It was a warm old autumn afternoon of russet and gold, a time for legends and stories of seasons long gone. Blue haze on the far horizon blended sea and sky into one. On the pale sands of a silent shore, ebbing waves had carelessly strewn a broken necklace of shells and pebbles along the tideline. Standing tall and mysterious was the mountain, like some huge beast guarding the coast. Salamandastron! Stronghold of Badger Lords and fighting hares. Once, when the earth was young, it had spouted fire and molten rock. But the winds of time had long since banished smoke from the monolith, cooling its stones. Now Salamandastron was home and fortress combined, run through and honeycombed with halls, caverns, corridors, chambers, tunnels, and secret places. Midway up the west face on a broad rocky ledge tufted with shrubs and wildflowers, a picnic lunch was set, close to the mouth of a tunnel entrance. Half a score of leverets, young hares, attended by a fully grown harewife, sat watching an 1 2 Brian Jacques ancient otter. Stooped and grayed by many seasons, he stood leaning on an ash pole, shaking his grizzled head in disapproval, as old creatures often will when faced with the young. When he spoke, his voice was surprisingly strong for an old-beast. "Hmph! Wish I was at die Abbey, those young 'uns at Redwall have proper manners. Instead o' layin' about gawpin', first thing they'd do would be help a body sit down!" Stifling a smile, the harewife watched die leverets scurrying around the aged otter, doing their best to show respect and concern as they assisted him. "A seat, y'say, nothing simpler, old chap, er, I mean, sir." "Pop y'self down here, sir, grass is nice an' soft, wot!" "Whoops a daisy! Easy does it, oF sir!" "Lean y'back on this rock, that's the ticket!" "Righto, ancient one, comfy enough now?" The venerable beast nodded slowly. "Well enough, thank ye. Now, are you all goin' t'stand mere watchin' a pore creature starve?" There followed a further scuffle as the young hares set food and drink before their guest. "Enough tuck to kill a duck here, sir!" "Summer Salad an' a beaker of Old Mountain Ale." "How about fresh-baked carrot'n'leek flan?" "Some scones with gooseberry jelly, very good y'know!" "Rather! Give the old chap a hot pastie!" When the old otter was served, the harewife beckoned the young ones back to their seats. "Good show, chaps, but mind y'manners or Mr. Rillbrook won't tell you a story." Beneath fuzzy brows, Rillbrook's old eyes glinted mischievously. He broke open a steaming pastie and said, grumpily, "Story? Just stopped here t'rest awhile, marm, wasn't intend-in' t'do no storytellin'." Outcast of Redwall 3 A fat, cheeky leveret piped up indignantly, "Scoffin' a load of our grub an' not tellin' a story? I say, what a bally swizz!" The harewife cuffed his long ear lightly. "Burrbob! That's quite enough from you, m'laddo. I don't think you deserve a story after such impudence!" Rillbrook took a deep draught of Mountain Ale, smacked his lips, and wiped a paw across his mouth. "Oh, I dunno, marm, a good story often teaches rotters an' rogues to be better creatures." The leverets shouted encouragement eagerly. "Rather, tell on, old chap!" "I'll say! Anythin' t'make us better creatures, wot?" "Do us the world o' good, doncha know!" The ancient otter waited until silence fell and they were watching him expectantly, then he began. "They call me Rillbrook the Wanderer, son of Rillbrook the Wanderer; my grandsire was called Rillbrook the Wanderer. ..." The cheeky Burrbob could be heard muttering, "I s'pose his great great auntie was called Rillbrook the Thingummy, we know that, get on with the yarn. Yowch!" This time the harewife's quick paw did not descend so lightly on the impudent leveret's ear. She fixed him with a frosty glare and said, "One more word from you, sir, and it's bed with no supper!" Burrbob took the hint, becoming the very model of silence. Rillbrook started from where he had left off. "I have wandered all the seasons of my life, near and far, sometimes under forgotten skies, along hidden streams, across silent forests. I have seen many things: mountains topped with snow, hot wastelands where creatures would kill for water. I have eaten among strangebeasts, listened to their songs, poems, and stories, words that have brought tears and laughter to these old eyes. I have heard tales so mysterious that they 4 Brian Jacques trouble my memory and still return to roam my dreams on lonely nights. "Listen now, and I will relate to you a mighty saga. It concerns a Badger Lord who once ruled this mountain, and his mortal enemy, a Ferret Warlord. The destiny of these two was entwined with many creatures, but mainly with two young ones who dwelt at the Abbey of Red wall. They were a pair thrown together by chance, for good or evil. ' 'Each of us is born to follow a star, be it bright and shining or dark and fated. Sometimes the paths of these stars will cross, bringing love or hatred. However, if you look up at the skies on a clear night, out of all the countless lights that twinkle and shine, there will come one. That star will be seen in a blaze, burning a path of light across the roof of the earth, a great comet. Think on these words as my tale unfolds. Mayhap you will learn something valuable, not about stars, but of the value friendship brings." BOOK ONE A Friendship Made Skarlath the kestrel fledged later than his brothers and sisters; the autumn was almost over when he left the nest, never to return. This is the way with hawks. They are fierce and independent, free spirits who love to soar high. So it was with Skarlath, but being young and reckless he flew north and was trapped by winter. Howling gales from the very edges of the world bore him away. The young kestrel was held captive by a whirling mass of snow that swept him over hill, dale, and forest. Shrieking winds drove him along, a bundle of wet feathers in a tight cocoon of damp white flakes that built on to his plumage in small drifts. Helpless, Skarlath was shot like an arrow into a forest. His body smashed against the trunk of an old hornbeam. Relentlessly the storm plunged onward, keening a wild dirge, leaving in its wake the unconscious young kestrel. Skarlath regained his senses slowly. It was night, still, with not a breeze about the forest. The cold was bitter and intense, 8 Brian Jacques and frost glittered and twinkled on snow-laden tree boughs. Somewhere close he could see the glow of a fire, but could not feel its heat. Voices and raucous laughter came from the lighted area, drawing him, but when he tried to move, the young kestrel squawked aloud in pain. His whole body was pinioned by ice; he was frozen tight, spread-eagled to the trunk of the hornbeam. Swartt Sixclaw sat closest to the fire. He was a young ferret, but obviously the leader of the threescore vermin who made up the band. Tall, vicious, and sinewy, Swartt had made himself Chieftain, because he was quicker and stronger than any who dared challenge him. He was a fearsome sight to friend and foe alike, his face striped with a sloping pattern of purple and green dye, teeth stained glistening red. Round his neck hung the teeth and claws of dead enemies. His left forepaw bore six claws'—it rested on the hilt of a long curved sword thrust through a snakeskin belt. The kestrel's agonized cries brought Swartt upright. Kicking a nearby stoat, he snarled, "Trattak, go and see what's makin' that noise." The stoat scuttled obediently off into the snow-laden trees. It did not take him long to find Skarlath. "Over 'ere, some stupid bird got itself froze to a tree!" he called out. Swartt smiled wickedly at a young badger tied to a log by a halter. It was a creature about the same age as himself, painfully hobbled and muzzled with rawhide strips. On its head was a broad, golden-colored stripe. Drawing his sword, the ferret touched its point to the rare-colored stripe. "Get up, Scumtripe, and give your master a ride over there," he said. The vermin crowding around the flames jeered and laughed as Swartt sat upon the badger's back and goaded it forward, raking with his claws and slapping it with the flat of his sword blade. Hobbled close, the young creature could only take small Outcast of Redwatt 9 stumbling steps. Anguished growls issued from its bound mouth as it fumbled through the snow. Swartt thought it no end of a joke, shouting aloud for the benefit of his band, "Giddy up, Scumtripe, y'great lazy stripedog, move!" Skarlath eyed the ferret fearfully as Swartt brought his face close, leering and licking his lips. "Well now, what 'ave we 'ere? A kestrel, not as tasty as quail or wood pigeon, but young and tender, I'll wager. Stuck fast by the ice, are ye, bird? That'll keep y'nice an' fresh until you join me at breakfast!" Then, dragging the badger cruelly up, he tied the halter attached to its muzzle to an overhanging limb of the hornbeam. "Here's a good job for ye, Scumtripe—guard my breakfast until momin'! Yer gettin' too fat'n'lazy lyin' by the fire." Swartt Sixclaw strode off, chuckling, to rejoin his band round the flames, leaving the unfortunate pair fastened to the tree. An hour passed, when all that could be heard was the crackling of pine logs as flames devoured them; the vermin camp was silenced in sleep. Suddenly, in one swift, silent movement, the badger flung his body close against the kestrel, trapping the bird between himself and the bark. At first the young kestrel thought he was to be smothered, but the warmth from the soft fur of the badger's chest started to melt the ice. Slowly, Skarlath felt the blood begin to stir in his veins. Although the badger was tethered and muzzled, he clung on tightly with all his strengm until at last Skarlath was able to move his head and wings. Skarlath jerked his head around until he found himself looking into the dark eyes of the golden-striped creature. Both young ones stared at each other, communicating in silence. Then the badger held still as the hawk's beak went to work. With short, savage movements, Skarlath tore into the rawhide muzzle strips that bound the badger until they were ripped to shreds. The badger clenched and unclenched his teeth, testing his jaws; then bowing his great gold-striped head 10 Brian Jacques he devoured the rawhide hobbles that bound his paws, chewing and swallowing the strips in his hunger. They were both free! "Come, friend, we go, escape, get away!" said Skarlath, keeping his voice to a hoarse whisper. But the badger acted as if he had not heard his companion. Fierce anger burned in his eyes. Stretching his powerful young limbs, the badger seized a bough of the hornbeam and snapped it from the tree with a single wrench. Smashing the bough against the tree trunk, he broke it in two; then, casting aside the thin end, he gripped the heavier piece with both paws. It was about half his own height, thicker at one end than the other, like some huge rough club. Roaring out his challenge, he charged the unwary vermin around the fire. "Eeulaliaaaaaa!" The camp came to life instantly. Two vermin fell under the club as the badger threw himself at Swartt. Before the ferret had half drawn his sword, the badger's club thudded hard against his foe's six-clawed paw. Swartt screeched and fell back injured, yelling to his creatures, "Stop him! Kill him!" Skarlath saw the badger disappear under a crowd of vermin as they tried to bring him down, and he hurtled in, ripping and stabbing with beak and talons. Though the badger was weighted by foebeasts, none could fell him. He stood like a mighty young oak, flailing the club, his deep-throated war cry ringing through the forest. "Eeulaliaaaaa!" Skarlath decided then that his friend was totally mad. The vermin numbers would tell soon and the badger would be brought down to be slain. Fighting his way through, the kestrel landed upon the badger's shoulder and cried into his ear, "Come away or we'll both be killed. Escape!" The badger struggled to the fire's edge and, using his club, he scattered the blazing logs into the ranks of his enemies. Outcast of Redwall 11 Flames whirred and sparks showered as he battered burning wood everywhere. It sizzled and steamed in the snow, throw-ing up choking clouds of smoke and wood ash. Then the two friends were away, the young badger bounding through the night forest, with Skarlath perched upon his shoulder. Bursting with the energy of freedom, they traveled tirelessly, crashing through bush, briar, and bramble in a welter of flying snow. Back in the ruined camp, all was confusion, smoke, ashes, and freezing dark night. A weasel called Muggra extricated himself from a snowdrift where the badger's club had bowled him. Rubbing his aching back, he crawled over to where an older vixen named Nightshade was ministering to Swartt, binding his six-clawed paw with a poultice of herbs and snow. Muggra sneaked a pawful of the herbs and nibbed them on his own back, asking, "Shall we follow them an' slay 'em with arrows?' ' The vixen answered without looking up from her task. "Aye, best do it right away, before they get too far." Bad temperedly, Swartt made as if to raise his six-clawed paw and swipe out at them both, but the movement caused him to snarl in agony; his paw hung limp and throbbing. "Idiots! Get the fire goin', quick, before we freeze t'death in the dark here," he spat. "Follow them? With me paw smashed an' ruined, an' five slain, another five, maybe, wounded or injured? I give orders 'round 'ere, mudbrains, we follow 'em when I'm ready, an' not before!" With lightning speed he shot out his good paw, and seizing the weasel Muggra by the neck he pulled him close, his hot breath vaporizing on the weasel's face as he hissed, "But when this paw's fixed an' I've rested by a good fire, there'll be noplace that badger can hide from Swartt Sixclaw. I'll follow that one to the edge of the world or to Hellgates, and he'll take a long time t'die at the blade of my sword. I'll hunt him 12 Brian Jacques t'the death an' slay him bit by bit, if it takes me ten seasons!" The vixen Nightshade continued binding Swartt's paw, fixing the herbs and snow tight with mud from the earth where the fire had been and strips of aspen bark. "If you leave it later man this night, it will take you a lifetime," she said as she worked. Swartt winced as the dressing tightened. "Shut yer slimy mouth, fox, always seein' the future, or sayin' that y'do. I could fix your future with one swing of me sword, that'd keep you quiet!" Muggra was choking under Swartt's grip. The ferret looked at the weasel as if just noticing him. "What're you doin' gur-glin' there. Didn't I tell y'to get a fire goin'? Trattak! Hal-frump! Gerrout an' forage for dry timber! The rest of you, get shot of those deadbeasts an' clear this place up!'' He flung the weasel aside. Later, as fresh flames licked hungrily around resinous pine boughs, Swartt lay back gritting his teeth and muttering savagely, "We'll meet again, badger. Make the best of these few days y've got left—I'll find ye, Scumtripe!" The badger did not stop running until it was broad daylight, cold and crystal clear. He halted in a smalt clearing at the forest edge. Skarlath fluttered to one side as the hefty young badger threw himself down in the snow and lay panting, tongue lolling, as steam rose from his thick coat. After a while he sat up, cramming pawfuls of the cooling snow into his mouth and gulping them down. Skarlath hopped about, testing his wings with short swoops, noting gratefully that his pinions were undamaged. Glad to be alive, he shook his plumage and spread his wings. "Heeeeh! Rest, friend, then we go far away!" he cried. The badger stood and picked up his club. "You go where you want. When I've rested and found something to eat, I'm going back there to slay that vermin Swartt Sixclaw!" The young kestrel took flight and wheeled round the badger's head, his wings brushing his friend's gold-striped muzzle. "Heekeeer!" he cried. "Then you are a deadbeast, my friend. 13 14 Brian Jacques Swartt has too many vermin; you will surely be slain!" The badger clenched his jaws as his body trembled with rage. "For many seasons that ferret held me slave, dragging me around, hobbled and muzzled, starving, beating, making fun of me. Scumtripe, that was his name for me—Scumtripe! I'll make him repeat my name tenscore times before I slay him with this club. But what is my name?" Whirling his club, the badger charged a dead elm stump and struck the rotting wood a mighty blow ... Whumpjfl A hole appeared in the elm stump as Skarlath shrieked out, "Kreeee! Look, food!" Hazelnuts, chestnuts, and acorns poured out onto the snow, the forgotten cache of some careless squirrel. Anger was momentarily forgotten as the two friends laughed aloud at their good fortune and fell upon the life-giving treasure. Sitting on the stump, the badger cracked shells in his strong teeth and placed the nuts before his friend. Soon they were both crunching and munching. The kestrel spoke around a beakful of chestnut: ' 'I am Skarlath; I was alone, but you saved my life; now I am with you. Where come you from, friend?" Scratching his golden stripe, the badger chewed thoughtfully. "I'm not sure. I think I had a mother, Bella or Bellen or something, it's hard to remember. I must have been very young. Boar the Fighter, that's a name I recall, maybe he was my father, or my grandsire, I'm not certain. Sometimes I dream about home, or maybe it's my imagination, but it feels nice. Then there's the mountain, was that my home? It is all very mixed up. But Swartt Sixclaw, I won't forget him.. .." The young badger looked quizzically at his friend the kestrel. ' 'Maybe Swartt was right, perhaps my name is Scumtripe. He gave me that name. What do you think my name should be, friend Skarlath?" Outcast of Redwall 15 The kestrel felt fierce pity for the young badger well up in him. He hopped up onto the strong, dark, furred shoulder and cried, "Kreeeee! Your name I don't know. But I know you are a great warrior, slay five and injure many, like a lightning bolt! There is none so quick or strong with a mace as you!" The badger picked up his hornbeam limb and hefted it. "So this is a mace, is it? I never knew a mace looked like this!" Skarlath looked at the hulking young beast with his tree limb. ' 'If you call it a mace, methinks nobeast would argue the point. Warriors like you can be anything they want to be. You are unsure of your true name. I will give you a good name. The mark of the sun is on your face, your speed is that of lightning, you have your own special weapon ... You are Sunflash the Mace!" The badger laughed happily and, standing at his full height, be spun the formidable hornbeam in his paws and roared, "I have a name! It is a good name! I know who I am! Sunflash the Mace! Eeulaliaaaaaaa!" Skarlath took wing and circled high, calling wildly, "Kreeeeeeee! Sunflash the Mace! Kreeeeeeeee!" When the kestrel flew to earth again, Sunflash was away, already backtracking swiftly through die forest. Skarlath winged between the trees after him. "Sunflash, where do you go?" he called. The warrior blood was rising in the badger's eyes as he brushed past Skarlath. "Out of my way," he growled. "I am going to settle accounts with the ferret!" "So, you go to your death!" said Skarlath, as he found his perch on the big shoulder and clung doggedly. "I have told you, Swartt has too many vermin, even for you. No matter, I have sworn to stay by your side. I go with you, and we will both be slain!" Sunflash halted. "But what else can I do?" he said, a bewildered look on his young face. "Sixclaw is my enemy!" 16 Brian Jacques Skarlath was wise for a young kestrel. He rapped his beak lightly against the skull of Sunflash, saying, "We can think! You are brave, but headstrong. Why risk your life against the odds when, if we take our time, we can be certain victors one day." Sunflash sat down in the snow, leaning his chin on the mace as he gazed at his companion. "Tell me how we will do this. I will listen and learn." Thus began the education of Sunflash the Mace. Skarlath outlined his plan, which was simple and should be effective. ' 'Why run after Swartt? He will be coming after us. The ferret will lose face in front of his vermin if he lets you live. Let Sixclaw wear himself out chasing us, while we leave this cold land and find warm country, where it is green and there is plenty of food. There we can rest and grow strong. "I will be your eyes and ears, flying high, watching for Swartt, listening for information. When the time is ripe, men we strike cleverly, my friend, like wasps we worry the ferret and his band. In and out, sting and disappear, slay one or two at a time, strike like sunflash, vanish like smoke. Then Swartt will come to fear us; he will realize that you will not disappear—that one day he will turn round and you will be there, waiting. This will trouble his mind, haunt his sleep. That is my plan. What do you think?'' A broad smile spread across Sunflash's face. "It is a great plan, Skarlath. I will learn to think like the kestrel. Lead on!" That day the two friends began traveling south and west on a journey that would last many seasons. Sunflash strode over hitl, valley, and plain, while Skarlath soared and circled overhead, scouting out the land. Winter passed into spring as the two friends journeyed onward, growing up together, getting wiser, seeing, and learning as they went. Sunflash could not stand injustice, and wherever he saw creatures being oppressed or enslaved, the big badger, remembering his own enslavement Outcast of Redwall 17 by Swartt, meted out terrible retribution to their tormentors. His name and fame began spreading. Songs and poems sprang up in the lands he and Skarlath traveled through. Most were heroic, and some, like this one, were humorous: I met with six weasels one warm summer night, And I feared for my life I'd be beaten and slain, But their faces were fearful, all ashen with fright, They jibbered and whimpered like they were insane. "O save us, preserve us, O hide us from him, The one with the mark of the sun on his face, hi one paw he carries a great hornbeam limb. He's the Warrior Lord they call Sunflash the Mace!" Of a sudden the earth seemed to tremble and shake, And the verminous weasels passed out in a swoon, As he came like the wind, with a hawk in his wake, There he stood strong and tall 'neath the moon. I'll never forget what he told me that night, While he looked at the weasels, stretched out where they fell. "You're a very brave beast to down six in one fight, For a small baby dormouse you've done very well!" But as more seasons passed and time went on, things did not quite turn out as' Skarlath had said they would. Swartt Sixclaw had tracked them as predicted, and Sunflash and his friend worried them, striking at them many times. Each attack was successful, and the ferret lost quite a few of his vermin to the lightning strikes of Sunflash. But Swartt was no fool. The realization of the badger's guerrilla tactics came home to him one sunny morning in low hill country to the north of Mossflower Woods. Two vermin whom he valued highly, Spurhakk the stoat and Bulfie, a ferret like himself, both hardened and skillful warriors, had vanished overnight. Swartt sat 18 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwatt 19 hunched over a small fire, massaging his damaged paw. From shoulder to elbow the limb was as strong as ever, but the six-clawed paw was rigid and unmoving. It ached every morning, reminding him of the winter night when the young badger smashed it with a piece of hornbeam. Nightshade approached with three others who had been out searching for the missing warriors. Swam quickly pulled a gauntlet onto his dead paw. It was a heavy affair, meshed brass mail, with two weighty copper fasteners, and it made a very formidable weapon. He glanced up at the vixen and snarled, "Well, didyer find 'em?" Nightshade squatted down on the other side of the fire. "Aye, both sitting up against a sycamore in a copse over yonder, stone dead, each holding one of these." She tossed over two long-stemmed water plants. Swartt picked them up and inspected them. "Bulrushes?" he said. Nightshade was a healer, and she knew every plant by name. "That's right, bulrushes. They are also called reed mace, or just mace in some parts of the country." Swartt Sixciaw flung them on the fire and watched them smolder. "Mace! It doesn't take a genius to work out who did this." The vixen narrowed her eyes against the smoke of the fire, saying, "You should have caught him and slain him the night he escaped." Swartt leapt up. Drawing his sword, he scattered the fire and shouted, "Should have! Might have! Would have! That's in the past! Get those idlers up off their tails, we travel east!" The vixen sprang aside