Sunday, 6 January 2013

The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe (extra final chapter)


Chapter 18


The evening rain seems to hang in the air, darkening the sky and soaking the sheep in the fields. In a lonely expanse of sodden countryside the beautiful mansion sits, besieged by the elements and the creeping of time. It is 1941 and the house is in darkness. In the servants quarters Mrs Macready pauses in her nightly reading of the bible and looks darkly at the ceiling. Although two floors below the children's room she can hear the creak of the floorboards as Lucy stomps around, swigging from a bottle of gin and raging impotently at her situation. 

“Lucy we have to get on with our lives, we have to move on.” Susan implores.

“But I was a princess!”

“I know Lucy, we both were. But we have to get on with our...”

“But I was a fucking princess in a kingdom of magic and wonder!” Lucy shouts, throwing her sister's hand aside, “I had a lovely boyfriend, some servants and a group of friends! Now I'm 8 years fucking old, it's pissing down with rain, it's the fucking blitz and I'm never going to see my boyfriend ever again.”

“We have the opportunity to start our lives again, make them whatever we want.”

“Terrific! I have to live the next ten years as a child and then get a job. I can't even remember what jobs there are in this world, can you?”

Susan tries to think, to remember the world before. It seems hazy and distant like a half remembered film.

“Clerical work.” she settles on eventually.

“Right,” Lucy says, “I don't know what that is. But it doesn't sound as good as being an actual fucking princess. Is clerical work in any way comparable to being a magic princess with a healing potion and a dagger?”

“The Professor says we can go back! One day we'll return to Narnia and have more adventures!”

“Oh don't talk to me about that old prick!” Lucy shouts, uncorking the bottle and having another swig, “he's clearly supposed to represent the author of the book, he can take us back whenever he likes! And besides Susan,” Lucy spits her sister's name with scorn, “in case you've forgotten, what seems like a second in this world is fifteen fucking years back home. Our friends are probably all old or dead now. We've missed the best years of our lives just because we were chasing that stupid stag.”

Susan makes for the door, looking concerned and older than ever which is ironic if you think about it.

“Stay strong, Princess Lucy the Valiant, one day we'll return to Narnia, one day. Remember; once a King or Queen in Narnia, always a King or Queen.”

“Oh piss off!” Lucy cries and lies down on the bed.

“How art she?” Peter asks as his sister gently closes the door. Peter hasn't adjusted well to not speaking in a fantasy style.

“Not good.”

“By the Lion's Mane I trust rude health shall return to our sister soon enough. Tis a queer situation we find ourselves in, returned to childlike form having gone through puberty, grown accustomed to sex, alcohol and sword fights and stuff.”

“I know,” Edmund says, “I tried to have a lovely wank earlier. Nothing doing I'm afraid.”

“Why has this happened to us?” Susan asks, burying her head in her hands.

“I know not” Peter sighs, staring out of the window at the ordinary British countryside as the ordinary British drizzle fills the air, “but we have to get on with our lives. We have to live...”

*

Susan, Peter and Edmund are in the drawing room. They have been back in the real world a week but still sit awkwardly in their unfamiliar children's bodies. Edmund is stuffing his face with rationed sweets because he can't find any Turkish delight and Susan is knitting a hat with a lion on it. Peter is standing at the window, running a razor over his bald, child's face and staring blankly at the rolling fields of rural England. There is a sudden banging from the room above and all three children look up and then at each other.

“Is she still up there?” Edmund asks nervously through a mouthful of liquorish,

“Yes,” Susan says sadly, “three hours she's been in that wardrobe, just sitting amongst the coats.”

“But we can't get back to Narnia that way, the Professor told us.”

“She doesn't trust him. She thinks he's a literary device, and a weak one at that.”


*

Inside the musky old wardrobe Lucy sits crossed legged with a box of matches in her hand. One by one she lights them and watches as the roomy interior illuminates and then slowly recedes back into darkness. She has explored the wardrobe more times than she can remember but it refuses to lead her back to the kingdom of Narnia. She has concentrated, prayed and even pummelled the back panel but to no avail. Sighing deeply she lights the last match in the pack and the brightness flickers steadily before being vanishing into smoke.

Lucy sits in silence for a moment, willing Narnia to appear before her. She almost thinks she can feel a breeze on her neck.

This time, she thinks to herself and crawls to the back of the wardrobe. But her hand touches only thick winter coats and oak panel.

The End

C.S Lewis, 1950

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