27
Aboard the Greenshroud, all talk of mutiny
was forgotten as searats and corsairs saw the long-awaited prize
within sight.
Jiboree stood on the prow end, pointing his sword
at the distant Abbey. “Haharr—there she is, buckoes, big an’
’andsome as ye likes!”
He summoned Shekra. “Go an’ tell the cap’n we’ve
arrived!”
The vixen tippawed into Razzid Wearat’s cabin,
thinking he would still be sleeping. Much to the contrary, he was
sitting in his chair, wide awake, facing the door, with his trident
placed within easy reach. His piercing eye was fixed on
Shekra.
“What do you want, fox?”
The Seer saluted by tugging an eartip. “Lord, good
news. The Abbey of Redwall has been sighted!”
Razzid did not appear unduly excited. “Where is it,
and how far away are we from it?”
Expecting a happier reply, the vixen answered
lamely, “Straight ahead, Lord. We should be there by noon.”
Placing the trident across his lap, Razzid
continued staring at Shekra. “When ye entered my cabin, I noticed
ye crept in—don’t deny it. I was supposed to be found lyin’ asleep,
eh?”
The vixen came up with a reasonable answer. “Well,
sire, it is only just dawn, an’ captains are allowed to sleep as
they wish. I thought ye’d still be restin’.”
The Wearat pointed at the deck. “Come here, stand
closer to me.”
Shekra obeyed hesitantly as Razzid urged her
forward.
“Closer. Come on, fox, a bit nearer. That’s
it!”
The vixen stood trembling, not knowing what to
expect next. She was so close that she could feel his breath on her
muzzle. When he spoke softly, Razzid’s voice had a hoarse
quality.
“Is there ought your captain should know?”
Her lips quivered. “N . . . no, sire,
nothin’.”
Razzid wiped moisture from his bad eye slowly.
“Good! You’re still my Seer, ain’t ye?”
Shekra nodded dumbly, aware of the single eye’s
intense stare.
His next enquiry came as a surprise to her. “Then,
tell me, why did I not sleep well?”
The vixen relaxed slightly. “Were your old wounds
troublin’ ye?”
Razzid spoke but one word. “No.”
She allowed a pause before speaking again. “A dream
disturbed your slumbers, then, Lord.”
Razzid sat back slightly. “Aye, a dream. What do ye
know of a warrior who carries a flaming sword?”
Even though she was puzzled, Shekra was on more
familiar territory. “This warrior, what manner of beast was he,
Lord?”
His reply startled her.
“A mouse, I think.”
The vixen covered her surprise by nodding, gaining
time. “Sire, I will have to consult my omens. What did the mouse
look like?”
As she rummaged for materials in her satchel,
Razzid snapped irately, “Idiot, he looked like a mouse, in
armour.”
Having gained a scrap of information, Shekra cast
pebbles, bones and shells. Her tone became foreboding. “The omens
predict a sign of warning. Do ye fear that, sire?”
Razzid laughed scornfully. “I fear nobeast, least
of all a mouse. Wot else do ye see? Tell me!”
The vixen gained confidence, resorting to flattery.
“’Tis right ye fear nobeast, Great One. The creature has not been
born that can defeat ye. Ignore this mouse, go forward and conquer
the redstone fortress. Nought will stop ye—’tis your right to rule
there!”
She awaited his reaction. The Wearat seemed buoyed
up by the fact he was nearing his objective. Then his mood swung
suddenly. He fixed her with a fearsome stare.
“Do ye speak truly, Seer? Well, do ye?”
Shekra adopted her mystic expression. “When did I
ever lie? I always speak truly to ye, Lord.”
Razzid mused aloud. “I often wonder if yore a Seer
or just a Soothsayer. So, ye say truly I have nought to
fear.”
The vixen decided to add a cautionary word,
covering herself against future events. “One thing, my Lord—beware
the flames from the sword of your dream. Remember, it was fire that
almost killed ye!”
The Wearat scowled darkly. “Aye, that’s somethin’ I
won’t easily forget. I’ll bear these scars for life!” Razzid sat
silent briefly, drumming his paw lightly on the trident haft, then
startled Shekra by rising speedily, an unexpected smile on his
face.
“Come on, friend, let’s go and take a look at the
famous Redwall, eh!”
The vixen stood to one side respectfully, but
Razzid held back, making an elaborate paw gesture. “No, no, you go
first. From now on, I want all my crew to go first, d’ye know
why?”
Shekra shook her head. “No, Lord.”
She flinched as Razzid tickled her back gently with
the trident prongs, answering casually, “Because I trust only those
who are in front of me.”
The crew were jubilant. They cheered their captain
as he strode out on deck.
“Ye did it, Cap’n, ye did it!”
“Aye, there’s the easy life, dead ahead of us, an’
’twas you wot brought us ’ere, Cap’n!”
Smiling graciously, the Wearat partially mounted
the rigging, so he could get a better view of the Abbey. They
cheered him to the echo as he held out his trident, pointing it at
their goal. Smiling benevolently, he nodded acknowledgement, noting
as he did that Shekra was standing between Mowlag and Jiboree,
murmuring something to them. All three turned. For a moment his
single good eye was smiling straight at them, almost with a mocking
expression.
