Code Lightfall and the Robot King (11 page)

BOOK: Code Lightfall and the Robot King
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“Oh, Ms. Watterly, your mysterious guest is quite the rake! I haven't had this much fun in ages!” said an overgrown lady robot through greasy tears of laughter.

“Thelma, do not ever let me hear you say that I do not plan an amazing dinner party,” replied Lady Watterly, staring daggers at Code and Gary. Clearly, they were uninvited, but if the guests were happy, Lady Watterly seemed to be happy.

Relieved, Peep landed on Code's shoulder and refused to leave his side for the rest of the trip.

Outside the safely sealed window, the docking gates of the Celestial City appeared. Below them, Mekhos had shrunk to a gray green orb. Gary looked up from his oil of vitriol and wiped his face. “Are we there yet?” he asked.

Code smiled at Gary. He had thought the slaughterbot was helpless, but Gary had saved his life twice in the last few hours. The big clunky robot was smarter than Code gave him credit for. Code was thankful to have made it up the Beamstalk at last—despite nearly being burned by acid, deprived of oxygen, and bruised from a series of hearty thumps to the back from his new entourage of female robot admirers.

“We're here, Gary,” said Code. “We're finally here.”

16
Celestial City

The Great Disassembly:
T–Minus One Hour

Leaving behind the wild dinner party, Code and Gary crept unnoticed down a long, dark passageway of perfectly polished silver and into the Celestial City. With the Disassembly imminent, the city seemed completely empty. The only faces Code saw were the hologrammatic portraits of strange-looking humans that lined the walls—the past kings and queens of Mekhos, he assumed.

Code wondered whether he was related to any of these odd faces. Every single royal had some kind of robotic addition: a beautiful princess possessed piercing red robotic eyes, a rugged prince had two monstrous metal arms, and in one particularly disturbing case, a haggard king was missing his lower half and instead stood proudly on eight golden spider legs. Code touched his own face thoughtfully.
Is this what's in store for me?

Peep wriggled out of Code's pocket. She launched into the air and purposefully buzzed ahead. As usual, Code and Gary followed close behind.

Passing through a low archway, Code emerged from the claustrophobic hall and entered the broad main street of the Celestial City. It was a vista that could only have been built by the peculiar robotic residents of Mekhos. Soaring turrets and towering walls crowded the sky under a vast translucent dome that twinkled with starlight. Rocket-powered elevators shot up and down the sheer faces of empty buildings. Stairways circled and squared their way around the streets and buildings, with some steps large enough for giants and others small enough for ants. It was incredible, but Code didn't have time to linger; he had to rush to catch up with Peep.

They trotted across empty pavilions and down deserted alleys. The city was eerily silent, except for the sharp snapping of banners in the artificial wind and the soft roar of waterfalls cascading beneath tall bridges. Ahead, the Celestial Castle was sprawling and magnificent—and deserted.

Finally, Peep led Code and Gary through a nondescript door and into the castle. Code had never seen her in such a rush. She peeped and blinked urgently as they trooped through cramped halls, winding their way deeper and deeper inside.

In the heart of the castle, the group reached a door covered in strong rivets and bands of thick metal. A dial illuminated with symbols protruded from the portal—a lock. Below it, a confusing array of keys protruded from a panel, each a unique shape.

“A keyboard,” whispered Gary.

Peep got busy. She hit the dial with a series of light beams and tugged on the keys one at a time. The dial spun and the keys shifted. And … nothing happened. Peep chirped in frustration.

“Oh, no!” cried Gary. “It's locked and we haven't got the combination.”

In disbelief, Code stared down at the rows of keys.
It can't come down to this
, he thought.
There's got to be a way
. Leaning forward, Code looked closer at the keys. And closer. His gray green robo-retinas zoomed in until the confusing array of keys filled his vision. And he noticed something. Out of dozens, three of the keys were worn down slightly more than the others. It was a difference of just a few millimeters, but it was enough. Someone had touched these three keys more than the rest.

“Ah ha!” exclaimed Code, turning the three special keys in every combination he could think of. After a couple of tries, the lock opened with a thundering boom.

The impassable portal slid back, leaving behind a flurry of glimmering dust motes.

For a moment, Code thought the vast room inside was a burning inferno. Then he realized that the searing light wasn't caused by flames, but by the reflections of billions of coins, gems, artifacts, vehicles, weapons, armor, crowns, artwork, cannons, and mysterious antiquities heaped into careless mounds between towering, gleaming archways. It was a treasure room beyond all measurement or comparison.

