the floor again by a big, brutal, sledgehammer blow.
All right, all right, he got knocked down, thought Maurice as Keith struggled for breath,
There was a shrill scream, and Maurice thought: aha!
But the scream hadn't come from the wheezing Keith. A grey figure had launched itself from the top of the rat cages right at the rat-catcher's face. It landed teeth first, and blood spurted on the rat-catcher's nose.
Aha! thought Maurice again, it's Hamnpork to the rescue! What?
The rat-catcher grabbed at the rat and held him out at arm's length by his tail. Hamnpork twisted and turned, squealing with rage. His captor dabbed at his nose with his spare hand, and stared at Hamnpork as he struggled.
“He's a bit of a fighter,” said Rat-catcher 2. “How'd he get out?”
“Not one of ours,” said Rat-catcher 1. “He's a red.”
“Red? What's red about him?”
“A red rat's a kind of grey rat, as you would very well know if you'd were an hexperienced Guild member like me,” said the rat-catcher. “They ain't local. You get 'em down on the plains. Funny to find one up here. Very funny. Greasy old devil, too. But game as anything.”
“Your nose is all runny.”
“Yeah. I know. I've had more rat bites than you've had hot dinners. Don't feel 'em any more,” said Rat- catcher 1, in a voice that suggested that the spinning, screeching Hamnpork was a lot more interesting than his colleague.
“I only have cold sausage for dinner.”
“There you are then. What a little fighter you are, to
“Kind of you to say so.”
“I was talking to the
“She's the mayor's daughter,” said Rat-catcher 2. “Mayors can get really upset about daughters.”
“Then he'll do what he's told, right?”
“You gonna give that rat a good squeezing?”
“What, a fighter like this one? Are you joking? It's thinking like that that'll keep you a rat-catcher's assistant your whole life. I've got a much better idea. How many's in the special cage?”
Maurice watched Rat-catcher 2 go and examine one of the other cages on the far wall.
“Only two rats left. They've eaten the other four,” he reported. “Just skin left. Very neat.”
“Ah, so they'll be full o' vim and vinegar. Well, we'll see what
Maurice heard a little wire door open and shut.
The caged rats across the room leapt back from the netting. Even they could feel the fury.
“Now
“Not the pit?” said Rat-catcher 2.
“Yes, the pit.”
“Tonight?”
“Yeah, 'cos Fancy Arthur is putting in his Jacko on a bet to kill a hundred rats in less than a quarter of an hour.”
“I bet he can, too. Jacko's a good terrier. He did ninety a few months ago and Fancy Arthur been training him up. Should be a good show.”
“You'd bet on Jacko doing it, would you?” said Ratcatcher 1.
“Sure. Everyone will be.”
“Even with our little friend here among the rats?” said Rat-catcher 1. “Full of lovely spite and bite and boilin' bile?”
“Well, er…”
“Yeah, right.” Rat-catcher 1 grinned.
“I don't like leaving those kids here, though.”
“It's ‘them kids’, not ‘those kids’. Get it right. How many times have I told you? Rule 27 of the Guild: sound stupid. People get suspicious of rat-catchers that talk too good.”
“Sorry.”
“Talk thick,
“Sorry, I forgot.”
“You tend to do it the other way around.”
“Sorry. Them kids. It's cruel, tying people up. And they're only kids, after all.”
“So?”
“So it'd be a lot easier to take 'em down the tunnel to the river and hit 'em on the head and throw 'em in. They'll be miles down river before anyone fishes 'em out, and they prob'ly won't even be recognizable by the time the fish have finished with 'em.”
Maurice heard a pause in the conversation. Then Ratcatcher 1 said, “I didn't know that you were such a kind-hearted soul, Bill.”
“Right, and, sorry,
The next voice came from everywhere. It sounded like a rushing wind and, in the heart of the wind, the groan of something in agony. It filled the air.
“No, we can use the piper,” said Rat-catcher 1.
“That's right,” said Rat-catcher 2. “I was just thinking the same thing. Er… how can we use the piper?”
Once again, Maurice heard a sound in his head like wind blowing through a cave.
“Isn't it obvious?” said Rat-catcher 1.
“Yeah, obvious,” muttered Rat-catcher 2. “Obviously it's obvious. Er…”
Maurice watched the rat-catchers open several of the cages, grab rats and drop them into a sack. He saw Hamnpork tipped into one, too. And then the ratcatchers had gone, dragging the other humans with them, and Maurice wondered: where, in this maze of cellars, is a Maurice-sized hole?
Cats can't see in the dark. What they