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    The Dark Planet

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      "Really?" said Edgar, inspired by Landon's enduring spirit

      despite the fact that Edgar knew that Dr. Harding could never

      come back.

      Landon nodded. He looked at Aggie for approval but Aggie

      wouldn't look back. Her gaze was fixed on Edgar.

      "Do you think the story is true?" she asked hesitantly.

      Edgar looked at all three of them. The green team. How quickly

      he had come to admire and love them. They were so much

      stronger and more full of courage than he was. They'd lost

      every thing and been left for dead, but they still hoped for the

      best.

      "You're not going to believe me when I tell you this," said

      Edgar. "You really won't, but I promise from the bottom of my

      heart that Atherton is real. And the story gets a lot better."

      And then Edgar told them every thing. He told them about the

      making of Atherton, about Dr. Kincaid and Vincent, about

      Cleaners and a collapsing world. He told them all about Dr.

      Harding and what had really happened to him, how he had

      transformed into Lord Phineus and back again, how all that he

      had made was part of a grand and wonderful story that had led

      Edgar back to the Dark Planet. He told them who he was--made

      by Max Harding and hidden away in the grove on Atherton. He

      told them every thing and they hung on every word.

      "After I landed here in the Raven I didn't know what to do. I only

      wanted to find the Silo, to see where my father--well, my maker,

      I suppose--to see where he had grown up. And now I've found

      you all and I couldn't possibly leave you here in a million

      years."

      "Wow!" said Landon. "Wow! Wow! Wow! This is, like, the best

      day ever!"

      "Calm down, Landon," said Teagan. But she was just as

      excited on the inside as he was. And Aggie was, too.

      Something good was happening to her and her friends, and her

      heart felt alive with excitement as it never had before.

      "What about Gossamer? Did you see the black dragon on

      Atherton?" asked Landon, wide-eyed.

      "I don't know about any black dragon," said Edgar. He wasn't

      even sure what a dragon looked like. "But one thing you said

      makes me wonder if there really is a dragon. Dr. Harding didn't

      like anything that could fly, so if he were to make a dragon, I'm

      not sure it would fly like you say."

      Landon beamed. "Well, sure, he'd fly! Every dragon flies. He's

      there, I know he is. We need to get to Atherton so I can find him.

      I'm going to find the black dragon!"

      Aggie started to cry, then she started to laugh. Pretty soon she

      was doing both at once and she couldn't for the life of her get

      any words out. Before long the laughter was gone and it was

      only tears and quiet sobbing. She slouched along the green

      leaves.

      "What is it, Aggie?" said Teagan. "Why so sad?"

      Aggie wiped the last of her tears away. "I wish you could have

      come sooner."

      Aggie wouldn't say why, but it was obvious to everyone that she

      had lost her family along the way and it had left her filled with

      grief, until now.

      "I'm sorry," said Edgar, feeling the weight of the world on his

      small shoulders. "But I'm here now--and Aggie, the story is true.

      It's not a fairy tale after all. Max was real and he really cared.

      The story's not over yet," Edgar concluded. "It couldn't have

      come to the end without you three in it."

      Aggie smiled weakly. Teagan wrapped an arm around her.

      "Aggie, we can do this," she said. "I really think we can. You

      just have to believe."

      Aggie took a deep breath of dusty air and let out a small but

      meaningful cough. She looked very tired to Edgar and he

      thought they should get her to bed. But she smiled despite her

      fatigue.

      "We have to make sure Red Eye and Socket don't find out

      about this," she said. "And there's not much time. We only have

      tomorrow and..." She paused and glanced at her friends.

      Everyone knew what awaited Edgar and Vasher--the

      passageway of lies.

      "Do you have some sort of plan, Edgar?" Aggie asked.

      "I didn't until I found this," he said, taking the folded piece of

      paper from Vasher's bunk out of his pocket. "It's from Max. He

      left it for us a long time ago so we'd find it."

      "No way!" said Landon. "I found that!"

      Landon's energy cleared all the sadness out of the air, and the

      four of them gathered in a circle as Edgar unfolded the paper. It

      was a remarkably intricate drawing of certain parts of the Silo

      and Station Seven with a dense clutter of numbers, symbols,

      and words. Edgar couldn't read the words, but he didn't tell

      anyone as Aggie turned the paper and read.

      "I can't believe he wrote this when he was--what do you think?

      Our age?"

      She exchanged a glance with Teagan, her constant

      companion.

      "All I know is this means we might be able to leave the Silo

      together," said Teagan, who was a hundred and seventy days

      younger than Aggie, which meant Aggie was supposed to leave

      the Silo first. "And that makes me very happy."

      The two girls held a lingering smile while Edgar and Landon

      continued to examine the elaborate map and all the symbols.

      "What do you suppose this is?" asked Edgar. He was pointing

      to a cryptic diagram that showed a square-shaped object

      surrounded by tiny dots exploding in every direction. There

      were two words inside the square no one had ever heard:

      "Hugin" and "Munin." Below the box was a long line of dots in a

      row that led to a small drawing of a boy's face. Could it be

      young Max Harding? Edgar didn't know. Below the boy's face

      were the words "Hugin will come if you call him."

