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    The Dark Planet

    Page 22
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    They all nodded, at once excited to be out of the Silo and

      scared speechless by two close calls in a row.

      It was a maze of pipes and ducts hidden in the ceiling, and all

      the while they could see out of the tiny square holes in the

      grate. Once they stopped short, hearing someone moving, and

      watched as a black head of hair passed beneath them and

      moved on. But finally, with everyone's nerves frayed to the point

      of breaking, they arrived at a place where they were forced to

      stop.

      "This looks right," said Edgar, seeing the concrete wall in front

      of them. It was an impasse but for a round hole above their

      heads.

      "It's a retaining wall," said Aggie. Everyone looked at her

      inquisitively. "It holds the building up," she explained. She had

      never told anyone at the Silo, but her father had once been a

      craftsman. She knew a little bit about how things were

      constructed.

      "Once we pass through the hole we need to drop back down,"

      said Aggie, holding out her hand so that Edgar would give her

      the piece of paper. "That will put us on the other side of one

      door and leave us only one more to go through."

      Edgar tingled at the idea of entering the room behind that door,

      because he knew what was there. The door was marked on the

      map with an MH for Maximus Harding.

      "You first," said Edgar.

      Aggie handed back the piece of paper and wriggled through the

      opening to the other side. She stood and looked back at

      everyone.

      "Looks good over here," she said, but Vasher wasn't so sure.

      Every step away from the Silo had been a little bit more difficult

      for the oldest and most anxious of the bunch.

      "Are we sure about this?" he asked. His twitching wrist betrayed

      how nervous he was.

      Teagan touched Vasher's arm. "It's going to be okay, Vash. Just

      hang in there a little longer."

      They were all afraid of being so far away from home. The Silo

      was all most of them could remember in any great detail, and

      even though it was a dreadful place to live, it had its comforts.

      They were fed, clothed, and given a bed. Life on the outside felt

      wide open and dangerous in a way none of them wanted to

      think about.

      Vasher looked back toward the Silo, wiped his brow, and shook

      his hand as if it had fallen asleep.

      "You ready, Landon?"

      "You bet I'm ready!"

      Landon passed through the hole feeling as free as a bird out of

      the Silo. He could imagine living among the hidden pipes and

      beams, sleeping up there and sneaking food. Teagan was next,

      then Vasher, and finally, Edgar.

      "What's wrong?" asked Aggie, seeing that Edgar had a troubled

      look on his face.

      "It feels like we're forgetting something. I keep thinking of that

      diagram with the exploding dots and those words--Hugin and

      Munin. What if it means something important?"

      "We'll have to cross that bridge if we come to it," said Aggie.

      "But right now I think we're standing in front of your dad's

      laboratory. Don't you want to look inside?"

      No one had ever said it quite that way before. Your dad. Edgar

      nodded almost imperceptibly. How had he ever managed to get

      here, standing in front of the dial that would open Dr. Harding's

      laboratory on the Dark Planet?

      "Fourteen... twenty-seven... twenty-one..."

      Edgar reeled off five more numbers and then the door clicked

      and popped open, much like the door to the passageway of lies.

      He pushed and the heavy door moved, silent and fluid, as if it

      sat on a layer of water.

      "It looks deserted in there," said Aggie. Dr. Harding's laboratory

      hadn't been used for over a decade. It had barely even been

      entered. Murky shadows hung heavy over every part of the

      enormous room.

      Everyone filed inside cautiously and the door was shut behind

      them with a soft click. The lab was lit from the outside by a giant

      windowpane that hung out over the water. The window was

      tinted in such a way that they could see out, but the light coming

      in was soft and dim.

      "No need for goggles here," said Teagan, glad she didn't need

      to pull them down off her forehead.

      The window rose high overhead in a wide half circle. Outside

      smog lay low on the waves of the ocean where Edgar spotted

      the long jetty of piled rocks and the shadow of Captain

      Grammel's ship.

      The view of the outside world took everyone's breath away. No

      one besides Edgar had seen anything other than metal and

      machines and buzzing fluorescent light in a very long time.

      There were the vines in the vine room, but this was completely

      different. This was outside!

      "I think that's where the passageway of lies leads to," said

      Vasher, mesmerized by the vision beyond the glass. "Socket

      told me once. Down the path of rocks and into the ship.

      That'swhere you're going. And you're never coming back. He

      laughed and laughed. I thought he was just being mean, but it

      looks like he was telling the truth."

      Edgar was overwhelmed by the room. So much about it

      reminded him of home and of his father. Models of Atherton at

      different stages were every where. A glass-encased chamber

      was filled with dead fig trees like the ones in the grove back

      home. Baskets and pulleys and ropes hung from the towering

      ceiling. Though he'd never been here before, he knew this

      place better than anyone else on the green team.

