Brian Jacques - Redwall 02 - Mossflower

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Late autumn winds sighed fitfully around the open gatehouse door, rustling
brown gold leaves in the fading afternoon.
Bella of Brockhall snuggled deeper into her old armchair by the fire. Through
half-closed eyes she watched the small mouse peering around the doorway at
her.
"Come in, little one, and close the door."
The small mouse did as he was bidden. Encouraged by the badger's friendly
smile, he clambered up onto the arm of the chair and settled himself against a
cushion.
"You said that you would tell me a story, Miz Bella."
The badger nodded slowly.
"Everything you see about you, the harvest that has been gathered, from the
russet apples to the golden honey, is yours to enjoy in freedom. Listen now,
as the breeze sweeps the last autumn leaves off into the world of winter. I
will tell you of the time long ago before Redwall Abbey was built in
Mossflower. In those days there was no freedom for wood-landers; we were
oppressed cruelly under the harsh rule of Verdauga Greeneyes and his daughter
Tsarmina. It was a mouse like yourself who saved Mossflower. His name is known
to all: Martin the Warrior.
"Ah, my little friend, I am grown old. So are my comrades; their sons and
daughters are fathers and mothers now. But that is life. The seasons still
look new to young eyes, the food tastes fresher in the mouths of the young
ones than it does in my own. As I sit here in the warmth and peace it all
lives again in my memory, a strange tale of love and war, friend and foe,
great happenings and mighty deeds.
"Gaze into the fire, young one. Listen to me and I will tell you the story.''
BOOK ONE
Kotir
Mossflower lay deep in the grip of midwinter beneath a sky of leaden gray that
showed tinges of scarlet and orange on the horizon. A cold mantle of snow
draped the landscape, covering the flatlands to the west. Snow was everywhere,
filling ditches, drifting high against hedgerows, making paths invisible,
smoothing the contours of earth in its white embrace. The gaunt, leafless
ceiling of Mossflower Wood was penetrated by constant snowfall, which carpeted
the sprawling woodland floor, building canopies on evergreen shrubs and
bushes. Winter had muted the earth; the muffled stillness was broken only by a
traveler's paws.
A sturdily built young mouse with quick dark eyes was moving confidently
across the snowbound country. Looking back, he could see his tracks
disappearing northward into the distance. Farther south the flatlands rolled
off endlessly, flanked to the west by the faint shape of distant hills, while
to the east stood the long ragged fringe marking the marches of Mossflower.
His nose twitched at the elusive smell of burning wood and turf from some
hearthfire. Cold wind soughed from the treetops, causing whorls of snow to
dance in icy spirals. The traveler gathered his ragged cloak tighter, adjusted
an old rusting sword that was slung across his back, and trudged steadily
forward, away from the wilderness, to where other creatures lived.
It was a forbidding place made mean by poverty. Here and
5
there he saw signs of habitation. The dwellings, ravaged and demolished, made
pitiful shapes under snow drifts. Rearing high against the forest, a curious
building dominated die ruined settlement. A fortress, crumbling, dark and
brooding, it was symbol of fear to the woodland creatures of Mossflower.
This was how Martin the Warrior first came to Kotir, place of the wildcats.
In a mean hovel on the south side of Kotir, the Stickle family crouched around
a low turf fire. It gusted fitfully as the night winds pierced the slatted
timbers where mud chinking had not been replaced. A timid scratch at the door
caused them to jump nervously. Ben Stickle picked up a billet of firewood,
motioning his wife Goody to keep their four little ones well back in the
shadows.
As the Goodwife Stickle covered her brood widi coarse burlap blankets, Ben
took a firmer grip on the wood and called out harshly in his gruffest voice,
"Be off with you and leave us alone. There's not enough food in here to go
around a decent hedgehog family. You've already taken half of all we have to
swell the larders in Kotir."
"Ben, Ben, 'tis oi, Urthclaw! Open up, burr. 'Tis freezen out yurr."
As Ben Stickle opened the door, a homely-faced mole trundled by him and
hurried across to the fire, where he stood rubbing his digging claws together
in front of the flames.
The little ones peeped out from the blankets. Ben and Goody turned anxious
faces toward their visitor.
