The King's Key (4 page)

Read The King's Key Online

Authors: Cameron Stelzer

Tags: #Rats – Juvenile fiction, #Pirates – Juvenile fiction

Mr Tribble let out a startled cry and the crew took evasive action. Ruby and the twins tugged frantically at ropes in a desperate attempt to collapse the sails. Horace seized the wheel and spun the ship in a tight arc through the water. Whisker grabbed the door frame to steady himself as the port side of the
Apple Pie
lurched towards the starboard side of the warship. An entire battalion of crabs gasped as the two ships scraped past each other with a piercing screech of timber.

For a moment the ships were locked in a grinding embrace, but with the jolt of a passing wave, they sprang apart and the collision was over. Whisker staggered backwards through the doorway, pulling the door shut behind him. With the click of the latch, there was silence.

He cautiously pressed his nose against the glass. Outside, six hundred beady eyes stared transfixed at Horace. Whisker reached for a scissor sword, expecting the crabs to hurl themselves aboard at any moment, but not one of them twitched. The uncanny silence continued until a small voice broke the stillness.

‘Stupid kid,' piped a crab. ‘You nearly killed us all!'

‘You're sailing on the wrong side of the sea,' scolded another.

‘That's a week of detention,' cried a third.

‘The repairs are coming out of your pocket money!' snapped a fourth.

Horace responded with a string of apologies: ‘Whoops … terribly sorry … it's entirely my fault … yes, we're insured … no, it won't happen again … of course I'm not sailing under the influence … I know, I know. I should never let a history teacher behind the wheel – it's all theory with them …'

The crabs appeared convinced that Horace was in fact an inexperienced schoolboy and the mice were preschoolers in fancy dress, and let them off with a stern warning. It didn't stop the crabs hurling a claw-full of school insults as the
Apple Pie
drifted past.

‘Oakbridge Smokebridge,' they chanted. ‘Crab Valley High rules!'

‘You've all got head lice!'

‘Hey smarty pants. What's four minus four?'

‘I dunno …?'

‘A mouse with no legs.'

‘Ha, ha, that's a good one …'

The chuckling voices drifted away in the wind and the Pie Rats sailed right through the blockade. Soon nothing lay between the bow of the
Apple Pie
and the open sea. Four rats and a blowfly let out a collective sigh of relief.

‘Well, that went well,' Pete muttered sarcastically. ‘So much for laying low in the Shipwreck Sea, enjoying a relaxing day off. Three close encounters and it's not even midday. Call me paranoid but I swear something's amiss.'

‘You may be right, Pete,' the Captain added gravely. ‘The Cat Fish have found us twice in as many days, which leads me to believe they know more about our quest than we first realised.'

‘Rat Bait,' Pete hissed, stamping his pencil leg. ‘I've said it once and I'll say it again: the dirty scoundrel's double-crossed us. He's ratted us out, I tell you.'

‘But Rat Bait despises the Cat Fish as much as we do,' Whisker piped up. ‘I saw how he acted on Sea Shanty Island when Sabre demanded the map. There's no way he'd cut a deal with a bloodthirsty cat.'

Pete let out a condescending snort. ‘Don't underestimate the power of riches, young Whisker – especially when it comes to a bounty of Cat Fish silver. Rat Bait wouldn't be the first Pie Rat captain to do the dirty on his fellow rats–' He stopped.

The Captain shot him a look of pure disgust. ‘My father has nothing to do with this, Pete.'

‘Sorry, Captain,' Pete muttered, shrinking into the shadows. ‘I won't mention him again.'

‘Good,' the Captain snapped. ‘Because right now we have more to worry about than a couple of rotten rats.' He pointed a shaky finger through the doorway. ‘If you hadn't noticed, that wasn't just a routine blockade we passed through. It was nothing short of a fully-armed battle formation. Every ship was equipped with extra cannons and additional troops. At an estimate, three quarters of the entire Aladryan navy was assembled out there. I have no doubt that something big is brewing – something that goes beyond the raids, beyond the arrests and beyond the attempts to stop the Pirate Cup.'

‘Oh dear,' Fred gasped, his enormous eye spinning in manic circles. ‘Oh double dear.'

‘B-but what are they preparing for?' Whisker asked fearfully.

‘I'm not sure,' the Captain said, walking towards the door. ‘But there's more to this than meets the eye and I, for one, have no intention of sticking around to find out.' He burst onto the deck, closely followed by Whisker and the rest of the anxious crew.

‘Is it lunch time yet, Captain?' Horace moaned from the helm. ‘We couldn't possibly fit any more danger into one morning.'

The Captain clambered up the stairs without a response, his brow deeply furrowed.

‘Oh, come on,' Horace pleaded. ‘We're in the clear and I'm famished.'

Whisker was about to agree that even Horace deserved a large slice of pie, following their narrow escape, when he remembered a piece of advice passed down from his great-grandfather Anso:
If it appears too good to be true, it probably is too good to be true
.' Whisker took this to mean: Stop. Take a careful look around – and prepare to panic.

Whisker stopped and looked around. Mr Tribble did the panicking.

‘Th-Th-Thunderclaw,' he stuttered. ‘
D-D-Dreadnaught
. B-b-behind us.'

Whisker's eyes grew wide. The blockade of ships lay far to the east. One ship, however, had broken from the fleet and was charging through the water towards them. Its colossal size made the other warships look like matchstick models. It was a four-masted monstrosity and it needed no introduction.

