Island of Destiny. It was Whiskerâs silent hope that the treasure would bring back his parents and sister, who disappeared in their little red boat on the night he was washed overboard in the cyclone. Whisker clung to the belief they were still alive â¦
His thoughts were interrupted by an excited cry from Horace: âArgh me pastries! Last wreck to our starboard side. Put the kettle on, Fred.â
âHold your ratâs tails,â Pete said warily. âI think the Captain should take a look at this.â
The Captain clambered up to the helm and raised a short telescope to his eye. Horace and Whisker scurried after him. Pete stood motionless behind the wheel, looking queasy.
âSo?â Horace squeaked, tugging the Captainâs sleeve. âWho misses breakfast?â
The Captain lowered the telescope. âIâm afraid you both do.â
âWhat?â Horace gasped, turning a sickly shade of green.
âThereâs no Claw-of-War,â the Captain elaborated, âbut the coast is definitely not clear.â
âS-s-so whatâs out there?â Whisker stammered, suddenly feeling as ill as the others.
âIâll give you a hint,â the Captain said, deadpan. âThey smell like fish, but they canât stand water â¦â
Out of the crab pot â¦
There was an old Pie Rat saying that cats and rats got along like naked flames and barrels of gunpowder â explosively. As Whisker watched the armour-plated vessel of the Cat Fish racing towards him, he knew the comparison was frightfully accurate â the Silver Sardine was notorious for firing flaming fur-balls.
âSimple Simon save us,â Pete groaned in desperation. âTheyâre coming for the map.â
âI thought Whisker blew up their rust-bucket boat last night,â Horace said, confused.
The Captain extended his telescope for a closer look.
âThe Silver Sardine is definitely afloat,â he said. âThough it appears her cannons are still out of action.â
âSmall consolation,â Pete muttered. âWeâre out of cannon-pies.â
Mr Tribble raised a trembling paw. âMight I suggest we take our chances with the shipwrecks, Captain? At least we wonât be eaten.â
The Captain swung his telescope towards the sandbar and let out an agitated groan. âRatbeard be kind. The Blue Claw are back for round two. The water is teeming with them.â
Pete stamped his pencil in frustration. âConfounded crabs! Conniving cats! Canât we find an easier enemy?â
âWhat are our other options?â the Captain asked, attempting to remain calm.
Ruby drew both swords and voiced her opinion with a cry of âfight.â The Captain politely shook his head and turned expectantly to Whisker.
Since his dramatic rescue, Whisker had become the official go-to rat in dangerous situations. Heâd saved the crew more than once with his desperate decision making and last-minute escape plans.
âErr ⦠well,â he mumbled, beginning a process of elimination. âWe canât sail north while the crabs occupy the sandbar, and we canât sail east with the mainland in the way. The Silver Sardine is blocking our southern escape route ⦠but we could take our chances to the west and try to outsail them â¦â
âWhat about the blockade?â Pete interrupted.
The crew looked nervously at Whisker. Whisker knew his plan was risky, but less risk than facing the cats.
âIf we encounter a blockade,â he replied, âthe Cat Fish are in as much trouble as we are.â
With a hesitant nod of heads, the Apple Pie turned west. Immediately, the Silver Sardine changed course and the pursuit was on.
Shipwreck Sandbar disappeared from sight as the two ships ploughed through the ocean. The Apple Pie had the up-wind advantage and a favourable breeze from the north-east kept her sails full. The Silver Sardine ,