The vermin horde found the path broad, smooth, and easy to march on, and good progress was made on the first day traveling south. That evening, they camped in an untidy sprawl, right across the path and on both sides of it. Tender young shoots and new green foliage, which would have been shunned as food any other time, were welcomed after their winter starvation.

Next day blustered in bright and breezy, lightly warm with random fleece clouds scurrying across spring skies. Swartt was in a good mood, pleased with the ground he had covered the previous day. Muggra the weasel Captain was still out in front of the army, dragging himself painfully along on all fours, his injured footpaw causing him great pain.

Pitilessly, Swartt marched hard behind Muggra, watching him crawl as he spoke to him in a cruel voice of mock reason. “See now, friend, you could’ve been marchin’ upright an’ brisk like the rest of us if you ’adn’t chosen to argue wid me. Come on now, don’t go sulkin’ an’ mopin’, apologize t’me like a goodbeast an’ ask me fer mercy.” He kicked the Captain, sending him sprawling on the road.

Muggra spat earth as he whimpered, “Mercy, Lord, I was wrong to argue with yer!”

Swartt laughed harshly, stepping on Muggra’s back as he passed him. “Get out o’ me sight, y’snivellin’ craven, an’ thank yer lucky stars I’m in a good mood t’day!”

Ssssssthunk!

A javelin came streaking out of the blue and buried itself deep in the path, in front of the Warlord. It stood quivering as the ferret fell back and seized Nightshade’s paw. “Where in the name o’ blisterin’ blazes did that come from?” he cried.

The vixen tried desperately to extricate her paw from the ferret’s vicelike grasp. “I don’t know, Lord, but it looks to me like some sort of warning that we should go no farther!”

Swartt held on to the paw, glaring at her. “Tell me true, fox. Did you ’ave any visions or dreams about this?”

Nightshade wrenched her crushed paw away, shaking her head. “None, Sire, I saw nothing!”

Tugging the javelin loose, Swartt broke it across his mailed paw. “One javelin ain’t goin’ t’stop this horde. Forward march!”

The Warlord stood still, allowing the marchers to walk past him. Screams rang out as the foremost three vermin fell, two pierced by arrows, the other felled by a hefty rock. Suddenly the horde was in disarray.

“They’re in the woods on the east side!” Swartt roared. “Scraw, charge ’em with spears, wipe every last one of ’em out! Aggal, Nightshade, line some archers up, here—jump to it!”

Redfarl watched the spearbeasts charge into the woodlands, letting them get sufficiently far from the path before nodding to a score of squirrels perched in the treetops. Half of the vermin were cut down by a hail of arrows, the rest, turning to run back, were set upon by otters whirling heavy loaded slings, which they used as clubs. As quickly as they struck, the attackers faded into the woodland.

On the path all Swartt heard was a few distant screams, then silence. He held up a warning paw, saying, “Stretch those bowstrings; be ready; keep yer eyes peeled on them woodlands!”

Still not a sound. Then Swartt heard a strange noise and saw the bushes shake not far from the path. “Shoot at those bushes!” he said, pointing.

A volley of barbed shafts shredded the foliage, and the rat Captain, Scraw, toppled out, already wounded by a squirrel arrow but now transfixed by seven more from his own side. Swartt performed a dance of rage, whirling his sword wildly. Horde archers ducked to avoid the blade.

“Idiots, did none of y’think to look before shootin’?” he yelled. “Put up those bows until we can see ’em!”

As the vermin archers relaxed their bowstrings, there was a shout from the east woodlands. A whistling rain of rocks and javelins hit the unsuspecting archers, and one large stone caught Swartt a glancing blow, stunning him. Nightshade signaled four vermin to carry him to safety, as she called out to the rest of the horde, “Into the woods on the west side of this path—hurry!”

The vermin needed no second bidding. They hurled themselves at the bushes, helped on their way by a shower of missiles from the hidden attackers.

The old rat carrying Swartt’s son was hit. Clutching at the javelin protruding from her side, she tugged at the backsling. Tearing loose the carrying cradle, she dropped it, babe and all, into a shallow ditch bordering the west pathside. She crawled painfully after the retreating horde and was trampled by other vermin in their haste to escape death.

Down in the ditch the ferretbabe wriggled from its restricting sling and began gobbling a mess of frogspawn from a muddy pool. It fed voraciously, neither whimpering nor crying.

*   *   *

Nightshade pressed cobwebs and damp leaves to the side of the Warlord’s head. Swartt gritted his teeth and staggered upright, grabbing a weasel as it sneaked past. “You! Did yer see ’em, who were they, ’ow many . . .”

The unfortunate weasel’s reply was cut short by a gigantic arrow, which silenced him forever. A jovial voice rang out from somewhere deep in the woods. “I say, top marks there, Jodders. Good shot, wot?”

Swartt looked around wildly. He could not stop the horde retreating deeper into the woods; they ignored his commands.

“Halt! Stop there!” he yelled. “What are ye runnin’ from—some ragtailed little bunch o’ woodlanders? Stand an’ fight!”

