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    The Dark Planet

    Page 27
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      with rows of dead plants and trees.

      She rolled down the long rows as she listened to the awful

      sound of beasts fighting in the distance. Being outside was

      terrifying, all the more so because she hadn't been outside in so

      long. She arrived at the roof's edge and couldn't see over the

      ledge. It was too high from where she sat, and she cursed her

      chair, hitting the wheels and the handles over and over with her

      clenched fists. Then she rolled away, toward the distant side of

      the roof, just to be sure the vessel wasn't hidden somewhere

      else.

      Could she have seen over the rail, Commander Judix would

      have caught site of Edgar and his friends emerging from the

      yards and standing in front of the Raven. If anything, the millionspiked object seemed even more frightening than when Edgar

      had left it in the forsaken wood. There was no person or beast

      he could imagine getting within ten feet of its pulsating, needlesharp tips. And yet Edgar knew he must find a way to open the

      door, get everyone inside, and set the powder block onto the

      black table.

      "Don't go anywhere near it," whispered Aggie through her

      mask, which she had put back on. She'd never seen anything

      quite so threatening.

      "It's okay," said Edgar. "I think the Raven is like Gossamer. It's

      on our side."

      "How do you know that?" It was Teagan in doubt this time.

      "What if it starts firing arrows at you?"

      Edgar had to admit he'd be cut right through if even one of the

      long black spikes fired in his direction. He wouldn't stand a

      chance. They heard a crashing sound from the yards and

      realized something very big and dangerous was practically on

      top of them.

      "It's a Spiker!" Vasher struggled to hold the powder block as his

      face twitched nervously.

      "Open!" Edgar yelled at the Raven, but it just sat there, the long

      spikes pulsing horrifically. He turned back to his friends with

      searching eyes. The masks were beginning to fail and

      everyone was starting to cough. Soon they'd be forced back

      inside or risk serious harm. The thought of Aggie and the others

      becoming any sicker bothered Edgar tremendously.

      "Edgar," said Landon. "What?"

      "The door," Landon continued as he pointed past Edgar. "It's

      opening."

      Edgar spun around and couldn't believe his eyes. "This is going

      to work! We're getting out of here," he cried, grinning ear to ear.

      But things weren't exactly as he'd hoped when the door slid all

      the way open.

      "What the devil!" said Red Eye.

      "You got me in a lot of trouble!" said Socket. Then, thinking a

      tiny bit more, he added: "How did you get all the way out here?"

      Socket and Red Eye both wore their usual thick goggles, and

      both had their benders out, swishing them from side to side in

      the pale light. Every single member of the green team felt a

      crushing sense of defeat. They had almost made it, only to find

      their tormentors standing in the very place they wanted to be.

      "You don't know how to operate it," said Edgar. He wasn't about

      to give up that easily.

      "Shut your mouth!" said Socket. "You're in enough trouble as it

      is."

      Red Eye rolled his eyes at his brother. They were so far beyond

      ever being able to go back to the Silo and life the way it had

      been. He was only interested in one thing: getting to Atherton.

      "You know how to run it?" asked Red Eye, who had been

      utterly confounded by the inner workings of the Raven and its

      vast black, blank surfaces. It had moved of its own will to arrive

      near the yards.

      "I know exactly how to operate that thing," said Edgar. "And

      what's more, I know how to take it to Atherton."

      "Atherton?" said Socket. "You're kidding?"

      Edgar shook his head. "If you don't know what you're doing

      you'll never make it. It's complicated."

      Red Eye weighed his options before answering with a growl.

      "You can come, but the rest stay."

      "No!" yelled Landon. He couldn't imagine being left behind on

      the Dark Planet.

      Socket moved forward and swung his bender with a swish!

      swish!

      "Shut up! You're staying here and that's the last of it."

      Above the Raven, Commander Judix had heard the voices

      growing in volume and had made her way back to the rail. She

      grabbed it and hauled herself out of her chair.

      And there it was. Outlined in the murky light of afternoon sat the

      jet-black vessel that had come to take her away. She was,

      unfortunately, incapable of climbing down to the ground to

      reach it.

      Commander Judix watched in disbelief as Red Eye and Socket

      stood in front of a group of children from the Silo. When she saw

      Edgar, even through the haze, she knew it was him. Her anger

      flared and she screamed.

      "Red Eye!"

      Red Eye, Socket, and all the children looked up and couldn't

      believe their eyes.

      "Commander?" said Red Eye. "Is that you?"

      "Of course it's me! Get up here and carry me down!"

      Socket wanted nothing at all to do with Commander Judix. He

      retreated into the Raven and stood in the shadows as his

      brother approached the Commander.

      "You don't really think I'm taking you with me?" said Red Eye.

      He had longed for a moment like this. Never in his wildest

      dreams did he think it would come true, and with such

      perfection! He was leaving the wretched Dark Planet for a

      waiting paradise and she--this monster of a woman who had

      treated him like dirt for far too long--she was trapped on the roof

      of Station Seven.

