Rats, Bats and Vats rbav-1 Read online

Page 12


  "Destruction. Eamon's idea of a good time." Chip turned on the rats, lounging against the tractor. "And you? Anything you'd like me to carry? Besides your idle selves, that is. What about that dinky little tractor to lean against? I could put that on one shoulder, and then take a stainless steel vat of wine on the other."

  Fal grinned at him. "Don't take it out on us because those bats want you to hump a ton of fertilizer. Anyway, what is the use of carrying wine when we've discovered a vat of brandy? Here, try some of this."

  Chip took the proffered glass of clear stuff. Took an unwary mouthful. Spayed it out, coughing. "You stupid bastards! That's lighter fuel!"

  The rats seemed to find that very funny. "A bit over-proof, eh?"

  "And you don't have to carry it," said Doll. "We'll carry it ourselves. Or in ourselves," she added, with a ladylike belch.

  "It's probably wood alcohol," protested Chip. "Methanol. It'll make you go blind, for God's sake."

  One-eyed Pistol replied loftily. "No use trying to keep us off the drink, Chip. Can't be done. We're good and proper rats, us."

  "It's for your own good, you asses!"

  Nym looked at him speculatively. "Tell you what. We need a volunteer to try the stuff out. A bat, that's the ticket! They're loons to begin with. They volunteer for everything. And they're blind as bats, anyway, so if it turns sour-"

  All the bats set up an agitated fluttering of their wings. "Begorra! It is sick to death I am of that foul slander!" Even the taciturn O'Niel was stirred into speech. "Blind as a bat! Are ye daft? We see as well as you, or better in low-light conditions. And we don't drink!"

  "They don't drink! Hear that girls? So what else is making them blind, methinks?" Fal gave a lewd wink to Phylla.

  "Check the palms of their feet," Pistol sniggered.

  Chip shook his fist at all of them. "Will you bunch of stupid rodents stop this?"

  "Who's your `rodent,' primate?" demanded Behan. "It is more cheek than an intelligent life-form you've got! I am Chiroptera and proud of it!" He folded his wings with affronted dignity, like a magistrate tightening his robes of office.

  "And we're macrosceledia/insectivora," chipped in Doc. With a casual wave of his paw: "With a mere dash of rodent thrown in. Couldn't give a toss about it. The term `rat' is purely an honorific."

  "Well said," hissed Fal and Pistol in unison. Nym rumbled his own wordless agreement.

  Chip shrugged. "All I was trying to do was persuade you not to kill yourselves."

  Melene took pity on him. "This was a wine farm, Chip. And believe me, even distilled, I can smell the grapes."

  Chip knew it was no use arguing further with them about drinking the stuff. The beggars chorus already had a fair amount in them, by the sounds of it. Not enough to incapacitate them, but enough to make them very troublesome. Rats were very good at attaining that level. The high metabolic rate allowed them to drink more than you'd think they could. And practice kept them from incapacitating themselves. Rats liked drink. It was the one method the army had found to get them to fight. They got a daily issue of grog, much as sailors once had.

  Of course, one of the bats still had to try to stop them. "But why take the daemon drink with you?" cried Siobhan. "It'll be the ruination of you! Take things to keep yourselves alive, not to kill you."

  "Molotov cocktails," snapped Fal. "That's what we're taking. Do they normally get served with an olive in them, Chip? We're not sure of the traditions, here."

  Siobhan seemed shocked. "But surely you cannot just take drink?"

  One of the rats picked up a spool of baling wire. "This is heavy enough. Useful stuff, wire."

  Chip was still dwelling on his failed flamethrower. An errant thought of flambed crepes went through his mind. "Is there really lots of that… raw brandy?"

  Doll grinned. "I' faith, enough to swim in or to keep Fal drunk for a month!"

  "Take me to it."

  The rats looked shifty. Very shifty. "I suppose there is enough," said Melene finally. Grudgingly.

  ***

  At a guess, Chip thought that the stainless steel tank had about four or five hundred gallons in it. The rats were still scandalized when he poured the diesel out of the backpack sprayer and then tapped raw brandy into the tank.

  "It'll give it a horrible taste, Chip," whined Fal.

  "Watch!"

  He pumped up the pressure. Lit the lighter and squeezed the trigger. With a sudden BOOM, it caught. Chip held a six foot flame-torch. That would show the Maggots!

