“Yeah, well, maybe,” said Darktan, “but out in the tunnels you have to be practical. Never let good food go to waste. And someone wake up Nourishing!”
“A
Darktan didn't answer. He could see the rats were already getting nervous. There was a smell of fear in the rat runs. They'd never come across so much poison before. Darktan didn't usually worry about anything, and hated to feel the worry starting, deep in his bones
A small rat, out of breath, scurried up the tunnel and crouched in front of him.
“Kidney, sir, No. 3 Heavy Widdlers,” it burst out. “We've found a trap, sir! Not like the usual sort! Fresh walked right into it! Please come!”
There was a lot of straw in the loft over the stables, and the heat of the horses coming up from below made it quite snug.
Keith was lying on his back, staring at the ceiling and to himself. Maurice was watching his lunch, which was twitching its nose.
Right up until the time he pounced, Maurice looked like a sleek killing machine. It all went wrong just before he jumped. His rear rose, it waggled faster and faster from side to side, his tail slashed at the air like a snake, and then he dived forward, claws out—
“Squeak!”
“OK, here's the deal,” said Maurice to the shivering ball in his claws. “You just have to say something. Anything. ‘Let me go’, maybe, or even ‘Help!’
“
“Fair enough,” said Maurice, and killed it instantly. He carried it back to the corner, where Keith was now sitting in the straw and finishing a pickled beef sandwich.
“It couldn't talk,” said Maurice, hurriedly.
“I didn't ask you,” said Keith.
“I mean, I gave it a chance,” said Maurice. “You heard me, right? It only had to say it didn't want to be eaten.”
“Good.”
“It's all right for you, I mean, it's not as though you have to speak to sandwiches,” said Maurice, as if he was still bothered about something.
“I wouldn't know what to say to them,” said Keith.
“And I'd like to point out that I didn't play with it, either,” said Maurice. “One swipe with the ol' paw and it was ‘goodbye, that's all she wrote’ except that obviously the mouse didn't write anything, not being intelligent
“I believe you,” said Keith.
“It never felt a thing,” Maurice went on.
There was a scream, from somewhere in a nearby street, and then the sound of crockery breaking. There had been quite a lot of that in the last half hour.
“Sounds like the lads are still at work,” said Maurice, carrying the dead mouse behind a pile of hay. “Nothing gets a good scream like Sardines dancing across the table.”
The stable doors opened. A man came in, harnessed two of the horses, and led them out. Shortly afterwards, there was the sound of a coach leaving the yard.
A few seconds later, there were three loud knocks from below. They were repeated. And then they were repeated again. Finally, Malicia's voice said: “Are you two up there or not?”
Keith crawled out of the hay and looked down. “Yes,” he said.
“Didn't you hear the secret knock?” said Malicia, staring up at him in annoyance.
“It didn't sound like a secret knock,” said Maurice, his mouth full.
“Is that Maurice's voice?” said Malicia suspiciously.
“Yes,” said Keith. “You'll have to excuse him, he's eating someone.”
Maurice swallowed quickly. “It's not
“It
“But if it's just someone knocking on the door in, you know, general high spirits, and we knock back, what are they going to think is up here?” said Maurice. “An extremely heavy beetle?”
Malicia went uncharacteristically silent for a moment. Then she said: “Good point, good point. I know, I'll shout ‘It's me, Malicia!’ and
“Why don't we just say ‘Hello, we're up here’?” said Keith innocently.
Malicia sighed. “Don't you have
“The crockery?” said Maurice. “You told him about Sardines?”
“I had to say I'd been frightened by a huge rat and tried to climb up the dresser to escape,” said Malicia.
“You lied?”
“I just told a story,” said Malicia, calmly. “It was a good one, too. It was much more true than the truth would sound. A tap-dancing rat? Anyway, he wasn't really interested because there's been a
“They're not
“And they always work fast,” said Maurice proudly. “They don't mess about when it comes to… messing about.”