this bag wonât pack itself. Iâve put in the spicy sausages and mango juice ââ âI told you theyâll have all that on the train,â said Figaro.
Just then there was a knock at the door. Rat huddled on the doorstep, dripping wet.
âHello, Rat,â said Figaro. âWhatâs up?â
Rat wiped the water off his whiskers. âOh, Figaro, something terrible has happened.â He sneezed loudly. âItâs Nate, heâs missing!â
âOh, is that all,â said Rumba. âDo you know what time it is? Morning . Nate never gets up till noon. No use knocking on his door.â Rumba looked at the puddle around Rat. âWould you mind drying off outside?â
âNo, you donât understand, I saw Nate only an hour ago,â said Rat. âHe came down to the river to try out his new canoe.â
âIâve seen those canoes on the TV ads. They look great! Theyâve got oars and everything,â said Figaro.
âYes. But you have to blow up the canoe yourself. It took Nate ages. He was all out of breath and shaky when heâd finished. Then he took off up the river.â
âWell, heâs just lazing about in the canoe then,â said Rumba. âWatching clouds. Look, Rat, itâs nice you came to visit and all, but weâre catching the Very Fast Train today.â
âYes, do you want to come?â asked Figaro.
âNo, you see Nate said he would be back soon because his cousin will be on that train and he has to meet her. You know the one. Nancy. Loves dancing. So, like I said, there I was, just fishing, and dreaming â â âWas that a perch you caught?â asked Rumba.
âYes, mighty fine it was too, but then I realised that Iâd been fishing for a long time and Nate still wasnât back. So I dived in the river. I hollered until my whiskers nearly fell off, but there was no answer.â Rat began to cry. âNate doesnât swim so well, you know.â
âYou need someone to look for Nate,â said Figaro. âSomeone with a great sense of smell, who runs like the wind and swims like a fish. Thatâll be me.â
âWhat about the Very Fast Train?â asked Rumba.
âWeâll just have to go another time,â said Figaro gravely. âOur friends need us here.â
So Rumba put the sausages back in the fridge.
Down at the river, Figaro found the canoe. But there was no sign of Nate.
âLook, thereâs a hole in the canoe,â moaned Rat. âA sharp stick could have done it.â
âOr a killer shark,â said Figaro.
âThere arenât any killer sharks in the river,â said Rat.
âI knew that already,â said Figaro. âAnd see, this plastic is too thin. They donât tell you that on the TV ads, do they?â
Rumba looked at the droopy canoe. âWhere is Nate if he isnât with his canoe? Figaro, you had better run like the wind along the bank. Weâll search here.â
Figaro took off, his nose to the ground.
âDonât worry, Rat, you couldnât have a better dog on the job,â said Rumba.
Figaro sniffed his way along the bend in the river. He slipped in and out of the mangroves. The roots were thick and close together, like teeth in a comb. He went further up the river than he had ever been before. His tongue lolled out of his mouth and his eyes grew red and sore. There must be bitey things in the grass, he thought, because his lips and nose were itching like fire.
He slid down the muddy bank, into the water. Strangly weeds pulled at his feet. He kicked out his legs and began to swim. Nate is not as strong as me, he thought. I hope he didnât have to fight these worrisome weeds.
Figaro swam up the river. Even though he hated putting his head under, he dived below to have a look. But all he saw were silvery fish flashing past like underwater lightning.
The fish were so sparkly he
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