The Secret of the Ginger Mice

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The Secret of the Ginger Mice Page 12

by Song of the Winns

Alice covered her eyes with her hands and shook her head. “I don’t know what to do,” she wailed. “Who’s in more danger: Alistair, or Beezer and Ebenezer?”

  “Or us?” added Alex, glancing back down the road. “Look, their first priority seems to be Alistair, so I think he should be our first priority too. Besides, Beezer and Ebenezer have each other, and Alistair only has us to help him.”

  And so it was decided. They’d continue on to Shambles.

  14

  The Mouse from Gerander

  Alistair swiped an impatient hand over his eyes. It was almost impossible to see through the rain and the mist rising from the waterfall, but the deafening roar in his ears told him the waterfall was very close. The raft was rocking violently from side to side as the river surged toward the precipice ahead. He was about to shout to Tibby to hold on, that they were going over, when he noticed her edging determinedly toward the front of the raft on her knees, holding the pole horizontally in both hands at chest height.

  “Grab onto the pole!” she yelled above the thunder of the water. Without hesitation Alistair dropped his paddle and did as he was told. As the raft shot through a narrow rocky chute on a crest of tumbling water, the pole held firm across the chasm, the two mice flung against it by the force of the torrent.

  For several minutes, they did nothing but cling to the pole, buffeted by the relentless rush of water. Then, at a nudge from Tibby, Alistair began to edge to the right, where the pole rested on a narrow platform of rock at the base of a steep cliff.

  Minutes later the two sodden mice collapsed, panting, onto the rock. Alistair lay face down, his heart pounding, still feeling the terror of their close shave.

  “We lost the raft,” Tibby said sorrowfully, when she had caught her breath enough to speak.

  “Things could be worse,” Alistair joked weakly. “At least we’re not ginger.”

  Sure enough, despite their thorough soaking, they were still a muddy purple.

  Eventually, Alistair sat up. He took his scarf from around his neck and wrung it out, then got to his feet. His limbs were shaky with adrenaline.

  “How are you feeling, Tib?” he asked.

  Tibby Rose turned her head to look at him. Her eyes were wide. “Scared stiff,” she said. “If that makes any sense after the fact.”

  “I know exactly what you mean,” Alistair assured her. “But do you feel up to a gentle afternoon stroll—to the top of this rock face?”

  “Oh, an afternoon stroll,” said Tibby, flexing her limbs experimentally. “Delighted, I’m sure.”

  “After you,” said Alistair politely, gesturing at the cliff.

  “So kind,” said Tibby.

  The storm clouds were drifting away to the east, and the rain had eased to a light sprinkle, but their journey up the wet rock face was a perilous one. Fortunately, there were plenty of handholds and footholds, though once Alistair’s foot slipped and set his heart pounding all over again. He tried to keep his mind empty, focusing on the next placement of his foot, the next spur for his hand to grip. Right hand. Left foot. Left hand. Right foot. At last he was flinging himself over the top onto a grassy bank.

  “Lovely stroll, thanks,” said Tibby, standing over him with her hands on her hips. “I hope you’re planning to offer me afternoon tea next.”

  Alistair rolled onto his back and slapped his forehead with his palm. “I knew I forgot something,” he said. “I left the picnic basket at the bottom of the cliff. You could go back for it . . .?”

  Tibby laughed. “No way,” she said. “Let’s just admire the view instead.”

  Alistair got to his feet. Stretching away before him was a huge egg-shaped lake—Lake Eugenia, he presumed. The water was a steely gray, reflecting the sky, and around its shore were dotted little settlements, clusters of red-tiled roofs. On the far side of the lake was a mountain range, a jagged row of sharp teeth silhouetted against the sky. To his left was the waterfall they had so nearly plunged over. Alistair gasped when he saw how high it was. There was no way they would have survived.

  “That’s where we need to go.”

  Alistair glanced down to where Tibby was pointing. Directly beneath them was a road, and to Alistair’s relief the incline was of loose gravel rather than treacherous rock. They half ran, half slid down the hill, arriving breathless at the bottom. Stretching away on the other side of the road were vineyards, the vines heavy with purple grapes. Food! Alistair plucked a plum-colored globe from a vine and popped it into his mouth, but instead of the tart juicy tang he was expecting, the grape was sour and bitter.