  "Keep the tip down!" Siobhan fluttered clear, shouting advice. "The thing is dripping! The drips are running down the nozzle-and the flames are following the drips! You idiot!"

  Hastily, Chip stopped squeezing the trigger and pointed the nozzle down. After an uncooperative minute, the flames died.

  Well, it worked. But as Chip's previous experience with flamethrowers had been caramelizing sugar with a blowtorch, he was more than a bit nervous of the gadget. The whole thing struck him as a recipe for disaster. But if it scared Maggots…

  "Where's Don Whatsisname?" he asked.

  Nym shook his head. "Dunno. The girls have been looking for him."

  "He's probably gone into hiding then."

  ***

  They found the tiny galago asleep. Deep asleep.

  "It is daytime, 'ginia. Not waking up time." The galago curled tighter under his tail.

  "Nocturnal," muttered Doc. "That explains the big eyes."

  "What sort of guide is it that I have to carry because he's flat out?" complained Chip, picking the creature up.

  "He's probably been through a lot in the last while, poor mite," said Bronstein. "He's obviously some rich woman's plaything. Not used to this sort of life. He's probably having the first decent sleep he's had ever since they were captured."

  "You falling for him too, Bronstein?"

  The bat snorted. "Hah. I'm not one of those oversexed rats. Likely the next time he holds forth about needing a real male for the job, his pretty little ears I'll notch for him. Still, though he was as scared as a rabbit to go back into the Maggot-tunnels, he was still ready to try. That took courage, real courage, for a pampered little thing."

  Chip sighed. "That's true enough. But this is a stupid idea, Bronstein. We're never gonna get away with it. Maggots are up and about now. They were asleep when the others went in."

  "True. So I think we should wait. Eamon and I have an idea."

  "Which involves blowing something up."

  The bat had the grace to look faintly abashed. "Uh. Yes. But only if it is needed."

  "Oh. You mean Eamon is going to give up a chance at mayhem? Explain that one."

  The bat snarled. Restrained herself. "I'll explain what we have in mind! Look, when Siobhan flew after the little fellow, she found out that there are tunnels which go straight across… from one side of the mound to the other. And at the other end there was a down chute. .. I don't know, an air hole, whatever, identical to this side."

  Chip raised his eyes to the twinkling force field that was between him and heaven. "Oh wonderful. Now all we need to do is find that there are ones going along as well as across and we can set up a toll booth, or walk straight to the middle of the whole Maggot nest!"

  "Will you listen, Connolly? Springing this human, which Eamon and Behan are none too keen on, I'll tell you, is bound to alert the Maggots. If we get out, we will want to come back to the farmhouse. That's where the food is, and that's the right direction for the sea. So what we want to do is to go across to the far side. Set up a shot pattern to get us out into the valley we escaped out of originally."

  Chip cocked his head. "Which is the wrong direction."

  "Right," Bronstein said, in the tone used to humor a small and annoying child. "We'll set things up so that the Maggots can chase off to where we aren't going to be. That'll give us a head start, at least."

  Chip rolled his eyes. "So you're going to cross the whole mound and set up a dummy first. Don't let me stop you."<
br />
  Bronstein looked uneasy. "Well, we need you to come along. You'll be carrying the fertilizer. And quite a lot of diesel. And that would save us from having to use more than one satchel-charge."

  These bats had bats in the belfry and no mistake! "I see. And doubtless you want a couple of rats along for hole digging. Forget it, Bronstein. It's a good idea, maybe, but there is more chance of my falling pregnant than the rats agreeing."

  "We… took the liberty of getting Melene and Doc to put a cold chisel and a four-pound hammer in the bag. Those hollow blocks give us really quick shot holes…"

  "You're crazy Bronstein, damn you! I'm not doing it!"

  ***

  Well, at least he was carrying much less weight in fertilizer and less diesel because he'd argued before giving in. He'd been able to talk them down to half again because of having to carry the cans of diesel. And now that the things were set up, what was left in the fertilizer bags couldn't weigh more than twenty to twenty-five pounds. It was nice to have insurance, even if he hadn't agreed to that second booby trap they'd set. And at least they'd waited until dark. It did appear that Maggots slowed down at night, coming to a virtual halt in the wee small hours. But crossing the six hundred yards of mound had been scary as hell, even with the bats flying interference. Still.. . it was easier than climbing over it. He'd gotten there. He'd even gotten back.