to avoid the burning embers. ' 'East? But my scouts tell me Sunflash still travels south by west. What is there in the east?" "Bowfleg!" Nightshade raised her eyebrows questioningly. "Bowfleg the Warlord?" Swartt thrust the sword back through his belt, sneering, "Bowfleg the Warlord, hah! You mean Bowfleg the Old, Bowfleg the Fat, Bowfleg the Glutton!" Nightshade shrugged. "Still, he leads a great horde." Swartt chuckled evilly as he marched off. "Not for long!" Outcast of Reduxdl 21 The far northwest fringes of Mossflower Woods are broken by rocky outcrops, gullies, and hills. One could wonder why creatures bothered living there when the woodlands farther inward were so lush and bounteous. But home is home, and often creatures do not like to move away from the familiar surroundings of their birthplaces. So it was with the hedgehog family of Tiny Lingl and the mole kin of Bruff Dubbo, who had shared the same dwelling cave for untold generations. Tirry and his wife, Dearie, had four small hogs, scarce a season and a half old. Not counting his old uncle Blunn and aunt Ummer, Bruff had his wife, Lully, and two little mole maid daughters, Nilly and Podd, to provide for. However, the dwelling cave of both families was not a happy place. It was a hungry and dangerous time for them, for outside in the gray drizzling afternoon another family waited, a family of five foxes. The old vixen with a hulking son covered the back exit, while the father, an equally old 20 dogfox, sat outside the front entrance with a fully grown son and daughter who towered over him. They had been there nearly half a season, laying siege to the dwelling. It was quite easy to relieve one another for the purposes of eating and sleeping, and still keep up a presence, taunting and reasoning by turns, knowing they had the hedgehogs and moles prisoners in their own home until hunger forced them out. "Don't be foolish, come out, there's food here, friends," the vixen wheedled. Tirry Lingl shouted back at them, * 'Garn, shift yoreselves, vermin, you ain't welcome 'ere!" The hulking fox son sniggered as he called into the back exit, "Heehee, there'll be something tasty here when you come out. Heeheehee. You!" The vixen nipped him sharply on his ear. "Shuttup, acorn brain, do you want to scare 'em to death?'' The old father fox cajoled at the front entrance. "Come on, be reasonable, we just want to talk. You don't think we'd hurt yer liddle ones, do yer?" Inside the dwelling, Bruff Dubbo helped Tirry to shore up die barricade they had made from furniture and the bit of earth they could scrabble from the cave's rocky interior. Bruff shook his dark furry head sadly as he spoke in quaint mole dialect to his companion. "Hurr oi wish't oi 'ad moi ole bow'n'arrers, they vurmints'd soon shift they'mselves, hurr aye!" Tiny Lingl peered through a gap between an armchair and a table at the foxes sitting outside. "They've got time on their rotten ole side, Bruff, we ain't. Liddle 'uns drank the last o' die water this mornin' an' there's nought but a stale" rye crust stannin' atwixt us an' starvation." Uncle Blunn's quavery voice piped up behind them. "You'm rarscalls! Oi'm a cummen owt thurr to beat ee with moi gurt stick, ho urr, so oi am!" 22 Brian Jacques Bruff turned the old fellow round, patting his back. "You'm a fierce ole h'aminal, Nuncle Blunn, but et be toime furr ee noontide nap. Hurr thurr, go'n lay ee daown." Back in the cave, the little hedgehogs began weeping for food and a drink, and the two wives, Lully and Dearie, shushed them soothingly. The small group slumped dejected, knowing what their inevitable fate would be. Sunflash the Mace sat amid the pines and shrubs on a neighbouring hillside, invisible to the foxes as he watched the scene below. Rain dripped from the edges of an old green cloak draped over his head. The warrior looked up now and then, searching the skies for the familiar figure of Skarlath to break through the drab curtain of drizzle, and then rested his chin on his mace handle. Over the seasons he had shaped it into a weapon that would last throughout his life. The handle had a tight binding of whipcord, which formed a loop to go over his paw, and the rest of the club had been fire-hardened, oiled, and polished. Several arrowheads and spear tips were half buried in the wide, rounded head of the mace. Only Sunflash had the skill and strength to wield such a formidable weapon. Skarlath had seen the foxes, too. He landed out of their sight and crept silently up until he was at Sunflash's side. "Friend Skarlath, what news of Swartt Sixclaw?" said the badger, keeping his eyes on the foxes below. The kestrel edged under Sunflash's cloak, out of the rain. ' 'Gone east three sunrises back, mayhap we were thinning his ranks too fine for him to follow us safely." Sunflash never once moved his eyes from the foxes. "I think you're right, but he'll be after us again someday, a little older, angrier, and with a lot more help. His ruined sixclaw won't let him forget us. Maybe we'll wait here for him." The kestrel's keen eyes began watching the foxes closely. "They look like they're all one brood. What are they up to?" Outcast of Redwatt 23 Sunflash pointed a huge paw at the cave entrance. "I think they've got some likely victims bottled up in there. I was waiting on your return. The foxes are just bullies; I would not feel justified in slaying them, but they must be taught a lesson. If they see me, they'll be frightened off. Would you go down and speak to those foxes for me, my friend?" The young vixen and her brothers were running out of patience, and they began hurling stones through the cave entrance and shouting, "Get out here, you stupid beasts!" "I'll count to ten and then we're coming in after you.... One!" Skarlath fluttered to earth between the cave and the foxes. "Kreeeeee! You must go from here!" The old fox did not appear at all disturbed. "Who are you, bird, what d'yer want?" he said indignantly. The kestrel treated him with lofty disdain. "Who I am matters not. I was sent here to tell you to go quickly and stop persecuting whoever lives in yonder cave." The hulking son and his vixen mother came dashing round from the rear entrance, and the former picked up a stone and made to hurl it at the kestrel. Skarlath spread his wings wide. ' 'Throw the stone and you will not see nightfall!" "The bird's bluffing," the vixen snarled nastily. "There's Only him! Come on, rush him!" Before diey could move, the mace came hissing through the air and thudded upright in die wet ground. A voice like thunder froze the foxes in their tracks. "Be still or die! Eeulaliaaaaa!" They watched astounded as a huge badger came bounding down the hillside. Taking a rock ledge in his stride, he gave ft mighty leap and landed among them with a roar. "I am Sunflash the Mace!" 24 Brian Jacques The vermin had heard the name; they crouched against the earth, trembling. Sunflash nodded to Skarlath. "See who lives in the cave. Tell them they are safe." Peering through the barricade of furniture, BrufTs wife, Lully, called out, "Yurr, 'tis an 'awkburd!" Old Uncle Blunn roused himself from his noontide nap. "Did ee say an 'awkburd? Wait'11 oi gets moi gurt stick, oi'H give'm billyoh!" Tirry clambered to the top of the barricade, crying, "Lack a day, first foxes, then 'awks, wotever next? Well, my friend, d'you want to eat us too?" Skarlath kept his voice gentle and tried a smile. "No, I don't want to eat you, I am your friend. Do you know of one called Sunflash the Mace?" Tirry's wife, Dearie, poked her spiky head through a gap in the barricade. "Sunflash the Mace, d'you say? I've 'eard of that one—a great warrior, they say. Is he outside? I'd be 'o-nored t'make his acquaintance!" It took a great deal of fussing and persuading to get old Uncle Blunn and Auntie Untmer out, but the little ones had no fear at all of the majestic badger warrior. Tiny and Bniff were completely awestruck. The foxes lay face down in the dirt, Skarlath keeping a fierce eye upon them. When Uncle Blunn was eventually coaxed out, he brought his "gurt stick" and began laying about at the foxes. Bruff took the stick from the old fellow, saying, "Yurr, Nuncle, doan't ee beat yon vur-min 'round, ee gurt zurr Sunflash moight want t'do that hisself, hurr!" The badger warrior listened carefully as Tirry, acting the part of spokesbeast for both families, explained how the foxes had besieged and starved them. Sunflash listened, stifling a smile as he felt the two tiny molemaids licking rainwater from his paw. Then, grasping his club, he winked at Skarlath and Outcast of Redwaft 25 said, "Stand those vermin upright, friend! Let me look at their scurvy faces while I decide what to do with them!" The mud-faced foxes wept and shivered as they faced the scowling warrior. "So these are the tormentors of babes and old ones, these are the terrorizers of the defenseless. Well, what have you to say for yourselves?" The father fox was about to speak, when Skarlath's wing buffeted him into silence. The kestrel knew the part he had to play. Scowling murderously, he strutted up and down, saying, "Lord Sunflash, these scum are not fit to speak. They are villains and foebeasts; I say we kill them!" "Whoooaaa, no, please, Lord, spare us, we meant them no harm!" The entire fox family flopped down and groveled on the wet earth, wailing piteously. Skarlath winked at Sunflash, and the badger twirled his mace thoughtfully. "Hmm, if we slay them here it might upset these little ones, then there's all that digging holes and burying carcasses...." Sunflash winked at Tirry, who had caught on to the idea. "What do you think, sir? It was your family that suffered." Tirry Lingl paced pensively across the backs of the foxes' necks, driving them face down into the earth as he ruminated. "You 'ave a point there, sir, but if you 'adn't come along, these blaggards would've slain us. P'raps you'd best take them somewhere out of sight and finish them off, they surely deserve no better. But I leave it up to you, Lord Sunflash." The foxes' blubbering rose in a crescendo, and Sunflash had to shout aloud to be heard. "I think I'll do it right here and now if this noise continues!" The fox family were suddenly struck dumb, pressing their quaking bodies against the earth. Bruff Dubbo's old Auntie Umrner shook a paw at them. "Burr, you'm villyuns, see 'ow 26 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwall 21 you'm loikes a ladle of ee own medicine, hurr hurr, surve ee roight!" Sunflash produced a good-sized lilac leaf and, making a slight split in it, he folded the leaf in two. Then he locked it between both paws, put it to his lips, and blew. Phweeeeeeeerrrrrr\ He passed the leaf to Tirry Lingl, saying, "Can you make a noise like that?" The hedgehog did, making an even louder noise than Sun-flash. "Makin' leaf whistles an' blowio' on 'em, dial was one of my favorite pastimes as a young un. Why d'you ask?" Sunflash turned to the foxes, his voice stern. "All of diese good creatures are going to learn that noise, and then they will always carry a leaf with them, night and day. The kestrel can hear it almost a day's flight away, and if he does not, then other birds will hear it and tell him. Now listen carefully, foxes, because your lives depend on it. You must leave here and travel north. Never, I say never, must you return. Should you ignore my words and come back to these woods, the creatures you threaten will signal, and I, Sunflash, swear a solemn oath upon my mace that I will seek you out and destroy you. Understood?" Thoroughly cowed, the foxes bobbed their heads up and down, nodding furiously, too scared even to speak. Then Sun-flash began spinning the deadly hornbeam mace from paw to paw, his voice rising menacingly to a full-throated roar. "I have given you your unworthy lives, but if you are still standing here by the time i have finished speaking, I am certain I will regret my decision. So I want to see how fast you can run, due north. Now!" Wet earth, pebbles, and grass flew as die five former bullies scrabbled into a headlong take-off. In a very short time me sound of their speeding paws was gone. Silence reigned out- side the Dubbo-Lingl cave, and then suddenly all present broke out into hearty laughter. "Hohoho! They went like scalded frogs!" "Hurr hurr! Gurtly afeared an' muddy nosed, burr aye!" There followed a round of introductions, congratulations, and thanks from both families. The four baby hogs and the two little molemaids had never seen anything as big and furry as Sunflash. They clambered all over him, smiling into his face and stroking the broad golden stripe on his muzzle. "Ee'm be a mounting wid furr on!" "Big wunnerful aminal!" The badger stood stock still, fearing to move lest he upset the tiny creatures or trod on them. His huge face was wreathed in a pleased grin; he had never encountered beasts so small and affectionate. Tirry's wife, Dearie, and her friend Lully the molewife fussed about, throwing their aprons over rneir faces in embarrassment as they chided the babes. "Do come away now, leave the gennelbeast alone. Lack a day, sir, wot must you think o' us all?" "Hurr aye, you an' ee 'awkburd be welcome to rest awhoil in our dwellin' cave. Us'n's be back at eventoide with vittles aplenty, then us'11 all make ee well fed, bo urr aye!" Both families fled into the surrounding woodland to forage for food, leaving Sunflash and Skarlath the hospitality of their cave. The two friends shifted the barricade and took their ease on thick woven rush mats. Surrounded by the peace and quiet of the homely atmosphere, they were soon deep in slumber. In his dreams, Sunflash could hear waves lapping against the shore; he saw pale sand, sea, and the mountain. A great feeling of longing swept over him, and he wanted so badly to be there, yet it seemed distant and intangible. Somewhere a deep voice, that of a grown male badger, was chanting: "Find me one day 'neath the sun, Guarding the land and the seas. 28 Brian Jacques Streams to the rivers must run, Telling their tales to the breeze. You are Lord, by the blood of your sires, From dawn 'til the daylight dies, As the sun burns the sea with its fires, And stars pin night's cloak to the skies. Find me whenever you will, Seek me wherever you may. All of your dreams fulfill, 'Ere time like the mist rolls away...." Reality seeped back slowly: a warm glowing fire, tantalizing odors, and the mole and hogbabes stroking his headstripe and tickling Skarlath's wing feathers. "Wake ee upp, zurrs!" "Vittles be yurr aplenty." "Mum says you two'n's will take some feedin'!" Tiny shooed the babes off. "Come away, you liddle rogues, let the pore creatures up now." Around the fire in the cave's center various concoctions were cooling on flat rock slabs. Bruff Dubbo presented them with beakers, which he filled from a pottery jug. "Yurr, friends, 'tis on'y dandelion-an'-burdock cordial, but et be no-ice an' cool t'drink, ho aye!" It was dark, sweet, and delicious, and the two friends slaked their thirst. Dearie LingI pushed two of her brood forward, saying, "Standee up straight, 'oglets, an' say your piece. C'mon now, stop suckin' those quills or they'll never 'arden. Speak out!" Both the small hedgehogs shuffled about, tugging their headspikes respectfully as they recited: "Thankee sir 'awk an' sir badger..." "For savin* all in this cave..." "From the naughty foxes ..." Outcast of Redwatt 29 "Aye, naughty, naughty foxes!" "Bad verminy foxes!" "Rotten uckypaw stinky ole foxes!" Dearie wagged a paw at her little ones. "Tut tut! That's quite enough, thankee!" She turned to the two friends, who were hiding smiles by burying their faces in the beakers, and said, "Wot my liddle ones was say in* is that our families would like to thank you for rescuin' us from the vermin. You must stay 'ere as long as you wish, our cave is yours. Come now, friends, enough talkin', 'elp yourselves to food." Sunflash and Skarlath had never tasted such good cooking. There was young onion and leek soup, hot brown bread spread with a paste made from beechnuts, a woodland salad, and a huge apple-and-greengage crumble. The crumble was a great favorite with the little ones, who spread it thick with honey. Old Uncle Bhmn sipped piping hot soup from a wooden bowl gratefully. "Oi wurr feared oi'd waste away to an ole shadow. Gurr! Vittles do taste gudd arter all that 'unger!" Sunflash had an enormous appetite, but the good wives of Tiny and Bruff would not hear of him stinting himself. "Allus plenty more, zurr, thurr be an 'ole woodland full o' vittles for us'n's t'choose from now ee've set uz free!" And so Sunflash the Mace did full justice to the spread. It was late into the night when he and the kestrel sprawled by the fire, warm, rested, and, for the first time in many a season, unable to eat another mouthful. The old mole. Auntie Ummer, hunted out a curious-looking instrument, a stout pole with bells, two strings, and a pawdrum attached to its base. She plucked the strings, jangled the bells, and tapped the drum with a footpaw. The babes, who were far too excited to sleep, began jigging and hopping around the fire, clapping their paws. 30 Brian Jacques "Whurrhoo! Play ee gurdelstick! Whurrhoo!" Old Uncle Blunn began tapping his paws and chanting: "Willy Nilly Nilly, Pod Pod Pod! All you'm 'oglets stamp ee ground, Moi ole paws b'ain't young loike yores. Show us 'ow ee damce around!" The gurdelstick music speeded up, and the little ones whirled and leaped, jigged and tumbled until they collapsed in a giggling heap, yelling for dandelion-and-burdock cordial. Tirry invited the friends to sing, but his guests declined, Skar-lath being too shy and Sunflash explaining that he had never learned a song, being in captivity most of his young life. The homely hedgehog patted Sunflash's massive paw. "By me spikes, that is a shame! No matter, my Dearie 'as a voice like a lark at morn in a meadow, she'll cheer you upl" Dearie Lingl had a jolly, clear voice, and she sang happily: "I once 'ad a cattypillar come t'live with me, We was both the best of friends as ever there c'd be. He'd wiggle "round upon the ground, he'd smile an' shake my paw. An' every time that 1 went out, stop in an* guard my door. But men one time when I returned I cried out "Lack a day!" My little cattypiilar, he had left an' gone away. An' there upon my mantelpiece a butterfly I saw, Far too proud to speak to me, he flew right out the door. Colored bright in warm sunlight, that creature winged away, I've never found my cattypillar to this very day. Outcast of Redwall 31 Which makes me say unto myself, now I am old and wise, I do like cattypillars, but I can't stand butterflies!" Laughter and applause greeted Dearie's song. The two families were used to entertaining themselves, and there followed a whole repertoire of songs, poems, and dances. Then, as the fire was allowed to fall into embers, they took their rest in the warm, dim cave. Sunflash had never been so happy and contented in his life. He hummed along as one of the small hedgehogs sang herself to sleep drowsily with a curious little chant: "Arm not alas sand, 'way south in the west, So star land a mat, there's where I love best, Sand not as alarm, lone seabirds do wing, And alas most ran, list' to me whilst I sing." Each time the babe reached the end of this strange ditty, she went back to the beginning and sang it again, her voice growing drowsier and drowsier until it was silenced by sleep. Something about the jumbled, meaningless words and the sad tune kept going round in Sunflash's mind. Finally he shook Tiny gently, and said, "I'm sorry to disturb you, sir. Are you awake?" "Hm, mm, just about, friend, d'you need ought?" "That song your little daughter was singing, what is it?" "Oh, you mean the one with all the funny mixed-up words and the nice tune. It's an old thing that my Dearie learned from her mother, she prob'ly learned it from her mother, and so on, way back. All our hoglets know it, pretty tune, silly verse." 32 Brian Jacques Sunflash gazed into the glowing embers through half-closed eyes, and said, "I don't know why, but I'd like to learn it." Tinry smiled as he settled into a comfortable ball. "I'll tell the babes tomorrow, they'll be only too happy to oblige ye, sir." The seasons turned through spring and summer to a mellow autumn. In the highlands of the far east, Bowfleg's drums beat Out their message of warning, while Swaitt and his ragged band of vermin traversed over tor and scrubland. The pounding drums sent word to three rat runners from Bowfleg's camp, who took off at a swift lope, heading for a long cliff range that puckered the land like an old scar. At the foot of the cliffs, bunched close like dirty thunderclouds, lay the tents of Bowfleg the Warlord. The runners halted beneath the purple pavilion awning of the sprawling tent at the hub of it all and prostrated themselves in front of the circular dais. Bowfleg lolled on his throne, peering at the messengers through the puffy eyelids of his swollen features. The old ferret grunted as he leaned his gargantuan bulk forward and asked, "H'wodd do de dromms say?" At the sound of the Warlord's strange accent, the senior rat looked up and made his report. "Mighty One, the drums tell 33 34 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwatt 35 of Swartt Sixclaw coming hither with a band numbering not more than twoscore." Bowfleg dismissed them with a snort. "Chah! Dadd one, de runaway, met'ink 'e be long dead!" A stoat Captain standing nearby leaned close to Bowfleg. "Sixclaw was always spoken of as a wildbeast, a strong fighter, even when he was very young. I would watch that one, Lord." Bowfleg grabbed a roasted thrush from a side table and wrenched off a mouthful. "H'Swartt, 'e can join my 'order-anks, de gudd fighter iss always of use. If nodd, I crosh 'im, like dis!" The Warlord flattened the thrush carcass against his throne with a single blow of his clenched paw. "Bring *im 'ere when 'e arrive!" The stoat Captain, whose name was Greenclaw, saluted smartly and marched off. At mid-noon Swartt Sixclaw entered the camp of Bowfleg bearing gifts—a carved spear, two belts studded with bright stones, a flagon of fine wine, and a drinking cup of silver. Swartt1 s small band were disarmed and kept outside under guard by a detachment of swordbeasts, each of whom wore a crimson tabard bearing Bowfleg's insignia, a single white fang in a green circle. Greenclaw escorted Swartt into Bowfleg's presence. The ferret knelt respectfully, noting the giant weasel who stood behind the Warlord's throne. The gifts were placed before Bowfleg, who turned them over with the point of his scepter. "Leave us now," he ordered Greenclaw. With a snort of contempt he looked at the young ferret kneeling before him. "When you young an' cheeky, you t'ink you better'n Bowfleg, liddle runaway, gonna bring back mooch plunder. Nobeast cudd tell Swartt any t'ink den. Ho no, 'e knew everyt'ink. Chah! Nodd mooch for one who he's away so long, eh?" Swartt could be a charmer when required. Smiling disarm-ingly, he looked up at the Warlord and shrugged. "I can go many places an' see many things, but to learn real wisdom an* courage I return to the master." Bowfleg's vast bulk shook as he laughed. "Kyahaha! Dadd's gudd, you still know who he's master!" Swartt stretched forward and kissed Bowfleg's footpaw. "How could I forget, Lord—you taught me all I know. I was young and foolish when I ran away from here. I am wiser DOW." \ The Warlord beckoned Swartt to stand upright. "HTm glad to see you godd more sense, budd don't t'ink you be wiser dan me. Anybeast feel like dadd soon he's dead!" Sixclaw turned aside so the other could not see his eyes. "I must remember that, Lord—too much wisdom can be the death of a creature, very good!" The old Warlord waved his scepter at the gigantic creature standing behind his throne, saying, "You see dis wizzel? 'E be Wurgg de Spinecracker. Dis one guard me night'n'day, 'e slaved many manybeasts. You watch!" At a nod from his master, the giant weasel stooped and lifted the throne with Bowfleg sitting on it. Showing no sign of strain or effort, he held it chest high then lowered it slowly at Bowfieg's signal. •- "H'wodd you t'ink o' dadd, eh?" the fat old ferret Wheezed. Swartt was impressed. Cleverly he let his mouth fall open wide, shaking his head as if in disbelief. "Never did I see a ;fjeast of that size or power! Lord, you have both wisdom and Strength on your side, nobeast would dare to oppose you." Bowfleg cocked his head on one side, staring at Swartt pen-$ively. "Den why do you comm 'ere?" ,$HSwartt Sixclaw sat on the top step of the dais. "Only to you, Lord, and to tell you of the rich lands that lie to 36 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwdtt 37 the south and west. Maybe one day I can travel there with you, as a Captain in your horde." Bowfleg nibbed a fat paw across his stomach and began to laugh. "Kyahahakyukyuk! I don't travel nowheres, dis iss my land. H'wodd I wanna travel for, godd everyt'ink right 'ere. I like you, Swam, you young, full of de big ideas. 