Urthclaw rubbed warmth into his cold nose as he talked in the curious rustic
molespeech.
"Vurmin patrols be out, burr, weasels V stoats an* the loik. They'm a lukken
fer more vittles."
Goody shook her head as she wiped a little one's snout on her apron. "I knew
it! We should have run off and left this place, like the others. Where in the
name of spikes'll we find food to pay their tolls?"
Ben Stickle threw down the piece of firewood despairingly. ' 'Where can we run
in midwinter with four little 'uns? They'd perish long afore spring."
Urthclaw produced a narrow strip of silver birch bark and held a paw to his
mouth, indicating silence. Scratched on the
6
bark in charcoal was a single word: Corim. Beneath it was a simple picture map
showing a route into Mossflower Woods, far from Kotir.
Ben studied the map, torn between the chance of escape and his family's
predicament. The frustration was clear on his face.
Bang! Bang!
"Open up in there! Come on, get this door open. This is an official Kotir
patrol."
Soldiers!
Ben took one last hasty glance at die strip of bark and threw it on the fire.
As Goody lifted the latch the door was thrust forcefully inward. She was swept
to one side as the soldiers packed into the room, out of the winter night
chill. They pushed and shoved at each other roughly. A ferret named Blacktooth
and a stoat called Splitnose seemed to be in charge of the patrol. Ben Stickle
signed with relief as they turned away from the burning strip of bark and
stood with their backs to the fire.
"Well now, dozyspikes, where are you hiding all the bread and cheese and
October ale?"
Ben could scarce keep the hatred from his voice as he answered the sneering
Blacktooth. "It's many a long season since I tasted cheese or October ale.
There's bread on the shelf, but only enough for my family."
Splitnose spat into the fire and reached for the bread. Ben Stickle was
blocked from stopping the stoat by a barrier of spear hafts as he tried to
push forward.
Goody placed a restraining paw on her husband's spikes. "Please, Ben, don't
fight 'em, the great bullies."
Urthclaw chimed in, "Yurr, baint much 'ee c'n do agin spears, Ben."
Blacktooth turned to the mole as if seeing him for the first time. "Huh,
what're you doing here, blinkeye?"
One of the little hedgehogs threw the sacking aside and faced the stoat
boldly. "He came in for a warm by our fire. You leave him alone!" Splitnose
burst out laughing, spraying crumbs from the bread he was eating. "Look out,
Blackie. There's more of 'em under that blanket. I'd watch 'em, if I were
you."
A nearby weasel threw back the covering, exposing the other three young ones.
Blacktooth sized them up. "Hmm, they look big enough to do a day's work."
Goodwife Stickle sprang fiercely in front of them.
"You let my liddle ones be. They ain't harmed nobody.'*
Blacktooth seemed to ignore her. He knocked the loaves from Splitnose's paws,
then turning to a weasel he issued orders. "Pick that bread up, and no sly
munching. Deliver it to the stores when we get back to the garrison."
Waving his spear he signaled the patrol out of the hut. As Blacktooth left he
called back to Ben and Goody, "I want to see those four hogs out in the fields
tomorrow. Either that, or you can all spend the rest of the winter safe and
warm in Kotir dungeons."
Urthclaw kept an eye to a crack in the door, watching the patrol make its way
toward Kotir. Ben wasted no time; he began wrapping the young ones in all the
blankets they possessed. "Right, that's it! Enough is enough. We go tonight.
You're right, old girl, we should have left to live in the woods with the rest
long ago. What d'you say, Urthclaw?"
The mole stood with his eye pressed against the crack in the door. "Yurr, cumm
'ere, lookit thiz!"
While Ben shared the crack with his friend, Goody continued swathing her young
ones with blankets. "What is it, Ben? They're not comin' back, are they?"
"No, wife. Hohoho, lookit that, by hokey! See the punch he landed on that
weasel's nose? Go on, give it to 'em, laddo!"
Ferdy, the little one who had spoken up, scuttled over and tugged at Ben's
paw. "Punch? Who punched a weasel? What's happening?"
