The four able survivors were lounging on the western
abbey walls, oblivious to the slight chill of mid spring. The afternoon
was warm and fresh, with the smell of full honeysuckle on the breeze. They
sat recollecting fond memories of the vanquished city of Leedsdown. The
view around them was spectacular. Ringo was admiring it when he suddenly
noticed a flickering light to the south.
"Hey, look. Someone's down there, looks like
wolffolk." Paul and Tori joined him, and peered down. Two wolf-like figures
were barely visible through the naked trees: they were apparently sitting
around a small fire. Paul's brow furrowed.
"I dunno, they look sorta like coyotes t'me."
"From here, though," John pointed out.
"I'll go down and check," Tori said, and before
anyone could stop her, which Paul and Ringo tried to do, she'd darted down
the walls, out the gates, and into the undergrowth and was slinking toward
the campfire. As she neared, she heard them talking.
"Aye, Noel, so yer sure it's 'slowly walking
down the hall, faster than a cannonball'? What kinda shite lyric's that?"
"Just learn it, Liam, or I'll just 'ave t'claim
it."
"Like 'ell you will!" the one called Liam shouted,
bolting up. Noel calmly told him to sit down and sing. Rebellious and scornful,
Liam obeyed, and relaxed. Tori made a signal to the others to come over,
but be inconspicuous. When she turned her head back, she was suddenly faced
with the towering Noel.
"Here now, 'oo might you be? Doesn't matter,
c'mon over: we need you t'tell uz somethin'." He grabbed her arm and dragged
her over. Terrified and stunned, she stumbled over to where he led her
and fell down onto a makeshift bench. In the dancing firelight, she moved
only her wide open eyes to see who her captors were. The Abbey was only
a stone's throw away. She could easily call for help...
Untensing a bit when she saw they were wolves
like herself, she began to wonder where they were from. They didn't sound
like anyone native to Leedsdown or the boroughs around it, she thought,
listening to them argue a bit more. "Miss? Forgive me, we forgot to introduce
ourselves." He bowed his head in a respectful nod. "We're the Gallagher
brothers of Manchester. I'm Noel and that's our Liam." Liam seemed to fancy
Tori, and wasn't shy about it. Tori disregarded his gazes, though.
"There're more of you?" she asked in a near whisper,
her heart racing wildly. Noel chuckled, and ignored the question. Lifting
up his guitar, he picked out a tune, and Liam began to softly accompany
him.
"How many special people change?
How many lives are livin' strange?
Where were you while we were getting high?
Slowly walkin' down the hall, faster than a
cannonball,
where were you while we getting high?
"Someday you will find me, caught beneath the
landslide,
in a champagne supernova in the sky.
Someday you will find me, caught beneath the
landslide,
in a champagne supernova, a champagne supernova
in the sky."
He noticed out of the corner of his eye three
more wolves approaching cautiously. He kept right on singing as if they
didn't exist.
"Wake up the dawn an' ask her why.
A dream, a dream, she never dies.
Wipe that tear away now from your eye.
Slowly walkin' down the hall, faster than a cannonball,
where were you while we getting high?"
He raised his head and bared his soul to the
star-dusted night sky.
"Someday you will find me, caught beneath the
landslide,
in a champagne supernova in the sky.
Someday you will find me, caught beneath the
landslide,
in a champagne supernova, a champagne supernova
in the sky.
" 'Cause people believe that they're gonna get
away for the summer.
But you and I, will never die,
the world's still spinnin' 'round,
y'don't know whyyyyyyy! Whyyyy, whyyy whyyyyyyyyyyy?"
He took a breath and closed his eyes, and gazed
up at the sky while Noel deftly played on. When that was over, Liam opened
his heavily-lidded blue eyes again and sang tenderly to Tori,
"How many special people change?
How many lives are livin' strange?
Where were you while we were getting high?
Slowly walkin' down the hall, faster than a
cannonball,
where were you while we getting high? Weeeee
were getting high? Weeeee were getting hiiiiiigh, weee were getting high...."
