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Daniel Coldstar #1

Stel Pavlou




  DEDICATION

  For Michelle

  CONTENTS

  Dedication

  1 The Disappeared

  2 4182

  3 A Hammertail Never Forgets

  4 It’s All Fun and Games Until Somebody Brings a Drote

  5 Lights-Out

  6 Did Somebody Say Drote?

  7 The Pit

  8 In the Belly of the Snake

  9 The Silver Relic

  10 Beyond the Threshold

  11 Point of No Return

  12 Army of Darkness

  13 Attack of the Nightwatchers

  14 Upside Down

  15 Face-to-Face

  16 Out of Reach

  17 Sunsrise over a Broken World

  18 Into the Rift

  19 Fallen City

  20 Hide-and-Seek

  21 Armor of the Overseers

  22 Taking out the Trash

  23 Hex A. Decimal

  24 Star Charts of the Wakeenee

  25 Double Cross on the Front Range

  26 Leechers!

  27 The Truth Seekers

  28 Hex A. Decimal 2.0

  29 The Trial of Darius Hun

  30 Fortress of Truth

  31 Zubenel Genubi’s Galactic History of the Exodussic Age

  32 Skyrider’s Gorge

  33 Allegiances

  34 The Book of Planets

  35 Way of the Truth Seeker

  36 War of Wills

  37 Crisis of Trust

  38 Legacy of the Destronomers

  39 Full Circle

  40 Back from the Dead

  41 Watch Your Toesies!

  42 Heart of Darkness

  43 Beneath the Mask

  44 The Seventh Summit

  Glossary

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  THE DISAPPEARED

  There is a burn mark where Daniel Coldstar used to sleep.

  They took him in the middle of the night. They came while he slept, pulled him from his bed, and only fired their weapons when he put up a fight. The other children heard him screaming, heard the flap of wings retreat into the night. And then nothing.

  Silence.

  He was gone.

  A week later and it was the same for Dathan Tantus. A few days after that it was Kree Kalamath’s turn, though he didn’t even make it into his bunk before they got him.

  That was how it was in the Racks. Here one minute, gone the next. The empty beds a reminder of who once had been and were no more.

  Twenty or so children each shared a Rack, bunk beds that towered up out of the bedrock like rusted nails, standing a hundred deep in every direction. They called themselves grubs, clinging to their beds like fleas, as though threadbare blankets were any kind of refuge from the mines; especially at night, when they came, scuttling across the walls, metal talons digging into the stone.

  Clickity-click . . . clickity-click . . . clickity-click . . .

  The Nightwatchers—a terrible mix of dead machine and living insect—if insects grew to the size of a man. They scanned the city of rust each night, probing the darkness in search of their next target. Some made a kind of mechanical groan, as though trying to lay an egg. Others swooped across the Racks, the beat of their wings counting down to the moment of attack.

  And yet the Nightwatchers weren’t even the worst part. Next came a LightEye, a purely robotic creation with more legs than its stunted processor knew how to handle. Its armored body raised up off the ground as though afraid of getting its pretty dress wet, until snap—

  It seared the Racks with the light of a miniature sun.

  And all this happened before the arrival of the true demons of the mines, the Overseers—who marched into the Racks wrapped in the stench of oil and decay. They were the shape of men, but they were not men. Their arms were too thin, their bodies too misshapen, and their weather-beaten masks with eyes too far apart and too numerous to possibly belong to a person—these were who the Nightwatchers looked to for their orders. These were who the grubs truly feared.

  They always came in a troop, usually around ten or so with a commander at the front. Rust weeping from their armor, the Overseers stood in silence and watched.

  Overhead, the Nightwatchers circled, air whooshing through their tattered wings, waiting for the signal from the Overseers—the hammer end of a lone blast-pike striking the ground in one almighty punch—urging them to snatch whichever child they had chosen.

  As a grub, there was nothing you could do but pray that they hadn’t come for you.

  Except on this night, something changed.