      "Your father was amazing," said Aggie, examining all the tables

      filled with scientific tools and gadgets, the rows and rows of

      books with sliding ladders rising to the high ceiling, the giant

      chalkboards covered in scribblings beyond anyone's

      comprehension.

      Everyone else had scattered in different directions, picking up

      strange objects and peering around corners.

      "Look at this!" said Landon from somewhere deeper in the

      laboratory. He'd found a wide table filled with skeletons and

      bones and drawings.

      "You guys?" Vasher stammered nervously from deep inside the

      chamber. He was staring at something behind a soaring shelf of

      teetering books.

      "What is it, Vash?" asked Landon. Everyone gathered around

      Vasher. Behind the giant shelf of books stood Gossamer, huge

      and menacing and all in black, staring down at them.

      Teagan felt sure it would spring to life and shred them to pieces

      with its great black horn. She screamed and ran for the door.

      CHAPTER 22HOPE

      Teagan's voice bounced off the high walls, but Gossamer didn't

      move.

      "It's not real," said Aggie. She inched up next to it and touched

      the leg. It felt real, but it didn't move. The model before them

      stood twenty feet high but Gossamer was much bigger than

      this--four or five times larger, in fact.

      "It's from the story!" said Landon. After getting over his shock he

      was elated to find that this creature might really exist. Could it

      be possible?

      "It's Gossamer!" he said. "He's on our side. He's here t
    o help us.

      Wake up! Wake up!"

      Landon waved his arms even though he knew it was only a

      model of something Dr. Harding might have made.

      "Even if it's not real it means Dr. Harding wanted to make it,"

      said Teagan. "This whole story is real, and every thing Edgar is

      saying--it's all true. He really did make a place for us, after all."

      "Where does the piece of paper say we should go now?" asked

      Vasher uneasily. To him, Dr. Harding's laboratory felt like a

      madhouse.

      Edgar pulled out the map and they all gathered around

      Gossamer's feet. All but Aggie. Without anyone noticing she

      had drifted back behind a rising shelf of books. She had seen

      something there on a pedestal that had made her curious.

      "Um, Edgar?" she said. "Remember when we were in the vine

      room and you told us your story? What did you call the thing

      you flew here inside of? The spiky black ball?"

      Edgar crept over to Aggie and followed her gaze.

      "The Raven."

      "That's what I thought."

      Suddenly, everyone was gathered around Aggie and they were

      all looking at the same thing. A model of two black ravens

      perched on a dead tree limb, their eyes locked on the green

      team.

      "They're spooky-looking birds," said Landon, a shiver running

      down his back. "There were a lot of them on the beach where

      Captain Grammel picked me up. I hate the sound they make."

      "Do you see what I see?" asked Aggie. Her voice was shaking,

      almost angry.

      "Oh, no," said Vasher.

      "What? What is it?" asked Edgar.

      The base of the pedestal on which the sculpture of the ravens

      sat was carved with words Edgar could not read. Teagan read

      them aloud, growing more concerned with every word.

      "'Hugin and Munin from the fallen age of Norse, who fly the

      world over and question the living and the dead.'"

      Edgar scanned the piece of paper frantically until his eyes fell

      on the diagram.

      "Hugin and Munin are ravens!" declared Landon. "But that

      means --"

      "How could I be so stupid!" Edgar cried. "This diagram shows a

      block of something with the words 'Hugin' and 'Munin' in the

      middle. The block explodes into little particles. If Hugin and

      Munin are ravens, then the Raven I came in on needs whatever

      that block is."

      "You need a powder block from the Silo," said Aggie, surer than

      she'd ever been about anything in her life.

      "Dr. Harding, you're a genius!" said Landon, not fully

      understanding what a bad piece of news this was.

      Teagan rolled her eyes.

      "He might be a genius but he's not making this easy for us."

      "Don't you see?" said Landon. "He had to keep it all separate

      so people wouldn't know what he was real y working on. We've

      been making something super important all along, we just didn't

      know it until now."

      "Well, now that we know, we're going to have to go back and

      get a powder block." Teagan sighed.

      Edgar thought of how heavy and awkward the blocks were.

      Getting back into the Silo would be a trick of its own, but

      carrying a powder block all the way back to the lab? It wouldn't

      be easy. And that was only the half of it.

      "The Raven is in the forsaken wood," said Edgar. "I thought I'd

      be able to go back there alone and meet you all somewhere or-I don't know. I hadn't thought that far ahead. But I don't think I

      can wander out there carrying a heavy block of powder with me.

      I barely made it into the Silo to begin with. And since we're on

      the subject of the Silo, can we really risk going back there?"

      "Wait!" said Aggie. "Let me see that map."

      Edgar handed it over and Aggie scanned it.

      "There! Right there!" she said, trying to keep her voice down but

      having a hard time doing it. She read the words they'd all seen

      before and already forgotten, the tiny sentence under the box.