      "You will come here this instant," said Commander Judix in her

      most authoritative tone. But for once the voice failed her. Not

      only did Red Eye refuse to bring her to the Raven, he laughed

      at her. He snorted and wheezed until the dirty air burned so

      badly in his lungs he had to stop.

      And that was when he heard it, the presence of a Spiker. It was

      closer than anyone had thought, and just then, its enormous

      clawed foot came down next to the Raven. The Raven wasted

      no time in response. A series of at least thirty black spikes shot

      out at lightning speed and sliced right through the Spiker,

      piercing through the other side of its leg. The monster shrieked

      and hobbled a few paces off to lick its wounds.

      In all the commotion Edgar waved his friends through the door

      and into the Raven. Vasher clutched the powder block close to

      his chest.

      Socket stood in the corner, shivering with fright and staring at

      the black ceiling, which had begun to glow. Two cave eels

      stared him down as if they might jump out from behind the glass

      and chomp off his head with their sharp teeth at any second.

      "Don't move," said Edgar, tricking Socket into believing he

      might actually be in danger. "If you do, they'll tear your limbs

      off."

      Red Eye came briskly into the Raven and Edgar kept the ruse

      going.

      "He better stay still, and so should you," said Edgar, acting as if

     
    the slightest movement might trigger an unexpected attack. "We

      all need to be slow and careful now. You won't like what

      happens if they get angry."

      Red Eye's breathing slowed and he stayed very still.

      "You better not be trying to trick me."

      From outside they heard Commander Judix screaming for them

      to come get her. Edgar felt a pang of guilt at leaving her behind,

      but if she returned to Station Seven, there was yet a chance she

      could be saved.

      Edgar slowly placed the disk on the black table in the middle of

      the Raven, and the door began to shut.

      "At least we won't have to listen to her howling any longer," said

      Red Eye.

      Aggie thought this was one of the meanest things she'd ever

      heard anyone say. With a Spiker so close by, she could

      imagine the poor woman's panic. She had known the feeling of

      being left behind to fend for herself on her long walk through the

      wood on her way to the Silo. She wouldn't wish it on anyone, no

      matter how cruel they'd been.

      The table burst to life and Edgar saw the images of everything

      he'd seen before.

      "When I do this, you're probably going to see a lot more

      creatures than you see right now," said Edgar. "After everyone

      is settled in I'll start things moving. You're going to feel as if the

      chair you're sitting in is trying to pull your pants off."

      "What?" said Red Eye.

      "Shhhhh!" whispered Edgar. "They hate loud noises."

      As if to prove his point an eel emerged behind the glass near

      Red Eye's head and stared down at him. Edgar turned and

      winked again at the green team and they took some

      reassurance that every thing would be fine. "Slowly now," said

      Edgar. Red Eye was wary of moving while the cave eel

      watched him, but he gathered his courage and slid down into

      one of the chairs.

      "Nice to see you brought something for me to eat," said Red

      Eye, seeing the powder block sitting on Vasher's lap. Vasher's

      twitching had calmed and he actually glared at Red Eye. There

      was no way he was giving up this treasure so it could be eaten

      for lunch.

      "I'm not moving," whined Socket from where he'd slumped

      down on the floor. A glowing cave eel was trained on Socket's

      head from behind the black glass.

      "I don't recommend that," said Edgar. "The Raven gets moving

      pretty fast. It will be nothing like what you experienced getting

      from the forsaken wood to here."

      But Socket wouldn't move.

      Edgar shrugged his shoulders, actually feeling a little bit guilty

      at what was about to happen.

      "Stay in your seats," he said, placing his hand over the twirling

      snowflake. He thought twice about it and looked at Vasher.

      "Why don't you set that down on the table here? You're not

      going to want to carry it all the way to Atherton."

      "Yeah," said Red Eye, leaning forward menacingly. "Set it

      down so we can al have some."

      Vasher held his arms out and gently set the heavy powder

      block on the table. The moment he did all the firebugs

      dispersed at once. They formed a column below the surface of

      the table and the powder block began to melt away, like it was

      sitting on a bed of acid. It hissed and smoked while the firebugs

      grew brighter and brighter until everyone but Edgar had to look

      away. He alone saw as they changed from blue to a brilliant

      shade of red.

      "You can look now," said Edgar, and everyone turned back to

      the table. All the images were back in place as before, but now

      every thing was a soft glowing shade of red. And there was one

      new item that hadn't been there before. It was the only thing

      Edgar had ever seen made of white firebugs: a shimmering

      snowflake pulsing from the bottom of the image of Atherton.

      Edgar tapped it, and the inside of the Raven came to life.

      Eels swam every where and firebugs multiplied until it looked

      like a star-filled night all around them. The two eels that had

      watched Socket darted off with the rest, gobbling up red

      firebugs by the hundreds as the Raven began to move. Edgar

      felt the seat hug him close, pulling him down and holding him

      steady. Everyone gasped at the feeling except Socket, who

      wasn't seated in a chair and seemed not to understand what

      was about to happen.

