), "but thats ealk. Were free Narnians, Hwin and I, and I suppose, if  youre running away to Narnia, you want to be ooo. In that case Hwin isnt your horse  any longer.

    One might just as well say youre her human.”

    The girl opened her mouth to speak and then stopped. Obviously she had not  quite seen it in that light before.

    "Still," she said after a moments pause, "I dont know that theres so  much point in all going together. Arent we more likely to be noticed?”

    "Less," said Bree; and the mare said, "Oh do lets. I should feel much more  fortable.

    Were not eveain of the way. Im sure a great charger like this knows  far more than we do.”

    "Oh e on, Bree," said Shasta, "ahem go their own way. t you  see they dont want us?”

    "We do," said Hwin.

    "Look here," said the girl. "I dont mind going with you, Mr War-Horse, but  what about this boy? How do I know hes not a spy?”

    &quot;Why dont you say at ohat you think Im<bdo>99lib?</bdo> not good enough for you?&quot;  said Shasta.

    &quot;Be quiet, Shasta,&quot; said Bree. &quot;The Tarkheenas question is quite  reasonable. Ill vouch for the boy, Tarkheena. Hes been true to me and a good friend. And hes  certaiher a Narnian or an Arlander.”

    &quot;All right, thes go together.&quot; But she didnt say anything to Shasta  and it was obvious that she wanted Bree, not him.

    &quot;Splendid!&quot; said Bree. &quot;And now that weve got the water between us and  those dreadful animals, what about you two humans taking off our saddles and our all  having a rest and hearing one anothers stories.”

    Both the children unsaddled their horses and the horses had a little grass  and Aravis produced rather hings to eat from her saddle-bag? But Shasta sulked  and said No thanks, and that he wasnt hungry. Aried to put on what he thought  very grand and stiff manners, but as a fishermans but is not usually a good place for  learning grand

    manners, the result was dreadful. And he half khat it wasnt a success  and then became sulkier and more awkward than ever. Meanwhile the two horses were  getting on splendidly. They remembered the very same places in Narnia - &quot;the  grasslands up above Beaversdam&quot; and found that they were some sort of sed cousins once  removed. This made things more and more unfortable for the humans until at last Bree  said, &quot;And now, Tarkheena, tell us your story. And dont hurry it - Im feeling  fortable now.”

    Aravis immediately began, sitting quite still and using a rather different  tone and style from her usual one. For in en, story-telling (whether the stories are  true or made up) is a thing youre taught, just as English boys and girls are taught  essay-writing. The difference is that people want to hear the stories, whereas I never heard  of anyone who wao read the essays.

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