Ben described the scene as he watched it. "It's a mouse-big strong feller too,
he is. They're tryhT to capture him . , . That's it! Now kick him again,
mouse. Go on! Hahaha, you'd think a full patrol of soldiers could handle a
mouse, but not this one. He must be a real trained warrior. Phew! Lookit that,
he's knocked Blacktooth flat on his back. Pity they're hangin' on to his sword
like that. By the spikes, he'd cause
8
some damage if he had that blade between his paws, rusty as it is."
Ferdy jumped up and down. "Let me see, I want a look!"
Urthclaw turned slowly away from the door. "Baint much
use, liddle 'edgepig. They'ra gorrim down now, aye, an*
roped up too. Hurt, worra pity, they be too many fer 'im to
foight, ee'm a gurt brave wurrier tho."
Ben was momentarily crestfallen, then he clapped his paws together. "Now is
the time, while the patrol's busy with the fighter. They Ve got a job on their
paws, draggin' him back to the cats' castle. Come on, let^s get a-goin' while
the goin's good."
A short while later, the fire was burning to embers in an empty hut as the
little band trudged into the vast woodland sprawl of Mossflower, blinking
water from their eyes as they kept their heads down against the keen wind.
Urthclaw followed up the rear, obliterating the pawtracks from the snowy
ground.
Gonff the mousethief padded silently along the passage from the larder and
storeroom of Kotir. He was a plump little creature, clad in a green jerkin
with a broad buckled belt. He was a ducker and a weaver of life, a marvelous
mimic, ballad writer, singer, and lockpick, and very jovial with it all. The
woodlanders were immensely fond of the little thief. Gonff shrugged it ail
off, calling every creature his matey in imitation of the otters, whom he
greatly admired. Chuckling quietly to himself, he drew the small dagger from
his belt and cut off a wedge from the cheese he was carrying. Slung around his
shoulder was a large flask of elderberry wine which he had also stolen from
the larder. Gonff ate and drank, singing quietly to himself in a deep bass
voice between mouthfuls of cheese and wine.
The Prince of Mousethieves honors you,
To visit here this day.
So keep your larder door shut tight,
Lock all your food away.
O foolish ones, go check your store
Of food so rich and fine.
Be sure that I'll be back for more,
Especially this wine.
At the sound of heavy paws Gonff fell silent. Melting back into the shadows,
he huddled down and held his breath. Two
10
weasels dressed in armor and carrying spears trudged past.
They were arguing heatedly.
"Listen, I'm not taking the blame for your stealing from
the larder."
"Who, me? Be careful what you say, mate. I'm no thief.'* "Well, you're looking
very fat lately, that's all I say." "Huh, not half as podgy as you, lard
barrel." "Lard barrel yourself. You'll be accusing me next." "Ha, you're in
charge of the key, so who else could it be?" "It could be you. You're always
down there when I am." "I only go to keep an eye on you, mate." "And I only go
to keep an eye on you, so there." "Right, we'll keep an eye on each other,
then." Gonff stuffed a paw in his mouth to stifle a giggle. The
weasels stopped and looked at each other. "What was that?"
"Oho, I know what it was—you're laughing at me." "Arr, don't talk stupid."
"Talking stupid, am I?" Indignantly, the weasel turned
away from his companion.
Gonff quickly called out in a passable weasel-voice imitation, "Big fat
robber!"
The two weasels turned furiously upon each other. "Big fat robber, eh. Take
that!" "Ouch! You sneaky toad, you take this!" The weasels thwacked away madly
at each other with their
spearhandles. Gonff sneaked out of hiding and crept off in the opposite
direction, leaving the two guards rolling upon the passage
floor, their spears forgotten as they bit and scratched at each
other.
"Owow, leggo. Grr, take that!"
"I'll give you robber! Have some of this. Ooh, you bit my
ear!"
Sheathing his dagger and shaking with mirth, Gonff unlatched a window shutter,
and slipped away through the snow toward the woodlands.
Oh fight, lads, fight, Scratch, lads, bite, 11
Gonff will dine on cheese and wine, When he gets home tonight.
Martin dug his heels into the snow, skidding as he was dragged bodily through
the outer wallgates of the forbidding heap he had sighted earlier that day.
