Authors: Heather Vogel Frederick
âNothing we can do about that now,' said Sir Edmund regretfully. âThere have been some new developments while you were gone. Alarming developments. I'm going to need you to lead a squadron of pigeons back to 80 Strand. With any luck, we should be able to save at least some of the orphans.'
âSome?' cried Bunsen over the Video Scrambler, his nose and tail flaming bright pink with concern. âWhat about Glory?'
Sir Edmund sighed. âI promise you I haven't forgotten about Glory, Mr Burner.'
âA squadron won't be enough,' said Julius. âIf it were any other rats, perhaps. But not with Dupont and Piccadilly in the mix. And there must be dozens of orphans.'
Sir Edmund tugged thoughtfully at his whiskers. He stared at the portraits on the wall. âWhat would Churchill and my great-grandfather have done, I wonder?' he mused. Suddenly, he spun about. âJulius,' he said, addressing the Video Scrambler screen again, âI believe it's time to break out the Summoner.'
Julius Folger was quiet for a long moment. âAre you sure?' he said finally. âIt's an awfully big gamble. It was decommissioned more than half a century ago, after all. What makes you think they'll even respond?'
âWho will respond, sir? If you don't mind my asking,' said Squeak.
âIt's a chance I'm willing to take,' Sir Edmund replied to Julius, ignoring her. He turned to his staff. âFriends and colleagues,' he announced. âI'm going to call in the SAS.'
The room went dead silent. Not a tail twitched.
Finally, one of the pilots cleared his throat. âThe Secret Air Service?' he croaked.
Sir Edmund nodded. âYes.'
The mice exchanged nervous glances. The SAS had long been rumoured to exist, its exploits whispered of by the elders who'd been mouselings at the time of the Blitz and the Great Turf War. Ghosts, they were, said some. Swallows, said others. Swift as night, they'd swooped down from the skies of London, helping to turn the tide in the battle against the rats. And just as swiftly they'd disappeared, never to be seen or heard from since.
âI don't like the sound of this,' said Bunsen anxiously.
âThere's only one problem,' continued Sir Edmund.
âWhat is that?' asked Julius.
âThe Summoner,' said Sir Edmund. âMy great-grandfather entrusted it to his friend Winston Churchill after the wars were over. To keep it out of enemy paws. Churchill sewed it into the lining of his favourite waistcoat for safekeeping, so my mother told me. That's what her father told her, and her father's father before him.' Sir Edmund looked up at Julius again. âThat waistcoat was donated to a museum after Churchill's death.'
âWhich museum?' asked Julius.
Sir Edmund turned to Squeak. âCancel my original orders,' he said. âI want you to go to the Royal Opera House instead. We're going to need the children's help.'
âWait!' ordered Stilton Piccadilly. Behind him, Goldwhiskers was scowling at his orphans.
Dupont's razor-sharp teeth stopped a whisker's width away from Glory's neck. He turned to the British bull rat. âFinders keepers,' he snarled angrily. âShe's mine.'
âNo, you fool, didn't you hear? She shouted something just before you knocked her out.'
âSo?' said Dupont, turning back to Glory, who had come to, but who had closed her eyes again in
anticipation of her fate.
âDon't you understand?' shouted Piccadilly. âShe was talking to someone! She was passing information about the exterminations!'
Dupont's beady red eyes narrowed. He pawed Glory's fur. âNo transmitter,' he reported, then gave her a brutal shake. âAre you working alone?'
Never give in
, thought Glory bravely, remembering Winston Churchill's rousing words.
Never give in. Never, never, never, never
. She gritted her teeth and kept silent, determined to protect Bubble no matter the consequences.
Dupont shook her again, more savagely this time. âWon't talk, eh? We'll see about that. I crack mice like nuts.' He held up one knife-like claw and curled it round the base of her tail. Glory shivered. Dupont's thin rat lips peeled back in a hideous smile. âStill have a place for it on my wall, right beside your father's.'
âFor the love of rubbish, Dupont,' muttered Piccadilly, shouldering past him towards the tea hamper. âYou always have to make such a production out of everything.' He rummaged swiftly through the basket's contents, and gave a cry of triumph as he lifted the white napkin at the bottom. âAha! Just as
I thought.' Reaching in, he plucked Bubble out by the scruff of his neck. âWhat did I tell you? They always work in teams. Double G! There's something you need to see.'
Goldwhiskers was still glaring at his cowering mouselings. âMouselings disobeyed Master,' the big rat said in a low growl. âMouselings didn't defend Master. What is wrong with
mouselings
?'