  “Yuck,” he said, spitting it out.

  Tibby giggled. “Those aren’t the eating kind,” she told him. “They’re for making wine.”

  “They’re horrible,” said Alistair. “I don’t know why anyone would drink wine if it tastes like that.”

  “I think we should make it our policy never to eat anything purple again,” said Tibby, looking at her fur. “I am so over purple.”

  As they trudged along the road past vine after vine of inedible grapes, Alistair said, “What made you think of putting the pole between the two banks like that?”

  “It was in Charlotte Tibby’s survival handbook,” said Tibby. “In the chapter on surviving waterfalls.”

  “When we get home I’m going to write Charlotte Tibby a fan letter,” said Alistair. “If you hadn’t read her book we’d probably still be sitting by the river in Templeton.”

  “Go right ahead,” said Tibby Rose. “Address it to the cemetery in Grouch. Charlotte Tibby died about fifty years ago.”

  “Her advice has certainly stood the test of time then. What does she say you should do when you’re caught out in the rain?” Alistair asked as the clouds above opened in another downpour.

  “Seek shelter,” Tibby called, and she took off down the road at a run.

  They had been running through the rain for about a quarter of an hour, and were so drenched Alistair wasn’t quite sure why they were bothering to run, when he spotted a small square building a short way off the road, surrounded by rows of vines.

  “Over there, Tib.” He led the way through the vines to what looked like a blank white box with a rough-cut opening for a door and two tiny windows. A few dry brown trails of ivy leaves straggled up one side, and the tiled roof had plenty of gaps. Alistair guessed that this must be some kind of shed, probably only used during harvest time given its general air of abandonment and neglect. The trough of water alongside must have been fed by an underground spring, though, for when Alistair dipped his hand in and raised it to his lips, the water tasted fresh and sweet.

  He looked in the door. It was almost dark in the shed, with not much light filtering through the grimy window, and the air smelled damp and musty. Alistair, his eyes not yet accustomed to the dim light, struggled to make out some plastic containers stacked on the dirt floor, a couple of buckets (one with a broken handle) and, leaning against the wall beside the door, a rusty pruning saw. In the far corner was a heap of old sacks.

  “Coast is clear, Tib,” he called over his shoulder, and she joined him in the doorway, where they shook the water from their fur as best they could and Alistair wrung out his scarf again.

  “I hope we don’t have to stay here too long,” Tibby said, wrinkling her nose. “It smells kind of moldy.”

  Suddenly there was a hoarse cough, quickly muffled.

  The two mice froze.

  “Who—who’s there?” Alistair demanded in a quavering voice.

  There was no answer, but as Alistair’s eyes adjusted to the gloom he saw a trembling shape in the corner, huddled under a thin blanket. Then the trembling shape coughed again and Alistair remembered where he’d heard that cough before.

  “Uncle Silas!” he cried. “You were in the tent last night, with Timmy the Winns and Griff and Mags.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said the huddled shape, but he sat up.

  Alistair saw an old, thin mouse with round specta
cles. “So you’re not Uncle Silas, then?” Alistair asked.

  “I most certainly am not,” said the old mouse.

  “And you weren’t in Pamplemouse yesterday?”

  “I’ve never heard of it.”

  “Oh. Well, what are you doing in this shed?”

  “What are you doing here?” the other mouse countered.

  Alistair and Tibby exchanged looks. “We’re, ah, traveling,” said Alistair.

  “So am I,” said the old mouse. “But you two look a bit young to be traveling about on your own. You—” Before he could finish his sentence his frail body was racked with a terrible coughing fit.

  “Oh,” Tibby cried. “Alistair, help him—fetch some water.”

  Alistair peered out the door to check that there was no one about, then darted around the corner to the trough. He was just casting about for something to carry the water in when he spied a tin mug hanging from a hook on the trough’s outer edge. He filled the cup and then carried it carefully back to the shed.

