The Forgotten Map

The Forgotten Map by Cameron Stelzer Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Forgotten Map by Cameron Stelzer Read Free Book Online
Authors: Cameron Stelzer
Tags: Rats – Juvenile fiction., Pirates – Juvenile fiction.
slop.’
    â€˜Child-friendly?’ Whisker scoffed. ‘You’d have to be a skunk with a blocked nose to find that friendly.’
    â€˜It stinks, but it’s safe,’ Horace said. ‘As Pie Rats, we can handle a few drops of putrid pie filling on our sleeves, but to our enemies, it’s utter chaos. Some victims think they’ve been sprayed with acid. Some think their gizzards have been blasted out of their stomachs. Others think we’ve used our cannons as toilets. But whatever they believe, it’s the quickest way to send them jumping overboard for a much-needed bath.’
    Horace chuckled and tapped the side of a pie with his hook. It effortlessly broke through the soft, green pastry.
    â€˜Don’t you just love mould?’ he mused. ‘I keep these pies in the bottom of the ship where it’s damp and dark.’
    As he removed his hook, a slow stream of grey-green slime oozed out. Whisker screwed up his mouth and groaned, ‘What on earth is that?’
    Fred leant down and took a big sniff. He paused and considered, ‘It’s seven months old.’
    â€˜Good vintage,’ Horace chimed in.
    Fred sniffed again and frowned miserably. ‘Triple garlic with Brussels sprouts and blue-vein cheese. Two dozen pies and no one wanted any.’
    â€˜Cheer up,’ Horace said, patting Fred on the back. ‘If all your pies were perfect, we’d have no ammunition. Your worst pie is our best weapon.’
    Fred’s face lit up with a beaming smile. Horace poured a small amount of gunpowder into the barrel of the cannon and packed it down with a ramrod.
    â€˜We’ll start with the long range practice,’ he said. ‘I’m not one for rules, but it’s essential that you look before you fire. You never know what could be in your path.’ He wedged a pie into the cannon, inserted a fuse and adjusted the angle. ‘You also have to consider the wind direction and the distance to your target. Pete has a formula for it, but I rely on experience.’
    Looking ahead, he yelled, ‘All clear. Ready, Smudge … FIRE!’
    Smudge bobbed up with a flaming match and lit the fuse.
    Horace counted down as the fuse sizzled, ‘Three … two … one …’ KABOOM! The cannon exploded.
    The pie shot into the air, veered to its left and then splashed into a wave a short distance away.
    â€˜Rotten pies to crash landings,’ Horace said in dismay. ‘I got the angle all wrong … Oh well, let’s see what you can do.’
    To Horace’s surprise, Whisker was a natural. His first shot soared in a graceful arc through the sky before wobbling into the ocean twice as far away as Horace’s attempt.
    â€˜Where in the blazing britches did you learn to do that?’ Horace exclaimed.
    â€˜The circus, of course,’ Whisker replied. ‘I was friends with the Armadillo Cannonballs. I sometimes got to fire their cannon during performances.’ He squinted out to sea to where his pie had landed. ‘With a few adjustments, it could go even further …’
    Fred shook his head. ‘No one shoots better than that. Not even Pete with his fancy maths.’
    â€˜The angle of the cannon isn’t the problem,’ Whisker said. ‘It’s the pie – and don’t worry, Fred, it’s nothing to do with your cooking. Did you see how my pie wobbled off course before it crashed?’
    â€˜Yes,’ Horace replied. ‘All the long shots do that.’
    â€˜Well, that’s the problem,’ Whisker said. ‘In the circus, the armadillos would often sway in one direction or the other.’
    â€˜And what did they do?’ Horace enquired.
    â€˜They used something a pie doesn’t have,’ Whisker said, pointing behind his back.
    â€˜A tail!’ Fred cried. ‘Are we going to make pies with tails?’
    Whisker pondered, ‘A tail only works if you can move it from

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