Read Atherton #3: The Dark Planet (No. 3) Online
Authors: Patrick Carman
Tags: #Science fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure - General, #Children's Books, #Children's & young adult fiction & true stories, #YA), #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Ages 9-12 Fiction, #Children: Grades 4-6, #Young Adult Fiction, #Science fiction (Children's, #Adventure and adventurers, #Orphans, #Life on other planets, #Adventure fiction, #Social classes, #Science Fiction; Fantasy; Magic, #Atherton (Imaginary place), #Space colonies
choices while you
babysit.
Stop questioning me!"
"You've compromised too much," said Hope. She had a burning
anger of her own. Even as Commander Judix turned her chair
and rolled away toward oncoming footsteps, Hope would be
heard. "Did you enjoy your breakfast this morning, Jane? They
risked their lives to make it for you--did you forget about that?"
"They receive from me a safe place to sleep, free from Cleaners
and Spikers and the menacing smog of the outside!"
Commander Judix had turned. She'd decided she didn't want to
talk to anyone approaching her nor visit the laboratory. She
wanted to be left alone.
Commander Judix had rolled back into her room. She was
about to close the door in Hope's face.
"Jane, please--don't do this. Give them at least until they can
stand it outside."
Commander Judix grabbed the edge of the door. "Go back to
the Silo where you belong."
She flung the door shut, thinking all the while of her lost mother
and father and sister, all of them lost in the forsaken wood
because of that madman Dr. Harding and all his monstrous
mistakes. And that name! No one around here ever called her
Jane, only her family had called her that. It burned her insides to
see their faces and hear them calling her name.
Jane! Jane!
It was God's sick humor she was alive at all.
After Edgar ate all the food and drank all the water Maude had
given him he had a hard time keeping his eyes open. He was
tired and the Raven was so warm inside. He made the longest
part of the journey to the Dark Planet in his sleep, unaware of
the impossible speed at which he was traveling.
Just before dawn he arrived in the at mo sphere of the Dark
Planet and it stirred him in his sleep, if only for a brief moment.
The outside layer of the Raven spun violently, but the inside
remained still and steady. It wasn't until the Raven landed on
the Dark Planet, ripping through a grove of trees on its spinning
final descent, that Edgar was finally jolted awake.
"Who's there?" said Edgar as he awoke in the chair. Whatever
force had held him down was gone now and he was free to
move. Soon he was on his feet, stumbling around in the near
dark.
"You look tired," he said to the Raven, noticing the empty
blackness of the glass walls. There were firebugs scattered
here and there, but no cave eels. It looked to Edgar like the
Raven would need some time to restore energy before she
could travel again.
Is it really possible I've left Atherton?
thought Edgar, rubbing his
eyes as they grew accustomed to the paltry blue light. As the
full force of what he'd done dawned on him, he felt very lonely
and afraid.
"What have I done?" he said, and looking at the lifeless walls of
the Raven, added, "and what if I can't get back home?"
Edgar looked at the flat, black disk lying on the now lifeless
table. The disk would fit in his pocket, but he was afraid to pick
it up. He knew what would happen if he did.
Are you ready for the Dark Planet?
he asked himself, trying to
put on a brave face.
It can't be as bad as the Flatlands once
were, right? At least this place won't be crawling with Cleaners.
Edgar had landed the Raven in the same place it had always
landed, hidden in the depths of the forsaken wood.
"Here we go, then," said Edgar, placing the black disk in his
pocket. He heard the door slide open and saw the foggy air
emerge. It was murky outside, but stepping through the door he
quickly realized it wasn't completely dark, only dim like night on
Atherton. The air smelled like nothing he'd ever smelled before.
It was a sharp scent he could actually taste on his lips. He had
a hard time breathing it in and began coughing.
The fit of noise set off a series of other noises Edgar hadn't
expected. Some of the sounds were horrifyingly familiar.
"Cleaners," whispered Edgar, totally surprised to hear the
ghastly roar of a monster he knew all too well. "And by the
sound of it, big ones."
He stood in shock, unable to move his feet as he listened. The
earth shook and a sound like breaking bones and slamming
jaws came rapidly closer. If this really was an approaching
Cleaner, it would have huge teeth attached to a set of jaws wide
enough to cut Edgar in half. It would have a hundred rattling
bony legs and a long, hideous body with an underbelly that
sucked up every thing in its path.
The smog was thick through the barren tree trunks as Edgar
peered out. It wasn't until he caught the first glimpse of the
creature that he finally turned and dove back inside the Raven.
With a quick flick of his wrist Edgar pulled the disk from his
pocket, tossing it toward the table like a skipping rock. When
the disk touched the table it stuck, as though it had been pulled
down by an unseen force. The door
whoosh
ed shut with little
more than a few seconds to spare. If he had taken a moment
longer he would have shared the space with the chomping
head of something very big and hungry.
"What was
that
?" said Edgar, breathless with terror. He wished
he could see what kind of monster he faced. He felt the Raven
rock back and forth and heard the sound of an animal crying out
in pain.
"Whatever's out there just touched you, didn't it?" asked Edgar,
thinking of the million razor-sharp spikes that covered the
Raven's shell. "You haven't been here for a long time. Maybe
they forgot what they were dealing with."
Edgar felt a mix of emotions as he heard the beaten creature
move off. On the one hand, he was safe inside. He could
already see more firebugs emerging in the black walls, floor,
and ceiling. Soon enough, he could turn the Raven around and
go back home.
But another part of him was dying to go outside and explore,
regardless of the dangers. He'd faced down cliffs and Cleaners
and floods before. The Dark Planet was a challenge he wanted
to overcome.