Dorka Gurdy put little Guggle down on the walkway
as Abbot Thibb and his followers came up the northern wallstairs to
the ramparts. The Dibbun squirrel protested strongly.
“Lif’ Guggle up agin, Dorky. Me wanna see da big
ship!”
This caused Alfio to take up the cry. “Me too! I
wanna see da big ship!”
The Abbot shook his head pointedly at Dorka, who
caught on immediately. “What big ship? I didn’t see no ship. Run
along, now, or you’ll be late for brekkist, go on!”
Paw in paw, they toddled off down the wallstairs,
both minds with a single thought now. Breakfast.
“I wants ’ot scones an’ hunny, wiv a big bowl of
rasbee corjul!”
“Heehee, me too! I race you. One, two . . .
go!”
Thibb watched them for a moment, then climbed
nimbly up onto the battlements. Standing tippawed, the others
peered over the walltop at the still-distant vessel. Dorka Gurdy
could not resist the drama of the moment.
“So liddle Uggo Wiltud’s dream ’as come true. I’ll
wager when that thing gets near enough, we’ll see the Wearat sign
on its green sail!”
Roogo Foremole, always practical, interrupted. “Bo
urr, that bee’s all vurry gudd, marm, but wot’s us’ns goin’ t’do
abowt et, Oi arsks?”
Abbot Thibb hopped neatly down to the parapet.
“Good question, Foremole. We’d best come up with an answer quickly.
I reckon that vessel will be alongside us around lunchtime. What
d’you say, Friar?”
The weighty watervole replied sharply, “Well, they
won’t be gettin any lunch from my kitchens!”
Fottlink the mouse Recorder could not resist a
smile. “I’m sure they won’t, Friar. First thing we must do is to
keep everybeast indoors, especially the Dibbuns.”
Sister Fisk was still staring at
Greenshroud. “That’s a big ship, Father Abbot. Have you
thought, when it draws alongside our Abbey, its mast tops will be
as high as this wall? I think they could climb from there to where
we are now. If they’re seagoing vermin, they’ll be rough, savage
beasts. How’ll we stop them?”
Dorka Gurdy sat down with her back against the
battlements. “Wish that brother o’ mine was ’ere now, Father. I
wager Jum would think of an idea.”
Fottlink nodded. “Aye, no doubt he would. Now, what
was it that Jum told us about the Wearat? Ah, I remember. He said
that Razzid Wearat had been beaten by the sea otters on the High
North Coast. Weren’t they supposed to have slain a lot of the
ship’s crew and sent it on its way in flames? Aye, that was what he
said!”
Friar Wopple made a sobering statement. “All
well’n’good, but we ain’t no warrior sea otters.”
Foremole held up a huge digging claw. “Mebbe we’m
b’aint, zurr, but us’ns knows ’ow to make ee fire, hurr aye!”
Sister Fisk clenched her paws resolutely. “Then
we’ll make fire, lots of fire. A big blaze up here won’t harm the
wallstones!”
The Infirmary Sister’s determination gave them
heart.
“That’s the way! We’ll make those rascals sorry
they ever thought of coming to Redwall!”
“Boi ’okey, uz’ll burn thurr ship to ee cinder,
hurr hurr. They’m vurrmints’ll be a-scarmperin’ abowt wi’ thurr
tails’n’bottums a-blazin’!”
Abbot Thibb held up his paws for silence. “Please,
friends, let’s not get carried away. I’m sure it’s a sound idea,
but we’ll act only if they start to threaten us. Now, let’s make
some preparations.”
Razzid Wearat had positioned himself astern. He
stood leaning on the tiller, watching his crew, who were all
for’ard. As far away from him as they could get, the three
conspirators, Shekra, Mowlag and Jiboree, stood on the bow
peak.
Mowlag muttered angrily at the vixen, “How d’ye
know he suspects anythin’, eh?”
Shekra cast a swift glance back at Razzid. “I told
ye wot he said. Why d’ye think he’s stayin’ astern? He knows, I
tell ye. Razzid Wearat ain’t stupid!”
Jiboree had his eyes fixed on Redwall. “Wot d’ye
say we rush ’im? We could slay Razzid an’ take the ship. After
all,’e’s only one beast, ain’t ’e?”
Mowlag curled his lip. “Well, you carry on, mate. I
won’t be with ye. I know Razzid. He’d either kill one or all of us.
Right?”
Shekra was forced to agree. “Right, an’ another
thing, the crew are all set on gettin’ the prize—that place an’ all
the good life wot goes with it.” The vixen was getting more
disenchanted with the idea of a mutiny since her interview with the
Wearat. “I think we’d be best forgettin’ any of our plans until
after that place is taken. We need Razzid for that.”
Mowlag was inclined to agree with her. “Aye, the
cap’n’s the one to have on yore side in a battle.”
The impulsive Jiboree was not happy, but he was
forced to agree. “So be it, then, we wait. But lissen, mates, once
we’re inside that Redwall Abbey or wotever ye calls it, then our
cap’n’s a deadbeast. Right?”
