“Listen, I didn't—” Darktan began, but Sardines nudged him.
“Word in your ear, guv?” he said, raising his charred hat politely.
“Yes, yes…” Darktan was getting worried. He'd never had so many rats watching him so closely. He followed Sardines away from the group.
“You know I used to hang around in the theatre an' that,” said Sardines. “And you pick up stuff in the theatre. And the thing is… look, what I'm saying is, you're the leader, right? So you got to act like you know what you're doing, OK? If the leader doesn't know what he's doing, no-one else does, either.”
“I only know what I'm doing when I'm dismantling traps,” said Darktan.
“All right, think of the future as a great big trap,” said Sardines. “With no cheese.”
“
“And you should let them think what they like about you and… that scar you've got,” said Sardines. “That's my advice, guv.”
“But I didn't die, Sardines!”
“
“No.”
Sardines sighed. “I reckon you do, boss. Do we want a lot of scrapping amongst ourselves at a time like this?”
“No!”
“Right! Well, thanks to chattery little Nourishing, you're the rat that looked the Bone Rat right in the face and came back, aren't you…?”
“Yes, but she…”
“Seems to me, boss, that anyone who could stare down the Bone Rat… well, no-one is going to want to mess with
“I can see I'm going to have to watch you, Sardines,” said Darktan. “You think like Maurice.”
“Don't worry about me, boss. I'm small. I gotta dance. I wouldn't be any good at leadering.”
Thinking for everyone, Darktan thought. The white rat… “Where
“Haven't seen him, boss.”
“What? We need him! He's got the map in his head.”
“Map, boss?” Sardines looked concerned. “I thought you drew maps in the mud.”
“Not a map like a picture of tunnels and traps! A map of… of what we are and where we're going…”
“Oh, you mean like that lovely island? Never really believed in it, boss,”
“I don't know about any islands, I really don't,” said Darktan. “But when I was in that… place, I… saw the shape of an idea. There's been a war between humans and rats for ever! It's got to end. And here, now, in this place, with these rats… I can see that it can. This might be the only time and the only place where it can. I can see the shape of an idea in my head but I can't think of the
“You're doing fine so far, boss,” said the dancer, patting him on the shoulder.
“It's all going wrong,” said Darktan, trying to keep his voice down. “We need him! I need him!”
“I'll get some squads together, boss, if you show me where to start looking,” said Sardines meekly.
“In the drains, not far from the cages,” said Darktan. “Maurice was with him,” he added.
“Is that a good thing or a bad thing, guv?” said Sardines. “You know what Hamnpork always said: ‘You can always trust a cat—’”
“‘—to be a cat’. Yes. I know. I wish I knew the answer to that, Sardines.”
Sardines stepped closer. “Can I ask a question, guv?”
“Of course.”
“What was it Hamnpork whispered to you just before he died? Special leader wisdom, was it?”
“Good advice,” said Darktan. “Good advice.”
Maurice blinked. Very slowly, his tongue wound itself back in. He flattened his ears and, legs moving in silent slow motion, crept along beside the gutter.
Right under the grating there was something pale. The red streak was coming from further upstream, and divided in two as it flowed around the thing, before becoming one swirling thread again.
Maurice reached it. It was a rolled-up scrap of paper, sodden with water and stained with red. He extended a claw and fished it out. It flopped on the side of the gutter and, as Maurice gently peeled the paper apart, he saw the smudged pictures drawn in thick pencil. He knew what they were. He'd learned them, one day when he had nothing better to do. They were stupidly simple.
“No Rat Shall…” he began. Then there was a damp mess, down to the bit that read: “We are not like other Rats”.