'Ere you come oud of nowheres, raggedytaggle! H'an' wodd you bring me, eh? Spear? I godd many spears. Belts? Nodd bigg enough. Cup an' wine? Who nidd dem?" "The spear is a symbol of your power, Lord," said Swartt, indicating the gifts one by one. ' 'The belts are a sign of my support, but the wine is special, fit only for great ones." He uncorked the wine flagon and sniffed it delicately.' "The oldest wine of the southlands, dark and sweet with the juice of elderberry and plum, specially for you." He offered the bottle to Bowfleg. The Warlord sniffed it and smiled craftily. "H'you t'ink I be stupid. 'Ere, I want to see you drink." Swartt took the flagon, pausing as he held it to his lips. "You see. Lord, I learn from you all the time. If this wine were poison then I would be a deadbeast...." Tipping the flagon, he drank deep. "But I would be the stupid one if I offered you poisoned wine. It is good wine, the best, that's why I brought it to you." Bowfleg watched Swartt a moment, on the lookout for ill effects, then said, "Give me somm, I tell you if it iss gudd wine!" Swartt offered the bottle, then, as if remembering his manners, he pulled back and filled the big silver drinking cup, which he passed to Bowfleg. The Warlord smiled over the rim of the cup at him, "I still be's watchin' you. 'Ow you feel, eh?" "Never better, sire." Swartt chuckled. "But if you still doubt me, then try the wine on your giant there." The Warlord patted the massive weasel's paw. "Ah yiss, my h'fait'ful Wurgg, comm drink." The weasel lifted the chalice like an eggcup between two of his thick claws. He emptied it with a loud sucking noise and gave the cup back to his Lord with a smile and a single word: "Good!" Bowfleg put on a face of mock indignation as he looked up at Wurgg. "Hoi! I say h'wodd's gudd, give me somm a dis wine!" Swartt filled the cup three times before the greedy Warlord was satisfied. Bowfleg lounged back on the throne, confident that the new arrival posed no threat to his leadership. "Zo, h'you back now, Sixclaw, gudd, gudd! You go now, find you'-self a tent, inna mornen we spikk more togedder." Swartt knew he had been dismissed. He made an elegant leg and bowed before he left the tent, saying, "Sleep well, Lord Bowfleg!" Dawn arrived wreathed in soft white mist, promising a mild sunny day. The drums beat out again over the scrub-scarred highlands, but this time the rat runners did not raise the alarm, for only one creature approached the camp. It was the vixen Nightshade, whom Swartt had purposefully instructed to follow him, leaving one day's gap between their arrivals. The rat runners kept their distance from the fox, considering her some kind of wild mystic. Nightshade did nothing to disabuse them of the idea, indeed, she had dressed to look the part. A tatty feather-trimmed cloak swirled about her painted and mud-daubed body, and she carried a long staff decorated with bones, hanks of hair and shells. It clanked and clattered as she shook it at the runners, chanting in a reedy quaver: "Gurgling, rattling, final breath, Brings me from Dark Forest gate, 38 Outcast of Redwatt 39 I, the messenger of death. King of Darkness, Lord of Fate!" Fires from the previous night's embers were being blown into life by a few early risers as the runners escorted the vixen into Lord Bowfleg's hordecamp. Spying the main tent with its prominent pavilion, she made her way straight to it. Two stoat sentries guarding the closed tent flap moved nervously aside as the odd-looking fox grimaced and shook her staff at them. Nightshade stood in front of the entrance and howled a long eerie call. "Hawoooooooo! I am the Seer! Ayaaaaaaaaai! Death has been here!" The runners and sentries were obviously frightened of the ragged vixen, who was now performing a crazy shuffling dance in front of the main tent. They huddled together, muttering. "I wonder why Lord Bowfleg hasn't heard her?" "Aye, it's strange that he hasn't sent Wurgg out to snap 'er scrawny neck an' stop 'er caterwaulin' like that." "Well, I'm not goin' to try an' move 'er!" "But we can't just stand 'ere, what's t'be done?" "I say we go an' rouse the Captains, let them sort it out." "Aye, good idea, mate, come on!" As word of the vixen's arrival swept through the camp, the hordebeasts deserted tents and cooking fires en masse to follow the group of officers heading to the main tent. Two stoat Captains, Greenclaw and Aggal, together with a rat named Scraw, who was a senior Counselor, heard all the sentries and nmners had to say. They watched the vixen dancing and chanting in front of the closed pavilion entrance. "Mightier than the Warlord, Who must come to his call, 40 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwail 41 I am but a messenger, Death rules over all!" Greenclaw was made of stern stuff. He drew his sword and, rapping out orders, pushed the vixen to one side. "Seize this one and hold 'er; I'll get t'the bottom o' this!" Greenclaw ripped the flaps aside and strode boldly into the tent. The other officers followed him in a bunch. Lord Bowfleg sat slumped in his chair; the giant Wurgg was seated on the top dais step, his back against the throne legs. Both creatures looked as if they were merely sleeping, but the rat Scraw could see differently. He put his face close to Bowfleg's, at the same time touching his footpaw to Wurgg's limp form. A short inspection was sufficient for Scraw. He turned to the assembly, shaking his head. "Dead, both dead! Not a mark on either of 'em. Who could have done this?" Greenclaw voiced his opinions so that all could hear. "I left Lord Bowfleg and Wurgg alive and well with Swartt yesterday—let's ask him!" The six-clawed ferret was dragged into the tent by four armed guards. He struggled free, shouting, "Getcher claws off me or I'll flay yeh alive!" Greenclaw had appointed himself official interrogator. "Answer me, Swartt. What took place here yesterday when you were alone with Lord Bowfleg and Wurgg?" "I gave Lord Bowfleg gifts," Swartt sneered at the officious Captain, "and he said he'd accept me into his ranks as a Captain, nothing else." Scraw picked up the gifts of spear, belts, and wine. He shook the flagon; wine swished inside. "Was this wine one of the gifts you brought? Did the Lord drink any?" Swartt chuckled knowingly. "He certainly did!" "Did you drink the wine also?" "No, it'd be churlish t'bring wine as a gift and then drink it." "Did Wurgg?" "No, Lord Bowfleg said that the wine was too good for a clod like him; only Bowfleg drank that wine," Swartt lied. Scraw was nodding and smiling grimly as he thrust the flagon toward the ferret. "I think this wine is poisoned. Prove that it's not—take a sip." Swartt grabbed the flagon and drank it empty. "Anything else y'want me t'do, rat?" he sneered. Anger was rising in Greenclaw. He snatched the flagon from Swartt and hurled it away, growling, "You're too smart for your own good, ferret. Why did you come here in the first place, tell me?" Swartt spoke loud, so that the hordebeasts crowded outside the tent could hear him. "I had no need to come here, I was doing well with my own band. Then one night I had a dream. Lord Bowfleg appeared to me and implored me to come to his side with all speed—he said that he needed my help." Greenclaw curled his lip derisively. "A likely story. Bring in the fox!" Nightshade was prodded in at spearpoint by several soldiers, who did not want to get too close to her. Greenclaw asked Swartt, ' 'Have you ever met this vixen before?'' "Never in the light o' day, though I often see her in dreams." "This is all nonsense!" snapped Greenclaw as he paced the dais steps angrily. The vixen shook her staff warningly at him. ' 'Do not mock what you cannot understand. None has seen me in this camp before, yet I knew of Lord Bowfleg's death long before I came : here. I am the messenger of Death and Fate. I see visions in ':? the stars, the wind, and the eyes of many!" 42 Brian Jacques Outcast of RedwaR 43 Greenclaw had heard enough. Drawing his sword, he came at the vixen. "Did your visions tell that you'd end up dead today?" Scraw stepped in the way, knocking the sword aside. "Put up your weapon, stoat. The fox is a seer. It is bad luck to slay one with gifts like hers." "A seer, huh!" sneered Greenclaw as he sheathed his sword with bad grace. "Well, tell us what you see, vixen!" Nightshade shook her staff until the shells and bones attached to it clattered ominously. She shut her eyes and wailed: "Seasons of glory will come to the horde, Nobeast will lack plunder while Sixclaw is Lord!" Greenclaw was furious. He turned on Swartt, but the ferret was ready, and before the stoat Captain could unsheathe his sword, Swartt grabbed the carved spear from Aggal and slew Greenclaw. Nightshade was still chanting and wailing: "Allbeasts who challenge the Sixclaw will die, Dark Forest gates will reflect in their eye!" Swiftly she moved among the Captains, staring wildly into their eyes. To a beast they believed the seer's words, and all looked the other way, avoiding Nightshade's mad stare. Then Swartt Sixclaw strode dramatically forward and, holding the vixen's face between both paws, he stared steadily into her eyes, saying, "You shall be my eyes and see all for me; nobeast will be able to hide secret thoughts against me!" Thus it was that the ferret Swartt Sixclaw became Warlord of the great horde, with only a few gifts: two belts, a spear, a good flagon of wine, and one other thing—a silver drinking cup whose rim and inside had been smeared with deadly poison! With that and a clever vixen he had won the day. The entire horde gathered around a small hillock to hear their new Warlord announce his plans. Swartt had repainted the green and purple stripes upon his face and coated his fangs with fresh red dye. Drawing his curved sword from the wide snakeskin belt, he whirled in a circle, and a magnificent bright blue velvet cloak, which he had plundered from Bowfleg's belongings, swirled around his muscular body. He pointed the sword at the main tent, which still contained the bodies of Bowfleg and Wurgg, and cried aloud, "Burn!" From high on the cliffs a score of weasel archers fired flaming arrows down into the brushwood-laden tent. In moments the whole thing was ablaze. The firelight danced in Swartt's eyes as he held up his six-clawed paw for all to see. "This is what you follow from now on: sixclaw! No more lying about in these hills and scrublands, no more idling under a fatbeast who was too lazy to move! Take down your tents and pack them for travel: today we move west and south to the lands of plenty. Food, plunder, captives! All of these you will have if you follow me into the sunwarmed lands. Aye, me, Swartt Sixclaw the Warlord!" The earth trembled as the massive horde stamped their foot-paws and hammered down their spearbutts. A mighty roar rose up like thunder as it echoed from the cliffs. 4 'Sixclaaaaaaaw!'' Tents were flattened and rolled, drums beat ominously, and banners with the new Sixclaw symbol unfurled on the autumn breeze. ;.'-; The ferret bared his reddened teeth at the vixen by his side. y:**Now let's see if Sunflash the Mace can pick this lot off one by one. Hahahahahaaaaa!" The year turned, and bright spring became bounteous summer. Sunflash the Mace straightened up from his labors, arching his mighty back. The two little molemaids, Nilly and Podd, imitated his movements impishly. "That's enough potatoes for one day, good work!" he said, winking at them. "Hurr, an' thurr be lots o' taters left furr another toime." "Ho aye, leave'm in ee ground t'get 'ooj an' gurtly tasty- ful." The big badger looked around at the neat rows he had created last autumn, clearing bush and moving rock until a sizeable food garden bloomed in the forest amid the hills and woodland. Bordered by several fruit trees, plum, apple, and pear, already growing there, plus a couple of horse chestnuts farther back, the crops cut straight furrows. Leek, onion, potato, turnip, peas, and cabbage all thrived, with mushrooms to be found every few days in the dark shelter of a rocky slab to Outcast of Redwatt 45 one side of the chestnuts. There would be berries later, red currant, blackberry, raspberry, and strawberry. Sunflash had worked hard alongside his friends, and they had taught him about growing things. He liked cultivating the land, finding he had a natural flair as a farmer. Sweeping the tiny molemaids up with both paws, Sunflash deposited them on top of the basket of vegetables they had gathered. With a single swing he lifted the basket onto one shoulder and strode off toward the dwelling cave of the Lingl and Dubbo clan. Sunflash'$ deep voice blended harmoniously with the two moles' as all three sang the riddle song: "Arm not alas sand, 'way south in the west, So star land a mat, there's where I love best, Sand not as alarm, lone seabirds do wing, And alas most ran, list' to me whilst I sing." Skarlath was sunning himself in the rocks above the cave, watching Dearie Lingl, Aunt Ummer, and Bruff's wife, Lully, preparing lunch on the grass. Old Uncle Blunn came coughing out of the cave in a cloud of dust, followed by the four small hoglets with Tirry and Bruff. They sat on the grass, dusting their coats down. Tiny sneezed and blinked, saying, "Bright ole day out 'ere, ain't it!" Sunflash marched up, nodding to one and all. Carefully he lifted the basket down, with the two molemaids sitting atop. "Some nice button mushrooms in here for you, Dearie," he said. "How's the store chamber coming along, Bruff?" The mole pawed dust from his eyes as he answered, "Near dunn, zurr, we'm jus' abowt finished. Lined et wi' those rock slabs you'm found larst wintur, lukfcs 'andsome, bo urr!" Lully used her apron to protect her paws as she gingerly removed a large flat pie from the rock oven Sunflash had 46 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwcdl 47 made. "Us'n's got lots o' things dunn since ee been yurr, zurr. Lookit, apple'n'blackb'rry pie, yore fav'rite!" Sunflash sniffed the aroma, his gold-striped face alight with pleasure. "Come away, 'oglets, you'll burn yore snouts agin1 that 'ot thing." Dearie shooed the four hoglets off as they crowded round to smell the pie. "Wait'11 it cools an' I'll give ye a big slice each." Old Uncle Blunn took the hoglets and the two molemaids off to the stream, which was only a short walk away. Flagons of dandelion-and-burdock cordial, brewed by Blunn, were submerged in the streamwater to keep cool. "Wash ee dusty pawsVsnouts in yon stream, ee mucky liddle vurmints, aye an' ee too, Blunn Dubbo!" Aunt Ummer called after them, Dearie bustled about, preparing salad from the fresh vegetables while Skarlath waddled off behind Lully, who was going to test a cheese she had been turning since early last winter. The good molewife smiled fondly at the kestrel, whom she considered to be her special friend. "On moi loif, zurr, oi never see'd an 'awkburd oo luvved cheeses more'n ee. Cumm naow, us'll try et furr taste, hurr." Skarlath eagerly assisted her to roll the cheese out of the cave's dark recesses, where it had been maturing. He had helped make the oval-shaped cheese, right from the greensap milk stage, pounding tirelessly at the fat, white grass stems and special tubers, which only true woodlanders knew of. They had gathered nuts together in late autumn, hazel, almond, and chestnuts, to stud their cheese with. Between them, the kestrel and the molewife peeled off the thin layer of damp crack-willow bark that protected the cheese. It had no rind and was a delicate pale yellow color. A fragrance of almond drifted faintly about them. Skarlath hopped from talon to talon, his fierce eyes shining. "Kraaaah! Is it ready, marm, shall we taste it?" The good molewife shook as she chuckled, "Aye, you'm surpintly shall taste et, zurr, hurr hurr hurr!" Taking a thin, greased twine from her apron pocket, Lully wound the ends round her digging claws and looped the twine over the cheese just below its top, then, placing both footpaws flat against the base of the cheese, she leaned backward, pulling evenly on the twine. The molewife was well experienced in all aspects of cheesemaking. Skarlath watched fascinated as the strong twine traveled smoothly through the cheese, neatly cutting a large oval piece from the top of their creation. Standing on its edge, the slice resembled an oddly shaped harvest moon, with the white of the nuts and thin slivers of their brown skins highlighted against the buttercup hue of the cheese. Breaking two small pieces off, Lully gave one to her friend. They nibbled daintily, commenting. "Bo IUT, ee be noice'n moist wi' gudd flavor, aye!" "Mmm, wonderful nutty taste, good and firm!" "Ho aye, none too solid, none too soft, us'n's dunn well!" Paw shook talon as the cheese makers congratulated each other. On the sward outside the dwelling cave, the older creatures lay about, watching the young ones play. It had been a satisfying lunch: summer salad served with Lully and Skarlath's * new cheese, and fresh oatfarls baked by Auntie Ummer, fol-/ lowed by the magnificent apple and blackberry pie that Lully ; and Dearie had cooked, all washed down with beakers of old }. Uncle Blunn's dandelion-and-burdock cordial, brought spe-t cially cooled from the stream. Sunflash stretched luxuriously V and set his back against the sun-warmed rocks as he watched If the babes trying to lift his mace between them. 48 Brian Jacques Tirry smiled at their efforts as he sprawled beside the big badger. " 'Twill be many a long season afore they lift that thing, friend." Sunflash shook his massive head. "Tiny, let us hope that they never have to. Learning the trade of a warrior and living in times of danger can rob a young creature of all its happy seasons and make it grow up fast and hard, as I did. Peace is a precious thing." ' 'You brought peace here for our families,'' said the hedgehog as he patted Sunflash's paw. "You look peaceful an' well content, Sunflash. Mayhap you like our life." The badger had a distant look in his dark eyes. "Oh, I do like the life here. I am happier in this place than I have ever been, and I wish dearly that I could live out all my seasons with you and your families on this very spot." Tiny Lingl spread his paws at the happy scene surrounding them. "Then why not? You are greatly loved here—make this your home.*1 It was a tempting proposition. Sunflash thought of the crops and the garden he had created, and the dwelling cave, which was larger now and more comfortable due to his help. Fondly he watched the little ones, laughing and rolling about in the bright noon sun. The older ones too, Aunt Ummer, Uncle Blunn and the rest, were all firm friends, trusting creatures, taking their ease together. His loyal companion, Skarlath, a hawk, was happy to learn the simple life. It was idyllic. He knew it could not last. Weighing his words carefully, he explained to Tirry. "Listen to what I must say, friend. If I stayed here it would mean great trouble, possibly death for those around me. I have told you of Swartt Sixclaw, the evil ferret. Make no mistake, if I make this place my home, then he will turn up here one day with his band. But even if he did not, my warrior spirit would Outcast of RedwaU 49 grow restless and I would need to go and seek him o"t. We are sworn lifelong enemies, he and I. "However, beside all that there are my dreams. Always I see the mountain of fire looming through my slumbers, and strange voices of other badgers, Warrior Lords whose names I do not know, call me. Why I must go to the mountain, where it is, what name it goes by, I do not know. But I am certain that my fate and destiny are bound to the mountain. Each night I dream, and the urge to travel there goes surging through me. One morning you will wake to find me gone. I am as sure of it as the turning of seasons, Tirry." Hiding his sorrow and disappointment the hedgehog murmured, * 'I knew all this afore you told me, I felt it every time I looked at your face. You have worked hard here, but only to put things from your mind. But enough o' this, mate, we're gettin' so gloomy we'll 'ave it rainin' afore nightfall! You're still a youngbeast with a great life ahead of ye, Sunflash. But promise me this—you won't go without sayin' good-bye." "I promise you, Tirry Lingl, I won't leave without a goodbye!" All through that afternoon they took their well-earned leisure, often joining the young ones at play. Skarlath took off to go on one of his high-flying, wide-ranging patrols, leaving word that he would be back by supper. Sunflash took himself off to the stream, where he sat cooling his footpaws in the warm shallows, trying to fathom out the riddle song. "Arm not alas sand, 'way south in the west, So star land a mat, there's where I lo—" Bruff Dubbo's voice interrupted his musings. "Ho, zurr, you'm see'd ought o' those two liddle 'ogs Gurmil an' Tirg?" Sunflash stamped his footpaws dry in the grass. "Haven't seen them since lunchtime. Why?" 50 Brian Jacques Bruff scratched his head with a heavy digging claw. "Seems ioik they'm got theyselves losted, hurr!" Back at the cave, Dearie was questioning the other babes, without much success. Gurmil and Tirg were the two little malehogs. Their sisters, Bitty and Giller, had been playing with the small molemaids, Nilly and Podd, and none of the four was making much sense, as is usual with babes. Dearie was worried but patient. "Now think careful, liddle 'uns, where'd they two scamps go to?" Bitty pointed at the sky. "Flied 'way, up there!" "No, no, they never, that was Mr. Skarlath, the 'awkburd. Lack a day, I do wish 'e were 'ere now. Nilly, do you know where GurmiFn'Tirg might be?" "Hurt, a playen in ee water, oi think." "No, that was Sunflash, 'e was at the stream. Oh, where 'ave those two liddle villains run off to?" She stared up at Sunflash beseechingly. The big badger radiated calm and confidence as he patted Dearie's headspikes gently. "Never fear, marm, I'll find 'em. Tiny, you circle to the east. Bruff, take a wide loop west. I'll go due south, and we'll meet up where the big clearing is, the one with the pond, you know it." Lully threw her apron up over her face to hide her upset. "Burr, they'm rascals, oi do wish't zurr 'awkburd was 'ere!" Bruff twitched his nose comfortingly at her. "Doan't ee fret, moi damsen, us'll foind em. You'm stay by yurr wi' Dearie an' watch t'uther liddle uns." Sunflash did not travel directly south. The late afternoon sun played through the leaves, casting mottled shade patterns on his broad back as he weaved through the woodlands on either side of the faint south path, searching wherever he thought the two little hoglets might have strayed. Birdsong trilled in the stillness of the noontide heat, butterflies fluttered their quiet Outcast of Redwall 51 way from shrub to bush, and bees droned lazily amid clumps of bramble, honeysuckle, and dogrose. But the tranquillity of nature was lost upon the badger as he strode anxiously about, his great mace swinging from one paw, searching for signs of the hedgehog babes. At last he found something. It was only small—a fragment of apple-and-blackberry-pie crust—but it proved that they had passed this way. They were roaming south. Farther on, Sun-flash chased away a bold blackbird that was pecking at a small morsel of cheese. He quickened his stride. Gurmil and Tirg had to be somewhere hereabouts. Suddenly a welter of cries and shouts broke upon his ears. Sunflash went thundering and crashing through the woodland and came bounding out into the clearing where he had arranged to meet with Bruff and Tirry. His quick eyes took in the dangerous situation at a single glance. There were the two little hoglets, frightened speechless, clinging on to each other, standing shoulder deep in the pond at the far side of the clearing. Bruff and Tirry, in company with an old squirrel, were circling and shouting. And a short distance from the water's edge, between them, barring their way to the babes, two fully grown adders coiled and reared menacingly. The snakes had not yet seen Sunflash, who slowed his pace immediately and signaled to his friends not to look directly at him and betray his presence to the reptiles. Tirry Lingl was terrified, but willing to sacrifice his life for the hoglets. He picked up anything close to paw—twigs, soil, grass—and flung it at the big scaly adders, his voice shrill with panic. "Leave my liddle 'uns alone, serpents! Don't you go near 'em! Gurmil, Tirg, stay in the water, stop there!" The old squirrel joined in the shouting. He obviously knew the snakes and hated them. "Gah, you cold'earted slimers, leave the babes alone!" 