Cloaked in lengths of old sailcloth, two Blue Horderats stood deck watch on the bows of one of Ungatt Trunn’s vast flotilla of vessels, which were anchored in the bay facing Salamandastron. Both rats blinked rain from their eyes, staring miserably at the mountain.

“Bet they’re all sittin’ snug an’ dry in there tonight, mate.”

“Aye, quaffin’ grog an’ fillin’ their bellies wid vittles.”

“Nah, I wouldn’t go s’far as to say that. Vittles is short an’ grog’s only fer Ungatt Trunn an’ ’is cronies. I’ll bet we gets stuck on ’alf rations in a day or so.”

“Mebbe yore right, cully, but I wager they’re all warm’n’dry an’ sleepin’ their fat ’eads off, snorin’ like ’ogs.”

“Huh, an’ look at us beauties, stannin’ out ’ere on deck watch in the storm, soakin’, cold, ’ungry an’ sleepy!”

“Whoa! Wot was that?”

“Wot? I didn’t see nothin’. Wot was it?”

“Like some kinda big bird, swooped down aft there!”

“Never! I thinks you needs some shuteye. Y’see funny things when yore tired, or at least you thinks you sees ’em.”

“But I did see it, I’m certain I did, down at the stern end!”

“Well, let’s go down an’ take a look. If ’tis there, a quick chop of me cutlass’ll settle it. I’ll take it down t’the galley an’ we’ll share it wid the cook.”

Both rats staggered down the slippy deck, clinging to the rails, and climbed the stairs to the stern peak.

“Well, where is this big bird o’ yours?”

“Er, it musta flew off, but I saw it!”

“Arr, yer talkin’ through yore tail, mate. There wasn’t no big bird ’ere. All the birds is long gone.”

“Oh, they are, are they? Then tell me, where’s that big thin heavin’ line that was coiled up, right where yore stannin’?”

“I don’t know, cleversnout, you tell me?”

“The big bird took it!”

“Why, ’cos it thought it was a giant worm? Don’t talk rubbish, mate. The ’unger’s gone to yore ’ead. That fox Groddil musta took it. He was ’ere t’day, lookin’ fer ropes.”

“No, I’d take me affidavit the rope was ’ere when we came on watch. I saw it!”

“Aye, just like y’saw the big bird. Lissen, mate, you keep on seein’ big birds an’ vanishin’ ropes an’ I’m not comin’ on deck watch with you anymore!”

*

Rulango dropped the last rope to Brog and his otters, who were waiting in the sea. Silently they coiled nine strong, thin heaving lines about them and swam off shoreward, swift and sleek.

Durvy caused great merriment back at the cave as he related what he had heard, imitating the vermin voices expertly, while Brog knotted the heaving lines into one massively long rope. Purlow watched the long coils building up into a great thick cylinder.

“Great seasons, nobeast’d be able to lift that whackin’ huge thing. How do we move it to the mountain?”

Brogalaw had thought it all out carefully. “Nine of us forms a line, each one carryin’ only a single rope’s length. When we reaches yore mountain, Rulango takes the end an’ flies up t’the window an’ passes it to ’em. No fancy twiddles, mate, a plain’n’simple plan. But not to worry. Me an’ my crew will do it—you rest ’ere.”

Stiffener had a word to say about that. “Sorry, Brog, but I’m comin’ with you, mate. ’Tis my sworn duty. I wouldn’t feel right, lyin’ warm an’ dry here while your otters were out facin’ all the danger. I’m going!”

The otter Skipper shook his paw warmly. “’Twill be a pleasure to ’ave ye along, Stiff mate. Now there’s no time to lose while ’tis night an’ bad weather. If we puts a move on, there’s a chance we could get yore messmates down from the mountain afore daylight. Hearken, crew, we got a hard’n’fast night’s work. Let’s be about it!”

Though he was an old hare, Stiffener’s seasons of exercise routines had kept him fit, and he bore his section of the rope as well as any sea otter. Brogalaw dog-trotted along in the lead, staying to the clifftops, which were easier to travel than the deep sands of the dunes. All nine creatures wore hooded cloaks of soft green-dyed barkcloth. Spume was whipped from the high-crested waves by the rain-sheeting wind, while dried-out seaweed flotsam from the tideline tumbled crazily about on the wet sand. The skies were moonless, strewn with banks of dark scudding cloud. Ahead of the column, Rulango winged low over the stunted grass, striving to keep a straight course to the distant mountain. Brogalaw had spoken truly: it was a task which was proving to be both hard and fast.

They halted not far from Salamandastron’s base. Brogalaw and Stiffener, accompanied by the heron, went ahead to scout out the lay of the land. The other seven sea otters sat down on the lee side of a hillock, still carrying the rope. They rested, but stayed alert, ready to go again at a moment’s notice.