Armored soldiers clanked and clattered together as they were dragged inward by
the ropes that restrained the prisoner, none of them wanting to get too close
to the fighting mouse.
Blacktooth and Splitnose closed the main gates with much bad-tempered
slamming. Powdery snow blew down on them from the top of the perimeter walls.
The parade ground snow was hammered flat and slippery by soldiers dashing
hither and thither, some carrying lighted torches—ferrets, weasels and stoats.
One of them called out to Splitnose, "Hoi, Split-tie, any sign of the fox out
there?"
The stoat shook his head. "What, you mean the healer? No, not a whisker. We
caught a mouse, though. Look at this thing he was carrying."
Splitnose waved Martin's rusted sword aloft. Blacktooth ducked. "Stop playing
with that thing, you'll slash somebody twirling it around like that. So,
they're waiting on the fox again, eh. Old Greeneyes doesn't seem to be getting
any better lately. Hey, you there, keep those ropes tight! Hold him still, you
blockheads."
The entrance hall door proved doubly difficult as the warrior mouse managed to
cling to one of the timber doorposts. The soldiers had practically to pry him
loose with their spears. The weasel who had been given charge of the bread
kept well out of it, heading directly for the storeroom and larder. As he
passed through the entrance hall, he was challenged by others who cast
covetous eyes upon the brown home-baked loaves. It had been a hard winter,
since many creatures had deserted the settlement around Kotir after the early
autumn harvest, taking with them as much produce as they could carry to the
woodlands. There was not a great deal of toll or levy coming in. The weasel
clutched the bread close as he padded along.
The hall was hostile and damp, with wooden shutters across the low windows.
The floor was made from a dark granite-like rock, very cold to the paws. Here
and there the nighttime
12
guards had lit small fires in corners, which stained the walls black with
smoke and ashes. Only captains were allowed to wear long cloaks as a mark of
rank, but several soldiers had draped themselves in old sacks and blankets
purloined from the settlement. The stairs down to the lower levels were a
jumble of worn spirals and flights of straight stone steps in no particular
sequence. Half the wall torches had burned away and not been replaced, leaving
large areas of stairs dark and dangerous. Moss and fungus grew on most of the
lower-level walls and stairs.
Hurrying along a narrow passage, the weasel banged on the storeroom door. A
key turned in the lock.
"WhatVe you got there? Loaves, eh. Bring 'em in."
The two guards who had been fighting were sitting on flour sacks. One of them
eyed the bread hungrily. "Huh, is that all you got tonight? I tell you, mate,
things are getting from bad to worse around here. Who sent you down with
them?"
"Blacktooth."
"Oh, him. Did he count them?"
"Er, no, I don't think so."
"Good. There's five loaves. We'll have half a loaf each— that'll leave three
and a half. Nobody'11 notice the difference."
They tore hungrily at Goody Stickle's brown oven loaves.
Upstairs, Martin had managed to wrap one of the ropes around a stone column.
Soldiers were jeering at the efforts of the patrol to get him away and up the
stairs. "Yah, what's the matter, lads, are you scared of him?"
Blacktooth turned on the mocking group. "Any of you lot fancy having a go at
him? No, I thought not."
The door opened behind them, and snow blew in with a cold, draughty gust. A
fox wearing a ragged cloak trotted past mem and up the broad flat stairs to
their first floor. The soldiers found a new target for their remarks.
"Hoho, just you wait, fox. You're late."
"Aye, old Greeneyes doesn't like to be kept waiting."
"I'd keep out of Lady Tsarmina's way, if I were you."
Ignoring them, the fox swept quickly up the stairs.
Martin tried to make a dash for the half-open door to the parade ground but he
was carried to the floor by weight of numbers. Still he fought gamely on.
13
The jeering soldiers started shouting and calling humorous advice again.
Blacktooth tried freezing them into silence with a stera glance, but they took
no notice of him this time.