  Now he was going to have to abseil down, into the depths. Shudder. There would be no safety rope, this time. At least there would be no instructor screaming at him to stop being a wimp.

  He steeled himself. The descendure had better work or he would be strawberry jam. He leaned back, knuckles white on his rope-clutching hands… Through gritted teeth, he whispered: "Here goes nothing."

  He stayed dead still. He forced himself to relax his clutching hands. Still no movement. The problem eventually proved to be getting the oily old hawser-laid rope to go through the descendure to allow him to move at all. His previous experience had been on a smooth, braided-perlon sheathed rope. The descendure the rats had designed for him made the twisted rope twist more below him. That formed knots he had to spin loose before he could go down at all. His slow descent gave him plenty of time to observe his environment. He was pretty sure this was an air shaft. Little tunnels gave off it at ridges which were probably floor levels.

  By the time he got down, the rest of the crew were in foot-stamping impatience. The galago had descended by calmly climbing down Chip's rope, regarding the cursing human en route as a sort of slow-moving rest stop.

  "Right. Where now?" Chip didn't want to think about the plan for getting back up. Not so soon after that descent!

  "Are you sure you wouldn't be liking to stop for nice cup of tea then? Or maybe a nap?"

  Chip was in no mood for sarcasm. "Shut up, Siobhan. Where do we go? Back to the food chamber?"

  "Oh, but we need to go back up two levels," said the galago.

  Chip missed.

  ***

  They crept along as silently, Bronstein acidly informed them, as a herd of dancing elephants. The galago had led them up one spiral ramp when the inevitable happened.

  Either the Maggot was coming down anyway, or it had heard something.

  Bronstein waved them back. They retreated into a side passage.

  Scritch, scritch, scritch. It kept coming after them. And this was a dead end… some kind of adobe-closed store chamber. Nobody breathed. Then the galago gave a sudden squeak and skittered away up the wall.

  There was a thump. Bronstein appeared. "Be using that four-pound hammer to provide us with bit of masonry, Chip. I don't think it saw me. We better fake a natural death for it."

  Chip reached up and knocked a spur loose. "Here. But I think the shit just hit the fan. We'd better move it up. Where is that galago?"

  "I am here," replied a small voice from the roof shadows. "I was just about to strike when the wonderful Bat Lady beat me to it."

  Bronstein lifted a lip.

  "Come on, Duke of Plazo-Toro," chortled Fal. "Let's move out."

  The galago drew himself up. "What did you call me?"

  "That elevated, cultivated, celebrated gentleman, the noble Duke of Plazo-Toro," replied Fal. His voice was perfectly level.

  Bronstein shooed them along, flapping her wings. "Move, move, both of you! And leave that Maggot alone, Pistol! They'll smell a rat for sure if the limbs are missing."

  At a dogtrot they continued. Fifteen minutes, and another successful circumvention, brought them to the place where the girl was walled in. The galago suddenly bounded ahead and bounced up to the tiny aperture near the roof.

  "It is I, Virginia! I have brought the rescue!"

  "Oh-Fluff! Dear God, you've been gone so long. I thought you were dead!" The voice on the other side of the wall was young, female, and sounded thoroughly miserable.

  "Fluff?" Fal grinned broadly.

  Chip was relieved that it hadn't all been a wild goose chase. He was also not mentally prepared to speak to her. He had privately suspected the "princess" would prove to be some ancient-Shareholder-bitch… if there was going to be anyone at all. "Uh, ma'am…"

  The reply was a few seconds in coming, as if she was thinking it over. "Is there somebody else out there…? I heard voices. Am I hallucinating? Fluff?"

  "Indeed, it is I, Virginia," said the galago with pride and reassuring affection. "Really. Here is my tail. I have brought some brave soliders. We have come to rescue you!"

  "Really? You've come to get me out?" There was wild hope in her voice.

  "Yes. Really. Please keep it quiet, ma'am," begged Chip. "Here, Don Fluff, push this end of the flexible saw through."

  Bronstein took charge of the rest of the operation. "Okay, the rest of you. While Chip saws, I want you rats to get to the corners. Find somewhere to duck out of sight if possible. Siobhan, you and Behan take those passages. I'll take this one, and Eamon and O'Niel can stake out the others between you."

  "Bats always get to do the risky work, indade." But Eamon fluttered off to do it readily enough.