Every teacher, student, pirate, blowfly and circus rat on the Isle of Aladrya knew what it was. It was the blue jewel of the navy. It was the pride of the fleet. It was the pirate crusher, the smuggler smasher. Captained by the General of the navy himself, it was a destroyer in a class of its own. It was the mighty
Dreadnaught
.

The sight of the terrifying ship told Whisker one thing: General Thunderclaw, the most feared officer on the seas, wanted them dead. He was rarely outsmarted and he never made arrests.

The Captain removed his hat like a mourner at a funeral.

‘Well, that spoils everything,' he sighed. ‘We've bitten off more than we can chew this time. Thunderclaw's no fool. If he's after us, he's on to us.'

Whisker's tail dropped to the deck.

‘Sorry,' he mumbled, pointing at the jib sail. ‘I should have removed the red underpants.'

‘It's no one's fault, Whisker,' the Captain assured him. ‘Your plan was exceptional.' He raised his telescope and assessed the situation.

‘Can we fight them?' Ruby asked, hopefully.

‘Suicide,' the Captain said coldly. ‘The
Dreadnaught
, like the rest of the fleet, is carrying reinforced troop numbers – four hundred crabs, at least. She's sitting low in the water, which tells me she's armed with enough volcanic rocks to sink us six times over. She'll either ram us from behind or blast us to bits from the side.'

‘Oh my!' Mr Tribble gasped. ‘Surely we can outrun her?'

‘Slim chance,' the Captain replied. ‘She may be overloaded, but she's fully rigged with twelve sails. The
Apple Pie
has three, including the underpants. Spare sails aren't much good without masts.'

‘Perhaps we could surrender?' Horace said tentatively.

‘That option's long gone,' Pete sniffled.

‘But – but – there must be something we can do,' Mr Tribble pleaded in desperation.

The Captain shook his head in defeat and took his place behind the wheel. Mr Tribble put his arms around the mice, Smudge hid behind a pile of books, Pete scribbled
RIP: Rest in Pies
on the deck and the others stared hopelessly up at the sky.

The clouds overhead were fluffy and white. Whisker wished they were heavy and black – storms clouds had saved them before.

Fred pointed high into the air.

‘If only we could fly like those birds,' he said dreamily. ‘They're much faster than our ship.'

‘Well, we can't!' Pete quibbled. ‘We don't have any wings. Besides, the wind is stronger up there, so the lazy creatures are getting a free ride.'

‘Birds aren't lazy,' Fred said defensively. ‘A falcon once spent a whole hour trying to catch me for its dinner before I beat it off with a stick.'

‘Are you sure it was a real bird and not that ridiculous eagle sail flapping around in the navigation room?' Pete said spitefully.

Fred's ears drooped. Whisker's tail shot straight into the air –
of course!

He looked at the sky. He looked at the navigation room. He looked at Ruby. Her green eye sparkled back at him. She knew what he was thinking.

‘You get the Eagle,' she said excitedly, ‘and I'll get the rope.' She rushed over to Fred and gave him a big kiss on the cheek. ‘You're a genius, Fred.'

Fred gave Ruby a confused smile. Pete screwed up his nose.

‘Hey!' Horace exclaimed. ‘I've never got a kiss for a brilliant suggestion before.'

Ruby rolled her eye. ‘I'd hardly call your suggestions brilliant, Horace.'

‘Well, what about Whisker?' Horace asked audaciously. ‘He has brilliant ideas all the time.'

Whisker felt his cheeks ripen to a triple-strength tomato red.

‘Just-just give Whisker a hand with the Eagle,' Ruby spluttered. ‘Or you'll both be kissing crabs!'

Let's go Fly a Kite

Things moved quickly when Ruby took control. She was impatient, but she was efficient. As the ship's boatswain, the deck was her domain.

‘Find me four strong fixing points on the bulwark,' she barked. ‘And bring me every rope that's not holding up a sail. Who's good at tying knots?'

‘Not me,' Horace replied, holding up his hook. ‘Ask the mice. They've got small fingers.'

Ruby pointed at Mr Tribble. ‘Give me your best
Double Fisherman's
knot, pronto.'

Mr Tribble gave Ruby a timid salute and, with Eaton and Emmie's assistance, began tying short lengths of rope together. Fred reinforced the fixing points with saucepan handles, while Whisker and Horace dragged the eagle sail onto the deck. Soon four enormous lengths of rope were attached to the corners of the sail. The Pie Rats had their kite sail.

The
Dreadnaught
continued its swift approach, halving its distance to the
Apple Pie
in a few short minutes.

‘I need four strong teams to feed the rope through the fixing points,' Ruby snapped, ‘and a volunteer to launch the Eagle. Whisker. Up the mast!'

Whisker was accustomed to Ruby's demands, so without protest he wrapped his tail around the sail and scampered up the rigging. The rest of the crew took their positions on the ropes.

‘Swing us around so we're running downwind,' Ruby shouted to the Captain.

‘Aye, aye, my dear,' the Captain cried, with a vigorous turn of the wheel.

Whisker felt a strong gust of wind on his back as he reached the top of the foremast. Twisting his tail around the rigging to steady himself, he grasped the sail in both paws and shouted down to the waiting crew, ‘Let her out!'

The crew fed the ropes through the fixing points and the kite sail expanded with air, rising steadily upwards. Whisker held on with all his might until he was certain it had enough lift and released his grip. The golden eagle soared majestically into the sky.

On any other day, Whisker would have raised his arms to the heavens and shouted in triumph. But on any other day, there wasn't a
Dreadnaught
on his tail.

He glanced over his shoulder. The giant ship had shifted to a port side position in readiness for a broadside cannon attack.

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