Noel's accompanying "Ooo"s were lullaby-like
in the background. As it was winding down, Noel stopped and dropped his
guitar, surprised, and leapt up, staring at the three who'd just joined
them and were sitting by quietly, listening.
"Fook! I know you! You're the bloody fuckin'
Beatles! God!"
"An' you two are th'most talented bastard's I've
ever heard!" John replied calmly. "Who're you guys with? I'm almost positive
I've 'eard yeh before. I loved it." Liam was grinning wildly.
"The Beatles, lovin' us. D'you 'ear that, Noely?
Bloody amazin'!"
"D'you like us that much?" Paul asked, surprised.
"We're totally bloody mad for yeh!" Noel cocked
his head. "Where's George?"
"He was hurt pretty bad by them foxes. He's at
the Abbey."
"Redwall?" Liam asked laconically.
"Yeah, s'matter of fact," Tori answered. I wonder
how he is. A cold wind blew from above, and she suddenly felt a pang in
her chest. He was not well.
" 'Cause we were on our way to Redwall," Noel
remarked off-handedly. "Our mam threw us out of our house an' told us t'go
south there. Said a friend o' hers lived there."
"You're practically at the foot of the damn thing,"
John informed them, his eyes dancing at their blindness. Liam jumped up
on their log and ogled for a look and finally spotted the monolithic red
house.
"Ah, yeah, guess yer right. See Noely, told yeh
you were gone in the 'ead. Got to get glasses, you 'ave." Noel ignored
his little brother's snide comment. Tori squinted at Liam's chest.
"What happened there?" she asked, concerned.
The object of her attention was a patch of matted brown fur. Silvery scars
and crusty scabs were slightly visible. Liam fell silent. Noel shifted
uncomfortably, and spoke for him.
"We, met some unexpected company."
"Oh really?" John asked.
"Fox," Noel confided. "Armed to t'teeth with
knives. He just came outta nowhere an' began tearin' our Liam all t'pieces."
"Me big bro got 'im good, though, didn't yeh?"
Noel was serious. "We had to kill him. Believe
me, he would've us if he'da gotten th'chance." He shuddered at the memory.
That poor, thin she-wolf. She just...stumbled out into the clearing and
died, right there. How they ran....
"Woulda been a hard day for Mam, eh Noely?"
"She really threw you out?" Paul asked, wide-eyed.
"No, she more told us t'stop stickin' 'round
th'house, that there was a whole wide world out there outside th'streets
o' Manchester. We left with a sack o' sandwiches, cookies, an' her clingin'
on t'us fer dear life," Liam informed them. "She's a good lass, our mam.
Our dad's another story."
"An' our brother," Noel reminded him. "But e's
dead, an' not much we can do 'bout that." Tori burst out in a strangled
sob at the word 'dead'. Paul and Liam were immediately at her side.
"What's wrong, love?"
Liam put a comforting paw round her shoulder.
"Now look what yeh've done, Noel, yeh sick twat."
"I did?! Twas you that brought this whole shite
issue up!" Liam growled and lunged at his brother. They began fighting
wildly.
Tori sat, smiling a little despite her tears.
She suddenly stood up and barked, "Hey!" The brothers untangled themselves
and looked at her. "You can come if you want. We've got plenty of hot food."
"Food! Now we 'aven't 'ad a good meal in months!"
Tall and lanky Liam was already racing toward the Abbey, his fire and newfound
friends comically forgotten.
* * *
Wynnstream peered down from the gatetops. "Gosh,
you all sure are lookin' like a proper liddle pack there! Who're these
two?" he called good-naturedly. Liam answered for himself.
"Liam Gallagher, and that's our kid Noel, me
brother."
"I assume these two 'aven't taken y'all pris'ner,
now 'ave they?" Wynnstream chuckled as he heaved at the lever that operated
the great wooden gates.
* * *
George had been reclining in the warmth the temperamental
sun had decided to bless them with. His lazy eyes panned the view of the
orchard where that Jakob was laughing merrily and playing a romantic game
of tag with a beautiful meadow mouse called Julia. The young mouse always
visited him, would always be enraptured by his descriptions of life in
Leedsdown. His thoughts turned, and he noticed the gates opening. Two strangers
wandered into the Abbey, wide-eyed. He squinted at them, and pulled himself
upright to have a better look of them.