  The carborundum-toothed saw hissed through the Magh' adobe. It was easier with two of them working-or it should have been. The "princess" kept jerking his fingers against the wall in her eagerness to be free.

  "There's a bunch of digger-maggots down in the big passage coming this way," warned Behan.

  "They're coming to get me!" The girl's voice sounded on the edge of hysteria.

  She probably was, poor kid, trapped in there for God knows how long. Chip looked at the cut. It was about eighteen inches down, by ten inches across. "How far off are those diggers if they're coming here?"

  "At least three minutes." Behan, like all bats, was an expert at time estimation.

  Chip looked at the cut; turned to the hovering galago. "How big is she?"

  The galago gestured with wide arms. "Immense. Compared to me, that is. Humans are overgrown."

  "Compared to me, you ass!"

  "Perhaps a little taller," said the galago.

  "Stand clear in there," Chip whispered into the hole. "I'm going to shoulder-charge this, to see if I can knock it down. Then be ready to run."

  He hit it. The wall cracked. His shoulder felt like it had cracked as well. He tried again, and the whole section fell in. The air, already dusty from their sawing, was full of swirls.

  Light reflected off heavy-framed glasses. The girl-prisoner had missed a lot of meals, apparently. Her face was muddy and tear-streaked. With her hair pulled back tightly from her angular face, she looked about twelve years old… except that she was distinctly taller than he was. "Quick! Take my arm. We'd better move out."

  Eagerly she scrambled through the hole. She was all ragged clothes, thick glasses and long legs. She struggled to get out of the hole, hooked a foot, and fell out into his arms. Chip found himself being hugged fiercely. "Oh, thank God!"

  Poor kid. Poor damn kid. "It's all right." She nuzzled into him. He kissed her cheek, gently comforting. Her lips found his.
Parted eagerly…

  Chip started back in alarm, but she held onto him.

  Eric Flint

  Rats, Bats amp; Vats

  Chapter 18:

  The hero's regrets.

  THE PIECE OF MASONRY fell. Lumifungus light streamed into her dusty darkness. He stood there framed by the light. A hero. Her hero. He was Heathcliff, Heathcliff-to the life! She climbed out and fell into his arms…

  "Will you two stop behaving like rutting rats!" snapped someone. "We've got to move!"

  She looked up. Focused with difficulty though her dusty glasses. And screamed. Briefly. Her hero clapped a hand over her mouth.

  It was a huge bat, with a wingspan the size of a full arm-stretch. A satanic apparition, black and evil in the eerie tunnel-light. The monster's long canines gleamed white and cruel. She cowered against her savior.

  He was quite muscular, she noted with satisfaction. Just like a hero should be, if perhaps a tad on the wiry side. But why was he pushing her away?

  "It's only Bronstein," he gruffed. "Come. We don't want to get you captured again."

  "But it's a bat! A giant bat!" She shuddered. "Won't it get into my hair?"

  He picked up his pack. "Don't call Bronstein an `it.' And I don't know about your hair, but she can certainly get up my nose."

  "Stupid humans," muttered-Bronstein?

  What kind of name was that, for a monster?

  "Call the rats, Chip, we must go."

  They began jog trotting down the passage, the hero hurrying her along. Virginia was a bit nonplussed. The hero was called-Chip? What kind of name was that for a hero?

  She started at the sight of the cat-sized rats that joined them, but managed to refrain from comment. Now that she thought about it, she'd heard about the rats and bats that humans had bred to fight against the Magh'. These looked like fighters, just in the way they moved. Not just fighters, but battle-scarred and battered fighters. They all wore harnesses, packs and bandoliers. Briefly, she wondered where their leashes were.

  Fortunately, they hurried her onwards before she asked.

 