On reaching the sheer rock face, Brogalaw and his friends crouched in the shelter of a bushy spur.

“Ahoy, Stiff, yore familiar with this place,” the sea otter whispered. “Be there any exits or entrances ’round ’ere, mate?”

The boxing hare blinked out into the rainwashed night. “Not ’round ’ere, Brog. Ssshh! Somebeast’s comin’!”

On leaden limbs, a weasel sentry plodded by, keeping his head down against the weather, glancing neither left nor right. Brogalaw breathed a sigh of relief as the weasel was swallowed up by the night. “Ship me rudder, mates, that was close!”

However, he spoke too soon. The sentry coming in the opposite direction heard the otter as he marched by. Thrusting into the shadows with his spear, he called for assistance to the weasel who had just passed that way.

“Hoi, Skel, back ’ere, quick!”

Stiffener heard a note of uncertainty in the guard’s voice as he shouted around the spur at them: “I knows yer in there. Come out now an’ show yerselves. Skel, will you ’urry up? I got prisoners cornered ’ere!”

Stiffener came out at top speed, bounding and leaping. He caught the nervous guard unawares and floored him with a massive uppercut. Flinging aside his cloak, the hare grabbed the fallen guard’s helmet, shield and spear. Clapping the helmet on, he held the shield high, masking his face, beckoning Brogalaw and Rulango to step out, as if he had captured them.

Rather slow and cautious, the weasel sentry appeared out of the darkness, and approached Stiffener warily. “Where’d ye find these two, Reggo?”

Stiffener pointed around the darkened spur with his spear. “In there!” he muttered gruffly.

The weasel edged forward and peered around. He saw his companion lying sprawled on the ground and turned quickly. “You ain’t Regg—Unh!”

Stiffener’s oaken spear butt rapped him sharply between the eyes and he dropped without a sound. Brogalaw and Rulango dragged the two unconscious guards into the bushes.

The otter Skipper began looping the rope end around the heron’s long bony leg. “We’ll stay down ’ere an’ pay the line out, mate. You fly up there an’ give ’em your end, they’ll know what t’do.”

Stiffener glanced up at the sky. “Too late, Brog. ’Twill be dawn in an hour or so. The journey here took longer than we thought. My friends are old—they wouldn’t stan’ a chance in broad daylight, out on the mountain face.”

Brogalaw was reluctantly forced to agree. “You got a good point there, Stiff. So, what’s the drill now?”

Stiffener made a quick decision. “Only one thing for it, friend. Let Rulango take the line up. When they makes it secure I’ll shin up there an’ tell ’em what’s goin’ on. I’ll take me cloak an’ stop with ’em. You an’ the bird go back an’ hide out with yore otters for the day. All of you come back ’ere at nightfall an’ we’ll do it then. ’Tis the only safe way.”

*

Most of the prisoners were sleeping in the high mountain cell. Torleep and Sailears were on duty rota, standing by the window, listening to see if they could hear any news from the chamber below them. Torleep leaned on the sill and rubbed his red-rimmed eyes.

“These two new brutes, Ripfang an’ Doomthingy, not much at gossipin’, are they? Snore snore all night, that’s all they’ve blinkin’ well done. I say, marm, what’s the matter?”

Sailears was facing the window. She tried to keep her voice calm as she explained the situation. “Don’t move, Tor, stay completely still, eyes front. Don’t turn ’round whatever y’do. There’s a whackin’ great bird of some sort perched on the window ledge. Bloomin’ creature could take your head off with a single swipe of his beak from where he is. Don’t move! Let me deal with this, wot.”

She put on her most winning smile and spoke softly out of the window. “Dearie me, you are a fine big feller, ain’t you? What brings you up here on a night like this, friend?”

For answer, Rulango lifted his leg. Sailears was taken aback. “Well, biff me sideways, he’s brought us a rope!”

Torleep turned slowly and found himself staring into the heron’s fierce eyes. He moved closer and waited a moment. “Well, he ain’t taken m’head off, so he must be a friend come to help us. Am I right, sah?”

Rulango nodded twice, shaking the rope-draped leg. Under the bird’s watchful eye, Sailears unfastened the line and began knotting it to an iron ring set in the wall.

“Take it from me, my fine feathered friend, if I were twenty seasons younger I still wouldn’t live long enough to thank ye for the favor you’ve done us, wot!”

Torleep was wakening the sleepers. “C’mon, chaps, up on y’paws, we’re bein’ rescued. Woebee marm, I’d be obliged if you keep the old voice down, wot!”

Rulango flapped off into the greying dawn. Sailears had half of her body out of the windowspace when she looked down. “Well, I’m blowed! Guess what? There’s somebeast, a hare I think, tryin’ to climb up the bally rope. Look at this, Torleep!”

