Maurice ran, skidding on the slimy stone as the tunnel turned a corner.
Maurice yowled under his breath. Other, smaller tunnels branched off on either side but the thin red streak led straight on and there, under another grating, the
Maurice sagged. He'd been expecting—what? But this… this was… this was
Soaked in water, leaking the red ink from Ratty Rupert the Rat's red waistcoat, was
Maurice hooked it out on claw-tip, and the cheap paper pages fell out, one by one, and drifted away in the water. They'd dropped it. Had they been running? Or… had they thrown it away? What was it Dangerous Beans had said? “We're nothing but rats”? And he'd said it in such a sad, hollow voice…
It can see what I see, he thought. It can't read my mind, but it can see what I see and hear what I hear and it's good at working out what I must be thinking…
Once again, he shut his eyes.
Maurice spun around, eyes wide. There were rats there, dozens of them, some of them nearly half the size of Maurice. They watched him, all with the same blank expression.
The rats, as one rat, moved forward. They rustled as they moved. Maurice took a step backwards.
“Where are you?” said Maurice, aloud.
Maurice turned, and edged forward. The rats followed. He spun around. They stopped. He turned again, took a couple of steps, looked behind him. The rats followed as if they were on string.
There was a familiar smell in the air here, of old, stale water. He was somewhere near the flooded cellar. But how close? The stuff stank worse than tinned cat food. It could be in any direction. He could probably outrun the rats over a short distance. Bloodthirsty rats right behind you can give you wings.
Are you planning to run to
Maurice had to admit that the daylight had never seemed a better idea. There was no point in lying to himself. After all, rats didn't live very long in any case, even if they had wobbly noses—
Maurice stopped dead. “You are going to
Malicia bolted the shed door.
“Rat kings are deeply mysterious,” she said. “A rat king is a group of rats with their tails tied together”
“How?”
“Well, the stories say it just… happens.”
“
“I read somewhere that their tails become stuck together when they're in the nest, because of all the muck, and they get twisted up as—”
“Rats generally have six or seven babies, and they have quite short tails, and the parents keep the nests quite clean,” said Keith. “Have the people who tell these stories ever
“I don't know. Maybe the rats just get crowded together and their tails get twisted up? There's a preserved rat king in a big jar of alcohol in the town museum.”
“A dead one?”
“Or very, very drunk. What do
“But that rat-catcher said he
“Oh course. It's anything really good”
“I mean a
“Very interesting. So?”
“So what sort of master piece would you have to make to become a master rat-catcher? To show that you could
Malicia frowned the frown of someone faced with an inconvenient fact. “Anyone could tie a bunch of rat tails together if they wanted to,” she said. “I'm sure I could.”
“While they're alive? You'd have to trap them first, and then you've got slippery bits of string that are moving all the time and the other end keeps on biting you? Eight of them? Twenty of them? Thirty-two? Thirty-two
Malicia looked around at the untidy shed. “It works,” she said. “Yes. It makes almost as good a story. Probably there were one or two
“I just think that some people like to be cruel,” said Keith. “How would a rat king hunt? They'd all pull in different directions.”
“Ah, well, some of the stories about rat kings say that they can control other rats,” said Malicia. “With their minds, sort of. Get them to bring them food and go to different places and so on. You're right, rat kings can't move