"I didn't know where else to take it," said Gregor.
"You were supposed to kill it!" said Ripred.
"But I didn't. I brought it to you," said Gregor.
"And what makes you think I won't kill it?" said Ripred.
"I don't think you'd kill a pup," said Gregor.
"Ha!" Ripred said, pacing angrily in a circle. Gregor wasn't sure whether that meant yes or no.
"Okay, how about I don't think you'd kill the Bane? Because if you do, you'll never get the other rats to follow you," said Gregor.
It was lucky he'd been sitting down, because Gregor smacked back onto the rock so fast, he would have cracked his skull open if he'd been standing up. As it was, it hurt plenty.
Ripred pinned him to the ground with one paw as he bared his fangs in Gregor's face. "And have you also thought that, under the circumstances, I might very well kill you?"
Gregor swallowed hard. The answer was yes. But instead of admitting it, he looked Ripred dead in the eye and said, "Okay, but I think I'd better warn you that, if we fight, you've only got a fifty-fifty chance of winning."
"I do?" said Ripred. It was enough to distract him for a second. "And why is that?"
"Because I'm a rager, too," said Gregor.
Ripred began to laugh so hard he fell over on his side. The other rats were laughing, too. Gregor didn't even feel like sitting up. "It's true," he said to the ceiling. "Twitchtip smelled it on me. Ask Ares."
No one asked Ares; they were guffawing too hard. That was one thing you had to give the rats: They enjoyed a good joke. Finally Ripred pulled himself together and swept his tail around, shooing the other rats away. "Go," he said. "Leave them to me."
"All right, Rager," he said when they were gone. "Tell me what happened, and don't leave out any details. I left you after our sorry excuse for an echolocation lesson and —"
"And then I ran into Nerissa," said Gregor. He told Ripred everything: about the fireflies and squid tentacles, about saving Twitchtip at the whirlpool and losing Pandora at the island, about the serpents in the Tankard and taking refuge in the cave. And then he found he couldn't go on.
"Yes, you six were in the cave and what about the others?" asked Ripred.
"They were lost," Ares said, after it was clear Gregor wasn't going to answer. And the bat picked up the story, telling how the remaining group had split. How Twitchtip had led them until she'd collapsed. How Goldshard and Snare had fought. How Gregor had taken the Bane. "And now we are here."
Ripred looked at them thoughtfully. "So, you are. What's left of you," he said. "I am sorry for your losses."
That was the thing about Ripred: One minute he was about to kill you, and the next he seemed to understand it was all you could do not to curl up into a ball and die.
"Just out of curiosity, Gregor, what do you expect me to do with that pup if I don't kill it?" said Ripred.
"I thought you might, you know, kind of raise it. Everyone's so afraid of what it's going to turn into. And if Snare had got hold of it, it probably would've grown up to be a monster. But maybe if you take care of it and stuff, it might turn out okay," said Gregor.
"You thought I'd be its daddy?" said Ripred, as if he hadn't heard right.
"Or, at least its teacher. One of the other rats could be its parent," said Gregor. "Just for, you know, eighteen years, or whatever."
"Ah, here's something you obviously don't know about rats," said Ripred. "That ball of fluff over there will be full grown by the time you've seen another winter."
"But...it's just a baby," said Gregor.
"Only humans grow so slowly," said Ares. "It is one of their great weaknesses. The rest of us in the Underland mature as the rats do. Some even more quickly."
"But how do you teach it everything it has to know?" said Gregor.
"Rats learn faster than humans. And what does it really need to know? To eat, to fight, to find a mate, to hate everyone who is not a rat. It doesn't take long to learn these things," said Ripred.
"You know other things," said Gregor. "About what goes on in the Overland, even."
"Well, I've spent a lot of time in your libraries at night," said Ripred.
"You come up and read books?" asked Gregor.
"Read them, eat them, whatever mood strikes me," he said. "All right, Overlander, you may leave the pup with me. I won't kill it, but I can't promise I can teach it much. And you know, there will be hell to pay in Regalia."
"I don't care," said Gregor. "If they think I'm going to do their dirty work, they can think again."
"That's the stuff, Boy. You're a rager. Don't let them push you around," said Ripred.
"I am a rager," said Gregor sheepishly.
"I know. It's just that there are brand-new ragers, and there are old veteran ragers who have fought in countless wars. And you would be...?" said Ripred.
"The first kind," said Gregor. "And I don't even have a sword."
"How's your echolocation coming along?" asked Ripred.
"It's not," said Gregor. "I stink at it."
"But you'll keep practicing, because you have such unflagging confidence in my judgment," said Ripred.
"Okay, Ripred," Gregor said, too tired to get into an argument about the whole worthless echolocation thing. He stood up. "Are you going to be able to handle it? The Bane, I mean?"
"If it's anything like its mother, I'll have my paws full," said Ripred. "But I'll manage."
Gregor went over and patted the baby on the head. "You take care, you hear?" The Bane nuzzled his hand.
"Give it this, when we're gone," Gregor said, handing Ripred the remaining candy bar. "It'll help. Ready, Ares?"
Ares fluttered forward, and Gregor climbed on his back. "Oh, yeah, and about Twitchtip. You'll let her stay if she makes it back, right?"
"Oh, dear. You haven't become attached to Twitchtip, have you?" said Ripred.
"As rats go, she is among our favorites," said Ares.
Ripred grinned. "She can stay if she can drag her pathetic hide back here. Fly you high, you two."
"Run like the river, Ripred," said Gregor.
As they flew off, he looked back over his shoulder. The Bane was sitting next to Ripred, eating the candy bar, paper and all.
Maybe it would work out in the end.
CHAPTER 24
After they had flown for a while, Gregor remembered that Ares hadn't rested after the long trip through the tunnel. "You want to find a place and take a nap?" he asked. "I can keep watch." But even as he spoke, he yawned. He hadn't had much sleep, either.
"I am strangely wakeful," said Ares. "Why do you not sleep while we fly? I will rouse you when I have need of rest."
"Okay, thanks." Gregor stretched out on Ares's back. The fur was damp, and it smelled of rotten eggs, but Gregor's clothes were in no better condition. Beneath the fur was the warmth of Ares's body. He closed his eyes and let oblivion take over.
Ares let him sleep about six hours before waking him. They camped in a niche high in the rocks of a cavern. The bat conked out immediately after providing Gregor with a few raw fish.
Gregor picked up one of the fish and ripped off a strip of skin with his teeth. Then he took a bite of the cold meat. Howard had always cleaned the fish with a knife, cutting neat pieces away from the bones. Gregor didn't have a knife or even a sword now. And what did it matter, anyway? Still, hunched over his fish on the stone ledge, he felt like he was in a time warp. He'd become a Neanderthal man or something, tearing into raw flesh, just trying to get the life-sustaining calories into his body. That must have been a hard life. Of course, his own wasn't exactly a picnic.
He thought longingly of rich, fatty foods. Mrs. Cormaci's lasagna, loaded with cheese and sauce and noodles. Chocolate cake with thick frosting. Mashed potatoes and gravy. He ripped off a stubborn piece of fish with a grunt. It didn't take long, he thought, to erase hundreds of thousands of years of change if you were hungry.