Read The Dragon Lantern Online
Authors: Alan Gratz
“Mr. Rivets, why is Buster still acting like a dog when all the rock people are acting like monsters?” Archie asked.
“I have no idea, Master Archie. I can only speculate that it has something to do with the canine's less complicated cerebral functions. Perhaps that, in combination with the fact that it was fused with something with roughly analogous features.”
“What did he say?” Clyde asked.
“Buster's brain is simpler, and he got put in something that already had arms and legs and a head for him to run around in,” Archie explained.
Within minutes,
Colossus
âBusterâhad finished “playing” with all the rock creatures, and there was nothing left in the canyon but little piles of rubble. Playtime over, the giant steam man turned and bounded toward them.
“Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!” Archie cried, backing up.
The steam man skidded to a halt a few feet in front of them and tooted its whistle happily.
“So ⦠do we call him
Colossus
, or Buster?” Archie asked.
The steam man leaned in toward Clyde and ran his lower jaw up Clyde's chest over and over again. “I think ⦠I think he's licking me!” Clyde said, laughing, even when one of the nudges knocked him on his butt.
“He's definitely Buster,” Archie said.
Buster the giant steam ⦠dog ⦠whistled happily at them, then ran to the edge of the canyon, where he lifted a leg and emptied water like he was peeing.
“Hey! Hey, stop that!” Clyde said, running after him. “That's water you need for your boiler!”
Archie looked around the empty canyon, lit only by the red light of the moon. “What do we do now, Mr. Rivets? The fox girl's run off, all the soldiers are dead, and
Colossus
is a giant dog.”
“Under the circumstances, I fear we must abandon our pursuit,” the Tik Tok said.
“What, you're going to give up? Just like that?” Clyde said. “Mrs. DeMarcus always said that winners never quit, and quitters never win.”
“But how are we supposed to chase her now?” Archie said. “I mean, just look at our ride!”
Buster was at that moment digging a giant hole where the skull had blown up, the steam pipe on his bottom wagging like a tail.
“Maybe he'll come when we call him,” Clyde said.
Archie doubted very seriously a ten-foot-tall steam dog would do anything it didn't want to do, but he tried it anyway. “Here, Buster! Here boy! Come!” Archie called.
Buster whistled happily and kept digging his hole.
“See? It doesn't work,” Archie said.
“Buster, you come here right this second,” Clyde hollered. “Buster, come!”
The giant steam man stopped digging, looked up, and immediately came bounding back over to Clyde. He sat down on his brass bottom with his knees in the air and his hands flat on the ground, tailpipe wagging, waiting for Clyde to tell him what to do.
Clyde and Archie shared an amazed look.
“Buster, lay down. Buster, down,” Clyde said.
The steam man lowered himself flat on the ground, head up and still watching Clyde.
“Good dog!” Clyde said, and Buster's tail wagged.
Archie picked up a boulder that was taller than he was and tossed it farther into the canyon. “Buster, fetch!” Archie yelled. Buster perked up and watched the boulder bounce and tumble away, but didn't move. Instead he looked back at Clyde with his mouth hanging open.
“Buster, fetch!” Clyde told him. Buster leaped to his feet and bounded after the boulder, the canyon shaking and echoing with his footsteps.
“He'll listen to you, but not to me,” Archie said.
“Master Clyde seems to have formed a special bond with the animal,” Mr. Rivets said. “One which appears to be mutually exclusive.”
“He meansâ”
Clyde cut him off. “I know what he's saying this time. He's saying me and Buster are best friends.”
Buster ran back to them with the boulder in his mouth and dropped it at Clyde's feet. Clyde had to jump out of the way not to get crushed.
“Good dog. Good fetch,” Clyde said. “Just going to have to get used to your new size, is all.” He patted Buster's foot, and the steam man rolled over on his side so Clyde could rub his belly.
“You think you can drive him?” Archie asked.
