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Authors: C. Alexander London

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BOOK: The Wild Ones
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Chapter Twen
ty-Two

DEAL BREAKER

HERE'S
one,” Shane Blacktail told his brother, with a grin on his face. “How many raccoons does it take to find the Bone of Contention?”

“I don't know, brother. How many?” Flynn Blacktail responded.

“No one knows!” Shane cheered, delivering the gleeful punch line to his joke. “They all get eaten when they try.”

The Blacktail brothers doubled over laughing, but Eeni and Uncle Rik did not find the joke funny at all. They were locked in separate cages that had been hoisted up by pulleys to the van's ceiling so that they hung above
the dashboard, visible to all the thugs and goons of the Rabid Rascals and to the passersby outside in Ankle Snap Alley.

Uncle Rik watched sadly as a family of rabbits lifted their meager belongings onto their backs and made their way out of the alley. The green tops of carrots poked from their satchels. Five young hedgehogs followed them, along with a scurry of baby squirrels from the Asylum for Bush-Tailed Orphans. There were a teenaged ferret and a newborn mole in the group too. The church mice who ran the orphans' asylum scurried after the children, trying to keep them together as they made their way into exile from Ankle Snap Alley.

“Can't you see what's happening?” Uncle Rik called down to the turtle. “Everyone is leaving. They think the Flealess are going to evict them.”

“The seven hundred and seven seasons are over,” the Turtle said without even lifting his head from inside his shell. “What do you want me to do about it?”

“Let us help Kit,” Eeni cried out. “If we can find the Bone of Contention, we can prove we belong here.”

The turtle's eyes glistened in the shadow of his shell. “A bet's a bet. If Kit can find the Bone himself, then we'll see what we can do about the Flealess. If he can't . . . well . . .”

Rik looked at the porcupine below. He was puffing out and relaxing his quills over and over again, testing them
for sharpness. Rik shuddered and glanced at the door, hoping Kit would return, but also fearful that if he did, the turtle would still have them all tortured just for spite. He didn't stay the boss of the Rabid Rascals by losing bets with young raccoons.

Blue Neck Ned, still upset he'd been kicked out of his table at Ansel's bakery, had perched on the gearshift, and he watched Eeni and Rik like a hawk . . . well, more like an angry pigeon with a grudge.

“Bet you wish you hadn't taken my seat now, don't ya, Rik?” Blue Neck Ned mocked Kit's uncle.

“I feel so helpless stuck in here.” Eeni rattled her cage. “If Kit were here, he could break us out.”

Rik shook his head. “I could break us out too, young lady. Any raccoon worth the stripes on his tail can pick a lock, but it wouldn't do much good. I don't think either of us can fight off a pack of mangy dogs, a murderous porcupine, and a python.”

Basil snored quietly coiled in a corner, but he smirked to show he heard them talking about him.

“You forgot pigeon,” Blue Neck Ned added. “You'd have to fight me off too.”

“That wouldn't be a problem,” said Rik, locking eyes with the bird.

“Why you no-good, down-and-out, garbage-scrounging liar.” The pigeon ruffled his feathers. “I don't need to
wait for Kit. That boy ain't coming back! Now I'm going to show you what happens when you mess with
this
pigeon.”

The bird leaped from the gearshift onto the top of the cage and started pecking down through the bars at Rik's ears.

“Ow, stop that,” Rik shouted. “Get off of me!” He punched up with his claws, but Ned danced from side to side as he pecked, shaking the cage and knocking Rik off his feet.

“Cut it out up there, youse!” The boss popped his head out of his shell. “A turtle can't hardly think with all that noise.”

“He's giving me guff,” Blue Neck Ned said. “He's gotta learn to respect a bird like me.”

“Respect is earned,” the old turtle said. “And a bird like you hasn't earned it from anyone.”

Ned's wings flexed, but he didn't reply. A pigeon who talked back to the boss turtle could get his wings clipped faster than a mosquito fries on a bug zapper.

“We will wait until the boy returns or the sun comes up and the bet is lost,” the turtle said. “Until then, Rik and his young rat friend are our guests. And we do not
peck
at our guests.”

“You think the boy will come back to give up the Bone, Bossss?” Basil asked.

The turtle shrugged. “No, I don't think he'll come back to give up the Bone.” He looked at Rik and smiled.
“I don't think he'll come back at all. Even if he finds it, there's Gayle, who wouldn't let a tasty morsel like him out of her sewer alive.”