Splitnose sniffed in disgust. "Discipline has gone to the wall since Lord
Verdauga's been sick,''
Fortunata the vixen waited nervously in the draughty antehall of Kotir. A low
fire cast its guttering light around the damp sandstone walls. Slimy green
algae and fungus grew between sodden banners as they slowly disintegrated into
threadbare tatters suspended from rusty iron holders. The vixen could not
suppress a shudder. Presently she was joined by two ferrets dressed in
cumbersome chain mail. Both bore shields emblazoned with the device of their
masters, a myriad of evil green eyes watching in all directions. The guards
pointed with their spears, indicating that the fox should follow them, and
Fortunata fell in step, marching off down the long dank hall. They halted in
front of two huge oaken doors, which swung open as the ferrets banged their
spearbutts against the floor. The vixen was confronted by a scene of ruined
grandeur.
Candles and torches scarcely illuminated the room; the crossbeams above were
practically lost in darkness. At one end there were three ornate chairs
occupied by two wildcats and a pine marten. Behind these stood a four-poster
bed, complete with tight-drawn curtains of musty green velvet, its footboard
carved with the same device as the shields of the guards.
The marten hobbled across and searched the satchel Fortunata carried. The
vixen shrank from contact with the badly disfigured creature. Ashleg the
marten had a wooden leg and his entire body was twisted on one side as if it
had been badly maimed. To disguise this, he wore an overiong red cloak trimmed
with woodpigeon feathers. With an expert flick, he turned the contents of the
satchel out onto the floor. It was the usual jumble of herbs, roots, leaves
and mosses carried by a healer fox.
Approaching the bed, Ashleg called out in an eerie singsong dirge, "O mighty
Verdauga, Lord of Mossflower, Master of the Thousand Eyes, Slayer of Enemies,
Ruler of Kotir—"
14
"Ah, give your whining tongue a rest, Ashleg. Is the fox here? Get these
suffocating curtains out of my way." The imperious voice from behind the
curtains sounded hoarse but full of snarling menace.
Tsarmina, the larger of the two seated wildcats, sprang forward, sweeping back
the dusty bedcurtains in a single move. "Fortunata's here. Don't exert
yourself, father."
The vixen slid to the bedside with practiced ease and examined her savage
patient. Verdauga of the Thousand Eyes had once been the mightiest warlord in
all the land . . . once. Now his muscle and sinew lay wasted under the tawny
fur that covered his big, tired body. The face was that of a wildcat who had
survived many battles: the pointed ears stood above a tracery of old scars
that ran from crown to whiskers. Fortunata looked at the fearsome yellowed
teeth, and the green barbarian eyes still alight with strange fires.
"My Lord looks better today, yes?"
"None the better for your worthless mumbo jumbo, fox."
The smaller of the two seated wildcats rose from his chair with an expression
of concern upon his gentle face. "Father, stay calm. Fortunata is trying hard
to get you well again."
Tsarmina pushed him aside scornfully. "Oh, shut up, Gin-givere, you
mealy-mouthed—"
"Tsarmina!" Verdauga pulled himself into a sitting position and pointed a claw
at his headstrong daughter. "Don't talk to your brother in that way, do you
hear me?"
The Lord of a Thousand Eyes turned wearily to his only son. "Gingivere, don't
let her bully you. Stand up to her, son."
Gingivere shrugged and stood by silently as Fortunata ground herbs with a
pestle, mixing diem with dark liquid in a horn beaker.
Verdauga eyed the vixen suspiciously. "No more leeches, fox. I won't have
those filthy slugs sucking my blood. I'd sooner have an enemy's sword cut me
than those foul things. What's that rubbish you're concocting?"
Fortunata smiled winningly. "Sire, this is a harmless potion made from the
herb motherwort. It will help you to sleep. Squire Gingivere, would you give
this to your father, please?"
As Gingivere administered the medicine to Verdauga, nei-
15
ther of them noticed the look of slyness or the wink that passed between
Fortunate and Tsarmina.
Verdauga settled back in bed and waited for the draught to take effect.
Suddenly the peace was broken by a loud commotion from outside. The double
doors burst open wide.
16
Ben Stickle nearly jumped out of his spikes as Gontf bounded out from behind a
snow-laden bush in the nighttime forest.
"Boo! Guess who? Hahaha, Ben* me old matey, you should have seen your face
just then. What are you doing trekking round here in the snow?"
