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
around the map as Aggie unfolded it.
"I've never been into Station Seven before, but one thing that's
good is this," said Aggie, pointing to a group of words Edgar
couldn't read. Aggie read them to everyone: "'Pipes and grates
throughout. Use these to make your way.'"
"This will mean we can move through the station without having
to walk on the floor where we'd be seen."
"We'll have to be real y quiet," said Teagan.
"But we're all good climbers, right?" said Vasher, surprising
everyone with his enthusiasm. He was secretly feeling more
like leaving with every passing second. "I mean, if there's one
thing we've learned how to do in the Silo, it's climb through
ducts and over grates and swing from vines."
"It's like Dr. Harding knew the skills we'd need from the very
start," said Landon.
"How do we get out of here?" asked Teagan.
"That will be the easiest part, I think," said Aggie. She walked to
the door and found the dial that Red Eye had turned the day
before. She read from the paper as she spun it back and forth.
"Twelve... nineteen... two..."
"Aggie?" said Vasher.
"I'm in the middle of this, can't you see?"
"The platform is moving."
Aggie stopped cold and looked over her shoulder.
"Socket's coming already!"
She went back to work--four numbers to go and her fingers
wouldn't stop shaking.
"Forty-four... twenty-four... eight..."
"Hurry, Aggie! Hurry!"
They all stood close behind her, readying themselves to rush
through to the other side.
"Thirty-one," said Aggie, and then there was a click and a
whoosh
as the metal door unlocked and opened. Everyone
darted through behind Aggie. Edgar looked back as the door
was closing and saw Socket's boots come into view.
Whoosh!
Click!
The door was shut and locked behind them.
As the five children of the green team stood staring at one
another in the faint light of the corridor, they felt certain that they
would never return to the world of the Silo. There had only ever
been one child who'd crossed over and went back again, and
that was Dr. Maximus Harding himself. It seemed to them more
than ever that Dr. Harding was guiding them to places they'd
never been, cheering them on from the watery grave of the
fallen House of Power.
If only they'd understood Dr. Harding's message a little better,
they would have realized they'd left something terribly important
behind.
"What's this nonsense?" said Socket as the platform reached
the bottom and he found the drying room empty of children
working. If they were hiding, they'd given him a perfect excuse
to punish them. And yet if they were at some mischief
elsewhere, his brother might slap him hard enough to dislodge
his goggles.
"Where the devil are they?" he said aloud, holding his bender
out as he inspected behind each of the large bins. He found
Edgar's boots and then Vasher's and kicked both pairs across
the room.
"Wait until I get my hands on them," he said, already imagining
them hiding in the vines upstairs.
The communication box on the wall flashed and buzzed,
startling Socket enough that he let go of his bender and it fell
into one of the bins. He struggled momentarily with whether to
retrieve his beloved weapon or go to the blinking red light and
answer it.
"Socket! Where are you?"
It was his brother's voice screaming out of the device. Socket
didn't want to answer it. He was sure that the green team had
been found making trouble on one of the other levels, and he'd
never hear the end of it.
"Socket! Pick up, you fool!"
Socket could tel this was no ordinary cal . Red Eye's piercing
voice was being broadcast throughout every level of the Silo.
"Yes, brother, what is it?" he answered.
"What took you so long?" Red Eye howled.
Socket was not a very fast thinker, and he could not come up
with a very good lie on the spot.
"Just in the drying room checking on things."
"Pick up the receiver," said Red Eye. Socket wondered what
his brother wanted to say that he didn't want the green team to
hear. He picked up the receiver and placed it to his ear,
lowering his voice clandestinely for effect even though he was
alone in the room.
"What is it, Red Eye? What's going on?"
There was a sound of a pushed button and Socket knew from
experience that this meant his brother had secured the line and
it was only the two of them now.
"That idiot, Shelton, is going out in the transporter again.
Commander Judix wants him to go beyond the wood, and the
crew deserted. Word is Captain Grammel showed up early and
they went to work for him. Commander Judix is furious."
"What's that got to do with us? We don't --"
"Stop your yakking and listen!" cried Red Eye. "Shelton's at the
door and expects me to go out with him. I'm going to try Judix
again--she won't answer me--but you might be running the Silo
alone today."
Socket was overjoyed. He could already imagine it, taking al
the credit for the food production, whipping the workers into
shape the way he wanted to.
"That sounds dangerous," Socket commented with a false show
of concern. "There's word of a war between the Spikers and the
Cleaners. Not too much food left out there."
He bit his knuckle the moment he'd said the words, wondering if
he'd scare his brother off his new duty.
"You think I don't know about the Spikers? I'm the one
told
you
about the Spikers!"
Socket hated his brother. He was always right about everything.
"Give that new boy, Edgar, a swift kick for me," said Red Eye.
"And keep them working down there. Judix is expecting a full
pallet tonight with Grammel on the dock."
Socket looked about the room and saw how empty and void of
activity it was. He seethed with anger as he thought of how far
behind they were.
You'll be sorry when I find you,
he thought.
"I'll keep them working, brother," said Socket. "Don't you worry
about a thing."
The line went dead and Socket hung up. He fished his powdery
bender out of the bin, then began his search for children he
would never find.
"What is it, Red Eye?" asked Commander Judix.
"Shelton is here at the door, ma'am, and he says you wa --"
"He needs a crew and you're all I've got. Socket can run the
Silo for a while. I need you and Shelton to find more children."
