The Song of the Winns
The SPIES of
GERANDER
• BOOK TWO •
BY FRANCES WATTS
illustrated by David Francis
PHILADELPHIA · LONDON
For Mum, who always let me stay up
late to finish one more chapter
Text copyright © 2013 by Frances Watts
Illustrations copyright © 2013 by David Francis
All rights reserved under the Pan-American and
International Copyright Conventions
First published in Australia by
HarperCollinsPublishers Australia Pty Limited, 2011
First published in the United States by
Running Press Book Publishers, 2013
This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or hereafter invented, without written permission from the publisher.
Books published by Running Press are available at special discounts for bulk purchases in the United States by corporations, institutions, and other organizations. For more information, please contact the Special Markets Department at the Perseus Books Group, 2300 Chestnut Street, Suite 200, Philadelphia, PA 19103, or call (800) 810-4145, ext. 5000, or e-mail [email protected].
Library of Congress Control Number: 2012955521
E-book ISBN 978-0-7624-4838-8
987654321
Digit on the right indicates the number of this printing
Cover design by Frances J. Soo Ping Chow
Interior design by Frances J. Soo Ping Chow, based on
the original layout by Ingrid Kwong
Typography: Fairfield, HT Gelateria, Lady Rene, and Perpetua
This edition published by Running Press Kids
An Imprint of Running Press Book Publishers
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Philadelphia, PA 19103–4371
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Contents
1. The Lonely Road
2. FIG Headquarters
3. Night Flight
4. The Assignment
5. Crossing the Crankens
6. The Sourian Orphans
7. Never Vanquish’d
8. Departure
9. The River’s Source
10. Undercover
11. The Secret Paths
12. Cornoliana
13. Billy Mac
14. The Palace
15. Atticus Island
16. Trouble in the Tulips
17. Keaters
18. Settling Old Scores
19. The Traitor
20. The Rendezvous
21. Back to the Source
22. Songbird
23. Betrayed
24. The Heirs of Cornolius
Acknowledgments
1
The Lonely Road
The mozzarella was in an icy crevasse,” said Uncle Ebenezer with a shiver, to demonstrate how cold the crevasse had been. The movement made his big belly wobble and his long shadow shimmied on the road stretching up between two high ridges of rock.
“An icy crevasse?” said Tibby Rose, who was beside him. “The mozzarella was in an icy crevasse? But why? How did it get there?”
Alistair, walking behind them with Aunt Beezer, had to laugh at his friend’s perplexed tone. He and his brother and sister were used to their uncle’s stories, but then the triplets had been living with their uncle and aunt for years, while Tibby had only just met Ebenezer and Beezer.
Uncle Ebenezer didn’t seem inclined to answer Tibby Rose’s questions. (They were the kind of questions Alistair himself used to ask once upon a time, but his uncle had never answered him either.) “I saw at once that the only way to reach the cheese was to abseil down. Fortunately, I had a length of rope with me, so I looped it around a tree.”
Tibby Rose nodded approvingly. “A firm anchor is crucial,” she agreed. Tibby was an expert in survival skills. She had been named after Charlotte Tibby—a great explorer—and had read all her namesake’s books. (Her mother had added the name Rose because of Tibby’s pink-tinted ginger fur.)
“I have an instinct for these things,” Uncle Ebenezer admitted modestly, stroking his mustache. “I left my brother Rebus at the top of the crevasse—that’s Alex, Alice, and Alistair’s father”—he reminded Tibby—“and began my descent.” He shivered again at the memory. “The deeper I went, the darker it grew. The crevasse was so narrow in places that my back brushed the wall behind me, and my feet were so cold where they touched the ice that they burned. I knew that if I stopped moving I would probably freeze to death, and the crevasse would become my icy tomb.”
Even though it was summer, Alistair pulled his scarf tight around his neck as he imagined being surrounded by sheer walls of ice.
Ebenezer paused in his storytelling, and for a moment the only sound was the rustle of leaves in the trees lining their way, and the soft pad of their feet upon the road. Even Alice and Alex, walking behind Alistair, had stopped their customary bickering to listen.
“So what happened?” Tibby Rose demanded as the silence lengthened.
“What happened?” repeated Uncle Ebenezer. “I’ll tell you what happened—just as I was within a tail’s length of the cheese, I heard a loud thump, so loud the ice around me shuddered.”
“What was it?” Tibby gasped.
Ebenezer shook his head sorrowfully. “It was Rebus,” he said. “I’d quite forgotten how my poor brother was scared of heights. He took one look into the ravine and grew so dizzy he passed out. Well of course with Rebus unconscious he wouldn’t be able to pull me up once I’d reached the cheese—and I might die waiting for him to regain consciousness! There was only one thing to do: I would have to climb the rope myself. And for that, I would need both hands.” He sighed. “So, leaving that poor mozzarella all alone at the bottom of the icy crevasse, I began to climb. Inch by determined inch I scaled that sheer ice wall until at last I reached the top. Then, with my final reserves of strength, I lifted up my unconscious brother, slung him over my shoulder and carried him home.” All of Ebenezer’s stories, Alistair noted, ended with him slinging Rebus over his shoulder and carrying him home.
