“Actually, I’ll say goodbye here,” said Johnny. “Need to find some food for the pack.” He held out his hand to Caw. “An honour to meet you, crow talker. I’m sure we’ll see each other around.”
Caw felt a little weird, but took it anyway.
Johnny shook firmly, staring at Caw. “You look so much like her, you know?”
Caw felt his cheeks reddening once more.
“Come to Caw’s!” said Pip. “There’s loads of room with us.”
Johnny put up his hands. “Oh, no. I couldn’t.”
“I’m sure Johnny wouldn’t want—” began Crumb.
“You must!” said Pip. “You just saved our lives.”
“I guess that’s up to Caw,” said the coyote feral. “It’s his place, after all.”
Crumb had fallen silent, but Caw thought Pip had a good point. And perhaps Johnny could tell him a bit more about his mother too.
“You’d be welcome,” he said.
Johnny shrugged. “That’s very kind of you, Caw. Is it the place your folks used to have? I think I even remember the way.” He pressed on ahead of them, whistling a happy tune.
As they walked to the house, Caw thought about the bank heist. A bison … He hadn’t noticed one of those on the roof when the Mother of Flies was creating her new army. He wondered what else had been up there – what other horrors awaited them.
And then he remembered something that Mr Silk had said.
“Those weren’t our orders …” Caw muttered.
“I’ve been wondering about that too,” said Crumb quietly. “It sounds like they have a new boss.”
“One of the other convicts?” asked Caw.
“Perhaps,” said Crumb, but he didn’t look convinced.
Caw shuddered as another possibility came to him. “You don’t think the Mother of Flies—”
“No way,” said Crumb quickly. “She’s in Blackstone Asylum. Her connection with the flies is broken. She’s no longer a threat.”
Caw nodded. But somehow he couldn’t quite bring himself to believe it.
The rain had let up by the time they reached the abandoned street where Caw lived. Johnny Fivetails walked by Caw’s side, marvelling at the dark empty houses.
“This place has really gone downhill,” he said. He turned to Caw. “Sorry, man. It’s just a shock.”
“It’s OK,” said Caw. “I like the privacy.”
“The Dark Summer drove people out,” said Crumb pointedly.
“I guess,” said Johnny.
Caw suddenly felt embarrassed as they approached the overgrown front garden and boarded-up house. When Crumb and Pip had moved in a fortnight before, they’d been full of plans to give the place a fresh lick of paint and repair the windows. But fighting the escaped convicts had taken over from all of that.
Caw saw a faint light coming from the dining-room window. The other ferals were already here.
He led the way to the front door, and pushed it open.
Several people were sitting round the dining-room table, and candles were lit across the room. There were familiar faces – like Ali the bee feral, Racklen the wolf talker, and the bat feral Chen – but strangers among them too. In the past couple of weeks, Mrs Strickham the fox feral had been gathering to their cause all the loyal ferals she could find. Some had refused, but most had agreed to join them, reasoning that they were stronger in numbers. Across the floor lay an assortment of dogs, and a few birds and lizards clung to the furniture.
The room was heady with a potent mix of food smells. Some ferals were digging into takeaway cartons, while others had scavenged plates, bowls and any containers they could find from his kitchen.
When Caw had agreed that the good ferals could use his house as a base, he hadn’t realised quite what Mrs Strickham had meant. But it was too late to go back on his word. It made sense to relocate here – their enemies might guess where they were, but at least no innocent people were living nearby. And Mrs Strickham couldn’t volunteer her own house. Caw knew that her husband, Lydia’s father, would never allow the ferals to use his family home for their war councils. Until a couple of weeks ago, the warden of Blackstone Prison hadn’t even known his wife was a feral, and from what Caw could gather, he wasn’t all that happy about it. If it wasn’t for her father, Lydia might be here with them now. She would have found a way to make Caw feel better about all this.
The tall figure of Mrs Strickham strode over to them. She was dressed in dark jeans and brown leather boots, with a pale roll-neck jumper. Her long hair was tied back. “We heard what happened,” she said. “I’m glad you’re all OK.”
“They got away with the money,” said Caw, lowering his eyes.
Mrs Strickham touched his shoulder, and he looked up. “But everyone’s all right?” she asked.
“I think so,” said Caw. “It could have been a lot worse …”
Mrs Strickham’s eyes shifted away then went wide. A smile slowly lit up her face. “Johnny?” she said.
“Vel!” cried Johnny Fivetails.
Mrs Strickham flew past Caw and embraced the coyote feral. Caw had never seen her look so happy. There was a commotion as several others crowded round, taking it in turns to hug Johnny or shake his hand. Even Racklen, who rarely smiled, was beaming.
Caw noticed Crumb was hanging back in the doorway. He didn’t like crowds either. All these people sitting on his furniture made Caw feel like a stranger in his own home. It was becoming hard to breathe in here.
“So what happened?” asked Mrs Strickham, addressing Caw.
He felt the room turn its attention on him. “Lugmann hit Pickwick’s bank,” he said unsteadily. “We tried to stop them, but they had the bison feral.”
“And Mr Silk,” Johnny pitched in. “It was well planned.”
Mrs Strickham nodded grimly. “I suspected the moth feral wasn’t gone for good.”
“Mr Fivetails came to our rescue!” said Pip. “The bison was going to maul me!”
Johnny shrugged modestly. “Thank the coyotes, not me,” he said.
“Our enemies are getting bolder,” said Crumb. “A bison in the city – it wouldn’t even have happened in the Dark Summer.” He lowered his voice. “We think there might be a new boss.”
Velma Strickham’s eyes widened again, and she gestured to the wolf feral. “Racklen, Crumb, Johnny – we need to discuss this properly. Caw, do you want to get some food and join us?”
The room filled with a hubbub as the other ferals began talking with each other and with their animals. A snake wound down the banister and butterflies fluttered around the lampshade. A Great Dane lay sprawled across the sofa, drooling on the carpet. Caw was beginning to feel dizzy.
“I might go outside and get some fresh air first,” he said.
Johnny looked a little surprised. “We could do with your input, Caw,” he said.
A bright parrot flew past Caw’s face and sparks flashed across his vision.
“Back in a minute,” muttered Caw, as his feet carried him towards the back door. He just needed to get away from all the noise. Crumb would say it better than he could anyway. He tripped over a snoozing fox, which