      "That's some weird stuff," said Landon.

      Aggie was focused on the intricate drawing of passageways

      and chambers in the Silo and Station Seven.

      "One thing is for sure," she said. "We need to follow this map."

      Soon a plan was formed, one more vine game was played in

      which the girls won again, and everyone returned to their beds

      for a few hours of much-needed rest.

      CHAPTER 19THE WIDEST RIVER

      Gossamer was a surprisingly agreeable companion for the

      many hours that Isabel and Samuel traveled down the winding

      path of the yards during the night. Now and then Gossamer

      would reach one of his great claws into a hole and pull out a

      squirming Pythid, burn it until crispy, and then drop it in his

      mouth and continue on.

      The two children made a startling discovery about Gossamer

      when, after several more hours of trudging along, Samuel

      began to tire of the long journey.

      "How long have we been at this?" he asked. Samuel's feet

      were aching and he'd more than once bumped up against sharp

      ledges and outcroppings of stone. He didn't want to be the first

      to complain, but it was becoming difficult to hold out against

      Isabel's dogged determination.

      "What does it matter?" said Isabel. "We've got a ways to go and

      no one's going to carry us to the end."

      "Are you sure about
    that?" asked Samuel. He'd been

      wondering for a while if there might be a way to ride atop

      Gossamer, but the many inhospitable black spikes that covered

      the beast from head to toe made it seem completely out of the

      question.

      But then the dragon had fluttered its small wings. They were

      webbed like bat wings and smooth like a hammock between

      thin bones, and certainly too small to ever lift Gossamer's

      weight. At the ends were more spikes, wide at the base and

      curved to a point.

      "Look there," said Samuel, watching Gossamer spreading out

      and shaking his wings again. Samuel felt a little sorry for the

      creature and wondered why Dr. Harding had made it so, but

      Gossamer didn't seem to mind. He sniffed and licked at the

      wings, as if they were a cherished oddity he couldn't quite

      understand.

      "What if we sat on his wings? Then he could carry us."

      Isabel looked long and hard at Samuel. "I should have

      expected this."

      "Expected what?" said Samuel, but he already knew by the

      tone of her voice that he was in trouble.

      "That you'd start complaining."

      "But I'm not complaining! I'm just saying it might work, that's all.

      It would be easier than walking."

      "Face it, Samuel," said Isabel, off and moving again when she

      saw that Gossamer, looking curious, was about to come back

      and join them. "You're from the Highlands. People from up there

      grow tired pretty fast."

      It was times like these that Samuel wished he had been raised

      in the grove with Isabel and Edgar. They both had a certain kind

      of stamina and mind-set that eluded him. He'd never spent a

      long day in the clutches of manual labor, tired by noon with six

      or seven hours to go whether he liked it or not.

      He chased after Isabel and, catching up, made his decision.

      "Walk if you want, but I'm giving it a try."

      Isabel shook her head in disbelief.

      "Could you stop a moment?" Samuel called out to Gossamer. "I

      want to ask you something."

      Gossamer swung his tail to one side and its spiky surface

      crashed against rocks where it sparked blue and red. His head

      turned to Samuel and the awe-inspiring face stared him down.

      Gossamer's expressive eyes opened wide, and the sea of

      blackness surrounding them--the eyelids, the nose, the teeth

      and tongue--made the brilliant blue eyes sparkle all the more.

      "Could I ride on one of your wings?" said Samuel.

      Isabel tried to hide her amusement, but let a peal of her

      infectious laughter slip out. Even Gossamer couldn't resist it. He

      first smiled with his smooth black lips, then opened his mouth

      and made a sound that came from somewhere way down deep

      in his throat.

      Samuel felt Gossamer's hot breath and feared for his life. What

      if he blows fire all over me? But he needn't have worried.

      Gossamer's laugh came from a different place than his raging

      plumes of fire.

      Samuel pointed to one of Gossamer's wings. He flapped his

      arms and then held them out. Gossamer so loved children he

      would do anything they commanded. And he was a smart

      dragon, made by a very smart man. He could understand a

      great deal without much prompting.

      Gossamer turned his body away from Samuel and Isabel and

      leaned back, letting his leathery wings unfurl on the ground in

      front of them.

      "You've got to be kidding me," said Isabel. "He understands

      you."

      "More importantly, he's going to let us ride! Come on, Isabel.

      Why not ride if he wants us to?"

      Isabel shrugged. The idea of riding Gossamer had gotten under

      her skin and now she wanted to try it.

      "I'll take the left one," she suggested. "You take the right."

      Samuel made a little hooting sound of excitement and started

      for the assigned wing, careful to avoid touching any of the

      spikes at the bottom or the top. When he stepped on, Gossamer

      made a chirping noise as though happy to have someone

      aboard.