Alistair felt a tremor in his chest as he thought of his father. It had been four years since the triplets had seen their parents—and for most of that time, they’d thought that Rebus and Emmeline were dead. . . .
“I can’t believe Mom and Dad have really been alive this whole time,” said Alex, as if his thoughts had been following the same line as Alistair’s.
“Do you think they’ll have changed?” Alice asked in a small voice.
Ebenezer, serious now, said, “Four years in an enemy prison would change anyone. But you know, my dear, I think we will all have to get used to a great many changes now. Why, look how much you four have been through in such a short time; I’m sure your experiences will have changed you in many ways.”
“I’m even braver than I thought,” Alex boasted.
Alistair wouldn’t have put it in those words exactly, but he knew what his brother meant. He definitely felt more confident, and more capable, as a result of his and Tibby’s hair-raising journey through Souris.
“I’m glad to hear it,” said Ebenezer. “You may well have cause to be brave now that we have joined the resistance movement to fight for a Free and Independent Gerander—or rejoined, in the case of myself and Beezer.”
“Do you think FIG will send us on spy missions, like the one Mom and Dad went on?” Alex asked eagerly.
/> “Well, I hope not like the one your parents went on,” Ebenezer said, sounding alarmed. “Look how that turned out. But yes, it’s possible you will be asked to undertake missions.” He sighed heavily. “As members of FIG we will all be exposed to risks and dangers; your parents risked their lives to free our homeland, and any one of us may be called on to do the same. We are going to be living a very different life now: always on the move, always looking over our shoulders. It’s not what I would have wished for you. After your parents died—after we thought they had died, I should say—Beezer and I were determined that you would have a normal, happy, safe childhood.”
“Is that why you never told us about Gerander and FIG?” Alice asked.
“That’s right,” Beezer replied. “We weren’t going to tell you until you were older; though now I think we might have been wrong to hide it from you.”
Even after everything he and Tibby Rose had been through on their way back to Smiggins, Alistair still thought the biggest shock he had ever had was finding out that he and his brother and sister were actually Gerandan, and that his whole family had been involved in the struggle to free their homeland from the Sourian occupation. He felt as if he’d had a whole new identity thrust upon him. He didn’t mind it exactly, but it certainly took some getting used to. It was amazing to think his parents and aunt and uncle had lived with a secret so big for so many years.
And now he was the one with a secret, Alistair reflected—he and Tibby Rose. He gripped the ends of his scarf. “How much farther do you think, Aunt Beezer?” He tried to keep the impatience from his voice. A secret FIG meeting was being held near the town of Stetson in the northwest of Shetlock, right near Shetlock’s border with Gerander. They had left their home in Smiggins before dawn three days earlier, and had been walking long hours each day.
His aunt replied, “It can’t be far now. I was hoping we’d get there before dark, but I’m not sure we will.” She lifted her eyes to scan the sky. Alistair knew she was watching for night hunters. And it wasn’t only night birds looking for prey they had to be wary of as the light faded on this lonely road. There was a strong possibility that two Sourian spies were on their trail. “Ebenezer, let’s take another look at the map,” she suggested.
While Uncle Ebenezer and Aunt Beezer murmured over the map, Alistair and Tibby Rose stood with Alice and Alex.
“We probably would have been there by now if Alex hadn’t ordered the cheddar soufflé at that place where we stopped for lunch,” Alice grumbled, casting an apprehensive look over her shoulder at the road behind them. “It said on the menu it would take them an extra twenty minutes to make.”
“It was the specialty of the house,” Alex argued.
Alistair suspected it was fear making Alice so sharp with their brother. Unlike him and Tibby Rose, Alice and Alex had actually encountered the Sourian spies, Horace and Sophia, first-hand, and had only narrowly escaped being killed.
“Not far now,” Beezer reassured the triplets and their friend as they resumed walking.
Tibby Rose fell into step beside Alistair. “I can’t believe how tiring all this walking is,” she said. “I can’t remember being this tired when we were traveling across Souris. But it was much easier when we didn’t have to carry anything.” She put her hands behind her back to ease the weight of the pack on her shoulders.
“For someone who ran away from home with nothing, you certainly have managed to cram a lot into that rucksack,” Alistair teased. “Though we didn’t really do that much walking in Souris,” he reminded his friend. “Most of the time we were paddling down a river, on the raft you made.”
“And even when we weren’t on the raft, we did a lot more running than walking,” Tibby recalled ruefully. “It would have been so much easier if we could have used secret paths,” she added in a low voice, glancing at Alistair’s scarf.
Alistair’s hands closed on the ends of his scarf once more as Tibby referred to the secret paths that crisscrossed Gerander. Was it really possible that his mother had knitted a map of the secret paths into the scarf she had given him just before she left on her last mission?
He was distracted from these thoughts when a swooping movement caught his eye. There was something circling above them in the sky!
“It’s a hawk!” Uncle Ebenezer yelled.
“An eagle!” cried Aunt Beezer at the same time.
