The last thing she remembers is the White Witch glaring at her and pointing her wand.
The next thing she knows is the feel of warmth spreading over her, creeping up from her toes with a tingle — but not pain, no pain at all, just a feeling of relief, and a desire to yawn — as if she's woken from the longest sleep of her life, and from what the two girls tell her, that seems to be exactly what happened.
When she finally reaches Cair Paravel, it's just as she remembers it, every stone, every step, every window where the sun shines in — but it's completely changed, completely empty of life, her family gone forever. The Lion explains that she's no longer a princess, but he didn't have to say anything, she already knew.
narnia, original character, a hundred years turned to stone
The next thing she knows is the feel of warmth spreading over her, creeping up from her toes with a tingle — but not pain, no pain at all, just a feeling of relief, and a desire to yawn — as if she's woken from the longest sleep of her life, and from what the two girls tell her, that seems to be exactly what happened.
When she finally reaches Cair Paravel, it's just as she remembers it, every stone, every step, every window where the sun shines in — but it's completely changed, completely empty of life, her family gone forever. The Lion explains that she's no longer a princess, but he didn't have to say anything, she already knew.