Code dimmed his robo-retinas and stumbled inside, craning his neck to inspect all the amazing treasures. Hovering orbs dotted the room, sending rays of luminescence cascading over the loot. Precarious piles of coins were heaped everywhere: tiny diamond coins, pie-sized golden coins, coins with legs crawling over each other, and coins that dissolved together and spread apart like amoebas. Every coin was imprinted with the noble visage of King John Lightfall. An exoskeleton the size of a small building stood motionless on the far wall, its hands resting on a monumental sword.

Gary tromped around the room randomly, tossing up handfuls of coins and cackling with glee. Meanwhile, Code remained where he was and scanned the space carefully. He noticed that most of the brightly burning light converged on one spot at the far end of the room: a magnificent pedestal with a glass case on top.

At last
, thought Code.
This must be where the Robonomicon is kept
. Code had imagined how the book would look: massive, dusty, and covered in specks of gold. It would glitter in the light, and when he opened it, the writing would be in glimmering golden letters and filled with diagrams, maps, and magical words—and all the answers he needed to save this world.

Code stumbled toward the pedestal like a sleepwalker, climbing over a half-buried airplane with the word “Electra” painted on its fuselage. Slipping on piles of coins, Code made his way up a mountain of loot and finally reached the glittering pedestal. Peep hovered near his head, tugging on his hair and fluttering at his ears. Code brushed her away and grabbed hold of the pedestal.

“I found it,” he breathed.

“The Robonomicon?” asked Gary.

“Yes. We're saved, Gary.”

Peep chirped frantically and shot beams of red light at Code. She yanked on his earlobe and smacked into his cheek. Mesmerized by the pedestal, Code paid no attention.

“Hooray!” thundered Gary.

Holding his breath with anticipation, Code yanked opened the case.

There was nothing inside but a cushioned pillow. The case was empty.

“Oh, no!” cried Code in despair.

“You got that right,” said Gary.

Code turned and saw Immortalis hovering in the air like a robotic jellyfish. Two silent jet thrusters spit blue flame from either side of a writhing mass of black tentacles. The body of King John Lightfall dangled in the air, supported by hundreds of tentacles wrapped around his torso, arms, legs, head, feet, and even his fingers. The cables twisted and wrinkled his elegant, kingly robes, and he swung lightly. A single unblinking blue eye adorned the middle of the Immortalis machine, like a glowing sapphire in a black crown.

Frightened, Peep alighted on Code's shoulder and hid under his collar.

Code's eyes widened as he met the gaze of his poor grandfather, caught in the foul embrace of Immortalis.

“My boy,” uttered King John Lightfall. “Protect—”

The king's words were cut off as several thin black cords shot out of Immortalis and wrapped around his neck, jaw, and face. A thicker cord tightened around his chest. The swiftly moving cords paused, then began moving together purposefully. Code grimaced as Immortalis played the king's tortured body like a puppet.

“Let him go, Immortalis!” demanded Code.


I
am King John Lightfall,” hissed the old man in a wheezing grunt. His eyes rolled wildly. “And you are
too late
.”

A taut cord easily subdued a kick as John Lightfall tried to wriggle free of Immortalis.

“I made it this far, Immortalis,” said Code. “Now where's the Robonomicon?”

“It's gone, gone, gone. And without her not even
you
can stop me, human,” said John Lightfall.

Code could feel Peep under his shirt collar, trembling in fear. Alas, before he could stop her, the little bot bolted away and sped through the cavernous treasure room, ducking and weaving.

“Thank goodness!” said the king, in his own voice. Then the wires snapped his jaw shut and began moving his mouth again. “You!” he spat in a strangled voice, pointing at Peep.

Peep flew low over the mounds of treasure, a rapidly moving violet speck easily visible to Code's new eyes. He splashed after her through piles of coins, trying to protect the scared little robot from the black-tentacled monster. He finally caught up to her.

“What is it, Peep?” he implored. Immortalis was close behind.

Peep sprayed frantic light beams onto a small, humming box. It looked like a birthday present wrapped in smiley-face paper. A single button protruded from the top, serving double duty as the nose for a grinning happy face.

Immortalis shot out a half dozen tentacles toward Code. They wriggled across the coins like snakes. Every instinct Code had was shouting at him to run away, but he chose to trust the little robot.

Peep had never once led him astray.

Code jammed his finger on the button. Impossibly, the box folded in on itself until—somehow—it was no longer there. Instead, Code was surprised to see a boxy, friendly robot looking up at him, a paintbrush in its clawed hand.

