Read The Trophy of Champions Online
Authors: Cameron Stelzer
Tags: #Rats – Juvenile fiction, #Pirates – Juvenile fiction
Strange Vessels
With six sets of paws working harmoniously together, the outrigger progressed at a surprisingly fast pace. As the morning wore on, Smudge returned from his surveillance operation with several interesting developments to report.
The Sea Dogs had left the island some time ago with nothing but a large piece of driftwood, relying solely on paddle power to get them to the neighbouring island. The Cane Toads were currently moving through the breakers, struggling to keep their flimsy raft from falling apart. On the far side of the forest, the marmosets were building an elaborate vessel using bamboo, banana leaves and vines.
The Cat Fish, on the other hand, didn't appear to be making a boat at all, but were weaving a large net from whatever materials they could get their paws on. Smudge had no idea what they were playing at, but informed the crew that Prowler was nowhere in sight.
âThat's never a good sign,' Horace muttered, tying his sleeping bag to the mast. âWhat about the penguins? I doubt they found an iceberg to sail away on.'
Smudge raised two arms in the air as if to say,
Don't ask me. I couldn't keep an eye on everyone.
âIt's likely they're flaked out in a small cave, suffering from heat exhaustion,' the Captain said, unconcerned. âFor now, the dogs are our main threat. If we get a move on, we can still catch them before they reach the island. Their pace will undoubtedly slow when their legs grow tired.'
âWe're almost ready to launch, Captain,' Ruby cried. âOne more shirt and we're set.' She stuck her paw out to Pete. âIf you please?'
âBother!' Pete muttered, stripping off his top. âI was hoping you had ample clothing with Fred's XXXL-sized jersey.' He reluctantly passed Ruby his slim-fitting shirt and squinted up at the scorching sun. âIf I get a hint of sunburn, there'll be trouble, do you understand?'
âRelax,' Horace laughed. âA tan will do you the world of good.'
âI'm an albino,' Pete exclaimed. âI don't tan. I roast!'
Ruby rolled her eye and began tearing off the bottom half of her shirt. When she was finished, she threw the strip of fabric to Pete. âHere, use this to cover your shoulders. It will protect you from the worst of the sun.'
âThanks,' Pete sniffled.
âDon't mention it,' Ruby said, glancing down at her tattered half-shirt. âI just hope midriffs are back in fashion on the mainland â¦'
It was a less-than-stylish crew that finally made its way out to sea in a makeshift outrigger. The six rats sat in a tight line in the hollow section of the log and Smudge clung to the top of the bamboo mast. The sail remained tightly rolled up as the Pie Rats paddled through the rough breakers, heading north. Ruby took the front position and set the pace, while Pete sat at the stern of the boat, steering the vessel.
Large waves hammered the small boat as it made its way towards the open sea. If it wasn't for the floatation device, the vessel would have surely capsized. Horace had the job of bailing water using a bamboo hook-attachment and worked overtime during the first part of the journey.
When the Pie Rats were finally past the line of breakers, they raised the sail and harnessed the power of the south-east wind.
It wasn't long before Smudge spotted the Cane Toads' disintegrating raft a short distance away. The toads were taking turns kicking with their back legs, paddling with pieces of bark and re-fastening sticks that had come adrift. Their pace was slow and cumbersome.
As the toad's raft disappeared behind the outrigger, the distant shape of the rocky island grew clearer.
âHow's the boat holding up?' the Captain asked, as increasingly larger waves jolted the vessel from side to side.
âThe float's still secure,' Pete replied, examining each knot thoroughly, âthough the mast is beginning to loosen.'
âCan you refasten it?' Ruby shouted over the roar of the wind.
âNot without collapsing the entire sail,' Pete called back, âbut I might be able to strengthen it.' He pulled the scrap of fabric off his shoulders and began wrapping it around the base of the mast. âPhooey to sun protection. My nose is sunburnt anyway.' He tied the ends of the fabric together and gave the mast a quick shake. âThat should hold it â for now.'