They were certainly scruffy, and they looked
like they could fight--
(lord knows they'll be needing it they'll need
all the fight they have)
--if need be. The larger one had a scar painful
just to look at on his chest. Fur was just beginning to really conceal
it, but George knew--
(Shang's gotten at this one she has)
--these two could only be brothers. They shared
the same menacing undertone and deep blue eyes, heavily-lidded and arrogant.
He closed his eyes and tried to ignore the messages.
But that never worked
(it will for now i'll make it)
.
(talk to me!)
Oh all right. D'you think they're Journeyers?
(couldn't say fer sure gotta be though look at
the fright in their eyes blue like fury though god knows they'll need it
in autumn)
"Fates an' seasons!" the larger of the brother
wolves yelped. "It's George Flantyr! It's actually George Flantyr!!" The
pair reverently approached him. Noel was close to groveling and prostrating
himself as he said,
"You are, like, one of my all-time heroes! You're
one of the three greatest guitarists of Tundralake!" Flattered by the unexpected
hero-worship, he asked, in an attempt to sway the conversation another
direction,
"Who're you? I think I've seen you somewhere
before."
"Noel Gallagher," he said, drawing himself up
proudly. "My old man was the director of the Manchester Symphony. Mam always
said I looked like 'im most."
George whistled admirably. He closed his eyes,
and then opened them, asking, "D'you play guitar?"
"Oh, every day," Noel swore. "I'm a fanatic."
"Aye, I'll vouch fer that," his brother added
smugly in the background.
George smiled wanly, as that was all his present
condition would allow. "Then we'll 'ave t'jam sometime, won't we."
Liam turned around to Ringo and commented out
of the blue, "You know, I somehow always seemed to have imagined you all
sort of the same size."
"Oh, no," Ringo chuckled. "Paul an' George are
just naturally big, and I'm th'runt of me litter. John's the only normal
one between us!"
Liam gazed up at thick ramparts of the Abbey.
"My, my, though, you've certainly found yersel's a grand ol' shack, 'aven't
yeh?"
"Sure 'ave. Twas only luck that brought us 'ere
though. Mind you, if they'd a built this thing five yards further 'way,
George woulda died on us."
"Umm, just wonderin', miss," Noel was asking
courteously of Dolores. "D'you 'ave any recollections of one Amberanne
Gallagher? She's certainly told us gobs about you." Dolores's face lit
up.
"Amberanne! My goodness, it's been seasons since
I saw her! Moved somewhere up north after our traveling days, as I recall."
Noel nodded. "She sure did. She's me an' Liam's
mam. Lives up in Manchester Tundralake, just out've th'wake of the invasion
by th'foxes." He noticed Tryffen trying to charm a basket of candied chestnuts
from Friaress Elena. "Say, s'that one o'them southern 'ares, what, what
talks funny? Never seen one of them up close an' personal b'fore." Tryffen's
ears shot up indignantly.
"Here now, talks funny? Listen t'him, sounds
like a bloomin' molechappie himself! Talks funny, huh."
Noel chuckled at the hare's mutterings. Dolores
nodded. "Yes, that one's on loan from Salamandastron from a brother of
mine, the resident Badger Lord, actually."
"Really?" the wolf inquired. "Well, my my. Seems
this Salamandastron's not a myth after all."
The good badger was confused, and a little peeved.
"Salamandastron? A myth? Not likely! It protects all of Mossflower country
and is a magical place. The whole history of Mossflower is written there,
past and future."
Noel shook his head. "Well then, I'll take it
you've never heard of Angliaterryn. Not too far from uz, actually." He
ambled toward Great Hall, following the crowd of others. "So, tell me about
this Salamandastron. I've only heard stories 'bout it."
* * *
Caxton Sbioann Miahcris stood solemnly before
the current Badger Lord of Salamandastron, Antisle Rawnblade the Fiery.
