“How much do you want for them?” asked Lief abruptly.
Tom rubbed his hands. “Shall we say, twenty-one gold coins for the three?” he suggested.
“Shall we say, fifteen?” growled Barda.
Tom looked shocked. “Fifteen? For these superb beasts that are as dear to me as my own children? Would you rob poor Tom? Would you make him a beggar?”
Jasmine looked concerned, but Barda’s face did not quiver. “Fifteen,” he repeated.
Tom threw up his hands. “Eighteen!” he said. “With saddles and bridles thrown in. Now — can I say fairer than that?”
Barda glanced at Lief and Jasmine, who both nodded vigorously.
“Very well,” he said.
And so the bargain was struck. Tom fetched saddles and bridles and helped Lief, Barda, and Jasmine load the muddlets with their packs. Then he led the beasts out of the shed. They moved with a strange, rocking motion, the one front leg stepping forward first, and the two hind legs swinging together after it.
Tom opened a gate in the fence and they walked out of the field. The three grey horses watched them go. Lief felt a pang of regret. In the excitement of bargaining with Tom, he had forgotten the horses. But how nice it would have been to ride them away, instead of these other strange, lolloping creatures.
Never mind, he told himself, patting Noodle’s splodgy back. We will become used to these beasts in time. By the end of our journey, no doubt, we will have grown very fond of them.
Later, he was to remember that thought — remember it bitterly.
When they reached the front of the shop, Tom held the reins while the three companions climbed up on their mounts’ backs. After some discussion, Jasmine took Zanzee, Lief took Noodle, and Barda took Pip, though in fact there was little to choose between the beasts, who looked very alike.
The saddles fitted just behind the muddlets’ necks, where their bodies were narrowest. The baggage was strapped behind, across the broad expanse of the rump. It was quite a comfortable arrangement, but, all the same, Lief felt a little anxious. The ground seemed very far away, and the reins felt awkward in his hands. Suddenly he was wondering if this had been a good idea after all, though, of course, he did his best not to show it.
The muddlets were making glad, snuffling sounds. They were clearly very pleased to be out in the fresh air, and were looking forward to exercise.
“Hold the reins tightly,” said Tom. “They may be a little lively at first. Call, ‘Brix’ when you want them to go, and ‘Snuff’ when you want them to stop. Call loudly, as their hearing is not sharp. Tie them up well when you stop, so they will not stray. That is all there is to it.”
Lief, Barda, and Jasmine nodded.
“One more thing,” Tom murmured, inspecting his fingernails. “I have not asked you where you are going, for I do not want to know. Knowledge is dangerous, in these hard times. But I am going to give you a piece of advice. It is excellent advice, and I suggest you follow it. About half an hour from here you will come to a place where the road divides. At all costs take the left path, however tempted you may be to do otherwise. Now — travel well!”
With that, he lifted a hand and slapped Noodle’s rump. “Brix!” he shouted. And, with a lurching jerk, Noodle started forward, with Pip and Zanzee following close behind. Kree squawked, flapping above them.
“Remember!” Tom’s voice called after them. “Keep tight reins! Be sure to take the left path!”
Lief would have liked to wave, to show that he had heard, but he did not dare lift a hand. Noodle was picking up speed, her floppy ears blowing backwards in the breeze, her powerful legs bounding forward.
Lief had never been to sea, for before he was born, the Shadow Lord had forbidden the coast to the citizens of Del. But he imagined that clinging to a lively muddlet must be very like sailing a boat in stormy weather. It required all his attention.
After about ten minutes, the muddlets’ excitement wore off and they slowed to a steady, lolloping pace. Noodle began to remind Lief of a rocking horse he had had as a child, rather than making him think of a pitching boat.
This is not so hard, he thought. In fact, it is easy! He was filled with pride and satisfaction. What would his friends say, if they could see him now?
The road was wide, and the companions were able to ride beside one another. Lulled by the rocking movement, Filli settled down to sleep inside Jasmine’s jacket, and now that he was sure that all was well, Kree flew ahead, dipping now and then to catch an insect. Jasmine herself rode silently, her eyes thoughtful. Barda and Lief talked.
“We are making very good time,” said Barda with satisfaction. “These muddlets are certainly excellent steeds. I am surprised that we have not heard of them before. I never saw one in Del.”
“Tom said they were hard to get,” answered Lief. “The people in this part of Deltora keep them to themselves, no doubt. And Del has had little news from the countryside since long before the Shadow Lord came.”
Jasmine glanced at him, and seemed about to speak, but then she closed her mouth firmly, and said nothing. Her brows were knitted in a frown.
They rode on without speaking for a moment, and then, at last, Jasmine opened her lips.
“This place we are to go — the City of the Rats. We know nothing of it, do we?”
“Only that it is walled, appears deserted, and stands alone in the bend of a river called the Broad,” said Barda. “It has been seen by travellers from afar, but I have heard not a whisper of anyone who has been inside its walls.”
“Perhaps no one who has been inside has lived to tell the tale,” said Jasmine grimly. “Have you considered that?”
Barda shrugged. “The City of the Rats has an evil reputation, and an Ak-Baba was seen in the skies above it on the morning the Shadow Lord invaded. We can be almost sure that one of the Belt’s gems has been hidden there.”
“So,” said Jasmine, still in that hard voice, “we must go to the place, but we know little of what we will find there. We cannot prepare or plan.”
“We could not prepare or plan for the Lake of Tears or the Forests of Silence,” Lief put in stoutly. “But still we succeeded in both. As we will succeed in this.”
Jasmine tossed her head. “Brave words!” she retorted. “Perhaps you have forgotten that in the Forests you had me to help you, and at the Lake of Tears we had Manus to guide our way. This time, it is different. We are alone, without advice or help.”
Her plain speaking irritated Lief, and he could see that it irritated Barda also. Perhaps she was right in what she said, but why lower their spirits?
He turned away from her and stared straight ahead. They rode on in silence.
Shortly afterwards the road ahead of them split into two, as Tom had told them it would. There was a signpost in the middle of the fork, one arm pointing to the left, the other to the right.
“Broad River!” exclaimed Lief. “That is the river on which the City of the Rats stands! Why, what a piece of good fortune!”
Excitedly, he began turning Noodle’s head to the right.
“Lief, what are you doing?” protested Jasmine. “We must take the left-hand path. Remember what the man Tom said.”
“Don’t you see, Jasmine? Tom would never have dreamed that we would go willingly to the City of the Rats,” called Lief over his shoulder, as he urged Noodle on. “So of course he warned us against this path. But, as it happens, it is the very path we want. Come on!”
Barda and Pip were already following Lief. Still unsure, Jasmine let Zanzee carry her after them.