Clyde looked thoughtful. “I sat up there behind Dull Knife day after day, watching him operate
Colossus
. I know
how
to do it. Whether I can or notâand whether Buster'll let meâthat's a whole 'nother question.”
Clyde told Buster to sit and stay, and he and Archie and Mr. Rivets climbed inside very cautiously, aware that if Buster went bounding off, they would be tossed around like rocks in a tumbler.
In engineering, they found all the machinery operating itself, as though ghost mechanics worked the controls.
“Like the inner workings of any living being,” Mr. Rivets said. “Bodily functions operate involuntarily. In short, Buster thinks, therefore he is.”
Buster stayed like he was told until they got to the bridge.
“Good boy!” Clyde told him. “Good dog!”
Buster whistled happily, and the cockpit swung with his head.
“Whoa,” Archie said, going tumbling. “We're going to have to add more safety belts up here. And things to grab on to.”
Clyde took Dull Knife's place in the driver's seat. His legs and arms weren't long enough to reach the pedals and levers, so they found blocks of wood to put on the bottoms of his shoes and a stack of pillows for him to sit on.
“All right. You ready for this?” Clyde said. “Buster, heel!”
Clyde leaned back in his seat, and
Colossus
âBusterâstood!
“Good boy!” Clyde said. “Heel, Buster, heel.⦔
Clyde took a step forward, and Buster moved with him. He lifted a lever for one of the arms, and the arm moved with him.
“I think it's going to work,” Clyde said. He tried taking a few more steps and was able to maneuver them out of the canyon. “I think as long as we let him run around every now and then, get his wiggles out, he should do just fine.”
“Most
Canis lupus familiaris
find a particular pleasure in understanding and carrying out the wishes of their masters,” Mr. Rivets said.
Buster whistled as if in agreement.
“So, we gonna do this? Go after this girl?” Clyde said. “She that important?”
“Not her, but what she's carrying,” Archie said. “It's an ancient relic, older than Rome, and it's very powerful. And it has something to do with how I ⦠became whatever it is I am.”
Clyde nodded thoughtfully. “All right, then. Clyde and Buster are in. But how are we gonna see through that girl's tricks when Mr. R here is blind?”
“We have to get him fixed somewhere,” Archie said. He sighed. If Fergus had been here, it would already be done.
“Get into those maps, then,” Clyde told him. “You're my new navigator. Find us the nearest town with a machine shop, and we'll get
both
our machine men fixed up.”
Buster accidentally stepped on a N
O
D
OGS
A
LLOWED
sign in the park as Clyde steered him off the street and into the green grass. A mob of chattering children, curious adults, and barking dogs trailed behind them, swarming Clyde, Archie, and Mr. Rivets as they climbed out of the steam man.
“Hey there!” Clyde called out to the crowd. “Can somebody tell us if there's an Emartha Machine Man shop in town?”
While Archie got three sets of different directions to the same place all at once from a handful of Omaha, Clyde introduced the rest of them to Buster.
“He likes beef jerky, chasing steam cars, and having his belly rubbed,” Clyde told the crowd. “He's a good boy, but he's kinda big, so you gotta be careful around him, and that's a fact.”
Buster sat back and scratched where his ear would have been with one of his big brass feetâ
clang-clang-clang-clang!
âdelighting his audience. Then he stood and started to pace around in a tight circle.
“What's he doing?” Archie asked.
“I don't know,” Clyde said. “I hope he's not looking to pee again, or lots of people are gonna get wet.”
The crowd of Omaha backed up, giving Buster space. After a few turns, he plopped down on the ground with a thud and curled up into a building-sized ball.
“I guess it's nap time,” Clyde said.
It had been two days since the canyon, and though they had stopped each night and camped, Buster curling around them by the fire, they had pushed him hard to get here in such a short time. The big guy deserved a rest. Metal blast plates meant to shield the bridge from raycannons slid down over Buster's eyes, and the smoke from his tailpipe tapered off from black to thin white. Buster was as close to asleep as a giant steam man could get.