The strange arctic hare's cloud-gray eyes remained averted to the ceiling
as the enormous badger examined the scroll he'd been presented from the
stronghold of Angliaterryn.
Antisle swayed his head back and forth slowly.
"No one has heard from the northern white bears in many seasons." He sat
back and sighed. "Many, many seasons. They were a legend when Old Lord
Brocktree came to this mountain."
Caxton smiled slightly. "I assure you," he replied
in a broad, heavy accent, "they are certainly there, Lord."
Antisle sighed, and turned to the hare to his
left. "Quinn, tell me, how did you come across this ambassador?" he asked
in a hushed tone.
"He came on foot, Milord," the well-built captain
replied. "Long Patrol escorted 'im 'ere. They found 'im fairly far north,
fer 'ere, but 'e's apparently come from a lot further." The badger looked
back at Caxton.
"Tell me, who is the head of Angliaterryn? They
have been lost to the ages this far south."
"Governor Creenhlay, Lord. Yellowback Creenhlay."
Antisle bowed his head, changing the subject.
"This is very serious. If Shang Widowmaker's horde is indeed headed in
our direction, we have quite a struggle ahead of us." He looked up again
with tears threatening to bead his brown eyes. "And you say that Leedsdown
Tundralake has been vanquished?"
"Yes, and possibly Manchester as well," the arctic
hare replied sadly.
"Great seasons and ancestors above..." he murmured.
"Are there any survivors at all?" Caxton glanced at his feet.
"There...have been rumors through the countryside
that I have traveled through, of a great red singing wolf. It could possibly...nay,
I dare not hope too greatly..." He turned his head away.
"What? Who?"
Caxton looked back at Quinn and Antisle. "It
is well-known fact that Colvin Wolflord and Derynai Fioraja are both slain.
Their daughters Paula and Leah and their son Peter were accounted for as
dead as well, but Tori Rubyhaer is still an enigma..."
Quinn grew excited. "An' you're sayin' that this
great singin' wolfgel could be her?"
"She is our only hope for salvation, it seems."
Antisle rested his head on a monstrous paw. "Caxton, could you accompany
me? I hate to ask anything of you after your long journey, but I feel you
have the missing piece in which to help me."
Caxton bowed his head. "Certainly, Lord."
* * *
The far northern messenger followed Antisle through
the twisting caverns below the mountain stronghold. His footsteps echoed
heavily through the tunnels, as did his heavy breathing.
"Here, stop here," Antisle whispered. Caxton
leaned against the wall of the hall, and squinted at the carvings the badger
lord was examining under the firelight.
"Tell me, why am I to see these?" Caxton questioned,
a little frightened. "These are the halls of the future, meant only for
badgers to see."
Antisle shook his head. "What you are looking
at are the same prophesies that a mouse, Martin the Warrior of Redwall,
gazed upon. Over to my right is the story of Urthstripe the Strong. He
rests further down in the passage. Beyond that is the poetry of Sunflash
the Mace. This is the history of Mossflower Country and its surrounding
areas. But I have never taken the time to look in its skies."
Caxton was confused. "Sir, pardon me for inquiring,
but...what skies?"
Antisle lifted his head and searched the ceiling.
"Here." His eyes flickered over the writing. He squared his jaw. "It seems
it is time for Tryffen to come home." He turned back to the hare. "Lord
Yellowback should have given you a package. Do you have it?"
"It hasn't left my side since I departed Angliaterryn."
"Give it to me and wait here," he commanded.
The hare handed him a small stone figurine, old and primitively carved,
vaguely resembling a wolf, beset with two emeralds as eyes. Antisle Rawnblade
silently disappeared into a corridor. He placed the statuette into an eroded
crevice, carved by beasts long ago gone to Dark Forest. The light that
shone through the two jewels fell on a simple engraving of a great stone
building. A great vermin claw was pointed at it. Antisle squinted.
"It is Redwall surely," he muttered to himself.
He stepped back, though, and examined it. "But there are no trees. Redwall
is in a forest....I know of no other Abbey in the region...." His eyes
widened. "Mohaercrest," he whispered cryptically. "Sheryl must go home!"