Just then, the van door slid open with a startling crash.

“You're wrong, Turtle!” Kit declared. The sky had just begun to swell with morning light, and his fur was tinted red against the glow. The dogs circled, sniffing the wet fur and sewage smell that clung to him. “She's a very reasonable reptile.” He held up the Bone. “And I win.”

“How . . . how did you get away from her?” Shane stammered.

“We made a deal,” said Kit.

“What kind of a deal?” The turtle narrowed his eyes suspiciously.

“That's between me and Gayle,” said Kit. “Now let my friends go.”

The turtle nodded. “Well played, Kit, well played indeed!” The turtle gestured to Shane and Flynn. “Let 'em out.”

“But, Boss!” Shane and Flynn objected together.

“A deal's a deal,” said the Turtle. “We Rascals pay what's owed.”

Kit glowered at Shane and Flynn as they let Eeni, Martyn, and Uncle Rik out of their cages. “I want my hat back too.”

Flynn grumbled, but pulled it out of the glove compartment and tossed it to Kit.

Uncle Rik touched his paw to the image of Azban's paw
inscribed on the Bone that Kit held. “You really found it,” he said. His eyes filled with wonder. “Your parents would be so proud.”

Kit smiled.

“We can show this to the Flealess,” said Martyn. “We can show them we have the right to live here for good.”

“Well, it's not up to us,” said Kit. “A deal's a deal.”

He tossed the Bone into the sand in front of the turtle.

“You can't give him that!” Martyn protested.

“I may not be able to make everyone else around here keep their promises, but I can sure as seasons keep mine,” said Kit. He looked back to his uncle. “Still think Mom and Dad would be proud of me?”

“I know they would,” said Uncle Rik. “You're a raccoon of your word, brave and quick of paw. What more could they hope for?”

“A raccoon who doesn't give priceless artifacts away to gangsters?” Kit suggested.

“Hey,” said the turtle. “We live here too, you know. What good's running a neighborhood if the Flealess think they can kick us out? This Bone says we get to stay, and that's what we're gonna do.”

Kit's uncle hugged him. “See?” he said. “You did well. Now I think we ought to go back to my apartment and get some well-deserved rest. Eeni, I'm sure your own family is wondering where you've gotten off to.”

“Uh, right, sure . . . ,” said Eeni.

“You do have somewhere to go, don't you, Eeni?” Kit asked.

“Of course I do!” Eeni snapped back at him. “I spend most nights with some squirrels in the old theater.”

“The dancing squirrels?” Uncle Rik shook his head. “That's no place for a young rat like yourself.”

Eeni shrugged. “I do just fine,” she said.

“By my stripes you do!” Uncle Rik said. “You'll stay with us tonight. I've a comfy couch you can sleep on and a newspaper quilt that's cozy as can be.”

Kit noticed Eeni looked bashful, like she might turn down the offer out of pride. Since he'd arrived in the alley, he'd heard all kinds of creatures lie for all kinds of bad reasons, so he decided he could tell a lie for a good reason.

“Oh, please stay with us,” he said. “You're my only friend in this city, and I'll be so lonely without you.”

After he said it, he realized it wasn't quite a lie after all.

“Okay,” Eeni agreed. “I'll come along . . . for your sake.”

She looked relieved.

Just then, Basil cleared his throat. “Exssscusssse me, Bossss,” the snake said. “I have ssssome bad newssss.”

“What is it, Basil?” the turtle grunted.

“I've taken a new job, sssseee?” Basil smiled. “My new employer offered me a very comfortable exsssissstenccce in the houssssessss.”

“In the houses?” The turtle narrowed his eyes at his enforcer. “You mean the Flealess?”

“I do,” said Basil. “And my firsssst job for them issss thissss.”

Without another word, Basil struck at the sand in front of the pool.

The turtle's head retreated into his shell. Blue Neck Ned screeched and took off in a panicked flight, slamming right into the windshield and knocking himself out. Shane and Flynn screamed and tried to shove themselves into the glove compartment as Basil swallowed the Bone of Contention whole and spun around to face Kit.

The bone-shaped outline in his neck slid slowly down his gullet. He couldn't speak, but he gave Kit a wink and a nod of thanks, then rushed from the van, zigging and zagging into the alley.

“Hey!” shouted Martyn, waving his fist. “You can't steal that!”