52 Brian Jacques One adder faced the three creatures, menacing them as the other snake began sliding slowly toward the little ones in the water. Cold evil glittered in the snake's eyes, and its forked tongue quivered as it hissed, "Leave here fassssst, while you ssstill have livessssss!" Suddenly, Sunflash made his move. Dropping the mace, he ran into the lake from one side, pounding in a straight line across the shallows toward the hoglets. The adder who had been sliding toward the water speeded up; it was fast, but not as speedy as Sunflash the Mace when his warrior blood was roused. The badger reached the babes ahead of the snake, snatched them both out of the water with a single movement, and carried on hurtling straight across the shallows. The adder was after Sunflash, zipping through the roiling waters in his wake, as duckweed and rushes broken off by the badger's storming speed flopped welly on the pond's surface. The other snake turned away from the three creatures on the bank, its coils bunching and stretching as it raced to intercept the badger. Sunflash leapt from the water and, bursting onto dry land, he rolled the babes, who had tucked themselves up into the refuge of their soft prickles. They skimmed over the bank like twin orbs, coming to rest way out of danger. Sunflash turned as the adder launched itself from the water and buried its sharp fangs in his side. Its companion wrapped itself round one of the badger's footpaws. Roaring aloud, Sunflash grabbed the snake that was biting him around its neck and plunged back into the water with the other adder still wrapped round his footpaw. Tirry grabbed the hoglets, hugging them to him as Bruff and the old squirrel raced about in the shallows. Unable to help the badger, they splashed and shouted. Sunflash did not come to a halt until he was in deep, the water lapping near his shoulders. Feeling the snake unwinding itself from his footpaw, he stamped down hard several times Outcast of Redwatt 53 until he trapped its head flat beneath his big blunt claws on the bed of the pond and held it there. The other snake had struck him twice, once in the side and once on his back, and now it slid off him into the water. But Sunflash caught it by the tail and began whirling it round above his head. Round and round it went, the creatures on shore hearing the whirr it made as it cut the air in blurring circles. Sunflash roared. "Eeulaliaaaaa!" He flung the adder far and high, and it sped through the air straight out like an arrow from a bow. Tirry looked up and saw it strike an elm tree limb. The snake's body wrapped round it several times, then it was still, resting draped across the high bough like a soggy piece of rope. Sunflash ground down hard with his footpaw for a long time, until the wriggling coils beneath the water went limp and still forever. Then, slowly, painfully, he began wading back to land, his side and back one throbbing, agonized mass. The big badger tottered in the shallows as Tirry, Bruff, and the squirrel dashed in and helped him out. Bruff wrung his paws agitatedly as Sunflash collapsed on the bank. "Yurr, ee been bited by ee surrpints, oi knows et!" The old squirrel grabbed Sunflash's face between both paws and shouted as the badger's eyelids began flickering shut. "Where did yon serpents bite thee?" he cried. Sunflash was sinking into a black pit; he heard the words coming from far away. Making an effort, he answered, "Bitten ... twice ... side .. . back .. ." Then darkness overtook Sunflash the Mace completely. Outcast of Redwcdl 55 The sun broiled the flallands mercilessly, drying up streams to a trickle, baking the earth, and raising dust swirls on the hot wind. It was a hostile waste where even scrub, gorse, and broom barely survived in the parched heat. Things were not going well for the new Warlord Swartt Sixclaw; there was a murmur of discontent running through the great horde. Swartt sat in his tent, pondering the dilemma facing him: too many soldiers and not enough food or water, and, worst of all, they were lost! The mighty cavalcade had started out on the wrong paw. Some had wanted to go, swayed by Swartt's promises of plunder and plenty, but others had wanted to stay, knowing they could get by in the semifertile cliff shadows, where there was at least water and a certain amount of vegetation, birds, and eggs. The whole project had been too unwieldy from the outset, with tents, trappings, and camp followers, most of the hordebeasts having mates and families. 54 Sometimes Swartt felt as though he were merely the figurehead of a great traveling settlement; and as if that were not enough, he had found himself landed with a wife. Swartt had not known that Bowfleg had a daughter. It was the tradition and unwritten law that she became wife to the new Warlord as a matter of course. Bluefen was her name, and she was quiet and pretty enough. Swartt marveled that such a fat ugly creature as Bowfleg could have sired her. Bluefen largely kept out of Swartt's way, as she had with her father, knowing the angry moods and great rages Warlords were capable of. Swartt dismissed his wife from his mind and concentrated his thoughts on horde problems. How they had lost direction on the desertlike flatlands was anybeast's guess, but he blamed the vixen Nightshade. She should have been calculating their direction while his time was taken up dealing with more important horde matters. Swartt had berated her soundly, sending her off three nights back to find water and food and to get them back on the right trail, south and west. To make doubly sure, he had sent his two killers with her, the weasels Scarback and Marbul. When Swartt had taken command of the horde, these two had immediately caught his eye. They were ambitious and ruthless, coldhearted assassins, just the types he needed to do his secret biddings. Outside the tent Swartt could hear the horde as they pitched camp. Travel on the hot windswept plains was impossible at noon—they would move again when eventide cooled the land slightly. Bluefen slipped quietly into the tent, placed a flagon at Swartt's side, and hurried out. The Warlord hardly noticed she had been and gone; absently, he knocked the stopper out of the flagon and sipped from it. Pulling a face, he spat out the brackish-tasting water, which hit the footpaw of the stoat Trattak as he entered the tent. Swartt beckoned him inside swiftly, saying, "Shut the tent flap, I don't want everybeast seein' you report t'me. Are they still at it?" 56 Brian Jacques Outcast of Red-malt 57 Trattak pulled the tent flap closed. "Aye, Lord, it's as you said. Wildag the ferret Captain and his toady, the rat they call Lardtail, they're the two. I hung about close to them, all's they do is go from tent to tent talkin' about you be'ind yore back." Swartt placed the flagon on the ground and sat down by it. "What do they say, tell me? Speak, don't be afraid." Trattak swallowed hard and crouched close to his master. "They say you've got us all lost and y'don't know where yore goin'," he said in low, halting tones. "Also they say you ain't fit t'be Warlord an' that you eat all the best food an' drink fine wines from silver goblets while good 'onest 'ordebeasts are starvin* ... an' ..." Swartt Sixclaw nodded understandingly. "Go on, what else? I know it's their words an' not yours." Trattak continued, a little more confident. "They say that a dagger between yore ribs'd solve a lot o' problems, then they could go back an' live by the cliffs where things were a lot better. Any'ow, Wildag's called a meetin' secret like, tonight. All the Captains'11 be there." Swartt patted Trattak, noticing the stoat eyeing the flagon. "You did well. Take this if yore thirsty—it ain't fine wine, only muddy water, but it'll do t'wet yer throat with. Send Nightshade t'me the moment she gets back. Go on now, keep an eye out for "er." The vixen returned at twilight. Swartt had not given the order to move on; the horde had stayed camped in the same place since noon. Leaving the two weasel assassins outside the tent, Nightshade went in to make her report. Swartt watched her as she laid a lumpy sack in front of him. "The news better be good, fox—speak!" he snarled. Words spilled from the vixen's mouth like water from a pitcher. "The word is good, Lord, I have found the southwest trail again—two days' trek should take us out of these desert lands. There is a broad stream, fresh water, small copses with trees and grassy hills. There is food there, fish, birds, and fruit. Look!" She emptied out the sack, which contained roots, tubers, and a couple of russet apples, plus a dead bird, which the vixen held up for Swartt's inspection. "Your weasels Scarback and Marbul killed this bird with slings and stones," she said. "There are many like it where we have been." Swartt munched on an apple as he turned the carcass with his sword point. He shook his head in disgust. "It's a crow, and an old one at that. You tryin' t'poison me?" Before the vixen could answer, Swartt shoved the dead crow back into the sack and laughed wickedly. "Never mind, it'll come in handy before the night's through. Well, at least we ain't lost anymore. Go an' get some sleep, I'll be movin' the horde out on the double tomorrow. Send the weasels in here." The ferret Wildag was older than Swartt, though not as big, and his ally, Lardtail, was a grumpy, fat, oversized rat. By the light of a flickering fire at the outer edge of the camp, the two faced a sizeable gathering of Captains and assorted horde-beasts, all of whom were disaffected with the leadership of Sixclaw. Wildag addressed the meeting, backed up by Lard-tail's whining comments. "Well, how does it feel t'be lost an' starvin', buckoes?" Lardtail stepped up. "Aye, all I've had since dawn is a few roots an' a mouthful o' dirty water—it's not good enough, mates!" A voice called out of the crowd, "There's nought out 'ere but sand an' wind, but if we starve then at least Sixclaws will too!" 58 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwall 59 Wildag's paw jabbed the air as he shook his head vigorously. "Swartt Sixclaw starve? Huh, that's a good un, tell 'em, Lardtail!" "I seen that vixen of his sneakin' into camp this evenin'. She went straight to Swartt's tent, carryin' a sack of vittles!" Wildag waved his paws to silence the outraged hubbub. "Did you 'ear that, friends, a sack of food! I'll wager the scum's sittin' in 'is tent right now, drinkin' wine an' stuffin' a roasted duck down his greedy gullet!" Amid the uproar that followed, a sack flew through the air and struck Wildag in the face. Furiously he grabbed the sack and shook it at the assembly. "Who threw this?" he yelled. Swartt stepped into the firelight, his painted face and red-stained fangs highlighted by the flames. Silence fell instantly upon the gathering. Showing no fear or concern, the Warlord winked at the two conspirators and rubbed his paws together in front of the fire. "Gets a bit chilly 'ere at night when the sun goes in. You cold, Wildag, hungry maybe?" The Captain was at a loss for words, and, sensing something awful was about to happen, Lardtail began shuffling backward. "Stay where y'are, rat, or I'll gut ye!" Lardtail froze, noting that Scarback and Marbul, the two assassins, had materialized out of nowhere and were flanking him. Swartt spoke to the would-be mutineers in a reasonable tone. "I've heard that some are sayin' we're lost? Now what sort of a Warlord would get his horde lost? Two days from here is a broad stream of fresh water, food, fruit growin' on the trees. Would I be lost if I knew this? An' I tell you some-thin' else, the farther on we travel, the better it gets—greener, fatter, richer. I don't tell lies, you'll see." He picked up the sack and faced the ferret Captain. "But as for you, my friend, I don't think you was tellin' the truth when you said I was drinkin' wine an' eatin' roast duck. If I was, then I'd make sure everybeast got the same as me." A sob escaped Wildag's lips, and he began to tremble. Swartt patted the Captain's back reassuringly. "Oh, come on now, bucko, cheer up, ole Sixclaw don't like to see anybeast un'appy or 'ungry. I'm willin' t'share my vittles with you, but t'show you I'm a real comrade I'll let you 'ave it all for yore-self." He tipped the old dead crow out of the sack, smiling com-panionably at Wildag. "As y'can see, it ain't no roast duck, but yore welcome to it." Then, pinching Lardtail's ear cruelly in his claws, Swartt marched the rat over to the crow carcass. "Pick it up, matey, there's a good rat," he said. "D'you want some?'' Hauled up on tip-paw by his ear, the rat whined, "No, Lord, I ain't 'ungry!" Hordebeasts are fickle creatures at best, and now some of the gathering began chuckling as they realized what Swartt was up to. The Warlord winked at them, knowing they would be firmly on his side after he had asserted his power. Wagging his chain-mailed sixclaw in the rat's face, he explained firmly, "Wildag's yore mate, so I want you to feed this to 'im right now, all of it. Meat, bone, claws, feathers, beak, the lot! Show Wildag that Swartt is a real friend. I ain't just sharin' it with 'im, I'm givin' 'im it all out of the goodness of me 'eart." Roars of laughter from the pitiless hordebeasts rang out as the two assassins grabbed Wildag in preparation for his awful meal. Swartt silenced them with a wave of his mailed paw. "I'm goin' to my tent now. I'll eat at the same time we all do, in two days' time, or sooner if we march fast. Meanwhile, •- don't go mutterin' an' meetin' among yoreselves, come to me. If you have anythin' to complain about I'll always listen." Cheers rang in the Warlord's ears as he strode off into the . night. He smiled to himself, The horde were with him once • more. 60 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwail 61 The following morning was hot as usual, though not as windy. Swartt waited until the tents were packed and the last rations issued before he stood to address the horde. They gathered around, banners fluttering in the light breeze, drums beating until the entire army stood waiting. Swartt knew that if he was to stay Warlord the one thing he must do was to instill fear of his powers into the hordebeasts. He did not want their affection or comradeship—to Swartt that was mere weakness. Respect and loyalty were only gained by one thing in the ferret's mind. Fear! He demonstrated it fully on that morn in front of his horde. The rat Lardtail cringed on the ground, flanked by Scarback and Marbul, the two weasel assassins. "I don't see our Captain Wildag about. Where is he?" Swartt Sixclaw's voice rang out commandingly. Marbul, so called because one of his eyes was a sightless white orb, spoke for the trembling rat. "Wildag's dead, my Lord!" Swartt managed to look both concerned and astounded. "Dead? How did he die?" he asked. Scarback kicked the quivering Lardtail contemptuously. "This stupid blunderer killed him by feedin' him a dead crow—beak, feathers, claws, the lot! Pore Wildag choked." Swartt shook his head in disbelief. ' 'Choked, eh? Somebeast is goin' to pay for chokin' a Captain!" Lardtail*s voice was a strangled sob of protest. "But Lord, you told me to feed the bird to Wildag. I was only carrying out yore orders!" The mailed sixclaw pointed accusingly at the unfortunate rat. ' "You liar! I never ordered you to kill Wildag, only to feed him. The penalty for slaying a horde Captain is death!" Lardtail screamed and groveled in front of the Warlord. "No, Sire, please! Spare me, Lord Sixclaw!" Swartt turned his back on Lardtail, nodding to Scarback and Marbul as he did. Their daggers flashed in the morning sunlight. Turning back to the horde, Swartt did not even bother glancing down at the slain rat. A chilling silence fell over the mighty army. Swartt hammered the lesson home with harsh callousness. "Lardtail's learned his lesson. So has Wildag. I am Swartt Sixclaw, Warlord of all this horde! I see all, I know all, I hear all! Look at the beast standin' next to you—he could be one of my spies. I have many, this is the lesson you must learn. Even thoughts cannot be hidden from me, I can read your mind just by your eyes. I see some of you lookin' away from my gaze, but that won't help. My vixen seer, Nightshade, can read thoughts with her eyes closed! Listen now, every slab-sided, droolin', misbegotten mother's whelp of yeh! Yore mine to the death, everybeast! Wherever we go I will conquer all. Bowfleg was ruler of the east scrublands. Hah! I will be Warlord of the whole country! None will stand in my way, and you will see to this! If I say march, starve, fight, die!— you will do it without question. This means everybeast, females, young, and families! It is two days' march to food and water, and we'll do it by tomorrow noon. There'll be no stragglers—keep up or die. Drummers, beat double march time. Now!" The drums beat a fierce tattoo as the entire horde moved forward at double their normal marching pace. Heavy cooking utensils and cumbersome possessions were littered in the wake of the marchers as each tried to keep up with the other. Swartt strode out in front, the vixen at his side showing him the route. At the rear of the horde, Marbul and Scarback trotted, blades at the ready to deal with stragglers or deserters. The lesson was being learned, and Swartt had added another title to his name—the Pitiless One! Outcast of RedwaR 63 High above the dust clouds of Swartt's army, far out of range from arrow or sling stone, four crows flew like ragged black specks against the sky. Two of the birds broke off and wheeled south, leaving the other two watching the horde of Sixclaw. Soaring on the high thermals and using the breeze, the first two crows were out of the desert regions and into the fertile hill lands by noon. Circling swiftly, they dropped into a copse of pines. Krakulat, Ruler of the Crow Brethren, sat immobile on a pine stump, his plumage covered in earth, dust, and pine needles. The huge bird was grieving for his mother, and none dared come near him. The two scouts landed a respectful distance away and waited until Krakulat's wife, Bonebeak, waddled up to them before making their report. "Rakkaaa! The vermin are as many as grains of sand blown by the wind, they come this way. Tomorrow when the sun is this high we will see them, Lady Bonebeak." 62 The fierce female called to her husband, "Yaggaaa! Did you hear that? The ones who slew your mother are coming to this place!" Krakulat's talons sunk into the bark of the pine stump with rage; his bloodshot eyes widened with anticipation as he rasped hoarsely to the trees about him, "Harrkaa! Tomorrow will be the dying day for many vermin, do you hear me, my Brethren? Krakulat has spoken!" A deafening din arose from the copse as hundreds of savage crows set up a mighty cawing. Krakulat shook his feathers until dust and needles flew about him. Blue-black and beautifully iridescent, the mighty bird nodded his frightening beak up and down in a stabbing movement, screaming, "Karraaaa! There will be many vermin for our eggchicks to pick over as the sun whitens the bones of those who slew my mother!" Sunfiash the Mace saw the gates of Dark Forest. He lay on the ground as they began opening before him, slowly, oh, so slowly; without sound of a creak, the mist-shrouded timbers moved. He felt his body being drawn toward them and could not resist, did not want to resist; the burning pains within him eased as he felt the desire to enter Dark Forest and rest. As the gates opened wider he saw two mighty Badger Lords, fully armored. One carried a fearsome sword, the other a double-headed axe. Now a third badger joined them. This one was simply clad and carried no weapons; he smiled at Sunflash. "My little Sunflash, do you not know me?" he said. Sunflash smiled back through the tears that welled in his eyes. "Father!" "Yes, my son, I am Barkstripe, husband of your mother, Bella of Brocktree. These two Badger Lords are Boar the Fighter, your grandsire, and Lord Brocktree, your great grand-sire. Listen to them now, they have something important to tell you." 64 Brian Jacques Boar the Fighter and Lord Brocktree barred the gate entrance with sword and axe and spoke as one. "You cannot enter here, Lord!" Sunflash felt a great sadness come over him. He wanted to join his sires, not to be rejected by them. He felt alone and helpless. "Why do you refuse me entrance when I am weary and wish to sleep, and why do you call me Lord?" he asked. Again the sepulchral tones of the Badger Warriors rang out: "There are many long seasons to be lived before you come here. Do not surrender, rise up, the mountain awaits you! It is in need of a Badger Lord!" Inside the cave dwelling, the squirrel, who was called Elmjak, rubbed his back ruefully. "Mine old bones be yet stiff from all that dragging and pulling, 'twas the hardest day's work in many a long season, friends, thanks to thy rush mat, goodwife Lully." The mole wife peeked over her apron top. "Hurr, ee ole rush mat'll be wore'd out arter draggen it all that way wi' zurr badger layin' on et, aye, wore'd out loik us'n's be." Outside, the little molemaids and hoglets played on the sward under a soft morning sun. Unaware of how close to death Sunflash lay, they had invented a new game, as infants will, fighting off adders. The two little molemaids clung to each other, shrieking, "Eee! 'Elp 'elp, ee sunpints be a goin' to eat us'n's oop!" Gurmil and Tirg were jointly pretending to be Sunflash. "Stop still—we'll save ee!" Bitty and Oilier, the two little hogmaids, stood on the sidelines, yelling, "Better save'm quick afore they get etted up!" "Gurr! Go 'way, nasty ole snakers!" Gurmil and Tirg roared as they thrashed imaginary adders. "Yah, slinky stinky ole slimy snakes, take tha'!" Outcast of Redwail 65 Dearie Lingl hurried out with a paw on her lips. "Shush, *ush now, liddle, uns! Keep yore noise down, we got a very sick badger to nurse in there; do be quiet, please!" The babes halted their game and clung to her apron. ' 'Whoi do ee gurt Sunflasher be sicked, marm?' * "Badgers be too big to get sicked!" "Ee surrpints bited 'im, twenny 'undred toimes!" "Will Sunflasher get deaded?" "Ee squirrel make 'im better oi thinks, hurr!" Dearie rummaged in her apron pocket until she came up with some dried apple pieces, which she gave them, saying, "Sunflash'll only get well if you keep very quiet. Be good beasts now, try not to make too much noise, my liddle buttons." They sat in a row on the grass, watching each other as they ate. "You'm chewen orful loud, Maister Gurmil!" "I can't 'elp it, 'tis a noisy apple piece I got." "Hurr, then keep ee mouth shutted!" "Then I won't able to talk!" "Gudd, that keep ee soilent, hurr hurr!" Elmjak the squirrel was old and wise. He sat at table with Tirry, Lully, and Bruff, and all four took a breakfast of mint tea and wild oat scones spread with honey. They ate in silence, watching the badger. Sunflash lay on his pallet of rushes and fragrant dried grass, and Skarlath hovered over him. The kestrel had not moved from his friend's side for two days and nights. Dearie crept softly in and tugged Skarlath's back plumage gently. "Come an' eat now, sir 'awk, or we'll end up nursin' you too." Skarlath followed her reluctantly and they joined the others. 