      The Raven shot into the air, spinning as it gained speed on its

      way to break out of the Dark Planet's at mo sphere. Socket

      tumbled end over end and found himself pinned to the glass.

      His goggles flew off and smashed into one of the chairs. He

      was a man in a tumbler, spinning circles at the back end of the

      vessel while everyone watched from the safety of their seats.

      "I tried to warn him," said Edgar.

      Red Eye scowled deeply at Edgar. He couldn't wait until his

      seat let him go so he could beat the boy senseless. The last

      thing he'd done was to slowly put his bender away, so at least

      his favorite weapon hadn't been lost. "When we get to Atherton,

      you better run," said Red Eye. "All of you better run!"

      "I don't think it will be us doing the running," said Landon. "Just

      you wait until you meet Gossamer. He doesn't like adults,

      especially mean ones like you."

      "I never met anyone as dumb as you, Lanny," said Red Eye.

      "Let me spell it out for you. There's no such thing as dragons.

      Got it?"

      Landon didn't say anything else. In fact, everyone seemed

      perfectly happy to stay quiet as the Raven started its journey

      across the sky. Even Socket had settled into a comfortable spot,

      curled up like a baby at the bottom of the ship.

      Commander Judix slumped down in her chair and watched the

      Raven leave the Dark Planet. It was, in her view, the final insult.

      She had long been a cold and calculating person, and yet she

      had never given in to the darkness entirely. She would

      remember her mother's touch or the voice of a lost friend, and

      the tiniest bit of hope would return. But in that moment of

      watching the Raven fly away, the Dark Planet had finally won.

      She felt nothing. When the Spiker leaned down and caught

      sight of her, she was unmoved at its arrival. There would be

      pain, but at least she would feel something in the end.

      She felt the Spiker's huge nose sniffing at her hair, and then, to

      her great surprise, she began to cry.

      CHAPTER 27THE CHILL OF

      WINTER

      "Wake up," said Samuel. "Isabel, wake up!"

      He prodded her shoulder and felt Gossamer's warm breath on

      his neck. The black dragon had awoken first, nudging Samuel

      where he lay curled up next to Isabel, nestled safely in one of

      Gossamer's warm wings.

      For two days they'd been stranded with the great dragon, the

      sound of falling crystals a constant reminder of how completely

      trapped they were. They feared being stuck inside Atherton until

      they starved to death, and tried without much success not to

      dwell on how worried their parents must be. One thing was for

      sure: If they ever did make it out alive, they were in big trouble.


      "He wants us to move," Samuel said as Isabel rubbed her eyes

      and woke up.

      "Do you hear that?" asked Samuel. Isabel was slower to wake

      than Samuel was and she wasn't sure what he was talking

      about. "It's quiet. "

      Isabel and Samuel carefully crept down the wing and stepped

      aside. They heard the faraway sound of two or three crystals

      falling from the ceiling.

      "He's stopped trying to keep us here," said Samuel. "Maybe

      he's thinking about taking us back the way we came. We might

      actually get out of here alive!"

      When they were clear of Gossamer's spiked head and neck he

      stood and lumbered heavily away from them. The space they

      were in was vast and brightly lit. On one end was the wide

      opening to the outside of Atherton, on the other was the vast

      wall of pulsing white light. Samuel and Isabel had watched it for

      hours and wondered what its purpose could be. The more they

      looked the more they were sure that Cleaners were swimming

      behind the white wall in the deepest part of the waters of

      Atherton. It was a thick, foggy sort of glass that hid them in

      shadow, a glass that was covered with billions of sharp spires.

      "What's he looking at?" asked Samuel. Gossamer wasn't one to

      leave their side, but something had caught his attention at the

      opening.

      "What is it, Gossamer? Do you hear something?" asked Isabel.

      Everything had turned unnervingly silent, and Samuel was left

      with the distinct feeling he and Isabel should hide. "I have a

      feeling something's about to happen," he said.

      "Maybe we should step back a little," said Isabel, fear rising in

      her voice. They looked in every direction. There was the

      towering wall of icy glass crystals, the small passageway to the

      side where they'd come in, and the vast opening to the outside.

      They had stayed well away from the opening for all of the two

      days they'd been there, because they knew the closer they got

      the harder gravity would try to pull them out into open air.

      Samuel and Isabel were both shuffling back slowly when

      Gossamer roared into the open space outside. It was hard to

      imagine anyone on the surface of Atherton not hearing the

      crushing volume of the black dragon's voice.

      "Why's he screaming so loud?" yelled Samuel, but Isabel

      couldn't hear him.

      Gossamer flapped his leathery wings and dove for the opening.

      "Where's he going?" yelled Isabel. She had been afraid before,

      but now she was terrified. "Don't leave! Please, Gossamer.

     


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