The brave little mouse chased after the snake, while Eeni, Kit, and Rik stood dumbfounded. The Rabid Rascals had just been cheated, and now the Bone was lost and, with it, any claim the Wild Ones had to call Ankle Snap Alley their
home.

Part IV

THE BATTLE FOR ANKLE SNAP ALLEY

Chapter Twenty-Three

THE DOG'S DAY

SIXCLAW
licked his orange paw as he waited for the tiny dog to prance across the sidewalk to him. The People had all left their homes for the day. The neighborhood belonged to the Flealess now.

The sun glinted off the bell around the orange cat's neck, which dinged every time he smoothed the fur behind his ears. He had trained the whole neighborhood to quake at the sound of his bell. He often didn't need to do anything more than make it chime to get a creature to confess their deepest secrets to him.

Of course, he liked it more when they resisted. Then he got to use his claws.

“So you got the snake to turn on his own kind?” Sixclaw asked Titus.

“I got the snake to remember where he came from,” Titus said. “He began as a well-fed house pet, and I promised him he could return to being one. In exchange for the Bone.”

“Reptiles,” Sixclaw grunted. “Can't trust 'em.”

“He did what you could not,” said the dog. “He retrieved the Bone.”

“Funny, I thought only dogs played fetch.”

“Don't you dare insult me, you bird-breathed doorknob scratcher!” Titus barked.

He loathed these cats and their pride. They ate the People's food, drank their water, and accepted their care, but still, they thought they were somehow better than the other Flealess, just because they lived outside. As far as Titus was concerned, Sixclaw was little better than the wild vermin he so hated. He was no house cat. For all Titus knew, Sixclaw actually did have fleas.

“You know, Basil brought me a present too,” Sixclaw said. He produced a small sack he'd tucked into his collar and untied the drawstring. He dropped the pouch on the ground with a thump, and a small mouse rolled out, his
white robes dirty and torn. The little rodent squinted up at the sudden sunlight. “Hello, Martyn,” Sixclaw said.

Martyn looked up at the looming faces of the cat and the dog. “You shampoo-stinking monsters,” he yelled. “The Bone of Contention
does
give us the right to stay, and you know it! It's proof that your ancestor did make a deal with Azban. You can't hide from the truth.”

Titus circled the mouse on the ground. “I have had enough of ancient history, you sanctimonious cheese eater! Who cares what deal was made so long ago? We're not historians, we're animals. Our way is tooth and claw; our law is power. We don't bark and bargain for our turf. We take it! Now that I've got your precious proof, I'm going to bury it so deep, not even your ghost will be able to find it.”

“So you're going to pretend like it never existed?” Martyn asked.

“He who controls history, controls the future,” said Titus. “Without it, the vermin have no claim to call this alley home.”

“You are the dirtiest, stinkingest, lyingest, bedbug-brained canine I have ever—”

Before Martyn could finish, Sixclaw swooped him back up in the sack and cinched it shut. The mouse's voice shouted on, muffled to nonsense by the fabric.

“A useful little prize,” Titus told the cat.

“I was going to eat him,” said Sixclaw.

“First, I want you to send an eviction notice to the vermin. Tell them they are to leave their homes and shops immediately or be destroyed. The alley is ours, and anyone left in it when the sun reaches its peak is pet food.”

“The sun's already up,” the cat observed. “The vermin will be sleeping.”

“So?” The dog shook his head. “Wake them. I'm sure Martyn's friends can be of help in that.”

The cat smiled. “So it's war then?”

“War?” The dog sat back and scratched his ear. “No. Not war. This, I think, will be a massacre. You'll bring the outdoor cats?”

“Of course,” said Sixclaw. “On one condition.”

“What's that?”

“When this is done, I get to eat Kit's head,” the cat said.

“You and your heads.” The dog scratched behind his ear. “Fine. You may eat his head.”

Sixclaw licked his lips.

Titus thought the feline assassin could use a visit to the veterinarian to treat his obsession with eating heads, but the dog had bigger things to worry about than one crazy killer cat. His parents always told him that some dogs were bred to greatness, some were given greatness by their People, and some, like him, had to grab greatness by
the scruff of its neck and tear it to pieces for themselves.

He could taste the greatness on the tip of his tongue.

Or maybe that was toilet water.

Either way, it was going to be a delicious day.

It was time to lead the Flealess to battle.

BOOK: The Wild Ones
11.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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