Red Eye was speechless. His blood ran cold at the thought of
being outside among the beasts in the forsaken wood.
"Is that all, Red Eye?"
Red Eye didn't answer, so Commander Judix continued. "Have
Socket bring a full pallet of blocks to Grammel's ship by end of
day."
She only heard raspy breathing on the other end. Just to be
sure he was paying attention she asked him a question.
"What's the new boy's name?"
Still nothing.
"RED EYE!" she screamed, and this produced a grunt on the
other end. He was paying attention again.
"I asked you a question. What's the new boy's name?"
Commander Judix heard Shelton in the background goading
Red Eye to get moving. And then, to her absolute amazement,
Red Eye said the name.
That
name.
"The boy's name is Edgar."
He slammed the phone down and was out the very door
through which Edgar had entered the Silo.
The communication box rang and rang until Hope walked past
and answered it.
The voice on the other end of the line was frantic. "Did you say
Edgar? Are you sure?"
Hope had never heard Commander Judix in such a state of
panic.
"DID YOU SAY EDGAR?" she cried again. It was the secret of
all secrets. Dr. Kincaid had told her and her alone of this
abomination of Dr. Harding's. She had long assumed the boy
was either dead or had never really existed at all.
"Commander, this is Hope. If you're looking for Red Eye, he's
gone. Maybe you can reach him in the transport--I don't know.
Are you okay?"
The line went dead and Hope was left to wonder about the
name that had so upset Commander Judix. Things were
beginning to feel out of control. Hope had known this feeling
once before, decades ago when the Dark Planet had begun to
fail. There were warning signs, some small and some not so
small, but then there had come a point when every thing
unraveled at once. And something right now signaled to her that
whatever had begun to change once more on the Dark Planet
could not be stopped... . And that something was caused by
what?
"Edgar," she whispered. "Who are you and where did you come
from?"
She wanted to go and find him, but she couldn't leave the
younger children alone for too long. She resolved to speak with
him the moment his workday was over and get to the bottom of
whatever bedevilment had entered the Silo.
Across the passageway of lies in Station Seven, Commander
Judix was shaking uncontrollably in her chair. Edgar?
The
Edgar? The secret boy, hidden on Atherton by Dr. Kincaid.
She'd never met Edgar, only been told of him after he was
gone, but the connection was fraught with meaning. The little
monster made by a mad scientist had been the beginning of the
end. But he was here now, and that could only mean one thing.
"I must go to the laboratory first, and then I'll retrieve that
horrible boy," she said.
When she turned to go, she was startled by a man standing in
front of her, and she cried out. The man didn't wear metal-soled
boots like everyone else, so she hadn't heard him sneak up on
her.
"Boo!" he said, then his sandpapery, booming laugh echoed
down the empty corridors.
Captain Grammel had arrived at Station Seven.
CHAPTER 21DR. HARDING'S
LABORATORY
"Sorry to startle you, Commander," said Captain Grammel. "A
long time at sea and all that--leaves me dying for some
entertainment."
Commander Judix thought Captain Grammel was looking a
little worse for the wear, and crazier than ever. As a sea captain
one would expect him to have deeply tanned skin and wisps of
windblown hair, but he had neither. In fact, he was completely
bald save for a little white tuft on his chin that might be called a
beard. It made his already thin face seem longer still. A small
tube ran from his nose to a tank hitched to his back. And he
wore the most outrageous goggles with enormous lenses, far
too big for his face, for he was extremely poor of sight.
He made a sound that, once heard, could never be forgotten. It
was a clearing of the throat that started down in his chest and
repeated over and over, like something was caught and he
couldn't quite get it out but refused to stop trying. It was a sharp,
honking sound that echoed dreadfully down the halls and drove
Shelton near mad when he had to hear it. Grammel was making
the sound just then, the sharp
honk! honk! honk!
as Commander
Judix tried to roll her chair past on her way to the laboratory. He
stepped in front of her, let out two more awful honks, and wiped
his nose with the back of his grimy hand.
"Sorry. Been holding that in a while," he said with one last
honk!
for good measure. "Where are you off to?" When he
talked it was raspy and full of air, giving the impression that the
tank on his back was probably forcing too much oxygen past his
nose and down his throat.
"I have something to do that can't wait," said Commander Judix.
"We'll have to conduct our business when I return."
"I'm on a tight schedule." He tapped his watch annoyingly. "Lots
of demand out there on the shores, more than ever, and
opportunity calls. Am I right?"
He leaned in close to the Commander's face. His eyes, huge
and bleary behind thick lenses, seemed to wobble in his head
as he let out yet another sharp series of honks.
"Get out of my way, you fool!" Commander Judix screamed in
Grammel's face, and the man backed away, surprised. Usually
it was he who held the upper hand in these meetings. He
thought it might be a new strategy of hers to throw him off
balance.
"I see how it is," he said, both hands on the arms of the chair
and holding her back. "You want more fuel, do you? Well, you
might not get
any
fuel if you don't start acting a little more
hospitable. Where's the food and the drinks like I always get?
What's happened to your manners?"
He paused a moment, let out a long and slithery
ahhhhhhhh
sound and wagged a dirty finger in her face. "You're angry
because I've stolen your transport crew, is that it? Well, I'll tell
you this--I didn't go looking. They begged me to take them in.
You should be mad at yourself, not me. They can't stand you."
He flashed a row of surprisingly white teeth rimmed with gold
and pushed up against the arms of the chair triumphantly.