A short time later Romsca strode into the glade at the head of her crew. She pointed to the prisoners. "Aye aye, what've we got 'ere?"
Lask ignored the question. He spoke without turning from his fire. "You have been gone long, corzair, why iz thiz?"
Squatting by the flames, Romsca speared an apple on her sword and began roasting it. "I've got news for you, matey. Graylunk's long dead. I found 'is bones, me'n'my crew, over in a pile o' rocks east of 'ere."
"What elze did you find, Romzca?"
"Nothin'. Not a single thing, no sign of any pearls, jus' ole Graylunk's bones an' the rags 'e wore."
"Did you talk with the creaturez at Redwall Abbey?"
"Course I did, that's how I knew where t'find what was left o' Graylunk. But mark my words, Lask, those beasts at Redwall ain't soft, they can fight, I know! If the pearls are anywheres you can lay a belayin' pin to a bobbin they're inside o' that red-walled Abbey somewheres. So, matey, yore in charge o' shore operations, what are y' goin' to do about it?"
The Monitor General did not attempt to hide a triumphant smirk. "I have two captivez. The old mouze iz Father Abbot of Redwall!"
Romsca nibbled at the steaming apple. "Well, ain't you the lucky lizard! But watch yore step, Lask, if those Redwallers find out you've got their Abbot, they'll come searchin' fer 'im in force an' tear these woodlands apart! I tell yer true, they've got tough, full-growed otters an' beasts who ain't scared of battle. Conva reckoned he saw a great badger roamin' the walltops last time we was 'ere. You might find ye've bitten off more'n y'can chew, takin' an Abbot as 'ostage!"
Lask Frildur stood up decisively. "I zerve my Emperor, Ublaz. I will do what I muzt! We will divide our forzez, half to take the prizonerz back to Waveworm, the other half to remain here under my command."
"Aye, that's good thinkin', matey," Romsca agreed, only too glad to be away from the hated Monitor General. "I'll take the 'ostages an' my crew back t'the ship ..."
Lask gripped Romsca's paw so tight that she winced. "You take half your crew and five of my Monitorz, that way there will be no trickz played. I keep half your crew here with my other five Monitorz."
The corsair managed to pull herself from the lizard's grip and stood fuming, paw on sword.
"All right, so be it, you don't trust me an' I don't trust you! Permission t'go, yer 'igh mightiness, or will there be anythin' else whilst I'm 'ere t'do yer biddin'?"
Smiling thinly, Lask produced a slim bone whistle and blew it. "Oh yezz, I had vizitorz while you were gone. They will accompany you back to your vezzel, juzt to keep an eye on thingzz!"
Grall the great black-backed gull and his remaining two companions, looking much the worse for wear, came padding through the trees.
As soon as Hogwife Teasel had told Martin about the corsair ferret and her questions about Graylunk and the pearls, he joined Skipper and his otters on the walltop, a look of concern clouding his face.
Skipper seemed unconcerned, however. "Oh, it was a corsair, no doubt o' that, an' I wager there's others waitin' orders in the woodlands. But wot's a crew 0' seascum an' vermin to us, Martin? We'll teach 'em a lesson they'll never ferget if'n they comes too close t'Redwall!"
Leaning over the parapet, Martin peered into the silent woodlands.
"I wish it were that easy, Skip, but Tansy told me that the Abbot is out there with young Viola. They should have been back by now."
Dismay showed on Skipper's tough face. "Wot d'you suggest we do, Martin?"
"We'd best get the elders together and hold a quick council of war."
Tansy and Rollo caught up with Martin as he crossed the lawn with Auma the badger Mother and Foremole.
"Martin, what can we do to help?"
The Warriormouse paused a moment before he entered the gatehouse where the other elders were waiting. "Keep on with the search for the other five pearls, you two. I've a feeling we may need them!"
************************************
Tansy pulled Rollo toward the wallsteps. "Let's sit out here. It's a nice afternoon, maybe we'll think better out in the fresh air."
Rollo read out the rhyme from the waxy paper for the fourth time. Like the first of Fermald's poems, it seemed to make little sense.
"I shed my second tear, into the cup of cheer,
But look not into any cup, the answer's written here!
My first is in blood and also in battle,
My second in acorn, oak and apple,
My third and fourth are both the same,
In the center of sorrow and twice in refrain,
My fifth starts eternity ending here,
My last is the first of last... Oh dear!
If I told you the answer then you would know,
'Twas made in the winter of deepest snow."
Tansy drummed her paws in frustration on the steps. "Ooh, that Fermald! If she were still alive I'd give her a piece of my mind! This rhyme's twice as tricky as the last one!"
They sat in silence, racking their brains until the Abbey bells tolled four times. Rollo had started to doze, but the bells woke him, and he said, "Come on, Tansy, let's go for tea!"
It was such a nice afternoon that Brother Dormal and Teasel had arranged tea in the orchard. Rollo and Tansy took scones, crystallized fruits, cream and steaming rosehip tea and sat with Piknim the mousemaid and Craklyn the squirrelmaid beneath the spreading boughs of an old gnarled apple tree. No sooner had Tansy sat down than Arven's face appeared upside down in front of her. He wrinkled his nose and stuck out his tongue.
"Tansy pansy toogle doo .. . Boo!"
The little squirrel was hanging by his tail from a bough. Tansy unhooked him and lifted him down.
"You little maggot, you'll fall on your head one day!"
Arven helped himself to a pawful of cream and ran off, giggling at the clever trick he had played.
Piknim looked over Rollo's shoulder at the waxy paper. "What's that, mister Rollo, the words of a song?"
The Recorder threw up his paws in despair. “I wish it were, miss, it's a riddle."
"Ooh, a riddle, lovely!" Piknim and Craklyn chorused in a single voice.
Rollo looked at them over his spectacle tops. “You mean that you like riddles? Are you any good solving them?"
The two friends immediately broke out into:
"If string cannot sing then answer this riddle,
What sings as sweet as the strings of a fiddle,
The fiddlestring sings, but it never can throw
An arrow so far as the string of a bow,
But a bow plays a fiddle and I'll marry thee,
If you give a bright bow of ribbon to me!"
They curtsied prettily as Rollo applauded, saying, "Well sung, misses, you can help us solve our riddle!"
Piknim and Craklyn read Fermald's poem twice then began tittering and winking at each other. Tansy looked from one to the other. "You've solved it, haven't you?" she demanded.
They began teasing.
"Well yes, but then again, no!"
"We've solved it, but not all the rhyme."
"But we know what the main part means!"
"Oh yes, it's a six-letter word!"
Rollo could restrain himself no longer. "Well, in the name of seasons and summers, tell us!"
Piknim and Craklyn were real teasers. They went off into gales of tittering and giggling until they were unable to talk.
Tansy placed a restraining paw on the irate Recorder. “Leave this to me, Rollo!" Scooping up two large globs of cream, she faced the laughing duo.
"If you don't tell me by the time I count three, stand by for a creamy facewash. One ... Two ..."
They both yelled out, "It's a barrel, it's a barrel!"
Still holding the pawfuls of cream, Tansy commanded them, "Right, show us how you arrived at the answer."
Piknim and Craklyn talked like a double act, one after the other.
"Well, we don't know what the first two lines mean, all that stuff about cup of cheer and shed a tear."