The other children find hiding places (Edmund pushing Lucy out of a closet after declaring that he was there first)-but Lucy finds the strangest hiding place of all-an unused room containing one 'sheeted' piece of furniture that turns out to be a magnificent wooden armoire, or wardrobe, with an intricate carving of a tree on one of its doors. Lucy proposes a game of hide-and-seek, and Peter, hoping to humor her, agrees to be 'It' and starts counting up to 100. (The bulletins describing yet more bombing runs by the Luftwaffe don't help their mood any.) The following day is no better, because it's raining and forces the children to stay indoors. Edmund Pevensie is, quite simply, a 'rotten kid', Lucy is homesick, Peter feels the weight of trying to be the Man of the Family while their father is fighting the war, and Susan is constantly 'trying to be smart' and thus often bumps heads with Peter. The children's first day on the estate reveals the tensions among the siblings. The chief rule (other than 'no touching of the historical artifacts') is: Do not disturb the Professor.
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