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Authors: Terence Blacker

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BOOK: The Twyning
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And yet here I was, growing stronger by the day. My head was full of something that seemed like a human revelation. The enemy had a name. Caz. The only doe I had ever loved, Malaika, would rest in her hand. I would even see her sleep there sometimes.

From the moment I grew fur, citizens had looked at the white mark on my head and mocked me for the trace of fragile blood it revealed. Now I feared that the fragile in me was allowing me to grow too soft and trusting.

I had to leave that place. I would save Malaika from the enemy, and together we would return to the world below. The kingdom is good. A ratling can grow to be great. I had seen enough of the reign of Jeniel to know that citizens were not threatened only by humans. There would be a danger in returning, but I had no choice. It was my home, and I was needed there.

And yet . . .

The sounds and smells of humans nearby were now almost a comfort to me. The revelations of Caz began to seem almost natural. I confess that I was glad to feel them within my head.

— How are you this morning, Efren?

— My legs are stronger. I can drink.

— Stay with us. We are all a family here.

What could I say? How could I explain that I knew of human trickery, of the deadly danger of them, that all I wanted to do was take Malaika away to the safety of the world below.

When she asked me again and again to stay, I would not reveal in reply. Eventually Caz would go away.

One night, Malaika and I went on a little journey out of the mountain. It was not forever (I knew that Malaika was strangely tied to these humans), but she needed to see me away from this place. With me, and back in the kingdom, she would begin to understand freedom, the true way of the rat.

I was still weak, so we were unable to travel far. Malaika showed me the eating places where humans left portions of their unfinished food. She took me to a spring where we drank and rested, then to a small wood where, she said, we would find eggs as the year grew warmer.

— But we shall have gone by then, Malaika.

My revelation was gentle, and she had heard it before.

— Perhaps.

She looked into my eyes, and I felt a lurch within me that was so strong that a noise, a small squeak of longing, escaped from me.

— You are tired, Efren. Let us return home.

— I am not tired. It is not home. We are rats; we are free.

— My love.

She moved closer to me in a movement that was more than merely comforting.

I cannot tell what would have happened if, at that moment, I had not become aware of a rustle, a sort of tickle of sound, within me. Something about me must have changed, for Malaika looked at me, alarmed.

— What is it, Efren? What is happening?

It grew louder within me, refusing to be ignored.

— I am hearing.

— Hearing what?

I closed my eyes. What was reaching me is difficult to describe. It was worse, in its way, than the scream of agony from King Tzuriel I had heard all those days ago. It was citizens of the kingdom keening. There had been a great loss, a terrible defeat. The pain of that chorus made me shake. I was hearing death.

I turned to Malaika, and in that moment, I was suddenly lost in a new unhappiness. The gift of hearing involves the greatest sacrifice a rat can give. As I looked at her, I knew that what I wanted above all else was impossible.

— I am a hearer.

— A hearer?

— Messages reach me. Only a few rats have the gift. They are important to the kingdom.

— Efren.

She looked at me with wide eyes, as if sensing that being a hearer could only be bad news.

— Does that mean you will have to return to the world below?

— More than that.

I moved away from her, knowing in that moment that the choice facing me was no choice at all.

I was a hearer. The kingdom was calling me.

Malaika nudged me with her nose, puzzled by my coldness.

— Tell me.

— If I have a family with you, I shall lose my gift.

— Love, Efren. The kingdom lives on love. We can be happy. We can bring more ratlings into the world. Is that not enough duty for one rat?

I gazed into Malaika’s eyes. She made it seem so simple, so easy.

She revealed again, moving closer to me.

— Love, Efren. Your duty is love.

. . . sniffing at each other, suspicious, stiff-legged, their hackles standing. They are as unlike one another as any two men could be — the doctor, with his suit and waistcoat and his booming voice; Bill, in his baggy working clothes, with his crooked back, unshaven face, and eyes that rarely look at you.

They have only two things in common, and one of them is that I work for both of them.

“How d’you know this character anyway?” Bill asks me when we are on our way to the doctor’s house the morning after pit day at the Cock Inn.

“I work for him now and then, Bill.”

“Work?”

“I catch rats with him.”

“What does he want with rats?”

“He cuts them up. He studies them.”

As we turn into the street where the doctor lives, Bill stops walking. He looks at the grand houses that surround us, then at me.

“Ah.”

I walk on. Bill may be quiet, and his work may be catching rats, but he is not a stupid man. Now he knows the answer to what has been troubling him throughout the night.

“It was you.”

I keep walking, head down.

“You were the one who told them.”

Ahead of him, I have reached the front door.

“There’s money in it, Bill,” I say. “This could be an earner for you.”

He walks toward me, and for a moment it seems as if he is going to strike me. I wait for the blow, knowing it is what I deserve. But instead he just shakes his head, like a man used to being disappointed by what people do.

It hurts more than any slap.

“Sorry, Bill.”

He lifts the knocker on the door of the doctor’s house and raps it twice. “If this goes wrong, I’ll know who to blame,” he says.

The door opens, and they are face-to-face at last, my two employers. We enter the house.

And here’s the second thing they have in common. Rats. I have reason to be grateful for that.

When we reach the laboratory and the doctor starts talking about his studies of the rat, Bill’s body seems to relax.