  The old mouse was hunched over, the blanket around his shoulders, and Tibby Rose was kneeling beside him patting him gently on the back.

  Alistair crouched before him and held out the mug.

  The old mouse took it in his shaking hands and drank. “Thank you,” he said at last, and his voice sounded stronger now.

  “Are you ill?” Tibby asked, sounding worried.

  The mouse shrugged. “I’m old, and I have traveled a long, long way,” he said. “My health is a small concern compared to the importance of my mission.”

  “You’re on a mission?” said Alistair. “What mission? For who?”

  The old mouse snorted. “And why would I trust you with that information?”

  Alistair paused. The old mouse was right; he had no reason to trust them, just as they had no reason to trust him. And yet Alistair felt sure that this was the mouse who Timmy the Winns had called Uncle Silas (though Alistair doubted that was his real name), and that any friend of Timmy the Winns would do them no harm. Indeed, they might be able to help each other. Like Alistair and Tibby Rose, this old mouse had reason to hide. Like them, he had reason to be watchful and cautious. Was it possible that their reasons were related? Did he have the answers to some of their questions? Alistair looked into the old mouse’s eyes. If he wanted Uncle Silas to trust him, he would have to make the first move.

  “Well, I trust you,” Alistair told Uncle Silas. “Enough to tell you our secret.”

  He glanced at Tibby, who gave him a small nod.

  “We’re on the run,” Alistair began. “You see we’re . . . we’re ginger.”

  “You’re ginger?!” The old mouse sat up straight and the blanket fell from his shoulders.

  Alistair took a step backward, suddenly regretting his admission.

  But the old mouse was beaming. “Where are you from, my friends?”

  “I’m from Smiggins, in Shetlock,” said Alistair.

  “And I’m from Templeton, to the north of here,” added Tibby Rose.

  The old mouse peered suspiciously from Alistair to Tibby and back again. “The light isn’t very good in here, but even so you don’t look ginger. Are you trying to fool an old mouse, is that your game?”

  “No!” Tibby protested. “We wouldn’t do that. We dyed ourselves with blackberries so the Queen’s Guards would stop chasing us. And other mice called us terrible names. Although we don’t really know what’s wrong with being ginger,” she confessed.

  The old mouse’s expression softened, and he pulled the blanket around his shoulders once more.

  “If you ask me,” he said, “there’s nothing wrong at all with a ginger mouse. Indeed, some of the bravest, most heroic mice I have ever known were ginger. And some of the dearest to my heart . . .” He seemed lost in thought for a few minutes, then asked abruptly: “Do either of you know where Gerander is?”

  “Of course,” said Tibby Rose. “It’s a province to the south of—”

  “NO!” interrupted the old mouse loudly. Then he shut his eyes and drew a deep breath. When he opened his eyes he said quietly, “No. Gerander isn’t a province of Souris—it’s a country in its own right. At least, it was . . .”

  He took off his spectacles and polished them on a corner of the blanket, as if gathering his thoughts, then resumed.

  “How much do you know about Gerander?”

  Tibby shook her head. “Great-Aunt Harriet taught me a lot of history, but she never really mentioned Gerander.”

  “We hardly learned anything about Gerander at school,” Alistair said with a shrug. “It was just mentioned as part of Souris.”

  “Hmph,” said the old mouse under his breath. “It’s true what they say: history is written by the victors.”

  “Pardon?” said Alistair, who didn’t understand.

  The old mouse smiled grimly. “There is really no such thing as ‘the truth’ when it comes to history. There are always other versions. So while Sourians—and, perhaps, Shetlockers—truly believe that Gerander is part of Souris, the Gerandans themselves see the situation in a very different light.”

  “Are you from Gerander?” Alistair wanted to know.

  “I am,” said the old mouse defiantly.

  “The other day, some mice who were chasing us called me and Tibby ‘Gerandan rebels,’” Alistair told him. “What did they mean?”

  “Was this before you dyed yourselves?”

  “Yes.”

  The old mouse nodded slowly. “I see. Well, it’s time someone told you the truth about Gerander: the truth as Gerandans see it, I should say. The story really starts generations ago. Queen Cornolia—I suppose you’ve heard of her?”