      "'Hugin will come if you call him.' So we can call the Raven--we

      just have to figure out how."

      "I think you're right!" said Teagan.

      Aggie beamed. She loved how it felt to contribute something

      important.

      "Now all we have to do is get a powder block all the way from

      the Silo to here so we can keep going," said Edgar, thinking it

      sounded like a near impossibility.

      "What was that?" said Vasher. There was a slight sound from

      the door as it opened quietly, but there were no footsteps. Edgar

      put his finger to his lips. Everyone stayed perfectly still behind

      the wide, tall shelf of books. Commander Judix had entered the

      room, rolled smoothly across the metal floor, and sat before a

      black table in her chair.

      Peering around the corner of the shelf, Edgar watched as

      Commander Judix, someone he'd never seen before, took

      something out of her vest pocket and placed it on the table. It

      was a black disk, like the one Edgar had in his own pocket, and

      he knew what the table would do.

      The surface lit up, a blue glow reflecting on her face. She was

      so pale and cold looking, like she was more dead than alive,

      and the blue light only made her more frightening to look at.

      She hovered over the table, her hollow eyes watching as the

      firebugs moved, and then all the children heard an audible

      intake of breath.

      "The way is open once more," she said, her voice full of

      wonder. If Edgar could have seen what she saw, he would've

      known there was a pulsing blue cluster where the Raven sat in

      the forsaken wood. She had found his way back to Atherton.

      "The boy will have the key," said Commander Judix, her voice

      shaky with excitement. Her whole existence could change in a

      flash if only he didn't slip through her fingers. She turned in her

      chair, stopped short and went back for the black disk, grabbed it

      and was off. The table went dark again and Commander Judix

      rolled to the back wall by the door, touching buttons on a

      communication box. "Shelton? Shelton!" she cried, but there

      was no answer and she cursed the box.

      Turning her chair around, she began rolling fast--straight toward

      Edgar and the others--and Edgar pushed everyone back. She

      parked before another communication box and reached as high

      as she could to touch the very top glowing button. This time

      there was a hissing as it came to life.

      "Shelton! Answer me!" she frantically screamed into the

      speaker.

      More static, and then his distant and crackling reply: "I'm here,

      Commander. What is it?"

      "Go straight to the launch site! Go now! The Raven has

      returned."

      A static-fil ed pause, then Shelton's bemused voice slowly

      resumed.

      "That can't be. It's some kind of trick."

      "It's not a trick! It's him!"

      It struck her then that maybe Dr. Harding himself was back-could it be? It was impossible for her to imagine, but there it

      was. Maybe he had brought the boy back for some reason.

      "Dr. Harding may be there, in the vessel. If he is, bring him to

      me straightaway. Now go! And be quick about it!"

      "We
    're turning now," said Shelton, stil sounding skeptical. "But

      it's a dangerous place. The instruments show it crawling with

      Cleaners. I'll have to take it slow."

      "Go!" yelled Commander Judix. She was so agitated it made all

      of the green team back away in fear until they were as far away

      from Commander Judix as they could get. She pushed the

      second button down and screamed again.

      "Socket! Answer me!"

      Commander Judix had pushed the button that made her voice

      heard every where in the Silo, but Socket wasn't about to reply

      to the angry voice.

      Commander Judix slammed the third button down, which rang

      the barracks where Hope spent all of her time.

      "Hope! Pick up!"

      A second later Commander Judix got the reply she was looking

      for.

      "What seems to be the problem now?"

      "Excellent! You're there. Now listen, Hope. I need you to hold

      the new boy until I get there. Do you understand? Don't let him

      out of your sight and just stay there. I'll be right over."

      Hope had been right. The whole world was in chaos again.

      Things were spinning rapidly out of control.

      "I'll try to find him. He's working with the green team, but Socket

      just came by here in a mad rage looking for them."

      "What do you mean, looking for them? Where are they?" She

      was incredulous.

      "I don't know, Commander," said Hope. "This is what you get

      when you put two fools in charge of your Silo. I'm sure they're

      somewhere."

      "Find that boy!"

      Commander Judix slammed her hand against the button and

      screamed in frustration. The green team watched as she

      wheeled her chair in a half circle and rolled away toward the

      door.

      Edgar peered around the corner to be sure, and when he was

      positive Commander Judix had left the laboratory, he stepped

      out from behind the shelf.

      "She's really horrible," said Landon. "Even worse than I

      imagined. No wonder this place is so terrible."

      "And she knows who you are," said Teagan as she looked at

      Edgar. "She knows Dr. Harding made you, so she must also

      know there's a chance Atherton is really out there. She wants to

      go there, I'm sure of it. That's why she's so crazy. She wants off

      the Dark Planet and she'll do anything to get her way."

      Aggie agreed, but she had something else on her mind. She

      walked right up to the communication box and pushed the third

      button down.

     


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