“My research suggests that a single buck and doe could in theory be responsible for fifteen thousand creatures in the period of one year,” says the doctor.

“They’d be going a bit,” Bill mutters.

“They would, but it is possible. Take a brood of nine young. The doe can conceive within three weeks. Gestation period is —”

“Twelve, more like,” Bill interrupts. “I’ve seen several broods of twelve.”

“Really?” The doctor takes out a piece of paper from his jacket pocket and scribbles upon it. “And where were these broods?”

“There is a granary near the river. The rats in that area always have big families. Strong, too. Great fighters, they are.”

“Fascinating. Would you be able to show me where they are, Mr. Grubstaff?”

“Bill’s the name.”

“Ah, yes, excellent. Bill.”

Soon they have forgotten my presence altogether. At last, each of them has found someone to share their rat talk. All other differences between them are soon forgotten.

They chat about traps and gas and ferrets and dogs. With the help of a map of the area, they begin to plan their great campaign — “the battlefield,” as the doctor calls it.

Later that morning, the three of us go down to the river near the sewerage run. The doctor shows Bill the manhole where we released the gas. Bill leads the doctor to the places where he has seen and heard rats’ nests.

That gloomy November day, we stand by the river. The doctor talks eagerly about the first battle in his war against rats.

“There is a place called Fisher’s Field,” he says. “D’you know it, Bill?”

“I do.”

“Once sheep grazed there, but today it is scrap land, a place where stray dogs roam, where beggars sleep in the summer months.”

“Good place for rats, Fisher’s Field,” said Bill.

The doctor reaches into his leather bag and takes out a heavy, folded sheet of paper.

“I am no draftsman,” he says, “but I have drawn a map of the area.” He unfolds the paper, and there, more neatly than I would have believed, is a little drawing of the field and its surroundings.

“The river runs beside it. Here”— he points with a finger — “is one culvert leading to the gutters. There are two others across the field, there and here. If we could flush the rats from the sewerage channels where they live below the ground, they will escape into Fisher’s Field.”

Bill nods, a little smile on his face. “Put some dogs in the field and you could take a few of the beasts.”

“Or . . .” Now there is excitement in the doctor’s voice. “Surround the field. Put close-meshed wire on every side. Trap the beasts. Men and dogs all around the boundary.”

“Like a giant pit.”

“Precisely.”

“What about the river? Beasts are good swimmers.”

“We shall have two nets, upstream and downstream. The riverbank is steep brickwork on the far side. They’ll be trapped in the water. Boats. Men with clubs. Dogs.”

“And how do you spring them from the sewerage?”

The doctor glances in my direction, as if his secret may not be safe with me. “Gas.” He speaks in a low murmur. “The councilmen don’t like it, but it’s the way we have to do it. The rats will have only one escape route.”

“Into Fisher’s Field?”

“Correct.”

Bill gazes at the map, and just for a moment, it seems to me that a flicker of sadness crosses his face.

“It will be a massacre,” he says.

The doctor laughs happily. “It will indeed — the most marvelous massacre. Will the setters help us, do you think?”

Bill nods. “It’ll be the best hunt they’ve ever had.”

It is dark before I am able to leave for home.

I should feel glad as I trudge the dark streets on my way back to the tip. My betrayal of Bill and the ratters and setters who come to the Cock Inn has been forgotten. My two employers have become unlikely friends. There will be work for me, and money, too. Today, since I have worked with both the doctor and Bill, I have been given two shillings.

Maybe Caz will not have to dance in the street anymore. Maybe we can find somewhere to live that is not a rubbish tip.

Yet there is something that tugs at me. Something feels wrong about this great war on rats.

I buy two pies at Mrs. Bailey’s shop but I’m in no mood to listen to her chat, however friendly.

I have never been happier to return home to the tip. There is a cold drizzle falling as I duck into the passage leading into the mound like the mouth of a fox’s earth. I whistle low for Caz.

Normally she whistles back — it’s a sound that makes my heart lift — but tonight the tip is silent. Stranger still, I see no candlelight to guide me to our little room within its walls of rubbish.

“Caz?”

I call her name quietly. There is a rustle in the passage ahead of me and I smile, thinking it is my girl.

It is her rat, Malaika.

“Hello, beast,” I say. “Where’s your mistress, then?”

I reach our room. It is empty.

“Caz?”

The pile of bedding is neat, the way she leaves it when she goes to work.

I wait. I listen.

Silence.

Malaika emerges from the tangle of rubbish and sniffs around the bedding.

“Caz?”

A feeling of cold dread descends upon me.

She is gone.

. . . but they can see visions. During the day while I slept, I heard the screams of the kingdom. The pulsing within me of countless citizens facing their death made me tremble. I saw the faces, wide of eye and with blood around their mouths, of those who had died.

And yet somehow I could not recognize the faces of those calling out to me. Now and then I thought I saw the three-legged shape of Fang, the smooth flank of Swylar, the gentle lifeless eyes of Alpa, but I could never be sure.

It was worst at night. The kingdom was drawing me back. As the certainty of what I had to do became stronger, I revealed less to Malaika. I could see in her eyes the hurt I was causing her.

BOOK: The Twyning
11.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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