"I wonder...," said Edgar. He tapped the table and firebugs
returned. A map of the world outside of the vessel emerged. On
one side was a body of water that appeared to go on forever, its
beach surrounded by a forest and jagged rocks. On the beach a
building was indicated by a square, and from the building a line
led outward to a tube-shaped structure at its end.
"And there I am," said Edgar, pointing to a small, oblong image
in the trees. He looked carefully at the map and decided the
tube-shaped structure had to be the place called the Silo. It
looked so close, perhaps only a short walk away.
Scanning the image, Edgar noticed that about halfway through
the forest, between the Raven and the Silo, there appeared to
be a series of giant holes.
"If there are holes, there are cliffs leading down, and I could
hide in there if I needed to," said Edgar. "Unless something
lives inside them."
Edgar sat down and took a deep breath. Like so many times
before, he knew his mind was already made up.
Edgar picked up the black disk again and the door opened. The
firebugs darted away, and the tails of cave eels pulled back into
the deepest part of the walls as if the Raven knew the forsaken
wood was poison and wanted nothing to do with it.
Edgar peered out the door. Seeing and hearing nothing nearby,
he stepped out onto the barren surface of the Dark Planet.
Dawn had passed into morning and the haze of smog was a
level lighter, though still murky, like looking through muddy
water cut through with sunlight. Pollution lay thick and heavy
through an endless stand of desolate trees. Edgar looked for
some mechanism that might shut the door from the outside, but
there was nothing to be found. This should have alerted Edgar
to another way out from the inside, a way that could allow the
door to remain shut, but he didn't make the connection.
You'll have to make do on your own until I come back.
Edgar pocketed the disk and started off, keeping an eye on the
widest of the trees in case he had to climb one in order to hide
from an oncoming threat. He looked back at the Raven, but it
had already disappeared in the thick smog of the forsaken
wood.
CHAPTER 11THE KEY TO
MULCIBER
"I'm never going to forgive him. Never, ever, ever."
Samuel sat next to Isabel and listened to her grumbling as they
watched Maude walk away. Maude had done what she had
promised, giving the tablet to Samuel and telling the two of
them where Edgar had gone. But Maude didn't have the will to
involve herself any more than she had to. She and her husband
Briney's life had returned to its normal state of simplicity and
she liked it that way. If trouble was coming she'd deal with it on
arrival and not a moment sooner.
"You'll have to forgive him," said Samuel. "It's what he does,
and he knows you'd only want to stop him. You can't make him
stay safe and cozy all the time. He'll come back. He always
does."
Isabel stewed a little more. Samuel looked in every direction to
be sure they were alone by the water's edge. Satisfied, he lifted
the tablet from where it had been placed between the rocks.
"What do you think it is?" asked Isabel.
"It's two-sided," said Samuel, trying to pry the two halves apart
with his fingernails. "And they come apart, or at least I think they
do. Maybe there's something hidden inside."
"Here, let me see it," said Isabel. Samuel reluctantly handed it
to her. Isabel gave it a brief glance, then held it over her head
so she could smash it against the rocks.
"What are you doing!" cried Samuel, reaching up to take it from
her. "We have to be careful with it. There's a lot that needs to be
read on there."
"Here, you can have it," she said, pushing the tablet into
Samuel's hands and beginning to walk away all in one fluid
motion. She felt he was punishing her for not knowing how to
read better.
"Wait--Isabel, please. I didn't mean anything by it. Let's look at it
together and see what we can figure out."
Isabel ignored him. Neither Edgar nor Samuel seemed to
understand how a friend was supposed to act.
"Come on, Isabel. I said I was sorry. I need your help on this. I
can't do it alone."
Isabel stopped but didn't turn around right away. She took out
her sling, set a dried fig inside, and began swinging it over her
head.
Fwoosh, fwoosh, fwoosh
--faster and faster it went until
snap!
she let it fly out over the water. Samuel watched until it
went so far he almost lost sight of it, a tiny black speck against a
deep blue sea of water. The effort made Isabel feel better.
"Let me see it again," she said, turning. She would leave if he
wouldn't trust her with the tablet.
Samuel hesitated before holding it out toward her. When Isabel
took it she ran her fingers over the letters that covered one side.
She could feel them, etched as they were, and it was a new
sensation she liked. Like Edgar before her, she quickly figured
out the second word at the top. A-T-H-E-R-T-O-N. "Atherton!
That's what it says," she said proudly.
"You're right," said Samuel. "Let me have a look."
She held it out.
"And that other word, I think you know that one as well." Isabel
wrinkled her brow so it fell low over her eyelashes. Her long
black hair fell over the sides of her face as she concentrated on
the letters. First, she said something that sounded like
in-sid,
but right after, without any help, she changed her mind.
"Inside--inside Atherton!" cried Isabel. But then she realized
what she'd read. Samuel saw that she was shaking, a look of
terror on her face he'd only seen once before.
"It's all right, Isabel. Don't think about it."
Isabel handed the tablet back to Samuel and turned away. The
inside of Atherton held the Inferno, which had almost killed
Isabel not that long ago.
"It's just a tablet, Isabel. We don't have to do anything with it."
Deep down there was nothing Samuel wanted more than to
read the tablet top to bottom, to absorb every single word and
number. It fascinated him beyond all reason.
"I think we should set it on fire," said Isabel. "Whatever it says
can only bring trouble."
"We can't do that. And I don't think we should just give it to Dr.
Kincaid. There must be a reason Edgar wanted
us
to have it."
"I still say we should get rid of it," said Isabel. "We can't do that!
What if there's something important here? This is the work of Dr.
Harding--that's obvious. We can't just destroy it, Isabel."
"Then you read it. I don't want to read any more."
Samuel was secretly glad Isabel didn't want to read the tablet.
He offered to let her sit by the water's edge while he gave the
tablet a good long look.
After what seemed like hours to Isabel but was actually only a