      Samuel got down on his knees and then lay down and rolled

      over, facing the ceiling of the wide-open passageway. "This is

      great!" he cried. "You're going to love it. It's better than your bed

      back home!"

      Isabel had to agree as she crept onto the wing and lay down. It

      was soft and warm, cradling her protectively. She couldn't see

      Samuel on the other side of Gossamer's hulking frame, but she

      heard him just fine.

      "Carry on, Gossamer!" he commanded. "Straight down the path

      of the yards until we reach the end."

      Gossamer knew the way. There were side channels that led

      into the open expanse inside of Atherton, but the way of the

      yards was straight and true.

      Riding Gossamer's wings felt like lying on the bottom of a small

      boat adrift on a rolling sea. The dragon's chest heaved slowly in

      and out, rumbling like a softly snoring giant of the woods. The

      effect was calming and soon the chatter between Isabel and

      Samuel became thin and wispy. And then both were fast asleep

      on Gossamer's wings as he made his way down, down, down

      into the deepest part of Atherton.

      When the two awoke neither of them could figure out where

      they were or what was happening to them, enveloped as they

      were in the wings of the black dragon.

      "Samuel?" said Isabel, half whispering as she tested the sound

      of her voice in the air. She'd awoken when Gossamer had

      stopped without warning. Samuel didn't have time to respond,

      for Gossamer reared up slowly and planted the back sides of

      his wings on the ground. Both Samuel and Isabel glided down,

      coming to rest on their own wobbly feet.

      "Did we just...?" started Samuel.

      Isabel jumped and finished his thought. "Ride a dragon? I think

      we did!"

      With Samuel and Isabel safely set aground, Gossamer shook

      his wings and folded them in tight. He stretched his long spiked

      neck and wandered several paces off in search of food. He

      seemed to know this place as he went down a side tunnel that

      required lowering his head to lumber through. A moment later

      the tunnel was fil ed with glowing light, the sound of wind and

      fire, and finally the crunching of teeth.

      "He probably hasn't stopped to eat for a long time," said

      Samuel, stretching his hands toward the ceiling. Another burst

      of flame and wind arose from deeper down the side tunnel.

      "He could be a while," said Isabel. "Let's see the tablet."

      As Samuel pulled it out the pen and the firebugs came to life,

      the bottom half of the device glowing bright blue. He held it over

      the tablet so it was easier to see in the dim light.

      "We could be anywhere," said Isabel, seeing that the yards kept

      going, circling this way and that, until finally at some point the

      way on the map abruptly ended.

      "The chill of winter," said Samuel, running his fingers over the

      four words. He stood and held the pen up high, suddenly

      feeling certain that Gossamer had stopped not for hunger, but

      for finding the end of something
    .

      "He knew the way and the way has ended," said Samuel.

      "What do you mean?" asked Isabel, but in the next moment she

      could see the answer all around her as light poured from the

      round opening of the side tunnel, where Gossamer was

      torching another Pythid.

      "Snowflakes," whispered Samuel. "Lots of snowflakes."

      Images of snowflakes were carved deeply into the stone ceiling

      and down the sides of the walls, the edges set in cold black

      relief.

      "What do you suppose is down there?" asked Isabel, glancing

      toward the end of their way.

      Gossamer had returned from his feast and gazed down at them

      tiredly. He had walked for many hours with a heavy load and

      eaten a big meal.

      "We can wait while you rest," said Isabel. The dragon seemed

      to understand what Isabel was saying. Gossamer sat back on

      his enormous legs and his eyes fell half shut as Isabel crept up

      to him.

      "Thank you for protecting us," she whispered, kneeling and

      touching the side of his massive black head. It was rough and

      hard like chiseled stone. Gossamer sighed deeply and drifted

      off to sleep.

      "Let's take a look down the way while he rests," whispered

      Samuel. "Maybe we can find the end on our own."

      Samuel put the tablet and the pen back in his pack and

      removed the small stash of water that remained. He handed it

      first to Isabel, who gulped down half, then took the leather

      pouch himself and finished it off. He shrugged at Isabel, put the

      empty pouch in his pack, and wondered where his next drink

      would come from.

      "Come on," said Isabel. "He's fast asleep. I get the feeling it

      won't be very far to the end."

      Samuel felt the same way as the two set off down the last part of

      the yards. It was wilder here, more jagged rocks and sharp

      beams of light shooting every which way.

      Up ahead, the way came to a wall. A hard turn to the left was

      the only direction they could go, and it didn't look big enough to

      allow Gossamer to pass through.

      "We can't go on without him," said Isabel. "I don't want to."

      "Let's just have a look," said Samuel. "We've come all this way.

      Don't you want to see what the chill of winter is?"

      Isabel looked back in the direction from which they'd come and

      wished Gossamer would wake up. When she turned back,

      Samuel had already gone.

      "Samuel! Wait for me." She took out her sling and filled it with a

      dried fig, holding it like a pendulum as the fig swayed near the

     


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