The orphans looked at one another in confusion. There was something new in Master's voice. Something they'd never heard before. And it was exceedingly unpleasant.
âMouselings know what happens when mouselings defy Master!' Goldwhiskers continued, his voice rising to a deafening pitch. âMouselings must be PUNISHED!' The orphan mice quailed. They clapped their paws over their ears. Goldwhiskers's voice dropped to a low hiss. âBut this is
different
! This is
betrayal
! And betrayal calls for something
much, much
worse than the OUBLIETTE!'
Farthing squeaked in terror and climbed Twist like a tree. Twist wrapped his paws round the toddler and held him fast as the little one tried to burrow under his chin.
âDouble G!' Piccadilly said again.
The big rat turned to Piccadilly. âWhat?' he snapped, breathing hard.
Piccadilly hoisted Bubble up in the air. âThe American mouse wasn't working alone.'
âSo?'
âShe called out a message, just before Dupont decked her. About the exterminations.'
âHe's probably got a transmitter,' said Goldwhiskers.
Piccadilly turned Bubble upside down and shook him until his teeth rattled. No transmitter appeared. Piccadilly's eyes narrowed. âI'm sure she was passing information, Double G. She ran up the table leg, remember, and then â'
Goldwhiskers whipped round and stared at the table by his red leather chair. His gaze travelled up the table leg to the telephone that sat on its surface next to his gold-lacquered box. âYou used my PHONE!' he screamed at Glory in outrage. âTo transmit information about MY PLANS!'
Glory didn't say a word.
Never give in
, she told herself again.
Never, never, never, never.
âWell, transmit THIS!' Goldwhiskers cried. He whisked the phone cord up in his huge paw, jammed it back into the plug in the wall, then he smacked the
speakerphone button and pressed redial. Glory could hear the phone ringing at MICE-6 headquarters, and then Miss Honeyberry's soft voice. âYes?' she said anxiously. âMiss Goldenleaf, is that you?'
âHow about Gold
whiskers
instead?' screamed Goldwhiskers. âYou tamper with my world and my plans, you PAY! You want to play rat-and-mouse? You send your spy mice here to my home â to play I spy here in MY HOME? I'll send them back to you, and the orphans too â if you can find all the PIECES, that is! And speaking of pieces, here's a little PUZZLE for you! I'm going to take all these DOUBLE-CROSSING, DISOBEDIENT, DISLOYAL mice on an outing tonight. A little Christmas Eve treat in London. Won't that be FUN?'
Glory, still held tightly in Dupont's grip, watched and listened as Goldwhiskers came unglued. She could hear it in his voice, just as she'd heard it in Dupont's before. It happened frequently when rats whipped themselves into a frenzy of retaliation. A very, very dangerous frenzy.
Goldwhiskers took a deep breath and chanted:
âUp on the rooftop the rodents pause,
Lots of mouselings in their claws.
Off for an evening of games and fun â
We'll come full circle when the night is done.
Round and round we'll go, then WHEE!
I'll be the last thing they ever SEE!'
The big rat's voice rose to a piercing crescendo. Behind him, the mouselings clutched each other in terror. Farthing let out a squeak of fear, and Goldwhiskers whirled round, pinning him with a ferocious glare. âDon't even THINK about it!' he roared, and slammed his paw down on the speakerphone button again, cutting off the call.
âAre you talking to a mouse?'
Oz and DB started guiltily. Nigel Henshaw was standing at the door of Oz's mother's dressing room with an astonished look on his pale, pinched face.
âUh,' stammered Oz.
Nigel stared open-mouthed at Squeak Savoy. She ducked under a large make-up brush on the dressing table, but it was too late. The damage was done.
Oz prodded nervously at his glasses. DB crossed her skinny arms across her chest. âWhat exactly do you think you saw?' she demanded.
Nigel pointed at Oz. âHim talking to that mouse,'
he replied. âThe one hiding behind that brush there. And she was talking back to him. Said something about a secret mission, and him having to get out of here on the double.'
What would James Bond do if he were here?
Oz wondered desperately. Agent 007 was always wiggling out of tight situations. He was smart; he was wily; he was unflappable. At the moment, Oz did not feel the least bit smart or wily. And he felt extremely flappable.
The name is Levinson. Oz Levinson
, he reminded himself sternly.
Get a grip
. âShut the door, Nigel,' he said, as calmly as he could.
The younger boy shut the door.
âUm, Nigel,' Oz continued. âDB and I couldn't help but notice the way Priscilla Winterbottom treats you.'
Nigel's pale face flushed.
âHow old are you, anyway?'