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t and then put all worries out of his head and fell asleep at once. It seemed only a moment later when he woke but he knew by the light and the very feel of things that he had timed his sleep exactly. He got up,put on his helmet-and-turban he had slept in his mail shirt,and then shook the other two till they woke up. They looked,to tell the truth,very grey and dismal as they climbed out of their bunks and there was a good deal of yawning.
“Now,”said Tirian,“we go due North from here-by good fortune ‘tis a starry night-and it will be much shorter than our journey this morning,for then we went round-about but now we shall go straight. If we are challenged,then do you two hold your peace and I will do my best to talk like a curst,cruel,proud lord of Calormen. If I draw my sword then thou,Eustace,must do likewise and let Jill leap behind us and stand with an arrow on the string. But if I cry ‘Home’,then fly for the Tower both of you. And let none try to fight on-not even one stroke