  An Overseer pounded his blast-pike into the ground, not once, but twice.

  The grubs listened to the scuffle of feet, but no one dared look down from their bunk until one of the Overseers spoke. The words projecting from his helmet were a terrible, artificial-sounding version of common Koin, the galaxy-wide language all the grubs understood, even if some of them couldn’t actually speak it. It was nothing like the Overseer’s true voice, a gibbering, grunting kind of noise, muffled beneath his helmet. The Overseer said, “Forty-one eighty-two, get moving!”

  Prodded into the open, a single boy stumbled out from behind the line of Overseers and into the light cast by the LightEye.

  Audible gasps echoed between the Racks, followed by frantic whispers in Jarabic and Chaff and a hundred other languages as the grubs tried to understand what was happening.

  The boy wobbled on unsteady legs, trying to get his bearings, as one Rack after another became a pillar of faces peering down at him. Faces he didn’t know, but who clearly knew him.

  Impatient, another Overseer swung his blast-pike at the boy’s head—

  “Dee!” a voice cried from the shadows.

  A few Racks away, a lone grub with pale eyes clambered down from his bunk as fast as he could, jumping the final few rungs to the ground.

  Barreling into the light, he pulled up short when he saw the boy flinch at his approach—

  Ssssnappp!

  “No!” the returned boy cried, rocking on his heels.

  Too late! A tendril of electricity lanced out from the tip of an Overseer’s blast-pike, smacking the grub across the Racks. He landed in a cloud of dust at the boy’s feet.

  The Racks fell silent.

  The commander of the troop signaled the Overseers to move on. With the LightEye clumsily tagging along behind, they marched out, leaving the two boys to get acquainted.

  “Dee . . . ?” the grub on the ground said, clearly in pain, and not caring one bit. “Dee, it’s me, Blink.”

  The name meant nothing to the boy Blink called “Dee.”

  Blink hauled himself up. “Daniel Coldstar,” he said, shaking his head. “I can’t believe you’re back.”

  2

  4182

  “What do you want?” said Daniel, not sure who he should trust.

  What did any of them want? Who were these people? He backed up, looking for a way out, his hands shaking.

  Blink looked at him, as if to say, Isn’t it obvious? “I want to know where you’ve been,” he replied.

  “Is that a trick question?”

  “Trick question? What are you talking about? Dee, you’ve been gone almost a month! Where were you?”

  “I don’t know!” Daniel barked. Show no fear, he kept telling himself. Show no fear. He balled his quivering hands into fists, pretended like his heart wasn’t trying to beat its way out of his chest. “Who are you?” he demanded. “Do I know you?”

  Blink rocked on his heels. “Know me?” he said. “What did they do to you?”

  “How come you’re s
till alive?” another voice demanded from somewhere high up in the Racks.

  Daniel glanced over his shoulder. Grubs from all over were venturing down from their bunks to gawk, crowding in, their stench making it difficult to breathe. Some sharp-nosed kid got right in his face, screaming in God knows what language.

  A grub, with dirty fingernails growing out of his scalp where his hair should have been, did the translating. “Fix is right, nobody ever comes back. Never.”

  Daniel looked around. “And coming back here is a good thing?”

  “What makes you so special?” someone else asked.

  “Maybe he knows the way out,” said another desperately.

  “Know the way out?” This was getting out of hand. “I don’t even know where I am. I don’t know who you are.” Fire ripped through Daniel’s veins. “I don’t know who any of you are!”

  “Keep the noise down!” the kid with the fingernail hair pleaded. “They’ll hear us.”

  Daniel didn’t care; all he knew was that if this kid got any closer, he was going to slug him. “Back off!”

  Some of the grubs did as they were told. Others appeared baffled. The grub called Blink stood his ground. “Dee,” he said, “it’s just us.”

  “Same goes for you too,” Daniel warned.

  That seemed to quiet them down like nothing else, which threw Daniel because he couldn’t get a read on why. “Are you their leader?”