“In the name of our ancestors! What have you done?!” cried the king, shrinking away. The happy little bot threw back its head and let out a psychotic laugh that sent a chill down Code's spine. Out of nowhere, Gary flopped his massive body down onto the mound of coins next to Code, then leaped to his feet.

“It's Charlie! The greatest robot hero in Mekhos history!”

“And criminal,” muttered Code, backing away.

Without hesitation, Charlie wheeled over to an oddly curved black bar resting against an Egyptian sarcophagus. The bar was long and thin and it looked somehow dangerous. Charlie snatched it up, and with a sigh of satisfaction he cocked the bizarre weapon.

Just then, Immortalis descended on its jet thrusters in a roaring whirlwind of melting coins and let its tentacles fall like the branches of a weeping willow over the little square-shaped robot. Charlie fired his weapon three times, quickly. A tight beam of light vaporized a wriggling chunk of tentacle. Immortalis squealed in pain and retracted its tentacles, dropping King Lightfall. With a surprised expression on his face, the elderly king rolled out of reach of the hovering machine and onto a jingling bed of golden coins.

Peep chirped in distress. She fluttered over to the fallen king, landing on his chest. Code crouched down next to his injured grandfather.

Meanwhile, Immortalis soared up into the air, ignoring Code as it tried to escape from the plucky little robot with the big gun.

“Finally free,” said the old man.

“Grandpa? Are you okay?” asked Code.

“Not really,” chuckled the king. He managed to sit up on one elbow, but collapsed back on the ground. Finally, he managed to say, “Oh, Code, you've grown up so much. This little one must have found you.”

The king stroked Peep with one weak finger.

“You've been gone so long, Grandpa. Everyone thought you were dead. But I didn't believe them. I
never
believed them,” said Code.

The old man now lying on the bed of gold coins had taught Code how to catch grasshoppers and how to pick out fossils from beds of shale rock. He was the only adult Code had ever known who didn't care about getting dirty, or looking silly, or being on time. And he was dying.

Code could feel each second of his grandfather's life ticking away, precious and irreplaceable. There were too many questions and not enough time.

“How did you get here? Why did this happen?” Code asked.

“Our ancestors built this place. One day it called to me. I was needed and so I came. Just as you did.” After a fit of coughing, the king continued. “I feel like I've been here a thousand years, and yet you're still a boy. Time passes quickly here in Mekhos. Now it's all about to end.”

“No, I can help. I can save Mekhos,” said Code.

The king looked closely at his grandson. “Your eyes,” he said sadly. “It's already beginning.”

“Please,” begged Code. “We have to stop the Disassembly. This world will die. My friends will die. Tell me what to do. Please tell me how to find the Robonomicon.”

The king smiled, his unseeing eyes staring vacantly into space. “Knowledge is worthless without action, Code. The Robonomicon can't help you if you don't help yourself.”

Code sat back, confused. His grandfather stroked Peep affectionately. “Your little friend here is a queen, did you know that? She didn't let us down, did she?”

“Grandpa,” said Code. “Please …”

The king grimaced in pain. “I'm afraid that I've reached the end of my program, Code. But the story of Mekhos isn't over. Your time here has just begun.”

Peep purred as she rubbed against the dying king's cheek.

“Wait,” said Code. “You can't die! I came such a long way, but I still don't know how to save Mekhos. I don't know what you mean about helping myself. The Robonomicon has all the answers, not
me
,” said Code. “I don't understand anything!”

The king took Code by the hand and looked into his eyes. “You're doing fine. Just finish it and begin again.” And with a loving smile, the king whispered, “I'm proud of you, Code. You're a good boy. A prince.”

Then the old man closed his eyes and stopped breathing. With a last flash of tender blue light at the fallen king, Peep fluttered into the air and disappeared into Code's shirt pocket. Code could feel the tiny bot sobbing against his chest.

I can't believe he's gone
, thought Code. He had come all this way to find his grandfather, and then he couldn't even find a way to save the old man. The Disassembly was about to happen, he never found the Robonomicon, and he had let loose a crazy robot. Even worse … Immortalis. Code was trapped in a room with a killer machine—

Suddenly, a lethal beam of energy shot past and liquefied the top layer of coins a few feet from where Code crouched. Gary sprayed coins as he rolled violently out of the way. “Code! I think it's time to make our move.”

BOOK: Code Lightfall and the Robot King
5.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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