almost immediately and a pathetic wail rang out. âSave me!â Thrown away in panic, the lantern flew up into the air.
Mouse was enjoying this dream. He rested his elbows on the windowsill and watched the light travel up, up, twirling end over end as it rose higher and higher. For one magic moment it hung suspended in mid-air before it slowly started down again, gathering speed as it fell. Down, down it came and thenâan instant before it made contactâit illuminated a tiny head.
Ouch, thought Mouse. Then he let out a gasp. In the light from the falling lantern he had seen what was causing the panic in the garden. Without hesitation, he raced out of his bedroom, down the stairs and out into the garden.
Chapter 2
The grass felt very un-dreamlike to Mouse; it was damp and cold beneath his bare feet. And there was definitely something quite substantial about the low shrub which grabbed him by the ankle and brought him crashing to the ground. That should wake me up, he told himself. Then he thought how idiotic that was. If Iâm dreaming, I havenât really tripped; Iâve just dreamed Iâve tripped. The blood that trickled from his cut ankle looked real, though. That is, it looked black, which is how he thought blood should look in the monochromatic moonlight. But he didnât have time to puzzle over it now.
âMrs. Rochester! Beat it!â he called out to his neighborsâ cat as he picked himself up. Mrs. Rochester was towering over the tiny man who Mouse had seen being hit by the falling lantern. Pinning his jacket to the ground with a sharp claw, the cat viewed him first from one side, then the other, as the little fellow lay huddled in terror.
âLeave him alone,â Mouse ordered sharply.
âWhreoww?â said Mrs. Rochester.
âYes, now, you big bully,â said Mouse sternly. Whimpering noises were coming from her captive, who was trying to pull himself free of the daintily placed claw that held his jacket.
âShe wonât hurt you,â Mouse consoled him. To the cat he said, âThatâs enough, Mrs. Rochester.â Mrs. Rochester thought about it for a moment, then unhooked her claw. The little fellow staggered backward and fell flat at Mouseâs feet. The cat swaggered off, her tail twitching imperiously in the air.
Mouse picked up the little manâs hat, a woolen toque that could easily double as an egg-cozy. He held it out and watched the man clamber to his feet and begin to brush at himself in an attempt to remove the dirt and regain his dignity. The little fellow didnât come much higher than Mouseâs knee. He wore dark trousers that buckled just below his knees over long stockings, and on his feet were stout leather shoes. A loose-fitting brown jacket over a dark shirt covered the upper part of his body. His large mustache with its curled-up ends was quivering rapidly, but whether from fear or indignation, Mouse couldnât tell.
With a rapid dart, the little man snatched his hat from Mouseâs hand and ran. Mouse could hear what sounded like other little people running too. âDonât be afraid,â he called out. âI wonât harm you.â
The sounds of escape stopped. Mouse heard whispering and, after a pause, the little man came back and gingerly approached him. âThat was rude of me,â he said in a gravelly voice. âI forgot to thank you. And Iâm not afraid, certainly not, just cautious. I have seen humans before. We donât usually get this close, of course. And we certainly donât let them see us. Weâve learned that humans can be unpredictable. Especially when they havenât been properly trained. You have been, havenât you? Trained?â
âTrained?â said Mouse. âYou donât train people. Animals are sometimes trained.â
âWell I think a little training might do you all a lot of good. I suspect the only thing wrong with that animal