  “Wow,” one of the kids in back said. “He sure got socked in the socket.”

  “Blink Darkada is your best friend,” said the kid with the fingernail hair. “At least, he was.”

  “He still is,” Blink replied, taking a step forward, trying not to flinch.

  Daniel kept his fist ready, just in case. “What happened to your eyes?” he asked.

  Blink’s eyes were a greenish blue, with no sign of a pupil.

  “He’s from one of the Burn Worlds,” another kid said.

  “He can stare at a sun without blinking,” Fingernails explained. “Doesn’t even go blind.”

  “Fat lot of use it is down here,” said the first kid.

  “I might be from the Burn Worlds,” Blink corrected, annoyed. “It’s just a guess.”

  “You don’t know where you’re from?” asked Daniel.

  Blink almost smiled. Almost. “None of us know where we’re from, Dee.”

  Daniel glanced around at the leather-faced grubs as if seeing them for the first time. They were just kids, looking as lost as he felt, hoping he had a pocketful of answers. Daniel let his fist relax. “I’m sorry,” he said.

  “What are you sorry for?” one of the grubs said. He had skin like tree bark, but when he held out his hand to Daniel, the warmth in that simple gesture felt like home. “They really wiped your brain clean, didn’t they? Maybe you’ll remember more tomorrow.” He introduced himself as Dakan Liss, though most called him Choky, he explained.

  Daniel hadn’t even finished shaking his hand when the other grubs, wanting to do the same, unleashed a torrent of names he’d never remember. Fix Suncharge patted him on the back, Henegan Rann, that mute kid Gungy Wamp, and Ogle Kog, who came from some world with super-high gravity, so he was shorter than most, but he claimed he could jump to the top of a Rack in one bound—Daniel wasn’t sure why that was important, but whatever.

  “What about you?” Daniel asked, turning to the kid with the fingernail hair. “What’s your name?”

  “Name’s Matthew Fleet,” he said. “We dug out the Worm together, before the cave-in.”

  None of that seemed familiar to Daniel.

  “You used to call me Nails?”

  Daniel shrugged. “Okay . . .”

  But before he could ask any more . . . “WHO DISTURBS—?” a Nightwatcher yawped from on high.

  The cry echoed from one side of the Racks to other. Startled, the grubs froze. “Who disturbs?” cried another Nightwatcher a little farther away. “Who disturbs?”

  It was too dark to see them, but the grubs could certainly hear the wretched creatures stretch out their wings, readying for the hunt. Either the Nightwatchers had returned or they had never left, but the grubs were so excited by Daniel’s return, few noticed. The time for talking was over. One more call from a Nightwatcher, and there were no prizes for guessing what came next.

  “Go!” Blink whispered.

  They scattered to the four corners of the Racks like vermin avoiding the light, clambering up ladders or over one another to get back to their bunks.

  “Where do I sleep?” Daniel asked, hurriedly.

  “That one over there,” Blink said, quickly pointing it out. “Top bunk.”

  Daniel took a breath. “Thanks,” he said.

  Blink nodded. The two boys eyed each other, a moment of understanding before going their separate ways. Blink fled into the darkness. Daniel ran the other way, Nightwatchers swooping over his head. He gripped the rungs to his Rack, the rust cutting into his hands, and climbed as fast as he could on legs that had little strength. His whole body shook with the effort. Every time he took a step, he worried less about the Nightwatchers and more about plunging to his—

  No more rungs!

  Daniel pitched forward into the charred remains of a blanket sprawled across a long, abandoned bed. The pillow, if you could call it that, smelled like something had been living in it. There were deep scratch marks all over the frame where something violent had happened.

  “I’m starting to think disappearing was the better option,” he said to no one in particular.

  It was the perfect thing to do to draw attention to himself. A Nightwatcher dove right in, its gigantic wings outspread. It landed at the foot of Daniel’s bunk with a clank, its clawed mechanical feet curling tightly around the rail, leaving fresh, deep grooves in the metal.