  “Yes,” said the two younger mice in unison.

  “Queen Cornolia was Queen Eugenia’s great-great-grandmother,” said Tibby Rose. “She was the Queen of Souris a long time ago.”

  “And she was the Queen of Shetlock, too,” added Alistair.

  The old mouse nodded. “That’s right. But there was no such thing as Souris or Shetlock in Queen Cornolia’s day. They were part of one big kingdom called Greater Gerander, and had been ruled by the House of Cornolius for more generations than history records. But that changed when Queen Cornolia was on her deathbed. She had triplets, you see, and since none was the clear heir, she divided the kingdom into three lands—the countries we now call Souris, Shetlock, and Gerander—each with its own sovereign. For years the three lands coexisted in relative harmony—relative, I say, for what siblings don’t squabble from time to time?”

  Alistair thought of Alice and Alex, and nodded.

  “Anyway, years and years ago—when I was very young—there was an earthquake in Gerander. A terrible earthquake! Whole towns were swallowed by the earth, thousands were killed and many more thousands were injured. What hospitals were left couldn’t cope with the number of wounded, and there was not enough shelter for those who had lost their homes.”

  He cleared his throat, and even in the dim light Alistair could see that his eyes were clouded behind his spectacles.

  “Now, Gerander was at that time ruled by King Martain, and he sought help from our nearest and much larger neighbor, Souris, ruled by King Erandus—Queen Eugenia’s father. Erandus sent his army to help. They repaired roads and built new houses; they fixed the drainage and the hospitals and the schools. Truly, they were our saviors. But when Gerander was fully restored, King Erandus’s army refused to leave! Erandus insisted that Martain had ceded sovereignty of the kingdom of Gerander to the ruler of Souris until such a time as order had been restored and, in his opinion, order had not yet been restored. Martain disputed this version of events, but it was his word against Erandus’s—and Erandus, with his huge army, had the advantage. The friends who had once been our saviors were now our occupiers, and so it has remained to this day, though Erandus and Martain are long since dead. But despite the fact we are ruled by Queen Eugenia, Gerander is no province of Souris. Gerander was an independent country—and will be
again.” These last words were spoken so vehemently that the old mouse was momentarily short of breath.

  “I don’t understand,” said Alistair. “Why would King Erandus want to take over Gerander?”

  The old mouse shrugged his thin shoulders. “What does any large country want with a small country? Its land, its wealth . . . Why I bet you didn’t know that the produce of all the farms of Gerander is sent to Souris, with only a tiny fraction remaining in our country to feed our people. We are close to starvation, so meager are our rations! But we are told that we must give up our crops in return for the ‘services’ of the Sourian army.”

  “But that’s awful!” cried Tibby Rose. “Surely if Queen Eugenia knew how the Gerandans suffered . . .”

  The old mouse laughed bitterly. “If Queen Eugenia knew? Of course she knows. General Ashwover of the Sourian army is the most powerful man in Gerander, and he reports directly to Queen Eugenia herself.”

  Alistair shook his head. “It seems like an awful lot of trouble to go to for the produce of some farmland.”

  “True,” the old mouse sighed, “it’s more complicated than that. While Gerander is only a thin ribbon of land, it is of great strategic importance. For one thing, although Souris has ports on the Sourian Sea, Gerander’s coastline on the Cannolian Ocean gives Souris access to an ocean port, expanding greatly their potential for trade with countries that lie across the Cannolian to the west. It also gives them a land border with Shetlock.”

  He fell silent, his chin sunk onto his chest, and just as Alistair was wondering if the old mouse had fallen asleep, he shook himself and spoke again. “There’s something else, of course. There are some powerful mice in Souris who believe that the kingdom of Greater Gerander should be reunited once more, that the capital of Gerander should once more be home to the House of Cornolius. And who is left from the House of Cornolius to rule Greater Gerander?”

  “Queen Eugenia,” Tibby Rose breathed.

  “Correct,” said the old mouse, and it occurred to Alistair that he might have been a teacher at one time. “But she is not the only one. . . .”

 

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