* * *
Tori sat alone at the piano, which had been moved
down to Great Hall, keeping her footpaw on the soft petal so as not to
disturb those sleeping in the dormitories. The plaintive calls of nightbirds
echoed through the forest outside. She rested her paws on the smooth, cool
keyboard, holding back her crying. Bowing her head in an elegant arch of
her neck, she listlessly pressed a low G.
The tune began to flock together like an image
in a cloud. Lyrics wafted down from the rafters, and she captured them
as they struggled beneath her tongue. Tori's eyes were red from withheld
tears and sleepiness. She watched as spirits appeared, and danced in graceful
Russian circles, waltzing like music boxes. A line parted through them,
and she arose, expecting by all rights to see her deceased family and the
royal court, her beloved life that had been burned and shattered. But no:
her jaw slowly dropped as a mouse lead a short procession through the hole
of her past. Was it Michael? It certainly looked like him....
"Tori Fairskye Rubyhaer," he said at length,
with the ease and understanding of a breezy summer day. "Your battle will
come soon enough. Enjoy what you have whilst you still have the time to."
"What right have you to tell me to enjoy while
I have it?" she whimpered angrily. "What knowledge have you of war and
hatred and loss, Michael? You've never been beyond this Abbey, I'm sure
of it!"
"Michael, backwards through many others," the
strange mouse said, the light confident smile never leaving his lips. "Through
Mariel and Dandin, through Samkim and Arula, through Bryony and Togget,
through countless hares, badgers, otters...." The phantasm bowed his head.
"All the way back, even to and beyond Rose, Felldoh, and Gonff. You see,
I too once lost everyone and everything." Tori's drooping eyes widened.
"You must be...." It went understood and unspoken.
Martin the Warrior smiled again, his gray eyes shining brightly.
"Keep your fire, Tori. You will use it to burn
out the evil scourge of Shang Widowmaker and her daughters. Tori?" The
mouse leaned forward to her, his face suddenly worried. He shook her shoulder.
"Tori?" The ghosts dissipated, and the northern
princess was left staring at another restless soul. Noel, concerned, offered
a paw. "C'mon, dear, y've been up harf th'bloody night. Get some sleep,
luv."
* * *
The white fox paced restlessly through the field.
The horde had been deflected off course by unexpected guerrilla attacks.
They were now hopelessly tangled in the mountains, and every few days,
her sentries were being picked off for food by the mountain eagles and
falcons. Unused to the harsh conditions of the peaks and impasses, mutinies
were beginning to kindle: she could feel it.
Poe watched Shang brooding. "Widowmaker, perhaps
if we captured some of the inhabitants," she offered, "one of the smaller
birds, perhaps, or a marten? They would surely show us maybe a pass or
a gap through these infernal mountains?"
The vicious white fox shook her head. "And where
would we find one of these invaluable scouts? No, Polewski," Poe straightened
slightly as her full title was used, "we must do this ourselves. I think
our only solution, however, is either backing out or trudging through."
"Shang," the ferret ventured, "the troops, they
will not like that either way."
"I know that! Don't you think I don't know that?!"
She sat down on a rock and rested her chin upon a paw. "But what to do,
what to do!" Shang arose, and began pacing again. " Hmm, mayhaps I'm just
being paranoid. Poe, fetch one of my spies. I need to find a conspiracy
before I can destroy it."
* * *
Putwer and Shaftclaw were both foxes whose grumblings
had exceeded the bounds of each other. Nightly, around their campfires,
as they shivered against the high mountain winds and inhospitable ground,
mates would gather and share complaints and doubts about the Widowmaker's
trek southward.
"Huh, who's to even say this glorious southland
even exists? It's only gotten colder th'further south we've gone!" Shaftclaw
growled as he shoved the pine branch into the fire in an attempt to kindle
the meager flames. Three other foxes, two weasels, and a stoat coughed
and cursed as the stick produced noxious smoke.
"Garr, learn t'handle a fire properly, dunder'ead!"
a weasel, Cawfrent, snarled.