66 Brian Jacques Sunflash moaned softly and tried to turn over. Elmjak hurried to his side and calmed him, bathing the badger's fevered brow with dampened dock leaves. He checked the poultices which he had applied to his patient's wounds, saying, "This one will live, mayhap. Never did I see a beast of such strength; no creature known to me could live through even one adder bite. Look at him now, friends, sleeping like a babe!" Tirry poured a beaker of the fragrant mint tea for Elmjak. "More power t'yore good poultices, sir, they seem t'work right well indeed. You must tell us 'ow t'make them." The recipe for the poultices had been in Elmjak's family for long generations, and now he recited it for his new friends: ' 'If beast be bit by fang of snake, And lying near Dark Forest gate, This ancient poultice you must make, To thwart the paws of fate. Find berries from the rowan tree, Add one small green pine cone, With young leaf of raspberry, Pounded flat beneath a stone. Heat o'er a flame 'til colored dark, Stir fast to make a paste of it, Bind hot and tight with aspen bark, Unto the limb the serpent bit. Change oft from dawn until nightfall, Make sure the beast lies still, Mayhap he'll live to thank us all, If he be strong of will!" Bruff Dubbo wagged a sizeable digging claw in the big badger's direction. "Burrhoo! Nobeast be stronger than ee gurt zurr Sunflash!" Outcast ofRedwail 67 Dearie Lingl agreed wholeheartedly with him. "Great seasons! Who ever heard of a beast so mighty that he slayed two poisonteeth after bein' struck twice by 'em?" It had been hard and wearisome getting Sunflash from the pond back to the cave and caring night and day for him, and sleep had only been snatched in fits and starts. Now, with the badger resting peacefully, there was some long-overdue slumber time. Midmoming was calm and warm, and the friends relaxed on the grass outside. Tiring of their games, the little ones sprawled beside their elders. It was not long before gentle summer cast its spelt and, amid distant birdsong and the lazy hum of bees, they were soon dozing off. However, Gurmil and Tirg did not take kindly to sleeping all day. Shortly before noon they were wide awake. Whispering and chuckling to each other, they tip-pawed past the slumbering elders and made their way into the cave. But they had not gone unnoticed: their sisters, Bitty and Giller, followed by the molemaids Nilly and Podd, came hurrying after them. They threw their little aprons over their faces in imitation of their mothers. "Gurt seasons, you'm villyuns, wot be ee a doin' in yurr?" "Come away now, you'm wake Sunflash!" But Gurmil and Tirg were determined to visit their hero. "Garr, we b'ain't wakin' 'im, on'y come'd to sing the song nice an' quiet. Sunflash likes the song." They gathered round the huge form of the sleeping badger. Nilly twitched her button nose cautiously, saying, "Us'n's best be singen quiet, lest ee 'awkburd 'ears an' eaten us'n's all oop wi' ee gurt beak!" Tiny paws stroked the great golden-striped muzzle as the babes sang soft and low. Dark Forest and its dread gates had receded from Sunflash's (beams; now he wandered lonely through sunlit vales and 68 Brian Jacques flower-strewn hillsides. Lying down in the cool shade of a great oak, he looked up at the sky. A shadow passed over him and a face appeared; Sunflash found himself staring into the most beautiful face he had ever seen. It was a badger, wise beyond dreams and calm as a still lake in the dawn. He knew instinctively it was Bella, his mother. In that moment he felt sadness and joy, yearning and fulfillment. Comfort and serenity shone through her smile as she stroked his golden stripe and began singing: Outcast of Redwcdi 69 Sunflash executed a great whirl, circling crazily until he fell on his back with an earthshaking thud. Caught up in the wild excitement of the moment, hogbabes and molemaids yelled aloud with their badger friend. "Salamandastrooooooon!'' "Arm not alas sand, 'way south in the west, So star land a mat, there's where I love best, Sand not as alarm, lone seabirds do wing, And alas most ran, list' to me whilst I sing. I'll walk alongside you, my lost little one, We'll find the mountain ..." "Salamandastron!" bellowed Sunflash, finishing the song. Wakefulness hit the creatures sleeping outside like a lightning flash and a thunderbolt all in one. They leapt upright, fur and spikes bristling at the sound of the booming roar from within the dwelling cave. Skarlath shrieked with shock and took off into the air like an arrow, and the babes came tumbling and howling into the open as the mighty shout reverberated once more: "Eeulaliaaaa! Salamandastron!" Limping slightly and supporting himself on his hornbeam mace, the badger appeared in the bright sunlight. Tears flowed openly from his great dark eyes, yet he was smiling. Casting the mace aside, he scooped the petrified babes up in both paws. "Salamandastrooooooon!" The fire burned bright and late in the dwelling cave that night as the homely celebration went on. A great cauldron of wood-landers' stew steamed thickly, its wondrous aroma tickling the noses of all who fancied a second helping, or even a third, or in Sunflash's case, a fourth and fifth. Elmjak and old Uncle Blunn had ranged far and wide for the ingredients. Potatoes, leeks, turnips, and mushrooms had come from the farm patch, but the special touches like watershrimp, wild onion, fennel, and a delicious addition they had never seen before mat Elmjak called southbeans, had taken some finding. The babes greatly enjoyed a summercream pudding that Skarlath and Lully had concocted between them; there was nut bread and even some early strawberry cordial. Sunflash had told the story of his dream over and over again. Tiny smiled indulgently as his friend recounted the tale once more. Sunflash ladled himself another bowl of stew, saying, "You're laughing at me, Tiny Lingl." 70 Outcast of Redwatt 71 The good hedgehog smiled even wider. "Nay, not laughin' at you, big feller, I'm laughin' for you. Yore parents an' grandsires, you know their names, you've seen 'em, you know who you are now, aye, an' even where yore bound. Hoho! Salamandastron, eh, who'd 'ave thought it?" The badger's huge paw rapped the tabletop as he repeated, "That's what I've been telling you, the words of the song all became clear when my mother sang mem. 'Arm not alas sand. So star land a mat. Sand not as alarm, And alas most ran.' They are all jumbled-up forms of the word Salamandastron!" Gurmil climbed onto the table and impudently began helping himself to Sunflash's portion of summercream pudding. "Hahah! But yore mum wouldn't 'ave knowed the song if we 'adn't started singin' it!" The badger stroked the soft spikes of his small friend's bead. "That's right enough, mate. I might not have recovered if it hadn't been for you young 'uns!" Podd licked her spoon absently. "Burr aye, zurr, best day's wurk ee surrpints ever did, bitin* ee!" The badger sat looking slightly puzzled, but the others fell about, laughing at the molemaid's innocent remark. Auntie Ummer waddled to her corner of the cave and sought out her gurdelstick. Old Uncle Blunn banged his beaker on the tabletop in time to the jangle, rattle, and bump of the instrument, calling, "doom on, moi ole duckyburd, give us'n's a tune, hurr hurr!" Nilly smiled endearingly at Blunn. "Do ee sing a song, Nunc, sing Wurpldown Dumm." The old mole chuckled as he patted her velvety head. "You'm gotten oi twisted round yore liddle diggen claw, mis-sie. Roight ho, hurr oi go!" Old Uncle Blunn soon had them laughing at his song. "Oh, oi knowed a mole called Wurpldown Dumm, Ee wurr a rascal, a villyun boi gumm, 72 Brian Jacques An' ee 'ad the plumpest an' fattest ole tumm, As ever was see'd in yon wuddland. For brekkist ee eated a duzzing gurt pies, They say that 'is tumm wurr as big as 'is eyes, Ee kept 'is mouth opened so ee cudd catch flies, Ee ett everythink in yon wuddland. One day as ole Wurpldown Dumm lied asleep, Ee Lord o' Dark Forest came wi' a gurt leap An' carried 'im off furrever to keep, Ole Wurpldown in ee dark wuddland. An' all ee dead vurmints cried, 'Coom an' see mates, O boggle us seasons, an' lackaday fates, Yon fat mole ee's eatin' gurt Dark Forest gates, O get 'im back up to ee wuddlands.' Ee said, 'Oi've eated butterflies, oi've eated bees, Oi've drinked lots o' soups an' cordials an' teas, But gates o' Dark Forest tastes just loike gudd cheese, One day oi'll go back to those wuddlands!' " The merriment continued with more songs and dancing until the babes fell to snoring and had to be carried off to their beds. When all was quiet, Tirry struck a more sober note, saying, "Well, Sunflash, I suppose you'll be leavin' us soon?" The badger nodded his great golden-striped head slowly. "Aye, Tirry, I'll be setting off an hour before dawn." Dearie patted his paw. "You've got to go, friend, you always knew that. We'll think kindly of you an' all you did for our families." Skarlath hopped down from the ledge he always liked to perch on. "Tomorrow 'twill be the start of autumn days. I will Outcast of RedwaU 73 stay here awhile with you and make cheeses. Though I will divide my time between sometimes flying off to watch for Swartt Sixclaw and other times keeping an eye on you, Sun-flash. So, badger, you may go with a light heart, knowing these families have a protector." Sunflash stretched out his heavy paw, running it lightly down Skarlath's plumed back. "What creature ever deserved such a friend as you, my hawk!" he said, his voice trembling audibly. Lully threw her apron up over her face to hide her distress. "Oi'll make ee oop a gurt pack o' vittles, zurr, ee woan't be 'ungered on ee journey, an1 may'ap 'twill remoind ee of us'n's." She and Dearie were overcome with tears, and they hurried off. Sunflash stretched out both paws to Tiny and Bruff, and they shook firmly, blinking and nodding a lot. "Go to your beds now," said Sunflash. "I told you I wouldn't leave without saying farewell. So good-bye, Tiny Lingl, and good-bye to you, Bruff Dubbo, my very good friends." The mole and the hedgehog wiped their eyes and went to their beds. In the hour before dawn, the dwelling cave was still and warm, and its occupants, all save one, were asleep. Without a backward glance, Sunflash picked up his mace and the sack of provisions; moving softly, he was off on his quest. Outside in the dim light, he started at a sound. Elmjak crept up, a paw upon his lips. The badger nodded, and together they cut into die woodlands, going south and west. Neither beast spoke as they carefully picked their way through bush and undergrowth i until they reached the brow of a small knoll. Amber and lilac i- washed a pale swathe through the eastern skies; woodpigeon, ' thrush, and blackbird could be heard as they rose to herald the dawn; the earth felt tranquil, green and dew-laden. 74 Brian Jacques Suddenly the old squirrel halted and, grasping his companion's mighty paw, he shook it firmly. "Thy path and mine part here. I walked this far with you so that you would not be leaving the dwelling of friends alone." Sunflash was careful not to squeeze Elmjak's paw too hard. "Thank you, my friend. I would be dead were it not for you. But where do you go now, what path will you travel?" Looking back the way they had come, the squirrel smiled. "My wandering days are done. I will return to the dwelling cave and live happily in peace and plenty with those two families of innocents. Methinks they will have need of my special skills. So worry not, Sunflash—like your kestrel, I will watch over our friends gladly." The badger touched his golden stripe as a mark of respect. "You are a goodbeast. My heart is lighter knowing you are protecting the families of Tirry and Bruff. We will meet again someday, I feel it. Send a message by Skarlath should you ever need me. Good-bye, Elmjak." Reaching into his herb bag, the old squirrel drew forth a turquoise stone. It was flat, intricately carved into the shape of a sycamore leaf and strung on a thin cord. He looped it around Sunflash's paw, saying, "This amulet may be of use to you sometime. Show it to any squirrel or otter you may encounter. Tell them it comes from the oakdens of Firjak and was given to you by his son Elmjak. It will make your path easier by bringing you help. Fare you well, Sunflash the Mace. Find your mountain, defeat your enemies, and grow great in the land!" Then with enviable agility in one so old, the squirrel went bounding off through the trees. Morning sun evaporated the damp and dew, clothing the woodlands in a brief gauze of mist. Sunflash trudged steadily onward as the trees and foliage became more luxurious and dense. Digging his footclaws into the loamy ground, the badger descended a steep wooded hillside, noting a warm decaying odor and the earth growing squelchy as he progressed downward. Upon reaching the bottom, Sunflash was forced to balance between a rock and a rotting beech stump. Seating himself, he unpacked oat scones and a flask of dandelion-and-burdock cordial. He ate and drank slowly as he evaluated the land, the great swamp he would be forced to cross. In front of him, and as far as he could see from left to right, dark treacherous ooze showed between the tall foxgloves, fungus-like growths clung parasitically to half-sunken logs, and clouds of midges swarmed about the mosses and liverwort that abounded everywhere. 75 \ 76 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwatt 77 From the shelter of clumped elderbushes, the badger was being watched. Many reptilian eyes stared unblinkingly from their hiding places. Sunflash was stoppering his drink flask when a strange sound reached his ears; looking around swiftly he identified the source of the odd noise. It was a reed flute, played by a small skinny newt. The creature had painted itself orange and bright blue with plant dyes. It hopped and frisked about with scant regard for the treacherous surface of the morass, skipping from plant to twig, from rush to flower, tootling and twiddling tunelessly. It popped up alongside Sunflash, virtually pushing his footpaw off the rotten log as it made room for itself. The badger greeted the newcomer. "Good day to you, little sir...." Further conversation was interrupted as the newt scrabbled to get inside Sunflash's provision sack. The badger nipped the invader neatly by its baggy neckskin and held it aloft. Indignantly, it kicked in mid-air, snarling nastily in a high-pitched nasal squeal, " 'Ey yew, *ey yew, gerroffofme an' giz me vikkles, 'urryup!" Sunflash gave the impudent reptile a warning shake to silence it. "Hold hard there, cheekyface, who d'you think you're talking to?" It tried to strike at the badger with its reed flute. "Stripey-dog thicky'ead badjerpadjer daftdog ... !" Sunflash had put up with enough. He stunned the newt with a tiny flick of his free paw beneath its chin. Unknown to him the myriad of reptile eyes still watched from the cover of the elderbushes. Sunflash laid the newt carefully out on the stump and waited for it to recover, and when it stirred and opened one eye, he trapped it gently with a footpaw and lectured it. "Now don't say a single word or I'll squash you like a gnat! Right, listen to me. Didn't your parents ever teach you any manners? You come here, diving into my bag, demanding food, and then you start insulting me. Have you got no respect for others? Keep a civil tongue in your head, I warn you!" The little reptile swallowed, its throat rising in a gulp. "A wiz 'ungry, yew got vikkles, giz Smerc sum ... pleez." "That's better!" said the badger, opening his sack. "My name is Sunflash the Mace. You want food—good, tell you what I'll do. Obviously you know your way about this swamp, and if you agree to lead me through it I'll feed you. Is it a bargain?" The newt wriggled out from beneath the badger's footpaw. "Barrgin, barrgin! Giz Smerc vikkles, I show yadda way!" Sunflash broke an oatcake in half, twirled a leaf into a cone, and filled it with cordial, and gave them both to Smerc. The skinny little creature ate as if it had lived through a seven-season famine, sucking the drink noisily and chomping at the oatcake until crumbs flew. To the badger's amazement it demolished the food and finished the drink. Holding out the conical leaf cup, Smerc shook it in Sun-flash's face. "Yehhhh! A like it, goodgood, giz me sum-more!" The badger eyed it coldly until he heard the word. "Pleez!" Refilling the leaf cone, Sunflash gave it to Smerc with the other half of the oatcake. The newt's table manners were totally appalling. When it had finished eating, it grabbed at the amulet that Sunflash had hung around his neck, hissing, "Luvly meggle giz me it, for showyer across swampy!" Sunflash understood Smerc completely. He had spent a lot of his young life in a vermin camp where creatures behaved like that as a matter of routine. The only thing such creatures respected was brute force, and now he decided to show the newt a bit. Picking Smerc up, Sunflash set him on a low laburnum branch. 78 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwall 79 "So then, your name is Smerc. Watch and I'll show you why I'm called Sunflash the Mace!" Sunflash seized the great hornbeam mace and swung it. "Eeulaliaaaaa!" One sweeping sideways blow at the rotten beech stump caused it to disintegrate, exploding into a shower of damp wood, powdery dust, slugs, and wood lice. When the debris settled there was no sign of the stump. Smerc stood open-mouthed, quivering all over with fear. Sunflash shouldered his mace, saying, "I've fed you, that's my half of the bargain. Now you will guide me through this swamp. Move, Smerc!" Slow worms, eels, and newts in a silent slithering procession followed as Sunflash negotiated a passage through the wide morass. He followed Smerc, sometimes waist deep as the newt skipped carelessly over lily pads, other times gripping the moss-covered limbs of long-submerged tree trunks. It was tough going. At the center of the swamp a jutting oak branch stuck up at an angle. As he moved toward it, the badger felt the shifting ooze gripping and sucking at his body. He floundered, tasting the foul mud in his mouth, unable to wipe it from his eyes as it flopped and splodged with his wild efforts. Smerc's voice rang out from somewhere nearby. "Grab 'old o' d'branch, stripeydog, or yer sink!" Summoning his strength, Sunflash made a mighty surge forward, grabbing blindly at where he knew the tree limb to be. There was a moment's cold panic, then he felt his paw grip wood. Looping the cord of his mace handle over a gnarled burr, he pulled himself from the sticky morass. After what seemed an age, his limbs came clear of the swirling, sucking mud. Sunflash clung to the wobbly limb, shaking with exhaustion; it had been a formidable task pulling his huge bulk from the swamp. Feeling around slowly he was surprised to find his provision sack still hanging from the old cord that served him as a belt. He dug his paw into the sack and pulled out the flask of dandelion-and-burdock cordial; then, biting out the stopper, the badger tilted his head back and poured the fragrant liquid into his mud-blinded eyes until they were free of swamp dirt. Gratefully he cleared his throat by drinking what was left in the flask, then he looked up to see Smerc and the band of reptiles who had been following him. The wicked newt was perched on the head of a big eel, obviously the leader, Sunflash tried ignoring them as he reasoned with Smerc. "Come on, be fair, you haven't completed our bargain. Get me out of this swamp. Which way do I go now?" The eels, slow worms, and newts remained silent, fixing the badger with a concentrated basilisk glare. Smerc, however, was delighted that he had lured the badger into a trap. He pointed at Sunflash and giggled insanely. "Yeeheehee! Which way ya go now, stripeydog? Yeeheeheehee! This's yer deepest part o' th'swamp, on'y one way t'go, badjerpadjer. Yeeheeheehee! Down!" Hot rage engulfed Sunflash the Mace, and he hurled the empty flask at the sniggering newt. Had his aim been tempered by calmness the missile would have slain Smerc, but as it was, die flask struck a glancing blow to both the newt and the big eel on whose head he was perched. Smerc flopped senseless on the eel's head, which was now sporting a livid bruise and a rapidly rising bump. The eel reared up, opening its mouth to reveal two rows of greeny-yellow, needle-pointed teeth. "Sssssink 'im!" it hissed. The whole mass of reptiles moved backward, and the oak ^ limb began turning on its side. Sunflash threw himself flat, ".dinging tightly to the branches. To his horror he saw a thick .vine hawser rise clear of the mud. It was attached underneath •'; fee oak limb and the reptiles were pulling on it. 80 Brian Jacques The badger was helpless. He hung on to the turning limb, shouting, "Stop! Stop! What do you want?" The big eel sank back and, wrapping itself around the hawser, it pulled with the others as it answered, "Want you... Sssssink!" The awful realization that there was nowhere to go swept over Sunflash; he held on to the tree limb as it was pulled down, turning slowly into the fathomless depths of mud. 11 Krakulat withdrew his Crow Brethren to a place where the horde of Swartt Sixclaw could not see them. They settled behind low hillocks, waiting for nightfall. The Crow Leader had been off hunting with his Brethren when the weasels Scarback and Marbul had slain his mother with slingstones. Fearfully the old ones reported the murder to Krakulat on his return, and the savage crow's rage and grief had been awesome, more so when his scouts reported back to him on the dreadful end his mother's body had met. Krakulat decided to take his ven-geance without regard to life and limb, and once his initial rage had subsided, he planned the time and place his Brethren would strike. Swartt had suddenly become a great Warlord and the toast of the horde. Never, not even in the eastlands, had the hor- ,4ebeasts known such a delightful spot. There was a broad- rStream, fruit trees, and an abundance of edible vegetation. The 81 82 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwatt 83 fact that no birds were to be seen was forgotten when Aggal the stoat Captain speared a large fat chub in the stream. The vermin soldiers and their families flocked to the water and drank, sported and splashed, some catching watershrimp, others hunting caddisworm and tadpoles. Fires were lit, tents were pitched, and a holiday atmosphere prevailed. Using a tent canvas under the vixen Nightshade's supervision, a team of soldiers dragged the stream, bringing in a goodly catch of chub, dace, perch, and even a big old pike. The six-clawed ferret sat beneath a shady tree, painting glowing pictures of the good times ahead to his officers. Swartt's unobtrusive wife, Bluefen, scurried about, serving fruit and fish. Swartt hardly noticed her. "This is only the start," he said. "Give me one good season travelin' south'n'west an' everybeast in the land'11 be flockin* to my banner, you'll see." "Hmm, southwest, eh? Is that where the badger is?" Scraw the rat, now a Captain, mused idly. The good mood of Swartt Sixclaw suddenly dissipated, and his voice became a questioning snarl. "Who told you about the badger?" Scraw was not intimidated by the Warlord's ill humor. "Some o' those beasts you were running with before you came to the tents of Lord Bowfleg," he answered. "They say the badger is young, but a great warrior, fearless in battle...." Swartt leaned forward anxiously. "What else do they say? Tell me." ' "They say he was the one who ruined your sixclawed paw, made it dead forever, and that you have sworn to slay him." Swartt upturned his metal drinking cup and suddenly dealt it a swift blow with the chain-mailed and copper-bound gauntlet he wore over the withered six-claw. The vessel crumpled, flattened beneath the force of the blow. Swartt stared at Scraw. "Don't ever make the mistake that my sixctaw is useless. It's slain more foebeasts than you've had hot dinners, rat. As for the badger, I hear he calls himself Sunflash the Mace now; take it from me, that one's a walkin' deadbeast!" Aggal the stoat Captain made bold enough to ask, "How'11 you know where to find this Sunflash the Mace?" Swartt nodded to the vixen. "Tell him." "Searats; some seasons back we met them on the coast," Nightshade explained briefly. "They told us of a place far in tfie southwest, a mountain ruled by badgers and hares, it has a strange name I cannot remember. The searats said that any badger traveling south and west will eventually arrive at this mountain, something to do with the destiny of badgers. Who knows?'' Aggal shrugged dismissively. "Huh, searats! Who can believe that lot of floatin' rogues? We slew a few up on the east , coast last season; before they died, some of them said they knew of a great redstone Abbey that had been built in the mid-south. Liars, they'd have said fish had wings if they'd thought ft'd save their miserable lives." Swartt lied with a straight face to his officers. "I have spo-: ken with a wise old owl; he knew of the badger mountain. V You all know that owls don't lie, so gather round and I'll tell ""you somethin'." ^ - The officers gathered closer to Swartt. Information from V wise owls was rare, but always true. The ferret Warlord spoke low. "The mountain of badgers and hares, this owl said, was < also a storehouse of fabulous treasure, jeweled swords, golden ^daggers, and shields mounted with pearls and gems. We'll take ilC'it by force of arms with this great horde. Then I'll split this ItlHeasure, but only with my brave Captains. What I tell you is not for other ears, it will be our secret. None of the inary hordebeasts need know. Are you with me?" The Captains looked from one to another, their eyes shining greed. Scraw acted as spokesbeast for them as he said, with you, Lord Sixclaw, you can depend on us!" 84 Brian Jacques The remainder of the day passed happily for the horde as they fed, played, and napped among the tents that had been set up on the streambanks. Late night found the fires burned to embers. A soft breeze moved the tent flaps and rippled the stream as the horde slept deeply, tired out after their forced march from the flatlands. Even the sentries slept. That was when Krakulat the crow made his move.. . . Scarback and Marbul were sleeping in the open, outside the Warlord's tent. It was their job to guard him, but the two assassins were as tired as any. They did not feel the thin twine made from animal sinews until it began tightening upon their necks, and by then it was too late. Four crows dug their talons into the earth as they strained and pulled in opposite directions on the strangling loops. Meanwhile, Krakulat stirred the embers of a fire at the edge of the camp into leaping flames, Silently, Krakulat's wife, Bonebeak, dipped her wing in signal to the army of waiting crows, and the Crow Brethren went to work. Each of them winged silently over the fire, carrying in their talons a long string. At the end of each string dangled a mass of dried moss and grasses dripping with pine resin. As the Crow Brethren passed over the flames, the fireballs ignited. Speeding like dark phantoms, they flew upward, dropping their blazing burdens onto the tents of Swartt's horde. As soon as this was done, they circled high out of range of the flames, waiting. Three ferrets dashed screaming from a burning tent. Krakulat and his crows dived and slew them as they tried to escape the flames. Now others could be seen against the patches of firelight that had sprung up, illuminating the landscape below. The Crow Brethren took no prisoners; the vengeance of Krakulat was swift and unmerciful. Outcast of Redwall 85 Swartt hurtled from his tent, ignoring his coughing, choking wife, who staggered behind him. He grabbed the vixen as she dashed past, yelling, "What'n the name of blood'n'fur is goin' on? Who set all these tents alight?" Nightshade pointed at four dark shapes attacking a squealing rat in the firelight. "Crows! They're all over the place.... Yaaaagh!" A crow fastened its talons in the vixen's back; Swartt clubbed it flat with his mailed paw. Drawing his sword, he roared, "The stream! Everybeast into the water, archers an' slingbeasts, rally to me!" The Warlord stood in the shallows, flaying about himself with the flat of his sword blade as he rallied his troops. "Fire arrows an' rocks! There, you dummies, there! Can't yer see 'em in the firelight when they fly down? There ain't so many of 'em! Come on, move yerselves, shoot!" A withering hail of stones and arrows whizzed into the night sky, followed by another and yet another. Krakulat saw the destruction the missiles wreaked on his Brethren and wheeled upward out of range, cawing, "Kraawkaa! Follow me. We will show them the Brethren have no fear. Higher, my warriors, higher!" Nightshade found Swartt and pointed upward. "Lord, they're out of range, but they're going to dive down upon us!" The Warlord acted quickly, passing word to his Captains. "Spears an' pikes, hold 'em low 'til I give the signal!" Swartt's quick thinking ended the encounter. Krakulat sent his crows zooming down like thunderbolts, and, unable to stop themselves in time, the last thing most of them heard was Swartt yelling, "Spears an' pikes up!" The Crow Brethren's ranks were so drastically thinned by this sudden action that they were forced to take flight. 