Ebenezer ran back toward Alistair and Tibby Rose. “Hurry, everyone!” he called. Taking Tibby Rose’s hand he ran toward the shelter of the shrubs at the side of the road, pushing Alistair along ahead of him. Aunt Beezer ushered Alice and Alex ahead of her.
Alistair crouched in the bushes, his heart racing, as the shape wheeled around, then descended. It was heading straight toward them! A shadow swept across the bush where he was hiding and Alistair thought he heard a voice say, “Oh, I really don’t feel well,” followed by a terrifying screech. A screech that sounded very familiar to Alistair . . .
“That’s not a hawk or an eagle,” he shouted. “It’s an owl!” And before his aunt or uncle could stop him, he darted out of the bushes.
2
FIG Headquarters
Alistair, come back!” called his uncle as Alistair stood in the middle of the road.
A giant owl swooped toward the ground, its talons outstretched. Alistair could just make out the shape of a mouse grasped in each talon.
“Oswald!” said Alistair, waving. “Over here.”
The owl hovered inches above the ground, then carefully released its two passengers, who stumbled a moment before regaining their balance. In the twilight Alistair saw a tall lean mouse and a small slim one in shiny black boots. It was Feast Thompson and Slippers Pink.
“We’ll walk from here,” the slim mouse was telling the owl, “and meet up again later.”
“Hi, Feast!” Alistair said as the owl soared into the darkening sky. “Hello, Slippers.”
Feast Thompson and Slippers Pink turned at the sound of his voice. Slippers, Alistair noticed, was looking distinctly queasy; she hated flying.
“Alistair! Tibby Rose!” Slippers rushed over and hugged first Alistair and then Tibby Rose, who had joined him.
By this time, the others had left the shelter of the bushes, and Alistair introduced Slippers Pink and Feast Thompson to his family.
“A pleasure to meet two of FIG’s highest operatives,” said Ebenezer.
“People only call us that because we spend so much time in the air,” said Slippers, laughing.
The group continued up the road together. Slippers Pink, walking with Beezer, led the way, followed by Ebenezer and Feast Thompson.
“It’s just around the next bend,” Slippers was saying. “FIG has taken over the Stetson school for our headquarters while everyone’s away for the summer. The principal is a supporter.”
“And when summer’s over?” Beezer asked. “Where will the headquarters be then?”
Slippers shrugged her slim shoulders. “On the move again, I suppose. Setting up camp in a cave in a remote valley for a month or two, if we’re lucky. More often it’s just a week or so in a forest clearing or in the scrub along a deserted stretch of coast. It’s been wonderful having a real base for a while: proper beds and running water and a cafeteria. Of course, we’re keeping a low profile; I doubt anyone in the village even suspects that there’s anyone staying at the school.”
Alex, who was walking with Alice in front of Alistair and Tibby Rose, groaned. “We’re going to be hanging out at a school? Eating in the cafeteria?” Then he let out an ooph as Alice nudged him sharply in the ribs. “Hey, what did you do that for?” he demanded.
Alice hissed, “Because Feast Thompson and Slippers Pink have more important things to worry about than what the food is—”
But before she could finish her sentence they heard Feast Thompson say loudly, “I hope Tobias has found a good chef. Slippers and I have been traveling nonstop for the last couple of weeks, and I’d give anything to sit down to a big,
hearty meal.”
Alex didn’t say anything, but Alistair saw him shoot a self-righteous look at Alice.
“Here’s the turnoff,” Slippers said, and at a fork in the road they turned left onto a narrow road winding up through an avenue of pine trees. “The school isn’t actually in Stetson itself; it’s on a hill above the town. It’s great for security, because there’s only one road in.”
“Except if you arrive by owl,” Feast pointed out.
After about ten minutes’ walking, Alistair saw that up ahead the narrow road opened out onto a large flat plateau partially enclosed by a wall of rock. He could just make out clusters of dark shapes, which must be the school buildings. As they drew close two mice stepped out onto the road to block their way.
Slippers Pink and Feast Thompson moved forward.
“Hi, Flora,” said Slippers to the tall blonde mouse. She turned to the tall brown one. “Is that you, Maxwell? It’s been ages.”
“I’ve been undercover the last few months,” the brown mouse said briefly. Alistair noticed that Slippers and Feast nodded but didn’t ask any questions about where Maxwell had been or why.
“Who else have you got there?” Flora wanted to know, peering past Slippers and Feast to where Alistair and the others were standing a few feet away.
“We’ve got Ebenezer and Beezer from Smiggins, and their niece and nephews and a friend.”
Max consulted a list, then said, “So that’s Alex, Alice, Alistair, and Tibby Rose, right?” He checked off their names and said, “We’ve been expecting you.”
Flora told Beezer and Ebenezer, “You can have adjoining rooms in the dormitory building for the next couple of nights. After that . . .” She shrugged. “We’ve just had word from one of our patrols that they’ve found a group of refugee families from Gerander hiding near the border. They’ll be here within forty-eight hours, and it sounds like they might have been injured in the escape. We’ll probably have to move you so they can have your rooms. You can bed down in the hall after that; plenty are.”
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