Finally she spins on her toe to face Winter, who may still be on the floor in his careless way but has surely recovered from the blow by now. "You," she says, "must go to the lion, and tell him that I desire safe conduct to treat with him on a matter of as much importance to him as to me. Go peacefully, I do not mind if you alarm the pitiful creatures who side with him but do not harm them while I seek parley. Do you understand, my Winter?" She bends to crook her first two fingers under his chin to turn his head up for frigid eye contact, inspecting him, thinking furious thoughts to which he's only an accessory. "I think the lion may be unnerved to see you. We will see."
And up goes James behind her! This is logical, since if James were in front her sword and shield would make an uncomfortable surface for Bella to potentially bump her face on.
They are going towards two hills that nestle up against each other at the base.
"Are you just going to - go for her directly without having to have the entire battle at all?"
"Oh - look," says Bella, peering at his first subject, where color is bleeding into him from nose onward.
The stone lion is becoming an un-stone lion, in a gradual process reminiscent of fire spreading over a lit page. As soon as his head is free, he shakes it vigorously, restoring golden life to the stone fringe of his mane. He pauses for a yawn and a stretch as living colour works its way down his back, then shakes himself all over and bounds after Aslan to jump and dance and lick him with gratitude and happiness.
When the courtyard's statues have all been released, Aslan calls, "Now, look alive, everyone, inside the house, search every corner! You never know where some poor prisoner might be concealed!"
And everyone bursts into the Witch's house, which is quite empty of live occupants while she prepares elsewhere for war.
"I found Tumnus!"
Eventually the entire house has been ransacked of statues, and the giant has clubbed into oblivion the wall that Aslan leapt over to reveal the spring landscape beyond, and Aslan says:
"Our day's work is not yet over, and if the Witch is to be defeated before nightfall we must join the battle at once. And now! Those who can't keep up - children, dwarves, small animals - must ride on those who can. Those of us with good noses must come out front with us lions to sniff out where the battle is and the rest must follow us. Look lively and sort yourselves."
James heads for Aslan, figuring that if he's willing to let her ride him again, he'll be the fastest and she'll be needed at the battle as a visibly human commander with a magic sword.
Bella goes, too, and presently they are Aslan-mounted again while everyone else piles onto the larger creatures and the sniffers range out ahead to find a trail. A hound gives a loud bay and everyone's off in that direction.
"Off my back, children," says Aslan, and when they have dismounted he roars to shake the whole of Narnia end to end, distracting the witch as she is just about to knife some poor animal and rallying the portion of the army she has been, till this moment, soundly trouncing. All the statues she has made in the battle so far are restored to life and rejoin the fight.