86 Brian Jacques Morning light found Swartt and his officers seated on the streambank, surveying the smoldering ruins of the hordetents. Soldiers, some with fur badly scorched, kept bringing in reports. "We've found the two weasels Scarback and Marbu!. They were strangled to death, Lord." Swartt dismissed them with a wave of his sword. "Just as well, I'd have throttled 'em meself if they'd lived, for not warnin' me of the crow attack. Any more sentries left alive?" Aggal pointed out a pair of rats. "Only those two, Lord." Swartt's face was expressionless as he pronounced sentence. "Slay 'em, they're no good to me sleepin' on duty. Make sure the rest see yer do it, teach 'em a lesson!" A weasel called Grayjaw came running up, breathless. "Sire, we've seen the crows. They're in that grove of pines over yonder. Give the word an' we'll attack!" Swartt shook his head as if in despair. "Listen to her. 'Give the word an' we'll attack.' Blockhead! They've probably got an ambush set up for us if we go near those pines. Leave 'em, there's no profit in losin' more of us by stayin' in this place an' wagin' war on a lot of crows." Nightshade slid to the Warlord's side and whispered in his ear. Swartt brightened slightly, nodding approval, and, standing up, he called so that all could hear: "Salvage what y'can, pack all gear, we're leavin'!" The horde broke camp at midmorning. As they turned to march south and west, Swartt nodded to the line of archers standing round a fire. "Give 'em back what they gave us. Fire!" Burning arrows sped into the pine grove. It was a natural firetrap, with thick layers of dead pine needles providing a floor and old pines leaking resin, supporting half-fallen trees, dry as tinder and highly flammable. Swartt had lost more than Outcast of Redwdil 87 threescore hordebeasts to the crows, but it did not make much of a dent in his horde, many of whom mourned the loss of their tents more than that of their dead comrades in arms. Black smoke belched skyward as the Crow Brethren tumbled out like a pile of old dark rags to take refuge on the stream banks. Krakulat watched the pine grove bum, saying, "Kchaakah! We will follow them and kill them One by one. Come!" The first the horde knew of it was not long after midday. A horderat marching slowly at the rear was seized by a score of crows and lifted screaming into the air. The birds flew as high as they could with their wriggling wailing burden, then they dropped him. He left a dent in the landscape; other hordebeasts leapt to one side to avoid being hit by the falling rat. After that a whole company of archers was ordered to march at the rear facing backward, their bows ready strung against further attacks. Next the crows picked another rat off the middle right flank, and the archers at the rear could not fire for fear of hitting their comrades. Before sundown a third rat was lifted off, this time from the front left flank of the marching horde. Swartt's bad temper descended once more, and he ordered the vixen to march alongside him. Repeatedly treading on her footpaws and digging her in the side with his mailed paw, he upbraided her. " 'Burn 'em out of the pines, Lord?' Shortsighted stupidity! What've yer made me look like, eh? A slop'ead like yerself! Those birds'll follow us until we're dead or they are. Righto, my bright seer, see me a way out o' this, an' quick about it!" Chaos was beginning to break out in the horderanks as the rats, realizing that they were the only ones light enough for the crows to lift into the air, started panicking. Pushing and shoving at weasels, stoats, and ferrets, the rats tried to occupy the center of the marching masses, where the crows dared not fly down upon them. Hordebeasts fought the rats viciou&ly. 88 Brian Jacques claiming the center spot for themselves and their families, some with young ones. The crows, however, did not have it all their own way. Archers and slingbeasts began a relentless barrage of stones and shafts at the dark-winged harassers. As night fell Swartt was forced to make camp. A burning ring of fires in the open surrounded the horde, stopping the crows picking off anybeast on the fringes. Half the soldiers were ordered to stand upright, pointing spears, javelins, and longpikes at the sky, while their comrades rested until it was time to relieve them. Swartt ordered Nightshade to sneak off under cover of darkness and scout ahead for a possible solution to their dilemma. Krakulat and his Brethren squatted out of range of the campfires. Bonebeak gave her husband no peace, as she constantly berated him. "Rakaaah! Vengeance is a fool's idea, what good will it do us when we are all dead? You have slain enough of the land-crawlers to pay for your mother's life ten times over. Our Brethren must get on with the business of living, we must find new homes. If you get us all slain, who will be left to say what brave birds we were, what a courageous fool Krakulat was? Kchaah!" She followed the Crow Commander as he waddled angrily between the sleeping Brethren, trying to shake her off. "Agga! Give your feathers a rest, and your nagging beak too!" he snapped. "I will say when I have had my revenge on the vermin. The Brethren follow me, my word is law here. Now leave me alone!" The night wore on with both sides fitful and uneasy, the horde unable to rest because of their guard duties, while the crows were kept awake by the constant tirades of their leader's wife. It was still several hours to dawn when Nightshade slipped back into camp with news for Swartt. "Lord, there is a deep Outcast of Redwall 89 winding ravine not far from here. A stream runs through the center of it, and I think there are caves on the stream bank. I saw no sign of other creatures there." Swartt stood and drew his sword decisively. "Right, tell the Captains t'get this lot movin'. We'll get to the shelter of this ravine an' take cover in the caves. Then I can figure out what t'do about these crows!" The horde entered the gorge in darkness, stumbling over the rocky defile at the shallow end of the ravine, still beset by the crows. It was a scene of chaos. Swartt and his Captains yelled commands at the hordebeasts above the cawing din of the birds, vermin fired arrows and slung rocks willy-nilly, others jabbed at the night sky with spears. Splashing through the stream, they bundled into the shaded gloom of the caves. There was not room for all the hordesoldiers, and many were forced to shelter amid the lupin and brambles of the steep ravine sides. Swartt had managed to light a fire in one of the caves. He looked around at the rushes and dry grass pallets in the corners, then said to the vixen, "So, you saw no sign of any other creature, eh? Well, who lives in these caves, tell me that?" Screams and terrified cawing from outside saved the vixen having to answer awkward questions. "Lord, listen, something strange is happening outside!" she cried. The Warlord peered outside, taking care to stay away from the cave entrance. "Well, it'll be dawn soon, then we'll find out." The agonized choking cry of a hordebeast rang out, causing Swartt and the vixen to start. Nightshade slunk to the rear of the cave, avoiding Swartt's glare. He shook a mailed paw at her threateningly, snarling, "By rights I should send you out there, yer cringin' cur! Sometimes I think yer more trouble than yer worth." 90 Brian Jacques After a while it went quiet outside, and all that could be heard was the odd moan of vermin who were obviously wounded. Dawn arrived gray and patched with lowering clouds. A fine drizzle caused the gorge to glisten wetly. Swartt poked his head out of the cave to see half a dozen foxes come splashing through the stream shallows toward him. The leader was a large, tough-looking vixen, and like the others of her escort she carried a bolas, four thonged, with rounded pebbles fastened to its ends. The Warlord tried to hide his surprise when the vixen spoke, for her tongue was a bright purple, unlike any he had seen. "Be ye the leader of this motley array?" she barked. Swartt could see hordebeasts peeping cautiously from the other caves and scrambling down the gorge sides. His quick eyes took in the number of slain vermin draped over the rocks. More foxes, maybe fifty, were collecting dead crows and heaping them in a pile. The ferret drew his sword and put on a bold face, saying, "I'm Swartt Sixclaw, Warlord of all this horde. I see you've slain some of my soldiers. Why?" The vixen spun her bolas idly, clacking the big pebbles together rhythmically. "Folly'n'fie! 'Twas a mishap; did I not rid ye of the crows?" Looking up, Swartt had to agree. There was no sign of a crow flying anywhere about. He saw a young fox plucking feathers from the carcass of Krakulat to decorate his brush with. "Aye, the crows are gone, sure enough," he said. "What do they call you, friend? Never mind the few of mine you slew, those crows were becomin' bothersome." The fox's purple tongue showed vividly as she answered. "I am Shang Damsontongue, and this is my gorge. Ye may stop awhile, Swartt Sixclaw...." Shang's eyes glistened covetously as she watched Swartt's sword. "Ye have many fine Outcast of ReduiaU 91 metal weapons," she continued. "Thy beasts carry spears and good daggers. I see shields, too, much metal." Immediately Swartt was on his guard, though he took it as an advantage that the foxes seemed only to be armed with the primitive stone-and-thong bolases. Obviously metal arms were considered precious by the foxes of the gorge. Swartt sheathed his sword, the beginnings of a crafty plan forming in his mind. The reptiles hissed joyfully as they hauled on the vine hawser. Sunflash wallowed helplessly, and his great weight was sucked under as the tree limb submerged slowly into the ooze. By spreading his paws and holding his head back, he tried to halt his descent into the swamp, but it was useless. He gave a final battle cry before he was lost forever in the murky depths. "Eeulaliaaaaaa!" Skarlath arrived like a bolt of lightning. In seconds the big eel was writhing in midair, clutched tightly in the kestrel's savage talons as he pecked sharply at its head. "Kreegaah! If my friend sinks, you die! Tell the slimy ones to get beneath him and buoy him up, quick now!" Though he was trapped fast by the neck the eel hissed aloud, "Ssssstop, do not let him sssssink!" Sunflash felt the mud well into his mouth, then suddenly he was pushed upward from beneath, the wriggling mass under his footpaws acting as a raft. Skarlath forced the eel to clench 92 Outcast of Redwall 93 the vine hawser in its mouth, then, beating the air furiously with all his wingpower, the kestrel flew slowly upward, gripping the eel. Beneath him the reptile latched hard on to the vine hawser, knowing its life was at stake. Fortunately the hawser was long, and Skarlath managed to reach a dry bank with lime and alder trees growing on it. Flying as high as he could, the kestrel dropped the eel among the topmost branches of an alder and grabbed the vine from it. Leaving the eel stranded high in the alder, Skarlath took three turns around the lower trunk, then, securing the hawser, he flew back to Sunflash, calling advice. "Kreeeeh! Feel around for the vine and pull yourself out!" Letting his paws sink, the badger felt about until he touched the oak limb beneath the swamp's surface. Sunflash groped wildly, knowing it was his only chance. At one point his head vanished completely under the mud. Skarlath felt a surge of panic, then sudden relief as his friend appeared like some slime-covered primeval monster, rearing up as he pulled and hauled on the hawser that he had found. Blinded by swamp dirt and spitting mud left and right, Sunflash dragged himself paw over paw, the vine hawser tautening as it rose and slapped against the viscous surface. Skarlath hovered overhead calling encouragement, while the reptiles, who had all risen to the surface, watched unblinkingly as the swamp-covered giant hauled and pulled, grunting and gasping, until he emerged on the dry bank with a final sucking gurgle. Sunflash the Mace lay completely exhausted, the mud plastering him turning to a gray, cementlike coating in the hot sun. Skarlath strutted around him, carefully pecking the mess from his friend's ears and eyes. Spitting out the gritty substance, Sunflash nodded weakly at the reptiles. "That lot look disappointed. I would have fed them for three seasons after they'd suffocated me," he said. 94 Brian Jacques The slow worms, newts, and eels were lying offshore, still watching intently. Nobeast was more surprised than the badger when Smerc staggered up, one side of his jaw swollen out of shape as he grinned lopsidedly and jeered, " 'Ello, stripeydog, see yer 'scaped from d'swamp. Heeheehee!" Sunfiash made a halfhearted grab at the cheeky newt, but he was too slow. Smerc tottered quickly off into the shrubbery. A moment later he was heard shrilling, "Gerroff me, yew! Lemmego, I di'n't do nottink!" Two otters hove into view, one hauling Smerc by a back leg. Both beasts looked plump and well fed; they moved with the sure-pawed grace common to otters. Nodding to Skarlath, they peered intently at Sunflash, and then the larger of the two spoke. "Aye aye, matey, we 'card the commotion over this way so we cruised over to take a glim. I'm Folrig Streampaw an' this fat frogwalloper is Ruddle Banksnout." Ruddle promptly passed possession of Smerc's leg to Sunfiash. "Ahoy, just 'ang on t'this bucko for a tick, matey!" Ruddle hurled himself upon Folrig, and they wrestled and kicked, buffeting each other all over the ground. "Frogwalloper is it, you bottle-bottomed flotsam, us Bank-snouts was always ten times more 'andsome than you Stream-paws!" "Haharr! Did yer say 'andsome? Yore mother wouldn't let yer swim in the water 'cos you frightened all the fishes!" They rolled over and over, locked together, pummeling each other as they laughed uproariously and traded insults. "Yore father tried t'swap you fer a toadbabe when you was a pup. He said it was nicer lookin' by far! Hohohoho!" "Harrharrharr, matey, my ole granma used t'say, show me a good-lookin' Streampaw an' I'll die 'appy. She's still livin'!" Outcast of Reduiail 95 Sunflash sat up, still with the writhing Smerc in one paw, and said, ' 'Would you two like to stop fighting for a moment, I'm getting weary just sitting watching you!" They quit tussling straight away and stooped, staring closely at the mud-caked Sunflash. "Blow me down, is that a badger be'ind all that swamp muck?" "Aye, so 'tis, an' he looks prettier than you, even with all that muck on 'im. Sit still, messmate, I'll soon 'ave you clean an' shipshape with a drop o' clear water." Ruddle dashed off to find water, and Folrig took Smerc from the badger, shaking him by his loose neck skin. "You rotten liddle scumslimer, I'll wager a willow'erb to a water-shrimp yore be'ind all this!" The newt kicked and squealed, pointing upward to the eel draped in the alder branches. "No, no, streamydog, not me, it was 'im up there!" Folrig grinned broadly at Skarlath. "I s'pose you put ole squirmskin aloft up there. Why don't y'take this whimperin' whelk up to join 'im? They're mates y'know, shame to keep 'em apart." Weeping and wailing piteously, the newt was borne up to the high branches and deposited there next to the eel, who was clinging grimly to the thin branches, complaining, "Ffffeel sssssick up here." Skarlath waggled a talon in his face. "Eelscum, feel grateful this bird let you live!" Ruddle could find only a bit of wet grass, but he cleaned Sunflash's eyes and nostrils as best he could. "There y'are, mate, at least y'can see an' sniff proper now. Come with me an' ole ugly mug there, we'll navigate yer back to good dry land away from this swamp. May'ap you'd like to visit our den an' take a bite with us, eh?" Sunflash thanked them and pulled himself upright slowly. 96 Brian Jacques Folrig was looking this way and that. " 'old 'ard, where's yer pal, the kestrel bird?" Powdered mud fell dustily from the badger as he began walking. "Oh, Skarlath comes and goes as he pleases. No doubt he knows I'm safe with you, so he decided to take off for a while. By the way, what about the newt and the eel up there? Hadn't we better let them down? They might starve and die." Ruddle chuckled. "Not them two, when we're gone they'll slither down one way or another. A bit o' penance don't do rogues like them no 'arm." It was nearly twilight when, after a long and perilous trek, they cleared the swamplands and came to a wooded terrain backed by mounds of smooth ancient rocks. The otters made their way toward the rocks; Sunflash heard water splashing as they skirted the fern-fringed bank of a stream. Looking farther up to where the rounded rocks reared their massive forms, he saw a beautiful waterfall. Folrig stepped out jauntily, calling back to Sunflash, "We'll soon see if yore a badger underneath yore swampcoat, an' I 'ope yore a prettier sight than ole rot-the-apples there!" Fighting and chortling, the two otters dived beneath the falls, letting the torrents batter them. Sunflash was a bit apprehensive at first, but after gingerly stepping beneath the cascade he reveled in the feel of clean, icy water drenching him after the long hot trek through the swamps. Weariness fell from the badger's limbs, and a marvelous sense of well-being enveloped him. With a playful roar he joined the otters in their game, seizing them both in a hug. "Eeulaliaaa! I'm Sunflash the Mace and I'm better looking than both of you put together, you nut-nosed, boulder-headed beasts!" Outcast of Redwall 97 Retaliating, Folrig and Ruddle got Sunflash in a double headlock between them, shouting, "Drown 'im quick afore he scares the young 'uns!" "Wot an 'orrible sight, mate, a badger with a butter-dipped nose!" The three fell about, laughing in the water, then suddenly Ruddle plunged deeper into the thick cascade and vanished. Sunflash pawed water from his eyes and looked at Folrig. "Where's Ruddle gone?" he asked. "Into the den, matey. 'Ere, give me yore paw an' I'll show yer." It was a cave at the back of the waterfall, completely hidden from view. Stepping from beneath the falls onto a raised ledge, Sunflash followed Folrig around a slight bend, and there they were, in a dry, rush-strewn cavern. Ruddle had already put flint to tinder and set a small fire. "Welcome in, messmate," he said. "It ain't much, but 'tis 'ome fer two 'andsome streamdogs such as us." Sunflash dried himself by shaking off and rubbing vigorously with aromatic dried grass. Ruddle produced beakers and a big gourd jug full of pennycloud-and-rosehip squash. Folrig busied himself chopping leeks and white turnips into a cauldron, eyeing Sunflash's hornbeam limb as he did. "That's a mighty big 'eadbonker, matey. Did you make it?" Sunflash hefted the weapon fondly. "Aye, it's my mace," he said. The irrepressible otter pointed to a bundle of thick red roots. "Mace, eh? Well, if you don't fancy smackin' ole Ruddle in the chops to improve 'is looks, p'raps you'd like to pound up those 'otroots fer the soup." Using the head of his mace the badger pulped the roots to shreds. Folrig tossed them into the cauldron along with some dried watershrimp, young nettles, mushrooms, and carrots. 