âLook!' Horace cried. âSmudge has spotted something.'
All eyes stared up at the wind-swept mast. Smudge gripped the corner of the sleeping bag with five arms and used his one free arm to point directly behind the boat.
Whisker spun around and gasped. Ploughing through the ocean and rapidly approaching was a mighty two-hulled catamaran. Constructed from hundreds of pieces of lightweight bamboo, it sat high on the water, gliding effortlessly through the waves. Two enormous banana-leaf sails rose from its hulls. What startled Whisker most was not the vessel's brilliant construction, but its brazen crew of six snarling Cat Fish.
âRatbeard save us!' the Captain exclaimed. âThe conniving cats have hijacked the marmosets' boat.'
âThat explains the net,' Pete groaned. âThe poor monkeys must be tied up in the jungle.'
âPoor us more like it,' Horace cried. âThe cats will overtake us in no time.'
âNot necessarily,' Ruby shouted. âIf the wind drops off closer to the shore, we can still paddle our way to victory.'
âWhat about the dogs?' Pete hollered. âMaybe they've already landed.'
Without warning, Fred stood up in his seat, almost capsizing the boat. He gave the ocean a quick scan with his powerful eye and promptly sat down again.
âSea Dogs, dead ahead,' he grunted. âHalfway to the island.'
âMarvellous!' Ruby cheered, clearly excited by the challenge. âWe have ourselves a race. All bottoms on seats. And row on my count.'
With all six crew members paddling for their lives, the outrigger moved swiftly through the rough water. For every metre the Pie Rats gained on the Sea Dogs, the Cat Fish crept a metre closer to them. The gap between the three vessels was soon so close that Whisker could hear the other captains shouting orders to their crews.
â⦠Keep paddling, you lazy mutts,' Bartholomew Brawl barked. âWe're still in the lead.'
â⦠Starboard side, on the double,' Sabre commanded. âPrepare to tack.'
The catamaran suddenly changed course and Whisker felt a blast of warm air from the beach. The sail twisted backwards and, with a shuddering
CRACK
, the mast snapped in two. Before the Pie Rats could react, the entire sail had lifted into the air and was skimming over their heads like a magic carpet.
âSail overboard!' Horace wailed as the sail splashed ungraciously into the waves. âMy precious sleeping bag is lost forever â¦'
âPull yourself together,' Ruby snapped. âAnd don't stop paddling, any of you.'
âBut what about our sail?' Horace moaned. âWe can't out-row a catamaran.'
âWe won't have to,' Whisker said, staring at two purple flags on the beach, fluttering in his direction. âThe wind's blowing from the shore. The Cat Fish will have to sail across the beach to get anywhere. It's twice as far to travel. We can still beat the dogs if we paddle straight ahead and ride the perfect wave in.'
âYou mean we're going to surf our way to the finish line?' Horace exclaimed, plunging his oar into the water.
âIf it gets you rowing, then yes!' the Captain cried. âIt's about time we showed those soggy pups who really rules the waves.'
With an enthusiastic cheer, the Pie Rats charged full steam ahead. Startled by the commotion, the Sea Dogs looked around to see the outrigger drawing level with them. Refusing to go down without a fight, they let out a chorus of howls and kicked their legs even harder. Further along the coastline, the Cat Fish had changed direction and were sailing back in a tight line towards the breakers.
âThe best wave will win it,' Ruby shouted over her shoulder. âSee those rocks, Pete?'
âOh my sunburnt paws,' Pete groaned, his red nose turning ghostly white. âYou can't be serious â¦'
âOf course I'm serious,' Ruby snapped. âThe bigger the rocks, the bigger the waves. Now steer us in.'
Pete had no choice but to obey, and in seconds the Pie Rats were in the very centre of a rocky obstacle course.
âHere comes the next set,' Ruby hollered. âGet ready to paddle.'
Whisker had a sinking feeling in his stomach as the water beneath him began to fall. The tips of jagged, black rocks rose from the surface. He glanced behind him to see a monstrous wall of water sucking up everything in its path. It grew larger as it thundered towards the Pie Rats.
