always as they appear.’ It waved a paw, and suddenly Tark and Zyra were standing in a field of poppies, the blood-red flowers wafting in a gentle breeze.
As Zyra reached out for a flower, the scene dissolved into a no-man's-land of mud, razor wire and dead bodies. Rats gnawed on the corpses. Rats flooded out from the trenches, engulfing the landscape. And then Tark and Zyra were in the sewer again, facing the rat-mage.
‘The tunnels are my domain,’ said the rat-mage. ‘In the world above, I am vermin. But here below, I am master. I can give you anything your hearts desire. So long as you stay within the boundaries of my domain.’
The rat-mage waved a paw, and silver platters laden with food, were brought before them on the backs of scurrying rats. Fruit, cakes, puddings, even ice-cream.
Tark's eyes widened.
‘Wot's this all abouts,’ demanded Zyra, barely even looking at the food. ‘Who in the name of the Designers are ya?’
‘I am the discarded child of the Designers,’ said the rat-mage, voice harsh with hatred, eyes blazing. It spat another glob of phlegm at the very thought of the Designers. ‘A mistake. A failed experiment. Banished down here, away from those who quest for Paradise.’ It drew a long, deep breath and calmed itself. ‘But down here, I am in control, away from the prying eyes of the Designers.’ It spat again. ‘Down here you may do as you will. Without them knowing. Without repercussion. The only rules that matter down here are mine.’
‘But the Designers see all,’ said Tark, as if reciting a well-known passage from a much-read book.
‘Not down here,’ assured the rat-mage. ‘And I know what it is that you want. Your heart's most intimate desire.’
The rat-mage waved a paw, and the sea of rats parted to reveal a bed. A luxurious, four-poster bed with sheets of silk, posts of carved mahogany and drapes of the finest embroidered fabric trimmed in gold.
‘Oh yes,’ intoned the rat-mage, its irritatingly squeaky voice becoming silky and smooth and seductive. ‘I know about the rules. Those unfair rules that prevent people of your station from acting on your feelings.’
The fingertips of Tark's hand brushed Zyra's.
‘Oh yes. Those with higher station may do as they will. May even pay for the likes of you, if they so desire. But you may not.’
Tark and Zyra gazed at each other. Their surroundings melted away. The rats were gone. The sludge and the tunnels were gone. Only the bed and the food remained. All else was an indistinct blur. And then there were flowers.
Zyra picked a flower and held it out to Tark. He smiled. His hand found hers and clasped it tightly. His heart quickened. His eyes closed. He breathed deeply as he leaned towards her. He felt exhilarated. He felt foggy. He felt as if he were about to be lost in a dream.
The flower Zyra held out brushed against his cheek.
Tark's eyes snapped open.
‘It has no smell,’ he said. ‘The flower.’
Zyra looked confused.
‘The fire,’ he remembered. ‘No heat. It ain't real. It's all fake.’
He snatched the flower from Zyra's hand and held it up for her to see. It was a brittle, dead twig. He scooped up a handful of ice-cream.
‘Smell it,’ he demanded, holding it up under Zyra's nose.
Zyra took a sniff and gagged at the stench. Tark had a handful of green sludge.
All around them, the food was revealed as rotting and decayed scraps on discarded pieces of wood. The bed turned into a cage. And then the rats were back.
‘Oh dear,’ said the rat-mage, its voice an irritating squeak again. ‘You could have stayed here and been oh-so happy. But now you will stay and be oh-so miserable.’
The rats parted to form a path to the cage.
‘In you get,’ said the rat-mage, conjuring up a ball of fire in its outstretched paw.
Zyra drew her knives and struck a fighting pose.
‘I could force you in,’ said the rat-mage.
‘No ya can'ts,’ said Tark. Then he added to Zyra: ‘It's illusion. Just like