98 Brian Jacques They sat round the fire until the soup was ready, when Ruddle served it steaming hot with chunks of barley bread. The taste was delicious, though the spiciness almost took the badger's breath away. Hurriedly he poured a beakerful of squash down his burning throat. "Phwooh! I feel as though I'm on fire. What soup is that?" Folrig began singing. "When I was just a liddle beast, I was so small an1 weak, I'd often fall flat on me tail, An' I could 'ardly speak. I scarce could totter round the floor, Me whiskers used to droop, 'Til granma made a great big pot Of good ole 'otroot soup! An' now I'm brisker than a bee, More fitter than a mole, Most every day I 'ear granma say, 'Give 'im another bowl!' I'll live a thousand seasons, Grow strong as any tree, Give me a spoon an' fetch it soon, Good 'otroot soup for me." As the evening wore on, Sunflash began to enjoy the tangy dish. In fact he ate more than either of his two friends. They sang and recited, ate and drank until all three fell asleep where they sat, around the glowing embers, with the soothing sounds of the falls in the background. Sunflash did not know whether it was night or day when he woke. Folrig had put more wood upon the embers and blown a fresh fire into light. The badger yawned, stretched, and took a mighty draught of squash from the gourd jug. For the first time he noticed an opening at the back of the cave. "Ruddle, where does that lead to? Is it a backway out?" he asked. The otter licked a paw and held it up. "It used t'be, messmate; feel that breeze, keeps the cave nice'n'fresh when the wind's blowin' in the right direction. Aye, 'twas once our secret way out, until a boulder shifted in the meltin' snows an' blocked it. But a little draught still comes through when it blows southerly." While the two otters prepared breakfast, Sunflash went to investigate the secret exit. Sure enough, a sizeable boulder had blocked it, and all that showed through were a few small cracks of sunlight from outside. The badger worked at clearing 99 100 Brian Jacques the rocks and debris that had lodged round the great stone, until Folrig called him. "If y'don't like arrowroot biscuits'n'o-ney with 'ot mint tea, then stay where y'are, matey, me'n'ole frightface'll eat 'em fer you!" Sunflash needed no second bidding. He enjoyed a hearty breakfast, while explaining what he had in mind. "Move what bits and pieces you need to the side walls of this cave—I'm going to unblock your secret backway. I'll push the boulder into the cave from the outside—and when you hear the boulder shifting you'd best stay clear of this place. Better yet, come and show me the backway from outside." The two otters followed him, scoffing and chortling at the idea that any creature could clear the obstruction. "Nobeast'll budge that ole boulder, it's there to stay. We both worked at it right through the spring with nary a scrap of luck,'tis wedged there for good, Sunflash." "If anybeast livhV could move yonder stone, why, we'd give *im a mighty feed an* call 'im 'andsome. Hohohoho!" From the outside, the backway was a natural tunnel in the rock above the falls. Sunflash climbed in and started pulling out slabs and shards of stone that had become wedged around the boulder. These he passed back to his friends for disposal. Once it was reasonably clear, he set his shoulder to the big rock and began to push, grunting and straining as he sought for proper purchase with his footpaws. Folrig and Ruddle sat outside the tunnel, concern evident in their voices. "Sunflash, matey, come out o' there,'tis no use!" "You'll 'urt yoreself, friend, it ain't worth it fer a daft ole boulder like that'n!" The large gold-striped head poked from the tunnel opening and glared at them; warrior blood was beginning to rise in the eyes of Sunflash. Outcast of Redwcdl 101 "Listen, you two ugly mugs, I'd advise you both to shut up! You're my friends, see—I've been guided through the swamps, been cared for, fed, and bedded in your home. So now I'm repaying you by clearing this secret way out, then I'll be on my way. Now both of you, sit tight here and not another word!" Thoroughly chastened, Folrig and Ruddle watched their friend disappear back into the tunnel. Setting his back full against the boulder, Sunflash lodged his paws into the walls on either side of him, his footpaws flat on the stone floor as he began to push. Muscles bunching and sinews strained, he concentrated all his mind on defeating the mighty boulder jammed squarely into the passage. The powerful jaws clenched vicelike, and froth bubbled around his lips as he strained, veins bulging and claws scarring deep into the rock walls. There was a slight creak, and dust powdered from the boulder edges to mingle with the sweat dripping from Sunflash's muzzle. Straining and pushing even harder, the badger shut his eyes tight as a red mist enveloped his senses. Then the four badgers were with him in spirit, his father, mother, and both grandsires, speaking as in one echoing voice. "Through wintercold and summerheat, The Badger Lord knows not defeat! Point of spear or blade of sword, Nought can stop the Badger Lord!" A thunderous battle cry ripped from the very depths of the badger's cavernous chest, and blood coursed through his frame in a torrent as he slammed his back into the boulder. "Eeulaliaaaaaaa!" The huge stone rolled forward, free of its constraints. Lying stretched upon his back, Sunflash opened his eyes and watched 102 Brian Jacques as the boulder rumbled off down the passageway. Picking up speed on the slope, it boomed its way through the cavern, swerving around the corner of the otters' dwelling and crashing into the cascading curtain of the waterfall. Folrig and Ruddle had heard the commotion; they dashed to the edge of the rocks, following the course of the noise. "Blisterin' barnacles, mate. Look!" The boulder came catapulting out of the cataract's center to crash into the stream below with a terrific splash. Folrig and Ruddle danced about wildly on the rock's edge. "Hohoho, bucko, Sunflash did it, I told yer he would!" "On me oath, messmate, I never doubted 'e would!" Sunflash cleansed himself of the dust and perspiration by taking a final refreshing shower beneath the greengold, sunlight-laced waters of the falls. When he had washed he stretched out to dry on the grassy banks of the stream below. Folrig and Ruddle bounded up, both carrying traveling staves and bearing three haversacks of food. The badger sat up and shook himself. "Hmm, and where do you two frogs' nightmares think you're off to, if I may make so bold to ask?" Ruddle answered for them both. "With you, of course, O good-lookin' one." Sunflash picked up his mace and one of the haversacks. "Huh! That's what you think—I'm not having two mudfaces like you pair following me about and scaring off the birds." Folrig shouldered his haversack, grinning. ' 'Belay that talk, butterstripe, we're bound to go with you. You wear the sign of Firjak's Oakden; we must follow it." Sunflash remembered the greenstone sycamore leaf talisman given to him by Elmjak, which still hung about his neck. The resolute expressions on his friends' faces told him that argument was useless. As they tramped southward he took the greenstone symbol in his paw and inspected it, musing, ' "This Outcast of Redwail 103 must be a very powerful omen. Elmjak told me that all squirrels and otters would aid me if I wore it. But why?" As they pressed deeper into dry, heavily wooded forestland, Folrig explained the significance of Firjak's talisman. "One time o' day the squirrels an' otters in these parts kept themselves to themselves, never botherin' with each other. Except for two liddle 'uns. They were Firjak, son of the Squirrel-queen, an' Bankrose, daughter of a great Skipper of Otters. These two were great liddle pals, they played t'gether often. But one day they was both taken by searats, captured an' marched off, far from these woods. Well, Firjak, he bit through 'is bonds an' escaped, then the liddle feller followed the rats, an' one night while they slept 'e slew two sentries an' liberated Bankrose. Firjak was wounded in the scuffle, an' even though 'e was but no more'n a babe, 'e carried Bankrose up into a big ole sycamore an' kept those rats at bay with a tiny sling an' some pebbles until a trackin' party of otters'n'squirrels arrived an' rescued 'em both. Young Firjak was sore wounded, down to 'is last pebble, too, a big flat green one, too large t'fit the sling. That's the one yore wearin' round yore neck, matey—the Skipper of Otters carved it to look like a sycamore leaf. After that the squirrel an' otterfolk became allies. So now y'know why anybeast wearin' that leafstone commands the respect an' loyalty of all otters an' squirrels." Sunflash looked at the talisman with new respect. "A tale of great courage. What happened to Firjak?" "Oh, Firjak recovered, but 'is footpaw was so lamed they say 'e rarely climbed a tree after that. Learned to swim, 'e did, somebeasts say 'e was more otter than squirrel in the finish." Sunflash was curious about the capture of Firjak and Bank-rose. "You say they were taken by searats. I never knew that searats came this far inland." Ruddle pointed westward, saying, "What d'you mean? We ain't that far inland, the great waters are only a few days over yonder." 104 Brian Jacques "Then that's the way we'll go," said Sunflash, changing his course. "Once I reach the sea I'm sure I'll only have to keep traveling south. Come on, you beauties!" Folrig seemed rather hesitant. "Er, it wouldn't be advisable to set a course that way, mate, searats an' Corsairs 'ang about the coast like ants in 'oney." Sunflash kept walking, calling back to Folrig, "If a squir-relbabe could defeat the searats they shouldn't be too tough for us. Besides, you two could panic them with your faces. Hahaha!" The following two days passed uneventfully; the going was not too difficult, the weather fine, and food plentiful. Toward evening of the second day, the travelers found themselves scaling some very steep wooded hills, each one seemingly higher than the last. Amid the stunted trees and shrubs of the final rocky tor, Sunflash called a halt. In the last rays of daylight he noticed a faint westerly gleam on the horizon. "Aha, it's the sea at last, my pretty ones!" he cried. Ruddle was still panting as he lit a small sheltered fire. "Well ain't that nice, clamberin' up all them 'ills so ole stri-pey'ooter can see the water!" "Huh, 'ills y'say, matey? If they was 'ills I'm an owl's uncle," said Folrig, unpacking supper from the haversacks. "It's mountains we've been climbin', bucko, an' none big-ger'n the one we're atop of right now!" Sunflash chuckled at his two companions. "Well at least we don't have to climb any higher, it'll be all downhill tomorrow, or should I say downmountain. Come on, you two frogfaces, dig out those turnip'n'mushroom pasties." Supper was laid on green twigs to warm over the fire. Ruddle dribbled honey onto three thick fruitcake slices, while Sun-flash poured out beakers of cold cider. Outcast of Redwall 105 They lay round the fire eating supper, enjoying the faint breeze. Folrig winked coaxingly at Ruddle. "I votes you take first watch, matey, yore the ugliest." Ruddle made as if to rise, then slumped back, saying, "First one can't solve a riddle takes first watch. What goes up an' up an' up an' never leaves the ground?" Folrig answered without batting an eyelid, "This pesky mountain we're on, that's an old un. Er, er, what's under the water an' over the water an' never gets wet?" Sunflash licked honey from his paws as he answered, "An egg inside a duck's tummy, even I know that one! Righto, what falls every day and breaks every night?" Ruddle sniffed. "Huh, dusk an' dawn, what else? What goes buhurr owch! Buhurr owch! See if y'know that'n." "Two moles fightin' over a damson pudden." Ruddle glared at Folrig. "How did you know?" "Well I should know, matey,'twas me that made it up!" They fell to wrestling and insulting each other until Sunflash pulled them apart. "Stop this fighting, you two, I'll go first watch." Suddenly Folrig and Ruddle wanted to take first watch. "No, no, matey, I'll go watch." "Oh no y'won't, I will." Sunflash tossed his mace from paw to paw menacingly. "I said I'll go first watch. Anybeast care to argue?" The two otters threw themselves flat, eyes closed tight. "Can't 'ear yer, mate, I'm fast asleep." "Me too, needs me beauty sleep, I do." Chuckling quietly at the irrepressible creatures, Sunflash strode softly off around the edges of their camp. He settled on a boulder from where he had a good view all round. The early part of the night was uneventful. Sunflash stayed alert, enjoying the silence of the balmy darkness. He sat thinking of his friend Skarlath and the happy seasons they had spent 106 Brian Jacques with the Bruff Dubbo and Tirry Lingl families at the cave. Intermingled with these thoughts were the dreams of his family: father, mother, and grandsires, and of course, the mountain, always the mountain, waiting for him somewhere in the southwest. The campfire had gradually reduced to embers and gone dead; there was no moon, only the wide star-strewn darkness above. Gradually, little by little, the badger fell under the soft spell of night's mantle. His eyes began to droop, and small sounds receded into the background, merging into a faint, comforting whisper. Then a weighted net was flung over Sunflash, pulling him backward off the boulder. Before he had a chance to break loose or lift his mace, the badger felt cold steel at his throat, at least a dozen sword or knife points. A gruff voice grated in his ear. "One move an' you're a deadbeast!" The net tightened as stakes were driven through it into the ground. "Munga, are those two others taken care of?" the gruff voice called out. A reply came back out of the darkness: "Out cold, the pair of 'em, Chief!" Sunflash began to struggle against the confining net. A sword point pricked him under the chin and a higher-pitched voice grated angrily: "Let me finish him off, Chief!" Shang Damsontongue was even easier to deal with than Bow-fleg had been. Swartt Sixclaw promised her joint leadership of the horde, plus many fine metal weapons, and she was eager and greedy. They sealed the bargain with fine wine from the south, Swartt drinking from the bottle and allowing his new partner the honor of drinking from the poisoned silver chalice. The sixclawed Warlord could scarce suppress an evil snigger. Would they never learn, these so-called leaders, that none was more deadly and pitiless than he? Once again he was Warlord of all the great horde. Shang's former band of foxes was only too happy to follow Swartt; issued with good metal weapons to take the place of their former crude arms, regaled with promises of lavish booty to come, they joined gladly. But Swartt had not reckoned with Balefur! The big dogfox had been only loosely attached to Shang Damsontongue's band. He was more of a loner—tough, in- 107 108 Brian Jacques Outcast of RedwaR 109 dependent, and fearless, Balefur answered to nobeast. Swartt had noticed him as the march southwest had continued, standing out, bigger than the rest, striding confidently, neither asking nor giving help to anybeast. Moreover, Balefur had armed himself with a large double-headed battleaxe, and he carried it with the easy grace of one who knew how to use it. On the second night's camp, Swartt decided to meet with the big fox. Being one of the few left with a tent, the Warlord had it set up, guards posted around it, and a fire burning outside. Cushions were scattered around inside, and Swartt's wife, Bluefen, set out a good array of food and drink. The Warlord was out to impress any potential friend or enemy with a show of splendor and power. Four armed vermin were sent to bring the fox into Swartt's presence, but from the start the interview went badly. Balefur sauntered in, battleaxe slung nonchalantly across his shoulder, completely ignoring the four guards around him. He winked casually at Swartt and leaned up against the tent post. Swartt studied his guest before speaking, then he crooked a claw at Aggal the stoat Captain. "Aggal, relieve our friend of that great heavy weapon." Balefur toted the axe, shaking his head at the Captain. "Nay, laddie, this's mah weapon, nobeast takes et from me, d'ye ken?" He laughed openly at the hesitant Aggaf. "Besides, et's no' heavy, ah kin wield et wi' nay fuss!" Taking a quick pace forward, Balefur swung the axe in a swift arc. Aggal jumped backward, but not before the axeblade had sheared through his sword belt. The fox picked up the severed belt and sheathed sword lightly on his double-headed axe and tossed it to the speechless Captain. "Och, yer no' hurt, stoat. If ah was aimin' t'slay ye they'd be buryin' ye in two pieces now!" Swartt got up from his chair; striding forward he faced the fox imperiously. "I am Swartt Sixclaw, Warlord of this horde!" Balefur looked away insolently as if dismissing him. "Aye, so ah've heard, what else is new, ferret?" Swartt fought inwardly to control his rising anger. "So you're Balefur, I can tell by your speech that yer from the far northlands. How did y'get this far south?" The fox shrugged, smiling patronizingly at me Warlord. "Och, that's a long story, but nae doubt ah* 11 be goin' farther a bit wi' ye, if we're t'betieve all yer talk o' great booty an' mighty plunder." Knowing the fox was getting the better of the confrontation, Swartt decided to change his tack. He smiled and clapped the big beast's back, saying, "I like you, mate, yer a beast after me own heart. How'd y'like to be a horde Captain in my army?'' Balefur chuckled, shaking his head. "Not fer me, polecat, ah'll leave that tae the wee beasties who like t'dress up an' play soldiers. Mah business is takin' care o' maself, not lookin' after otherbeasts." Seething inwardly, Swartt pasted a smile on his face. "Don't take or give orders, eh, a good idea. Come sit with me, Balefur, let's eat'n'drink together, friend." The big fox laughed openly. "Yer a canny creature, Swartt, ye drink from the bottle an' ah drink from the silver cup, eh? Is that what yer thinkin'? Well et'll no' work, ah ate an' drank afore ah came here an' :H ah'm off tae take mah rest now, so ah'll bid ye good night." •*$' Without waiting permission from the Warlord, Balefur shoul- •£ dered his battleaxe and strode off. •i When Balefur had left, Swartt leapt at one of the guards ! standing nearby and felled him with a mighty blow from his mailed paw. "There! That'll give yer somethin' to smile about! Any- beast want some of this, speak up an' I'll give it to yer!" 110 Brian Jacques At a nod from Nightshade, the guards and Captains hurriedly left the tent. The vixen hovered behind Swartt's chair. "That one is dangerous, Lord, he knows we poisoned Shang Damsontongue. But we will have to be careful. Balefur is much admired within your horde; we will watch and wait." Swartt gritted his teeth until his jaw ached. "I'd like to finish the blaggard tonight, while he's sleepin'!" " 'Twould not be easy, Lord, he is a northlander, experienced in the art of battle. 'Twould be no simple task to slay that one. If you missed then you would be made to look foolish in front of the horde." Swartt studied his six-clawed paw in its metal gauntlet, and said, "I suppose you're right, vixen, we'll watch an' wait. Nothing must happen t'make me look foolish in front of my horde. I want you t'go ahead and scout the land for three days. Make sure we're on the right course, I don't want them mut-terin' that we're lost again, Balefur'd just love that. Travel alone and let nobeast know where you're goin', d'ye hear?" Nightshade stuffed provisions in a sack. "I'll go now. Don't worry too much about Balefur, he does not figure in your fate, Lord." Swartt drew his curved sword and tested its edge. "No, but I'll figure in his fate sure enough. There's more ways of shell-in' an acorn than hittin' it with a rock. Go now." The following days were not easy for Swartt. Tales, enlarged by rumor, had spread through the horde, telling of his encounter with the fox Balefur. The stories grew more fantastic as they passed from one to another. "I tell yer, mate, Swartt's terrified of ole Balefur." "Who told yer that?" "One of the guards who was in the tent, 'e said that Balefur chopped Swartt's belt in pieces with that battleaxe of 'is." "So, what did Sixclaw do about that?" Outcast of RedwaU 111 "Never did a thing, jus' stood there tremblin', then Balefur goes an' lays Cap'n Aggal out with a single blow." "It must've been a good blow, that Aggal's a tough 'un!" "Hah, none of 'em are as tough as the fox. 'Ave yer seen the size of 'im? I wouldn't like to chance me paw with that 'un!" "Me neither, not if 'e did wot you said." "Well 'e did it, true as I stan' 'ere. I'll wager that ole Bale-fur'll be leadin' this 'orde afore long." Swartt could hear the murmurs; he heard the stifled chuckles also, though he could never identify the culprits from out of the marching horde. Luckily the going was easy, over copse-dotted grasslands crisscrossed by small gurgling streams. Alone in his tent at nights, the Warlord noticed that his Captains were hardly bothering to come in and report at the end of each day. When he slept his dreams were visited by visions of the badger Sunflash. Each morn he would wake, and the one thing driving him on, even in his present precarious position, was to slay his enemy, the badger who had ruined his sixclawed paw. Balefur, however, was enjoying his notoriety and courting popularity with his admirers. There were a great number of hordebeasts who favored the big fox; some were only too glad to serve him food, erect a tent for his use, and obey his whims. The horde Captains were plainly frightened of him, and Bale-fur took every opportunity to belittle them by making sideswipes at their authority. His prowess with the battleaxe was becoming something of a legend around the campfires. Often he would chop an officer's spear handle in two pieces and pretend it was an accident. "Whoops! Sorry about (hat, laddie, ye must've stepped in mah way jist as ah was practicin', still, nae harm done, eh?" 112 Brian Jacques Some days he would deliberately hold about half of the horde back by taking a rest in mid-march. He would sit at the edge of a stream, bathing his paws and calling out so that Swartt could hear every word clearly, "Och, ye march on wi1 yer badger-chasin', we'll catch ye up by nightfall, mebbe!" Grim-faced and silent, the Warlord marched onward, afraid to challenge Balefur's easygoing insolence in case he lost to the fox, yet knowing that while the challenge remained unanswered, he was losing the respect of both horde and Captains. It was a dilemma he would have to face sooner or later. It was in the dark of a moonless night when the vixen returned. The Warlord sprang up from the cushions where he had lain sleepless through the long hours. "Where in the name of fur'n'blood have you been all this time, vixen? Make yer report, an' it better be good!" It was good. Swartt's agile mind weighed up the possibilities as Nightshade explained what she had found. "Lord, you are marching south now, and have been for the last few days, but no matter. Two days from here a great river runs to the west. If we follow it to the shores of the sea, then we only have to go due south." Swartt nodded impatiently. "Yes, yes, y'did well, vixen, we won't get lost followin' a river. But there's somethin' else you've seen, I know there is! Tell me." Nightshade leaned close, her voice low, relishing the role of conspirator. "A little way east before I found the river, I discovered two old stoat hags living not far from a great hole in the ground, a quarry they called it. Funny thing though, these two old ragbags of stoats, they were living in a hovel made of grass sods, but it was ringed about by many thick ropes lying flat on the ground...." "Thick ropes on the ground, what for?" Swartt interrupted. Outcast of RedwaU 113 "I asked them that very question, Lord. They told me it was because of the snakes—they said that serpents won't cross over a rope laid flat on earth... ." Swartt stared hard at the vixen in the gloom of the tent. "Snakes! How many snakes were they tafkin' about?" "They said a great nest of adders live down in the quarry, where the stone is dry and sandy in places. I stood at the edge of the quarry with them and they showed me the entrance holes to the serpents' lair. Anybeast going into one of those holes would meet a horrible death for certain." Swartt scratched his painted chin thoughtfully. "A great hole in the ground full of snakes, eh? I wonder how they got there." There was disbelief in Nightshade's voice as she explained. "Those two old hags said that the quarry was made by many mice, squirrels, moles, and woodland creatures, who needed the red sandstone to build. When they left, the snakes took it over. I think those two stoat hags are as crazy as weed-fed frogs!" Swartt waved her to silence with his mailed paw. *'Never mind all that, if the hole in the ground is there and full of serpents as they say it is, then I've got a great idea. Listen carefully now, I want no slipups!" 