Some of the Omaha children started climbing on top of him, which didn't seem to bother Buster in the least. “Just don't go inside him,” Clyde told a group of the younger boys, knowing they would tell the others. “And come and get me if he wakes up. We'll be at the Emartha Machine Man shop.”
Not that anybody would have had any trouble finding them in town anywhere they went. Clyde was the only Afrikan in town, best they could tell, and Archie one of the few Yankees. Between Buster's noisy, obvious arrival, Clyde's dark skin, and Archie's snow-white hair, they stood out like a buffalo on a New Rome street.
The Omaha city of Ton won tonga, “The Big Village” in the Sioux language, was a long way from the size of New Rome, but still big. Smoke rose from two- and three-story buildings, and streetcars rattled by on the busy streets, tracing circular routes around the city center. Like all Omaha cities, Ton won tonga was laid out in a giant circle, with this one bisected by the Missouri River.
Archie, Clyde, and Mr. Rivets crossed a steel girder bridge over the broad Missouri from the Sky District into the Earth District, where most of the city's business was located. None of the three sets of directions Archie got was correct, but an Omaha police officer with a colorful beaded sash and an eagle feather in his hair pointed the shop out to them.
Ton won tonga's Emartha Machine Man outpost was a small, first-floor affair. A sign in the window said S
EE THE
N
EW
S
TEAM-
D
RIVEN
M
ARK
IV
,
N
OW
IN
S
TOCK!
and for once Archie was glad Mr. Rivets was blind. Mr. Rivets was a clockwork Mark II Machine Man and had been known to be a little resentful of the Mark IVs' new abilities and smug attitudes.
“Good morning, sirs!” said a shiny titanium Mark IV as they stepped inside. The plate on his chest said his name was Mr. Cylinder. “Have you come to trade in your old Mark II for a newer model?”
Archie saw Mr. Rivets straighten, but he cut him off before the Tik Tok could respond. “No, thank you. We're very happy with our Mark II. He's just seen a bit of damage, and we'd like to get him repaired.”
“We
are
currently offering attractive trade-in deals on all obsolete Emartha Machine Men,” Mr. Cylinder said.
“Obsolete?”
Mr. Rivets said. “I'll have you knowâ”
“Just repairs, thanks,” Archie said. “Is there a manager we could speak with?”
“Of course, sir. Right away,” Mr. Cylinder said.
A smiling Omaha man with large, round glasses met them at the counter. “Welcome! Welcome,” he said. “My name is Urika. I see your machine man has ⦠been in an accident?” He peered at Mr. Rivets, trying to understand how a machine man's eyes could be put out without having another scratch on him.
“Yes, he ⦠ran into a pitchfork,” Archie said. He shrugged at Clyde. It seemed an easier explanation than what had really happened.
“Well! You're in luck,” Urika told them. “We've just had a brand-new shipment of parts from our distributor. Although we
do
have some rather good trade-in deals right nowâ”
“Really, just the repairs, thanks,” Archie said.
Urika nodded and winked. “Loyalty works both ways, doesn't it, sir? Now, does your family have an account with us?”
“Oh. I don't know.”
“We should be on file, sir,” Mr. Rivets said. “The family's name is Dent. Mine is Mr. Rivets. Serial number P-02961.”
“Oh, a rather early model then,” Urika said. He went to a large wooden filing cabinet at the back of the shop, pulled out a drawer, and set it on the counter. It was full of rectangular paper punch cards, which he walked through with his fingers.
“Here we are! Yes,” Urika said. He took a card from the drawer and slid it into a machine. The clockwork processing unit clicked and whirred, and spinning tile letters began to spell out information on the display above a keyboard. “Ah yes. A
very
early model. 1772! Just after the Darkness fell. And I see the Dent family were not your original owners.”