  “Who disturbs?” the Nightwatcher demanded.

  Daniel so badly wanted to answer back, but he knew it would probably be the biggest mistake he could make. This thing towered over him. He didn’t stand a chance.

  Instead, he rolled over and pretended to be asleep, while the Nightwatcher sat at the end of his bed, cocked its head, and watched him.

  3

  A HAMMERTAIL NEVER FORGETS

  The TRS-80 GoLoader had three massive headlights mounted in front, and a mile-long train of mine cars behind it. Beneath its rusted-out shell sat a grease-smeared guidance system broadcasting a steady stream of orders to every mine car within a ten-mile radius, instructing them to either join the train or detach and head elsewhere. Sitting on a string of antigravity repulsers, the entire contraption didn’t care about tracks, road, or terrain—it flew through the mines, its blackened attitude adjusters flipping the vehicle onto its side, or rolling it completely over every time it accelerated into a bend.

  Daniel, his fingers curled around the bars of the cage on one of the mine cars, drank in the damp air of the mine shaft. What was that smell? A kind of spicy aroma that made his stomach growl; there was something so . . . familiar about it.

  “I’d stand back if I were you,” Blink warned.

  The other grubs in the mine car were already backing away, but Daniel was more interested in what he saw down the tunnel, a tangled forest of bone-white roots hanging from the tunnel wall.

  “I don’t think we’re going to get through,” he said.

  But he was wrong. The GoLoader hurtled toward the obstruction, while the fleshy limbs recoiled from its lights. They were more animal than vegetable.

  Blink grabbed Daniel by the scruff and yanked him back right as the rattletrap plowed on through.

  Bullets of severed tentacles exploded through the mine car, sawn off by the cage bars. They thrashed about on the deck for the longest time.

  Blink held Daniel back. “Just wait,” he said, “before you do anything else stupid.” He explained that this was what the roots always did before dying.

  The pale chunks of organic matter shook one last time before oozing with sticky sap.

  Dani
el shook him off. “What are they?”

  “Breakfast,” said Nails with a grin, scooping up a piece and taking one almighty bite.

  It was every grub for himself, stuffing his pockets. As a food source, it didn’t look very appetizing, but there was that smell again—spice.

  Daniel nibbled on a piece. It was rough on his tongue, not nearly as slimy as it looked, and sweeter than he was expecting. It had him scrambling to fill his own pockets before it was all gone.

  Passava . . . ? Was that the name of this stuff? Yes, Passava! The flood of relief at finally being able to latch on to a memory! If only it would lead to more, but Daniel had already started to realize that there was something very strange about the way his mind had been wiped clean. He could remember some things with perfect clarity, like language and numbers, but other things were completely missing, no matter how hard he looked. It was as though his mind knew that a memory was supposed to be in a certain compartment, but whenever he opened it all he found was an outline in dust of where it used to sit. The memory wasn’t blocked; it had been taken, lifted out of his mind with precision, leaving a whole lot of nothingness.

  Light flooded in through the bars of the mine car; the deathly glow of LightEyes spilling across ancient columns of carved stone, and around the ruins of once-mighty buildings.

  “Where are they taking us?” Daniel asked between chews. He drifted back to the bars, watching an entire colony of grubs below crawl all over the ruins under the unforgiving watch of Overseers.

  “Looks like the Snake,” said Choky.

  The Worm? The Snake? “Do any of these places have friendly names?”

  “Why?” said Blink, joining him at the bars and sucking on a big piece of Passava. “Would it make you feel better?”

  As the GoLoader dove down into a cavernous chamber filled with the deafening racket of crushers and motors, the overwhelming stench of fresh dung filled their nostrils. The staging post, where all snake-mining activity began and ended, was lined with animal pens as far as the eye could see, each enclosure crammed with trabasaurs of every conceivable size and type, from two-legged Ridgebacks with their razor-sharp teeth being saddled up and ridden out, to braying Chainhogs and Hammertails pulling smaller empty mine cars called skids down into the tunnels.