15 The following day was light and breezy. Patches of sun and shade stippled the grasslands as Swartt stood on a small knoll, his face and teeth freshly painted, cloak swirling on the wind. The Warlord's tone had a fresh ring of confidence as he addressed the horde in a loud voice: "I've been travelin' due south because I know a great river runs west not two days from here. We'll march to that river and follow it west, and if we make it to the river in good time, I'll allow you a couple of days' rest, eatin', sleepin', and doin' what you like. Now break camp and let's move!" A half-hearted cheer went up, but most of the horde did not seem in any hurry to march. From somewhere in the center of the horde, Balefur's voice could be heard clearly. "All those who want tae chase badgers, follow the ferret!" ' 'If you think Swartt Sixclaw came all this way just to chase a badger, then you're slow in the head, fox." Balefur stared at Nightshade curiously. "What makes ye say that, do ye ken somethin' I don't?" 114 Outcast of Redwatt 115 Nightshade smiled craftily, tapping her muzzle with one paw. "I know more about Swartt Sixclaw than any beast living. Don't you believe he's down here on a badger hunt. Follow me if you want to know the real truth." Balefur followed the vixen as she picked her way through the vermin throng until the two of them stood alone in an ash grove. She sat and patted the grass indicating that Balefur join her. The fox inspected the area, then sat in a place of his own choosing, back against a tree, axe lying close to paw. "Ye dinna fool me, lassie," he said, "ah know ye t'be Swartt's creature." Nightshade's eyes were bitter and her voice shook as she answered, "For too many seasons, my friend, but now I'm sick of being treated like a pawrag—vixen do this, vixen do that, fetch, carry, yes Lord, no Lord." Balefur smiled as he toyed with the axe haft. "Och, then what changed yer mind all o' a sudden?" Nightshade leaned forward and grasped his paw. "You did! Swartt's afraid of you, it's plain to see his days as Warlord are numbered. I want to be on the winner's side. Everybeast knows you are the next horde leader!" Balefur pursed his lips shrewdly. "Tell me more, ah'm be-ginnin' tae like the sound o' this." Nightshade's voice held an undercurrent of greed and excitement. "The badger story is just a ruse. Swartt wants power and wealth. The position of Warlord is his power, but the wealth lies hidden southeast of here. Searats sailed up the great river long seasons ago and hid their treasure in a secret place!" The big fox immediately became very attentive. "Aha! Treasure ye say—where?'' "Only Swartt and I know. We fought the searats and slew them many seasons ago on the east coast. Before their Captain died we squeezed the location of the loot out of him. However, I know now that Swartt has grown too powerful to share any 116 Brian Jacques loot with me. What I'm looking for is somebeast I can trust, a fox like myself to share both the treasure and command of the horde." Balefur spat upon his paw and held it out. "Play me false an' I'll gut ye, but take my paw, tell me where yon treasure lies, an' ye've got a bargain. I give ye my word, lassie!" Nightshade spat on her paw and joined it with the big fox's. "Fox and fox together act, Here's my paw and here's my pact! "Right, when we reach the river, Swartt is giving the horde a couple of days' rest, that's so he can slide off and get the loot. He wants the horde to move west, but if you follow the river east and come back north a bit, you'll see a great hole scooped out of the earth, a quarry. That is where the treasure lies. Go carefully, and avoid an old sod dwelling where two stoat hags live. They act as sentries for the treasure, guarding the quarry. Those old hags are dangerous, they have knowledge of great spells, magic, and poisons. Keep away from them, and enter the quarry secretly from the opposite side of their dwelling. You will find many holes low-down in the pitface—choose the biggest. Follow down the hole, it is a tunnel, and at the end of it you will find the treasure if you dig straight down. Take two trusty friends with you to carry it back, for it is a great hoard that took the searats many, many seasons to steal and plunder. They say there is a great jeweled axe made from gold there, bigger even than the one you carry." Though Balefur's eyes shone covetously at the thought of such riches, still he asked the question, "An' what'll ye be doin' whilst ah'm gettin' yon booty?" The vixen nodded approvingly. "Good, I thought you'd ask that! I'll be convincing Swartt that you've deserted with a Outcast of Redwcdl 117 couple of your mates; meanwhile I'll be slipping a potion in his food that'll weaken him a bit. No sense in taking stupid risks. Then when you challenge him for the leadership you'll be sure to win. Now get going, take two of your foxes with you. If you leave now you'll set paws on the treasure a full day before we arrive at the river. I'll meet you at the cave to split the spoils." Balefur called back as he ran off toward the moving horde, "Ah'm glad tae have ye as a friend an' not a foe, Nightshade!" The vixen smiled and waved, knowing she was linked by destiny to serve only one. The Warlord Swartt Sixclaw! Balefur chose two dogfoxes, young and completely in awe and admiration of him. Without telling them too much, he shepherded them away from the marching horde, and they slipped off south and slightly east, away from the main body. Swartt was joined by the vixen as they forded a small brook. 4 'Well, did our big-mouthed fish take the bait?'' he asked. The vixen scooped up a pawful of water and sipped lightly. "Hook, line, and sinker, Lord; it was like telling a hungry ratbabe where cook hid the apple pie." There was no breeze that night. It started to rain, with a slight nimble of thunder from the west getting closer. Balefur had traveled hard and fast, the two foxes panting to keep up with him. Completely drenched, they halted on a hill of shale and scree overlooking the quarry. Lightning crackled from the sky, illuminating the huge pit scooped out of the earth. Wiping rainwater from his eyes, one of the foxes stood back a bit from the edge, saying, "It looks too scary, I don't like it!" One hard prod from the battleaxe haft left him sprawling and nursing aching ribs. The big fox snarled contemptuously. "Ah'm no bothered whether ye like et or no, laddie buck, up 118 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwatt 119 on yer paws now. Look down yonder, ye two, when lightnin1 flashes again, then tell me if ye see a big hole in the quarry-side." Thunder boomed and a bolt of lightning cut the wet night sky. "Aye, there it is, just off t'the left, see!" It was clear enough; all three saw it at once. There was a series of small holes, but one larger than the rest stood out like a great dark mouth, gaping wide. Balefur pushed the two young foxes ahead of him. "Shift yersel's, mates, that's where we're bound!" Still rubbing his ribs, the young fox protested, "We could do with a lighted torch to see the way...." Balefur's claws dug into neck scruff as he shook the protestor. "Are ye daft, laddie, where's dry wood tae be found? Ah've flint an' tinder wi' me, d'ye want me tae dry yer tail out an' set a light to et, eh? Now move yersel's!" The lightning became more frequent, and their descent to the quarry floor was unpleasantly rapid as they skidded and slipped over rain-slicked stone and through patches of wet clay. Muzzle over brush they landed, soaked and dizzy on the quarry floor. Suddenly lit by lightning, the whole place looked unreal, a crater of banded pink and red stone enveloped by lancing rain. Balefur shouldered his axe, saying, "Keep those wide daggers close, ye'll be needin' em to dig." "To dig? What for, Balefur?" "Ach, never ye mind. Come on—we haven't all night!" The hole entrance loomed dark and forbidding, but before either of the foxes could hesitate, Balefur had pushed them inside with his axe shaft. Once in, it was surprisingly dry and silent, and they took a moment to shake and wipe rainwater from their faces and paws. "Och well, at least 'tis warm an' dry," the big fox remarked cheerfully. "If ye feel anythin' around that'll do fer a torch, let me know an' we'll light one." One of the two foxes sniffed the air and shuddered. "Ugh! What's that smell? It's awful!" Balefur sniffed several times before pronouncing, "Ah don't know what et is, but mind, laddie, anyplace searats have been is bound tae stink a bit. Right, hang on to mah tail, yer pal can hang on to yers. Follow me." The moment Balefur began to suspect that all was not right was when the tunnel took several twists and turns. Attempting to find his way back through the total darkness to their original entrance, he found himself caught up in a maze of chambers, cross tunnels, and dead ends. The two young foxes began whimpering. "L . .. let's get out of here, I'm scared!" "Aye, we should never have left the horde!" Using his free paw, the big fox cuffed about in the darkness until he had soundly buffeted them both. "Shuttit! D'ye hear me, belt up, yer snivelin' gobs!" They went quiet. Balefur squatted in the darkness, trying to get his bearings, then he heard the noise. Flip ... Plop ... Flip ... Plop! "Hear that, et might be the rain's stopped an' 'tis drippin' from the rocks. Sounds like et's up ahead, right, let's go!" As they groped their way farther along the passage, one of the foxes yelled joyfully, "Light ahead, look!" Sure enough, there was a pale light to be seen dimly ahead. They dashed toward it, tripping, stumbling, and shouting, "It must be moonlight. I'll bet the rain's stopped!" It was a cavern, a vast, high-ceilinged chamber in the nat-ural rock. Limestone stalactites and stalagmites could be seen everywhere, some of them reflected in the pale green luminous tight given off by a massive pond in the center of the cavern. The three foxes stood disappointed but spellbound at the glowing scene before them. The smell grew stronger—sweet, dry, cloying. Balefur had caught that odor before on the battle- 120 Brian Jacques grounds of the northlands. It was the scent of death! Sss ssssssssssssttttttt I It started gradually until the whole chamber echoed to the sinister hissing noise. Then they saw the snakes. Every exit from that dreaded place was blocked by them: adders, writhing and hissing, baring fangs as they slithered forward. Scaly, cold-eyed, olive- and black-chevroned reptiles; long, short, thick, fat, poison, toothed and sinuously evil. Rearing, bunching and swaying, they came. Balefur had never witnessed anything like it, not even in his worst nightmare. The battleaxe slid from his nerveless paws as he felt himself fixed by a thousand hypnotic eyes. One of the foxes at his side screamed and threw himself into the pool. "Eeeeyaaaaagh!" There were only ripples on top of the bottomless pool to show where he had broken the icy surface, and a dark shape could be traced for several moments going down ... down ... down! Then, without a sound, their faces frozen masks of terror, eyes and mouths wide open, Balefur and the remaining fox slid silently into the rustling, many-coiled embrace of the serpents of the cavern. As the metal point broke the skin under Sunflash's chin, he felt its holder knocked aside and the weapon wrenched away. Then a gruff older voice growled, "Let it be, Gring, this is too big for a searat. Musko, make a light and bring it here. Let's see what we've caught!" Flint struck metal and a torch was lit. A raggy-furred shrew wearing a colored headband pointed his small rapier at Sun-fiash. "This ain't no searat, comrades, this's a badger, a big 'un, too!" Sunflash began pawing the net aside, angry at being caught napping. The fixing stakes flew from the ground as he stood. "Huh! I thought you lot were the searats. If you've harmed those two otters I'll make you sorry you were born!" A young shrew ran forward threateningly, sword drawn. "I don't trust this one, he could be with the searats. Kill him!" The older shrew neatly tripped the young one, then, relieving him of his sword, he thwacked him smartly across the 121 122 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwall 123 rump with the flat of the blade. "That's enough out of you, Gring. I'm Log a Log round here. I'll say who gets slain and who gets spared. Now behave yourself!" Turning to Sunflash, the shrew leader made a brief salute with the sword. "Sorry about that, friend. Hi, Munga, how are those otters?" The reply came back with a deep bass chuckle. "Comin' round fine, Chief. It's those two thick-skulled uglies Folrig an' Ruddle—good job we only sandbagged 'em!" A small fire was lit on the lee side of a protruding rock. The otters rubbed their heads as they sat around with Sunflash, Log a Log, and some older shrews. Ruddle introduced Sunflash to the shrews, wincing as he touched a bump between his ears. "It's a season or two since our paths crossed, matey. What're you shrews doin' up in these high hills?" Log a Log pointed in the seaward direction. "Taking a shortcut to head Warpclaw an' his searais off. We were off clearin' a dam from the broadstream few days back, and when we got home to our camp that villain Warpclaw had sailed his ship Gutprow clean up our river from the sea an' carried the liddle ones off for galley slaves. The old ones managed to run off an' hide—what else could they do?" Sunflash thought of the Lingl and Dubbo babes, and a wave of anger swept over him against the searats for stealing little ones. "How many babes were taken, Log a Log?" he asked. "Thirty an' four t'be exact..." Log a Log stopped mid-sentence. For a moment his eyes filled with pain. "And that includes my own little daughter, barely more than a season old." Sunfiash picked up his mace. "Come on then, there's no time to be lost. We're with you!" The shrews gaped open-mouthed as the huge badger went pounding off down the steep slopes toward the distant shore. They were amazed at his agility and strength. Where he could not climb he took great leaps, where it was too steep to walk he threw himself into a roll, and any rock or hindrance that barred his way was pulverized beneath the mighty mace. Folrig and Ruddle bounded after him, calling to the shrews in their wake, "Sunflash'll get yore liddle ugly mugs back if anybeast will! Hoho, bet yore glad t'be on the same side as this badger!" They made the beach an hour after dawn. Sunflash gathered them behind a rocky outcrop from where they could see the broadstream flow across the shore and into the sea. Folding a leaf, he began blowing a high-pitched signal. Log a Log looked at him strangely. "What're you doing, friend?" Sunflash stopped blowing. ' 'Just a chance a friend of mine might be around. Right, we need a plan. You otters, swim upstream and see if you can sight the searat ship coming this way. Log a Log, have you got any ideas how we can slow them down or stop them from reaching the sea?" The shrew Chieftain scratched his scrubby chin as he gazed out over the beach; then he pointed to one spot. "See there, fliat's where the sand forms in a bump on the tideline. The river flows shallowest over that part. Musko, Floom, go an' check it out for depth." The two shrews dashed out to the spot and plunged into the water. A moment later they were out and running back, dripping. "Neck high, Chief, just about neck high!" Log a Log turned to Sunflash. "That should be enough. How strong are you, friend?" Sunflash shrugged. "Strong enough. Tell me what you want Die to do, and we'll see how strong I am." 124 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwail 125 Captain Warpclaw of the slaveship Gutprow was a true Corsair searat, tattooed from face to claws, decked out in tattered silks and brass earrings, with a broad scimitar thrust in his waistband. He stood perched on the stem behind the tiller rat, leering down at the huddle of terrified shrewbabes crowding together around the mast pole in the shade of Gutprow'& huge single green sail. The dull-eyed slaves chained at the oar banks pulled steadily, keeping their faces down. They pitied the young captives, who would be condemned, like them, to a life at the oars of some piratical galley, but they were afraid to offer them any comfort. Warpclaw ducked his head and, breaking a green twig from an alder tree as it brushed the ship's side, he fanned himself with the leafy twig, breathing deep of the good morning air. He was in a rare good mood, happy to be sailing seaward after a successful raid that had netted him a good cargo of young ones from the shrew settlement upstream. Warpclaw called up to the lookout high on the masthead, "Ahoy, Bilgesnout, any sign o' blue water yet?'' "Not yet, Cap'n, may'ap we'll catch a glim o' the sea 'round the next bend—can't be far now!" Warpclaw stalked down the steps from the stern into the midship well. Turning to a fat-bellied stoat who wore a broad leather belt and carried a braided sinew whip, he said, ' 'Too fair a mornin' t'be dawdlin', Bulgom! Tickle yer rowers up a bit, let's see a turn o' speed out o' this craft." Grinning cheerfully through a mouthful of blackened and broken teeth, the stoat cracked his long whip across the naked backs of the rowers. Painfully they increased their oar strokes under the vicious swish and crack of Bulgorn's lash. The shrewbabes had to crouch low to avoid being hit by the whip's backlash; they whimpered and squeaked with fear. Warpclaw was having fun. He leapt down among them and, thrusting his,face forward, he snarled cruelly, "Yahaharr, me liddle beauties, I'll 'ave yer guts for ratlines if I 'ears one more moan out of ye!" The little shrews went into a terrified silence, clinging pitifully to each other. They were still not fully aware of the horrors that awaited them on the open seas. Bellowing orders, the searat Captain livened his crew up as the ship rounded a bend in the broad stream. "Haul in them fenders! Make fast yer mainsail ends! Lookout, where away the sea now?" The rat lookout leaned out from his perch, shading his eyes with a paw as he called back smartly, "Main dead ahead, Cap'n, I kin see the sun on the water atwixt these rocks'n'trees now!" Folrig and Ruddle had been watching the slave ship from a safe distance for some time. Shooting ahead like twin arrows through the broadstream waters, the two otters outswam even the small fish as they sped toward the shore. Sleek and shining from the water, they arrived safely at the hideaway behind the rocks at the beach edge. "Hearken, mates, the searat vessel ain't far behind us," said Ruddle. "What've you been up to, ole goldie nose?" Log a Log shook his head as if in disbelief as he patted the badger's sturdy shoulder. "This beast has carried two great boulders that a score of shrews couldn't budge. See over there where the sand humps up at the tideline? Sunflash dumped those boulders in the water right at that spot. I tell you, no ship'11 be able to pass them an' make it to the open sea." Sunflash took out his split leaf and blew one last loud call with it. He shrugged as the shrews and otters stared at him curiously. "It's worth one last try, though I can't risk that 126 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwall 127 noise again. Maybe he heard it; then again, he might be too far away." Log a Log shook his head; he was not about to start asking silly questions at a time like this. The big badger's business was his own, no explanations asked. Cool shrewbeer, oat bread, and cheese were passed around, and they ate as swords were given a last edge upon the rock surfaces, and slings were loaded with flat, heavy pebbles. Sun-flash tightened the mace cord around his paw, and all was ready. As the Gutprow came clear of the rocks to the open shore, the broadstream ran slightly more shallow. The oar slaves were made to stand and punt with their long paddles, digging them into the sandy shallows to push the vessel along. Warpclaw was jubilant at the prospect of the high seas in front of him after a trouble-free raid. A fair breeze from the east bellied the big single mainsail, hurrying the ship across the shoreline toward the white-flecked main. The searat Captain ran for'ard and, standing with his back to the bowsprit, he faced the crew. He waved his scimitar and roared, "Ahoy, buckoes, who's the best Cap'n on land or sea?" They cheered and shouted his name. "Cap'n Warpclaw!" Sunlight glittered and twinkled on his brass ornaments and shining scimitar as Warpclaw threw wide his paws triumphantly. Whumpl The searat was thrown flat on his back as the ship stopped dead. Two crewrats sitting on the after gallery were shot backward into the water, and the oar slaves fell sideways like a load of tenpins. A stricken-faced lookout came sliding down a rope and shot past Warpclaw, who was staggering upright and rubbing at the back of his skull with both paws. The lookout hung over the bows, yelling, "She's trapped 'ead on atwixt two dirty great rocks! They wasn't 'ere when we sailed up this way! Eeeeyyaaarrgg!" With a hefty kick from Warpclaw, the lookout went straight over into the water. Still massaging his aching head, the Corsair looked over at the spluttering rat in the water. "Guts'n'-tripes! Who stuck them there?" he snarled. "Give the babes back, seascum!" Warpclaw whirled around. Sunflash was striding across the beach, flanked by the two otters and backed by sixty shrews. The badger's voice was like thunder as he hefted his mace. "I won't tell you twice, rat! Deliver those little ones back. Now!" Warpclaw was a quick thinker. Forgetting his throbbing , head, he leapt down amidships and came up with a shrewbabe, then, holding the tiny creature upside down by a single foot-paw, the searat pulled out his scimitar and swung it aloft. "Stop right there or I'll slay this'n!" he bellowed. Sunflash and the rescuers ground to an immediate halt. The badger pointed with his mace at the wriggling, weeping babe. "I warn you, rat, touch one hair of him and you'll die!" Warpclaw knew it was a standoff, but he had the upper paw. /"Shift those boulders or I'll kill 'em all, every last one!" The crew of Gutprow sprang to arms; suddenly the rails bristled with armed vermin. Log a Log looked at the two ot-; ters, despair stamped on his scrubby face. ; Warpclaw chuckled; he knew how soft woodlanders were about their young. "Well, stripedog, you look big enough. Are yer goin' to move the rocks?" Sunflash could not stop his voice trembling as he answered, : "Give the babes back and Til free your ship." ; The Corsair knew he had won. Drawing the scimitar farther '..back, as if ready to chop, he called down to the badger, "Tell 'i yer wot I'll do. We'll call this liddle maggot number one, then 128 Brian Jacques Outcast of Redwall 129 I'll keep slicin' 'em until you move those rocks!" The wide blade glittered in the sun as he swung at the babe. '' Kreeeegaaaaaar!'' Skarlath hit the searat like a thunderbolt from out of the sky! One set of talons buried itself in the swordpaw while the other took Warpclaw round his throat. He fell backward, dropping the babe into the water. Then Sunflash the Mace was aboard the ship in a flash, bloodwrath of the Badger Warrior Lords rilling his eyes. Skarlath knew what was about to happen; he was powerless to stop it. Seeing the shackle that connected the slave chain, he wrenched at it madly until it clattered free, then he shrieked at the oar slaves, "Kreeeh! Grab those little ones! Get clear of this ship!" One paw at his throat, the other scrabbling for his scimitar, Warpclaw rasped hoarsely at the crew of the Gutprow, "Kill the badger, rip *im, tear 'im to shreds!" As the crew advanced on Sunflash, the oar slaves splashed overboard, clutching the yelling shrewbabes. Skarlath swooped down beside Log a Log as the babes and their rescuers were hauled from the water. "Kreeeh! Stay clear of the ship!" A blood-chilling roar rang out from the deck. "Eeulaliaaaaaaaa!" Log a Log drew his rapier, saying, "But we must help him!" The kestrel knocked the blade from his paw. "If you value your lives, stay clear of the ship, all of you! The sight of that rat nearly slaying the little one has set off the bloodwrath in him; Sunflash is berserk! I have seen it before, though never like this. He will slay anybeast in his path, he is a Badger Lord. Stay clear, I beg of you!" The gathering on the shore stood in shocked silence as roars, screams, and chaos echoed from the Gutprow. Sunflash the Mace was visiting death upon the searats who had stolen babes from the shrews. Outcast of Redwatt 131 17 With his back against the mast, Sunflash faced the searats six at a time. Daggers stabbed, blades slashed, but nought could stand before him. The mace swung and fell, whirling in arcs, sweeping like a scythe, smashing like a sledgehammer. The searats fought back with desperation, but their swords snapped like twigs as the Badger Warrior wielded his mace so fast that it was hard for the eye to follow. His speed and strength were unmatched. Onshore, the shrews covered their babes* eyes and ears as they looked away from the swaying vessel. The oar slaves, however, stood watching, grim satisfaction stamped on their thin faces. The vermin of the waves were being paid back in full for every lash mark, every chain scar, every day of near-starvation, every night they had separated the oar slaves from their loved ones. An old squirrel raised a clenched paw and shook it at the hated Gutprow, crying, "Let them reap the whirlwind they have brought upon their own evil heads!" 130 Not one searat or wave vermin left the ship alive. When his terrible task was at an end, Sunflash let slip the mace from his paws and fell down in a stupor by the mast. Folrig, Ruddle, and Skarlath had long since herded the shrews back behind the rocks at the shore's edge, where they ate and stayed resting . until sunset's scariet fires began lighting the horizon. Then the kestrel flew out over the silent ship. Sunflash was awakened by the lonely cry of seabirds. Lowering himself over the ship's side, he washed all traces of battle from his body and cleaned off his mace in the cold water. The badger's eyes were normal now, back to their usual mild, dark-brown hue. Skarlath landed nearby and watched as Sunflash took his jpnace and smashed two gaping holes in the Gutprow, one each ; side, amidships, just above the waterline. Placing his mace to •we side, he waded into the broadstream and, bending his back ii; ;iaad grunting with exertion, he loosened the two boulders from y|the streambed and rolled them ashore. The water had been v^uildins up behind the vessel, and now that it was free of the »-•-' D r ^iestraining boulders, the ship sprang clear. Night winds caught |