Ben recovered himself quickly. "GonfF, I might have known! Listen, young
feller me mouse, I haven't got time to stop and gossip with you. WeVe left the
settlement at last and I'm lookin' for the little hut that the Corim keep for
the likes of us."
The mousethief winked at Urthclaw and kissed Goody cheekily. "Ha, that place,
follow me, matey. I'll have you there in two shakes of a cat's whisker."
Goody shuddered. "I wish you wouldn't say things like that, you little rogue."
, But Gonif was not listening, he was skipping ahead with die little ones, who
thought it was all a huge adventure.
**Is it a nice place, Mr. Gonff?"
"Oh, passable. Better than the last place you were in."
"What's that under your jerkin, Mr. Gonff?"
"Never you mind now, young Spike. It's a secret."
"Is it very far, Mr. Gonff? I'm tired."
"Not far now, Posy me little dear. I'd carry you if it weren't for your
spikes."
17
Goody Stickle shook her head and smiled. She had always had a special soft
spot for Gonff.
The Corim hut was well hidden, deep enough into the forest to avoid immediate
discovery. Urthclaw said his goodbyes and trundled off to find his own kind.
Ben watched him go as Gonff lit the fire. He nodded fondly. "Good old
Urthclaw, he only stayed at the settlement because of us, I'm sure of it."
When the fire was burning red, Goody sat around it with Gonff and Ben. The
four baby hedgehogs poked their snouts from under the blankets to one side of
the hearth.
"Have you been stealing from Kotir again, Gonff? What did you pinch this
time?"
The mousethief laughed at Goody's shocked expression. He threw a wedge of
cheese over to the little ones. "It's not pinching or stealing if it comes out
of Kotir, mateys. It's called liberating. Here, get your whiskers around that
lot and get some sleep, the four of you."
Ben Stickle sucked on an empty pipe and stirred the burning logs with a
branch. "Gonff, I do wish you'd be careful. We can live on what we have until
spring arrives, Goody and I would never forgive ourselves if you got caught
taking cheese and wine inside that cat's castle."
Goodwife Stickle wiped her eyes on her flowery pinafore. "No more we wouldn't,
you young scallawag. Oh my spikes, I dread to think what'd "appen if those
varmin catchered you, Gonff."
Gonff patted her very carefully. "There, there, Goody. What's a bite of food
and a warm drink between mateys? The young uns need their nourishment.
Besides, how could I ever forget the way that you and Ben brought me up and
cared for me when I was only a little woodland orphan?"
Ben took a sip of the wine and shook his head. "You be careful, all the same,
and remember what the Corim rule is; bide your time and don't let 'em catch
you. One day we'll win old Mossflower back."
Goody sighed as she went about making porridge for the next morning's
breakfast. "Fine words, but we're peaceable creatures. How we're ever goin* to
win our land back against all those trained soldiers is beyond me."
Gonff topped up Ben Stickle's beaker with elderberry wine
18
and gazed into the flickering flames, his normally cheerful face grim. "I'll
tell you this, mateys: the day will come when something will happen to change
all this, you wait and see. Some creature who isn't afraid of anything will
arrive in Mossflower, and when that day arrives we'll be ready. We'll pay that
filthy gang of vermin and their wildcat masters back so hard that they'll
think the sky has fallen on them."
Ben rubbed his-eyes tiredly. "A hero, eh. Funny you should say that. I thought
I saw just such a one earlier tonight. Ah, but he's probably dead or in the
dungeons by now. Let's get some sleep. I'm bone weary."
The little hut was an island of warmth and safety in the night, as the howling
north wind drove snowflakes before it, whining and keening around the gaunt
trees of winter-stricken Mossflower.
19
4
Struggling wildly between two stoats, the captive mouse was dragged into the
bedchamber. He was secured by a long rope, which the guards tried to keep taut
摘要:

Lateautumnwindssighedfitfullyaroundtheopengatehousedoor,rustlingbrowngoldleavesinthefadingafternoon.BellaofBrockhallsnuggleddeeperintoheroldarmchairbythefire.Throughhalf-closedeyesshewatchedthesmallmousepeeringaroundthedoorwayather."Comein,littleone,andclosethedoor."Thesmallmousedidashewasbidden.Enc...

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