Thanks, Saffa. Anf good, Gaz!
This book might be rewritten from my previous notes a bit.
New chapter.
CHAPTER FOUR:
Wonderland and the Runaways
"Rollo," a boy with dirty blonde hair who looked to be about ten or thereabouts, "I dunno about this."
"You heard them, Ricky! Telling us what to do. Talking to us like we're kids." Rollo groused. He was Ricky's peer in terms of age, but the most adventurous and ambitious of the two.
"But . . . we
are kids, Rollo." Ricky said, trying to be reasonable.
"I'm not! I'm not a baby."
"You said 'kids', not 'babies'."
"Don't quibble."
"I don't think you know what that word means."
"Don't be stupid, Ricky. Of course I know what it means."
"What does it mean, then?"
"That's not important," Rollo said, brushing the question aside.
The two boys were runaways after having a fight with their respective guardians. They had entered the sewers of the city and were wandering around aimlessly down here. They were lost, but Ricky was far too proud, too arrogant, to admit it.
"Do you know where we're going, Rollo?" the boy said, sure that he saw black mold infested bricked wall before.
"You ask too many questions, Ricky." his fellow snapped.
"And you don't ask enough, Rollo." Ricky countered, coolly.
"Whatever," he replied, having no quips of his own to throw back. "Let's go this way."
Ricky was going to say something how every path looked the same and they were walking aimlessly in circles, but decided against it. He followed his black-haired cousin down the pathway, but he felt that it was against his better judgment.
They walked into an impossibility, an inplausibility, an mystery.
A beautiful verdant garden with topiaries, hedges and everything. Short grass beneath their feet certainly felt real, but this was not possible or even plausible. This kind of vegetation, whether neatly manicured or not, could not thrive like this in such a dark, dank, dirty place like a sewer.
In the middle of this garden was a long table with a long, somehow pristine tablecloth drapped ever so delicately, almost looks lovingly, over it. Upon this table sat a white ceramic teapot with decorative flower prints, with matching ceramic teacups with delicate floral patterns. Tea steamed from both the teapot and the cups.
Around this table sat kids, no older than they. A girl dress as Alice, a pair of twin boys dressed as the Tweedles, a girl drssed as the Queen of Hearts, a biy dressed as the March Hare, a four-year-old boy dressed as the dormouse, and a boy dressed as the White Rabbit. There was something unnatural about the way they sat, the way they looked with unfocused eyes . . .
Rollo didn't see how suspicious this whole thing was, and just saw it with hidden surprise. Ricky, however, was shrewd enough to know there was something off here. Something not right, but yet he said nothing. He wanted to, but he knew Ricky's retort, anticipated it.
"Oh, dear," came a rather goofy voice. It was Jervis McDowall, dressed as the Mad Hatter. "More runaways?"
Before Ricky could stop him, Rollo said, "How do you know that?"
Jervis motioned to the other kids, "You aren't the first runaways to come to my Wonderland."