âNow,' Ruby shouted, plunging her paddle into the wave. âROW! ROW! ROW!'
Whisker rowed harder than he had in his entire life. At first it seemed the boat was going nowhere. Then, with the combined strength of the crew, the outrigger began rising upwards, and suddenly it was airborne, riding high on the foaming crest of the wave.
Horace cheered in triumph, Pete covered his eyes with his paws and the rest of the crew held on for dear life.
To either side of the outrigger, the Sea Dogs and Cat Fish were struggling to catch their own small waves, but they soon vanished in showers of spray as the Pie Rats hurtled towards the shore.
âHow do we get off this barrelling behemoth?' Pete cried, peering through his trembling fingers.
âI hadn't thought that far ahead,' Ruby shouted back, âbut we've got about five seconds before we hit the beach.'
âThe beach!' Pete screamed in terror. âWhat happened to all the water?'
There was a rolling, thumping
KERSPLASH
as the wave belted the rocky beach, sending the outrigger plummeting down. The Pie Rats leapt free as the front of the log ploughed into a patch of pebbly sand and stopped dead.
Sopping wet and covered in grazes, Whisker staggered to his feet. He could see Gustave standing between two purple flags, halfway up the beach. A row of cheering spectators lined the rocks behind him. Glancing over his shoulder, Whisker caught sight of the Sea Dogs scrambling ashore. Hot on their heels, the Cat Fish bounded off the catamaran.
âHurry!' Whisker yelled to his teammates. âIt's raining cats and dogs.'
Ruby and the Captain were beside him in an instant and racing up the beach. Fred took one look at Horace and Pete, lying in a tangled heap in the sand, and scooped both of them up in his huge arms. With his enormous eye fixed firmly on the finish line, he lumbered after the others.
The flags drew closer. Chatterbeak flapped his wings excitedly from the top of a rock.
âCaw, caw!' he squawked to the crowd. âHere they come. The Pie Rats are leading the charge but the other teams are right behind them. It's going to be close. Ruby breaks away and the Pie Rats have finished in â in â second place.'
âSecond place?' Ruby gasped, falling to her knees across the line. âBut we won.'
âSecond place, second place,' Chatterbeak prattled. âIt was definitely second place.'
Rising to her feet, Ruby shook a sandy paw at Chatterbeak and hollered, âLook here, bird brain, we were the first team to land on the beach and the first team to reach Gustave. Whichever way you look at it, we were here
first.'
An awkward murmur swept through the crowd.
âHow embarrassing,' giggled a familiar voice from the front row. âShe clearly has no idea â¦'
âNo idea about what?' Ruby snapped.
âI'll take it from here,' Gustave said, approaching Ruby. âYou are right to assume your boat arrived first, my dear, but I am afraid you vere not ze first team to reach me.'
âAre you blind?' Ruby huffed. âOur closest competitors are still halfway up the beach.'
Sensing there was more to the situation than first met the eye, Whisker turned his attention to six navy and white animals shuffling to the front of the crowd. Water dripped from their feathers as they gave each other triumphant flipper-slaps.
âAh, Ruby?' Whisker said, suddenly understanding. âI think you should take a look at this.'
Ruby spun around and stared wide-eyed at the six celebrating fairy penguins.
âThe Penguin Pirates!' she gasped. âHow did they get here?'
âI thought that was obvious,' Pete sniffled, âthey swam.'
Ruby kicked the sand in frustration. âYou could have told me that before I made a fool out of myself.'
âNo one thinks you're a fool, Ruby,' Whisker said, trying to calm her down.
âUnless you're the fashion police,' giggled another voice from the crowd. âSince when were midriffs back in vogue?'
âThey're not,' laughed a third voice, âat least not on civilised islands â¦'
Ruby crossed her arms over her stomach and glared angrily at the culprits: three pretty young rats. They were hiding behind a large cardboard sign displaying the familiar message:
Whisker Rules the Waves.