On the walltop, Abbey creatures were carrying wood
up from below. Ding Toller and Dorka Gurdy were piling it at the
northwest gable whilst keeping an eye upon the ship’s progress.
Roogo Foremole and his crew arrived with a pile of old barrel
staves from the wine cellars, which they placed on a heap of dried
moss, dead grasses, withered branches and other combustibles. Roogo
dusted off his huge paws, winking at Dorka.
“They’m barrel stavers makes gurt flames. Yurr,
b’aint ee vurmint boat arrived yet, marm?”
The otter judged the distance from
Greenshroud to the Abbey. “Nay, sir, ’twill be some time
a-comin’ yet. When do we light the fire, I wonder?”
Milda, a helpful young volemaid, tossed a bundle of
dried bracken onto the pile. “Not yet, marm. Abbot said he’d do it
when the time comes.”
Sister Fisk called down the wallstairs, “Has
anybeast seen Abbot Thibb?”
Friar Wopple was hauling a large cauldron up the
steps, assisted by some of her kitchen helpers. “I’ve seen him not
long ago. Excuse me, but would some of you lend a paw with this
thing? It’s very heavy.”
Willing volunteers hurried to help with the
cauldron. Having delivered her contribution, the tubby watervole
sat on the top step, mopping her brow with a dockleaf.
“I saw Father Abbot not long ago. He was standing
in front of Martin the Warrior’s tapestry, so I thought it best not
to disturb him. I expect he’ll return here when he’s ready.”
Sister Fisk sniffed the contents of the cauldron.
“Phew, that smells a bit ripe. What is it, Friar?”
Wopple explained. “That’s some waste vegetable
cooking oil. I find it excellent for lighting fires—it burns for
quite a while. Be careful how you use it, Dorka.”
Morning wore on toward midday as the tension
increased. Trundling along at an unhurried pace, the big
green-sailed ship drew closer to the Abbey. It was clearly visible
now, a very threatening sight. Searats and corsairs lined the rails
and forepeak, armed with a fearsome array of weapons, ready and
eager to use them. Razzid Wearat held his position at the tiller,
with Mowlag and Shekra attending nearby, at his command.
He sized up the huge, red sandstone building,
nodding in admiration. “Well, I ain’t never seen nothin’ like this.
Wot d’ye say, Mowlag, do we attack?”
Confused that he should be consulted, the searat
mate merely lowered his eyes. “I’m here t’do wotever ye say,
Cap’n.”
Razzid turned to Shekra. “An’ you, fox, wot do you
say, eh?”
The Seer had been expecting this. She had a ready
reply. “Lord, if ye are set on attackin’, I cannot stop ye.”
Razzid raised one scarred eyebrow. “But?”
The Seer chose her words carefully. “But I would
counsel caution, sire. This is a big stronghold and unknown to us.
What number creatures wait behind its walls? Mayhaps if we were to
sound them out first, talk to their leaders, let them know who ye
are. We might not have to fight, once they know yore name an’
reputation.”
Razzid stared pointedly at Mowlag. “A wise
decision, I think. Wot d’ye say, Mowlag?”
The searat maintained his humble attitude. “Like ye
say, Cap’n, a wise decision.”
The Wearat stamped his trident butt on the deck.
“Good! we’ll halt within hailin’ distance o’ the wall.”
In the Abbot’s absence, Ding Toller had taken
charge at the walltop. Roogo Foremole levered himself up, noting
how close Greenshroud was.
“Hurr, Ding, they’m almost yurr. Do ee loight ee
fire naow?”
The gaunt squirrel drew in a deep, nervous breath.
“Aye, I think ’tis about time, but where’s the Abbot got to?”
Friar Wopple dipped a tankard in the cauldron, then
spread oil over the waiting heap of kindling. “I don’t know,
friend, but we’d better do somethin’ fast!”
Dorka Gurdy lit a fir twig from a lantern. At that
moment, the top of a mainsail drew level with the wall.
Redtail, the corsair stoat lookout, climbed into
view. Grinning nastily, he swept off his battered hat, addressing
them. “Good day to ye, gennelbeasts—”
As the words left his mouth, Dorka touched the
lighted twig to the pile and flames shot up with a whoosh.
Redtail yelled out in shock, falling backward. His
footpaw caught in the rigging, and he hung there upside down.
Fear gripped Razzid at the sight of the sudden
blaze. Memories of his blazing ship at the High North Coast flooded
back. He roared at the crew.
“Take ’er back! Back, I say, take ’er back!”
The vermin on the poles shoved hard, reversing the
course as the vessel rolled back from the inferno on the walltop.
The Wearat ran the length of his ship, heart pounding. He made it
to the prow, followed by Mowlag and Shekra.
The vixen stared up at the flames. “Just as well we
never attacked right off, Lord. They have a stone fortress, but
we’ve only got a wooden ship!”
Jiboree pointed to the battlements. “Lookit
there!”
Razzid stared, wiping moisture from his injured
eye, dumbfounded at the sight which confronted them.
Standing astride the battlements was the mouse
warrior from his dreams. He was wearing armour and holding forth a
flaming sword.