"Hah, betcha the fox couldn't learn t'do that
'erself," Rankwhisker, the stoat, laughed humorlessly. "While we're freezin'
t'death up here, she's probably feastin' wid those two brats of hers in
front of a fireplace!"
Putwer shook his head mournfully. "I tells yeh,
t'ain't fair, mates. We're livin' like bloody oarslaves wi' nary a crust
betwixt us, an' she probably don't even know up from down t'get us out've
here!"
Cawfrent's companion looked down at his dagger,
as it glittered coldly in the chill light. "That fox might be pretty, but
I betcha she'd look a lot prettier inside out, wid this between 'er ribs!"
"An' how's would yer plan on doin' that, Vimple?"
The weasel looked into the firelight. "Wouldn't
be too 'ard. With Poe snawin' away outside 'er tent, and Anastasia an'
Tatyanna off amusin' theyselves..." He trailed off suggestively.
One of the foxes stood up and stretched. "I'm
with yeh, mate! That would solve a passle of our problems, an' I'll be
party to it." Ribsy then shivered. "But I'm off to a good forty winks afore
I do any murderin'. This cold makes th'paw that wolf got at all throbbin'."
Stiffly, he made his way to the niche he'd dug out in the snow.
"Aye, I'm with Ribsy too," Rankwhisker agreed.
"I'd rather be dreamin' 'bout some warm island than shiverin' an' plottin'
at this hour." The gang was addressed one last time by Shaftclaw.
"But when we meets 'ere tomorrer, bring yer skinnin'
knives an' such. We got's a job ter do, remember that!"
Cawfrent and Vimple trudged away through the
rocks and bone-biting snow. Cawfrent turned to Vimple. "So, should we report
t'Widowmaker now?"
"Nah, maybe we should get Poe first. She'd be
easier t'get through to."
* * *
The twin beacons of Anastasia and Tatyanna atop
a high perch on either side of the vast horde had been long absent. Now
they stood on juts of rock above the valley, howling in an unearthly cadence,
an echo stolen from the wolves. Instinctively, they silently assembled
before the line of flags and skulls perched on spears.
The widowmaker fox had decked herself out in
some of her barbaric finery. She'd capped her fangs in silver, and dyed
the area around her eyes jet black, causing her haunting, captivating eyes
to stand out even more. A necklace, strung with the teeth and claws of
Colvin and Derynai, adorned her neck.
"Rivenkeepers!" she called. "Bring forth the
traitors!!" Seven huge Norwegian rats, each holding a chain lead of one
of the campfire would-be assassins, prodded forth Putwer, Shaftclaw, Rankwhisker,
Ribsy, and the three other foxes; Hankfur, Neoparn, and Shornear. Each
of the trembling vermin had been whipped, maimed, tortured, and beaten.
They were now bound together in a slave line.
"Parade them!" Shang commanded. The horde watched,
horrified, as some of their best fighters were dragged through each rank,
pleading, tripping, sobbing, and yelping. Above the stunned silence, the
leader fox's voice rose. "So, Winterchildren, you see what happens to the
fools who doubt me and plot against me! You have called me soft, yes. You
have called me lost, and you have said I am losing my grip!" The horde
shrank back at her fury. "Well, I may be a mother, but merciful, I am not!"
When the Rivenkeepers had made a full circle of the army, the prisoners
were brought up onto a ledge above a pond. They cringed away from the edge,
ignoring their comrades' stares as they shivered, stumbled, and wailed.
"SILENCE!" Widowmaker roared. "I am as coldhearted
as you soon will be!" One of the Rivenkeeper rats kicked Ribsy, the largest
of the group, off the ledge. The unfortunate hordebeasts struggled to stay
on the ground, but each slowly fell, linked together and suspended by the
chains, and finally they plummeted into the freezing water. "I know something
these clods did not, nor did they think I did! I know a way out of here!
And we move now!" Her daughters began howling again: Go south. Shang's
examples now bobbed in the water, either frozen to death or pitifully beseeching
passing mates to help them out. But either way, they were chained to death
in two places, and Shang Widowmaker had earned a new title: Coldhearted!