    The Grantville Gazette Volumn VI Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn VIGrantville Gazette, Volume IX Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IXRing of Fire III Read onlineRing of Fire IIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIIIGrantville Gazette V Read onlineGrantville Gazette V1635: The Eastern Front Read online1635: The Eastern FrontRing of Fire Read onlineRing of FireMother of Demons Read onlineMother of Demons1824: The Arkansas War Read online1824: The Arkansas WarGrantville Gazette 43 Read onlineGrantville Gazette 43Forward the Mage Read onlineForward the MageThe World Turned Upside Down Read onlineThe World Turned Upside DownRing of Fire II Read onlineRing of Fire IIBoundary Read onlineBoundaryGrantville Gazette VI Read onlineGrantville Gazette VI1812: The Rivers of War Read online1812: The Rivers of War1633 Read online1633All the Plagues of Hell Read onlineAll the Plagues of HellGrantville Gazette, Volume 7 Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume 7Worlds Read onlineWorlds1632 Read online1632The Alexander Inheritance Read onlineThe Alexander InheritanceDiamonds Are Forever Read onlineDiamonds Are ForeverThe Philosophical Strangler Read onlineThe Philosophical StranglerGrantville Gazette, Volume VIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume VIIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIV Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIVGenie Out of the Bottle Read onlineGenie Out of the BottlePyramid Scheme Read onlinePyramid Scheme1636- the China Venture Read online1636- the China VentureGrantville Gazette, Volume XII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XIIGrantville Gazette, Volume I Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IThe Demons of Constantinople Read onlineThe Demons of ConstantinopleThe Macedonian Hazard Read onlineThe Macedonian Hazard1634- the Galileo Affair Read online1634- the Galileo AffairThe Shaman of Karres Read onlineThe Shaman of Karres1636: The Ottoman Onslaught Read online1636: The Ottoman OnslaughtThe Genie Out of the Vat Read onlineThe Genie Out of the VatThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II1636: The Saxon Uprising Read online1636: The Saxon Uprising1634 The Baltic War Read online1634 The Baltic War1636: Mission to the Mughals Read online1636: Mission to the Mughals!632: Joseph Hanauer Read online!632: Joseph HanauerGrantville Gazette-Volume XI Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XI1637: The Peacock Throne Read online1637: The Peacock Throne1636: The China Venture Read online1636: The China VentureThe Rats, the Bats & the Ugly Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats & the UglyGrantville Gazette, Volume X Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XThe Course of Empire Read onlineThe Course of EmpirePyramid Power Read onlinePyramid Power1636: The Devil's Opera Read online1636: The Devil's OperaRing of Fire IV Read onlineRing of Fire IVGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire)1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards)The tide of victory b-5 Read onlineThe tide of victory b-51634: The Ram Rebellion Read online1634: The Ram RebellionThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2 Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2Castaway Resolution Read onlineCastaway ResolutionCouncil of Fire Read onlineCouncil of FireSlow Train to Arcturus Read onlineSlow Train to Arcturus1637_The Volga Rules Read online1637_The Volga RulesBoundary b-1 Read onlineBoundary b-11637: No Peace Beyond the Line Read online1637: No Peace Beyond the LineThe Sorceress of Karres Read onlineThe Sorceress of KarresDestiny's shield b-3 Read onlineDestiny's shield b-3In the Heart of Darkness b-2 Read onlineIn the Heart of Darkness b-2Grantville Gazette.Volume 22 Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume 22Carthago Delenda Est э-2 Read onlineCarthago Delenda Est э-21635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards)1812-The Rivers of War Read online1812-The Rivers of WarThe Dance of Time b-6 Read onlineThe Dance of Time b-6Belisarius II-Storm at Noontide Read onlineBelisarius II-Storm at NoontideIron Angels Read onlineIron Angels1636:The Saxon Uprising as-11 Read online1636:The Saxon Uprising as-111812: The Rivers of War tog-1 Read online1812: The Rivers of War tog-1Jim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6Fortune's stroke b-4 Read onlineFortune's stroke b-41637 The Polish Maelstrom Read online1637 The Polish MaelstromThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1 Read onlineThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1Grantville Gazette.Volume XVI Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVI1636:The Kremlin games rof-14 Read online1636:The Kremlin games rof-141824: The Arkansas War tog-2 Read online1824: The Arkansas War tog-2Time spike Read onlineTime spikeJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1Grantville Gazette.Volume VII Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume VII1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards) Read online1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire)Jim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 5 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 51635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette. Volume 21 Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume 21Rats, Bats and Vats rbav-1 Read onlineRats, Bats and Vats rbav-11636_The Vatican Sanction Read online1636_The Vatican SanctionThe Aethers of Mars Read onlineThe Aethers of MarsJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 5 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 51634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards)Grantville Gazette Volume 24 Read onlineGrantville Gazette Volume 24TITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire) Read onlineTITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire)Ring of fire II (assiti shards) Read onlineRing of fire II (assiti shards)1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards) Read online1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards)Jim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4In the Heart of Darkness Read onlineIn the Heart of DarknessMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3 Read onlineMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3