Another spearlike arrow thudded into the trunk of a sycamore, right near the Warlord’s head. Silently, he decided that discretion was the better part of valor and fled too.

*   *   *

The great otter Skipperjo was left in command of the path. His otters crouched in the foliage on the west side, ready to deal with any vermin who tried to regain control of the road. Sumin and Redfarl pursued the horde; travelling high in the trees, they picked off stragglers. The vermin ran as if chased by unseen demons, each trying not to be at the back of the horde, which was the most vulnerable position. Gradually they slowed, weariness taking toll of their trembling limbs.

Late afternoon found them in a deep natural hollow somewhere in the west reaches of Mossflower. Swartt sat, allowing the vixen to bandage his head with a mud and leaf poultice.

He glared at the silent horde, venting his spleen on them.

“Squirrels ’n’ otters, that’s all they was, a bunch o’ mis’rable squirrels ’n’ otters, an’ you beauties ran from ’em. Tell ’em, Nightshade—you saw them, didn’t yer? Squirrels’n’otters, that’s all they were!”

A surly voice called out from the horde, “I never seen squirrels shootin’ arrers as big as that’n wot wiped out pore Grinflit!”

Swartt’s head was aching; he was too tired to reprimand the culprit. Instead he beckoned his Captains, and they gathered round as he lay back, covering his eyes with his mailed paw. “Well, what’ve you lot got t’say fer yerselves, eh?” he growled.

The replies were what he expected.

“No point in gettin’ slain for trespassin’ on some otherbeast’s road, Chief.”

“Keep travellin’ west, that’s what we were doin’ in the first place.”

“Aye, you can’t slay an invisible army. We lost a good number today, an’ didn’t even see who did the killin’!”

Swartt stood up, shaking his head sorrowfully but secretly glad that his Captains had provided him with an excuse not to turn back and seek retribution on the foebeast. “Huh, the backbone’s gone from you lot, yer a load o’ jellyfish. Ah well, I s’pose we’ll keep goin’ west through this forest if yer all too scared to go back an’ avenge yer dead mates.”

*   *   *

Redfarl perched in the low branches of an elm nearby, listening to what was going on. Her tail shot upright, a signal to the waiting squirrel archers stationed in the trees not far from the horde. They fired a line of shafts into the ground, not a pawsbreadth from where the vermin sat. Slightly farther back in the woodland cover, Jodd lay flat on the earth, his head inside a great hollow log. The hare’s voice echoed and boomed as he called slowly in a loud sepulchral voice, “Begone from our land while you still live! Worms feast upon any who try to stand against us; their bones rot upon the territory of the phantom slayers! Go noooooooowww!”

All the squirrels in the trees, plus a few otters who were with Jodd, echoed the mournful howl: “Go noooooowwww!”

Nightshade could be heard shouting as the horde took to their heels and charged westward into Mossflower, the speed of panic urging them on.

“Carry Lord Swartt, he is injured! See the line of arrows, it is a warning, the phantom slayers have spoken. Let us go!”

The vixen found she was talking to herself; the horde had gone. Without a backward glance, she dashed off after them.

*   *   *

Some of the squirrels nearly fell from the trees, laughing. Jodd was still lying with his head in the hollow log, calling mournfully, “I’m starving. Wonder what’s for bally supper, us phantoms have t’jolly well eeeeeeaaaaattttt!”

Sumin gripped Redfarl’s paw gratefully. “We did it, thanks to you an’ Skipperjo. Redwall Abbey is deep in your debt. We will hold a feast for you all!”

The squirrelhare’s voice boomed out from below. “That’s the ticket, a great feast! Sooooooooper!”

Skipperjo met them back at the path, and there was much paw-shaking, tail-wagging, and back-slapping.

“Never lost a one of my otters, we tricked ’em good, mates!”

“Aye, all my archers are accounted for, not a scratch on any of ’em. We did a great thing here today, eh, Sumin?”

The sturdy squirrel beamed proudly. “We did that, it was risky an’ darin’, but we pulled it off. A good yarn to tell the young ’uns, Skipperjo!”

The brawny otter held up a paw. “Oh, talkin’ about young uns, matey, lookit what I found.”

He signaled to a female otter, who came forward bearing a small bundle, which she carried in two slings tied together across her back.

The lanky Jodd peered into the improvised cradle. “Great fur’n’feathers! It’s a jolly little junior vermin. Yowch! The bounder chomped m’paw. Good appetite, wot?”

Sumin watched as the otter placed the squirming ferretbabe on the soft grass at the pathside. Skipperjo shook his head, saying, “Pore liddle thing, looks ’arf starved. What’ll we do with it?”

Sumin waggled a paw at the ferretbabe, and it snarled. “Suppose we’ll have to take him back to the Abbey an’ let Abbess Meriam sort it out, that’s unless anybeast here fancies adoptin’ ’im?”

There was silence. Redfarl touched the ferretbabe gently, and it bit her. Stonefaced, she watched the small creature licking its teeth, savoring the taste of blood, and said, “I know ’tis a hard thing to say about a babe, even a liddle vermin, but let me tell you, no good will ever come of this one. Don’t ask me why, I just feel it in my fur!”