Torleep squinted down through his monocle. “By the left, you’re right, marm, looks like a hare. Hey there, you chaps, lend a paw to haul the feller up here!”

When Stiffener was eventually hoisted into the cell and they recognized their old companion, there was profuse hugging, kissing and paw shaking. The boxing hare put a paw to his lips, urging them not to make too much noise. “Coil the rest o’ that rope in afore anybeast sees it, mates.”

*

Doomeye lay back on a straw pallet, facing the long rectangular window of the chamber below the hares’ cell. Half asleep, he rubbed his eyes.

“Ripfang, you awake, brother? Was that a rope I saw goin’ up in the air just then?”

Ripfang sat up and yawned.

“Aye, ’twas prob’ly Groddil an’ Fraul escaped. Tryin’ to catch a passin’ cloud, the fools was. Hawhawhaw!”

Doomeye probed at one eye, blinking furiously. “Musta been an eyelid dropped down over me eye. That blue dye plays ’avoc with my eyesight. Thought it was a rope!”

Ripfang was now up and about. “Y’never know, it mighta been. Let’s go an’ check on them longears they got locked upstairs.”

But the two rats never got that far. On emerging from the chamber they were faced with the sinister form of Ungatt Trunn’s Grand Fragorl.

“His Mightiness would have words with you. Follow me.”

The wildcat looked as if he had passed a sleepless night. He sat in front of a blue-smoking brazier, draped in a silken blanket. Ripfang and Doomeye stood stiffly at attention, both thinking that he knew about the wanton slaying of Mirefleck. Trunn surveyed his two new captains from the corner of a red-rimmed eye.

“You two were searats—you must have sailed many places and seen lots of strange things, eh?”

Ripfang, being the more eloquent, spoke for them both. “’Tis so, Mighty One. Why d’yer ask?” He quailed as the frightening eyes turned to meet his.

“Never answer a question with a question when speaking to Ungatt Trunn; that way you may see the next sunset. In all your travels, have you ever met a badger, a big beast who carries a double-hilted sword on his back? Think now, did you ever encounter such a creature?”

“No, Yer Mightiness, we never met such a beast, sire.”

The wildcat dismissed them with a wave of his tail. “Leave me now. Go about your duties.”

On their way down to the dining hall, Doomeye chuckled with relief. “Heehee, I thought ’e’d found out about Mirefleck.”

“Shuttup, oaf. ’E will if’n yew keep shoutin’ it ’round. Funny, though, ’im askin’ about a badger like that?”

“Aye. I’ve never even seen a badger, ’ave yew?”

“Not real like, but sometimes I gets ’orrible dreams about one, a big ’un, like Trunn said, but not carryin’ a sword like the badger ’e wants t’know about.”

“Is that right? I never knew you dreamed about a badger, Ripfang. Er, ’ow d’you know wot a badger looks like if’n you ain’t ever seen one?”

“I never said I ain’t heard of one! Look, will you shuttup about badgers? I don’t like badgers, an’ I can’t ’elp it if I dream about one, can I? Let’s go an’ get some brekkist. I’m starvin’.”

But breakfast was disappointing. Doomeye prodded with his dagger at the tiny portion of mackerel on a dock leaf and wrinkled his nose, sniffing at it suspiciously.

“One stingy liddle cob o’ fish—goin’ bad, too, I think. Is this all the vittles we gets? I thought we signed on fer better grub than rotten fish. ’Ey yew, c’mere!”

The Blue Horderat cook saluted. “Anythink I kin do fer ye, cap’n?”

“Cap’n? Oh, aye. Wot’s wrong wid the vittles ’round ’ere?”

“That’s all there is, cap’n. Wish ’Is Mightiness’d get that fox of his to magic up some more provisions.”

Ripfang puffed out his narrow chest. He felt it was beneath him to bandy words with a mere low-ranking skivvy. “Right, well. Anythin’ else to report?”

“Aye, two outside guards deserted, cap’n,” the cook informed him with an insolent grin. “There’ll no doubt be a few more if’n the grubstakes don’t improve.”

Ripfang had taken a dislike to the cook, so he prodded him several times on the end of his bulbous nose. “Bad fortune to ’em if’n they do—we’ll fetch ’em back an’ use ’em t’bait up the fish ’ooks. Now stop yer gossipin’ an’ git back t’work. Oh, those two who’ve gone missin’. Bring us their pieces o’ fish—that’s an order!” He nudged his brother and winked broadly at him. “One o’ the joys of bein’ a cap’n, eh!”

Outside the weather was beginning to clear. Mist rose from the damp rocks and a warm breeze started to sweep the clouds away. Summer had begun. It was to be a most memorable season for all.

Most memorable!