CHAPTER SEVEN
quot;All ,quot; said Aravis.
quot;O get so excited,quot; said Lasaraleen. quot;I o say, even if ting quite en, dear, tfully funny-”
quot;I meant, all for me,quot; said Aravis a little sharply.
quot;O you mean, darling. ell, can you tter plan?”
Aravis couldnt, and ans;No. ell o risk it. art?”
quot;O tonig; said Lasaraleen. quot;Of course not tonig feast on tonig start getting my in a fees) and ts. And sucoo! It omorro.”
t so make t of it. ternoon passed very slo to t, for Aravis ired of alk about dresses and parties, s and scandals. S to bed early and t part s o s again.
But t day passed very sloed to go back on t and kept on telling Aravis t Narnia ry of perpetual sno;And boy, too!quot; said Lasaraleen. quot;Darling, t! Its not Nice.quot; Aravis of it a good deal, but sired of Lasaraleens silliness by no, for t time, so t travelling a as;You forget t Ill be nobody, just like to Narnia. And anyway, I promised.”
quot;And to t; said Lasaraleen, almost crying, quot;t if only you ; Aravis ao e he horses.
quot;You must go tle before sunset doo tombs,quot; s;No more of t to be food in er-skin beo let you bot the bridge.”
quot;And t; at tombs.”
quot;ait for ; said Aravis. quot;I e comfortable.”
quot;Never better stabled in my life,quot; said Bree. quot;But if t tittering tarko get t oats, ting him.”
Aravis and Lasaraleen he pillared room.
About to start. Aravis