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Kingdom Keepers VI

Page 1

by Ridley Pearson




  ALSO BY RIDLEY PEARSON

  Kingdom Keepers—Disney After Dark

  Kingdom Keepers II—Disney at Dawn

  Kingdom Keepers III—Disney in Shadow

  Kingdom Keepers IV—Power Play

  Kingdom Keepers V—Shell Game

  Steel Trapp—The Challenge

  Steel Trapp II—The Academy

  The following are some of the trademarks, registered marks, and service marks owned by Disney Enterprises, Inc.: Adventureland® Area, Audio-Animatronics® Figure, Big Thunder Mountain® Railroad, Disney®, Disneyland®, Disney’s Hollywood Studios, Disney’s Animal Kingdom® Theme Park, Epcot®, Fantasyland® Area, FASTPASS® Service, Fort Wilderness, Frontierland® Area, Imagineering, Imagineers, it’s a small world, Magic Kingdom® Park, Main Street, U.S.A., Area, Mickey’s Toontown®, monorail, New Orleans Square, Space Mountain® Attraction, Splash Mountain® Attraction, Tomorrowland® Area, Toontown®, Walt Disney World® Resort.

  Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters © Disney Enterprises, Inc./Pixar Animation Studios

  Toy Story characters © Disney Enterprises, Inc./Pixar Animation Studios

  Winnie the Pooh characters based on the “Winnie the Pooh” works by A. A. Milne and E. H. Shepard

  Copyright © 2013 Page One, Inc.

  All rights reserved. Published by Disney • Hyperion Books, an imprint of Disney Book Group. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. For information address Disney • Hyperion Books, 114 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10011-5690.

  ISBN: 978-1-4231-7921-4

  Visit www.disneyhyperionbooks.com

  www.thekingdomkeepers.com

  www.ridleypearson.com

  Contents

  Title Page

  Also by Ridley Pearson

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Acknowledgments

  Dedicated to the crew, stewards, cast members, actors, singers, officers, and staff who make the Disney Cruise Line unlike any other cruise experience out there.

  Hats off.

  THE CONSTELLATIONS GREW DIMMER, the night sky swallowing them whole. These were no normal stars—they were red, blue, white, green, yellow. Nor were they strung in familiar patterns. Instead, they formed long, straight lines, the stars symmetrically spaced.

  It was only as white, foaming clouds rose to challenge the stars, dousing Finn Whitman’s face with salt water, that he realized the lights weren’t stars at all.

  But neither was he a boy.

  Not exactly.

  “Help!” A girl’s cry. Finn fanned the water, turning around as the ship’s wake arrived, bobbing him higher. Just before plummeting into another wave trough, he saw a girl flailing to stay afloat.

  Willa. He remembered now: the two of them jumping from Deck 4 of the Disney Dream cruise ship, leaping into the darkness to avoid a pack of mad hyenas on their heels. Leaving their fellow Keepers back on the ship.

  The Disney Dream was on a celebration cruise to inaugurate the opening of the new locks of the Panama Canal, while also promoting the onboard installation of the Kingdom Keepers’ hologram DHI guides. The dangers that had arisen on and off the ship during the cruise’s first stop at Disney’s private island, Castaway Cay, had happened less than a day earlier. It felt more like a year.

  The speed with which the Dream now receded surprised and frightened Finn. As a passenger he’d had no idea how fast they’d been moving. As he watched the cruise ship shrink away at an alarming pace, he understood that in a minute or two it would be just another flickering light on the horizon.

  Another wave from the ship’s wake caught Finn, lifting him like a cork. He saw Willa riding the top of the adjacent crest, looking toward the ship.

  “Over here!” Finn shouted.

  Treading water, Willa turned to face him.

  Then she sparkled and vanished.

  Finn pulled hard, bodysurfing down the rolling wave and swimming strongly toward Willa. Stretching to extend his freestyle stroke—amazed by his own strength—he saw his hand and forearm dissolve into glitter, a sparkle of light washed away by the hungry spray.

  An instant later, Willa reappeared—and so did Finn’s arm.

  The phenomenon would have stunned, even frightened, an ordinary person. But to Finn it made perfect sense. He and Willa were holograms, three-dimensional projections of light generated by a computer server on board the disappearing Dream. The farther away from the ship, the worse the projection. Being low in the water as they were, the two holograms were subject to additional interference from each wave. Riding the crests, they came into clarity. But it wouldn’t last, and once their projections failed, Finn would have no way of finding Willa. The audio stream, being a narrower bandwidth, might last slightly longer, but it wasn’t a risk worth taking.

  “Here!” Finn shouted a second time. Kicking ferociously, he propelled his hologram down from the wave’s crest, through the trough, and up the other side, cutting the distance between them in half. Their holograms sputtered, a result of distance from the ship. Any farther, and they would dissolve altogether.

  He and Willa, along with several other high school kids now aboard the Disney Dream, had once modeled for the roles of Disney Host Interactive (also known among Disney Imagineers as Daylight Hologram Imaging) teenage Park hosts, holograms that guided families around the Disney parks. And now the cruise ships.

  Undisclosed at the time (some would say “unknown”) was a side effect that allowed the DHIs to “cross over” in their sleep, becoming their hologram replicas. Finn and his friends often found themselves inside a Disney park while their bodies, their human selves, slept at home. They’d quickly discovered that their holograms had been engineered by Disney’s Imagineers to do battle with certain Disney villains—the Overtakers—whose one desire was to take over the parks and ruin them.

  The OTs, as the Kingdom Keepers referred to the Overtakers, dreamed of a darker experience for Park guests than the one Walt Disney had envisioned. That same dark force, in the form of Maleficent, the Evil Queen, and Cruella de Vil, was currently aboard the Dream—and intent on turning it into the Nightmare.

  This time, the Overtakers had stolen a historic journal once belonging to the Disney Imagineers—or perhaps even Walt himself. The Overtakers had infiltrated the ship, and smuggled Tia Dalma and Chernabog—a mysterious and monstrous creature from Fantasia—aboard at Castaway Cay. The addition of a witch doctor and the most evil of Walt Disney’s creations didn’t bode well. Where Maleficent went, trouble followed.

  Which accounted for the man-eating hyenas that had forced Finn and Willa to jump overboard in the first place, and had put them in their current predicament.r />
  When a hologram’s projection failed, it fell into what the Keepers called DHI shadow. The result was invisibility, which in certain instances could be a good thing. Not so much when you were nearly drowning, and the only hope for survival was steaming away at eighteen knots.

  “Your hand!” Finn called, reaching for Willa. “Before we’re gone!” Then, when she didn’t react instantly: “Come on!”

  Again, he amazed himself by how strongly he swam. A Florida boy, Finn was no stranger to water—but since when could he swim like a lifeguard?

  Willa’s hologram had lost its density and was porous, like sand spread loosely over a floor. It had lost its third dimension as well; she looked like a pixelated, digitally enlarged photograph. The final stage before invisibility.

  “Reach!” Finn shouted. His voice sounded like a bad radio signal, scratchy and popping with static. Desperate, he plunged his face into the sea and called out, “Starfish wise, starfish cries!” a phrase he’d been given to summon King Triton, who’d saved Finn once before.

  Striking out blindly in the water, Finn felt his hands catch Willa’s. Finn squeezed hard, then walked his fingers up to Willa’s forearms so that they held each other’s wrists—a stronger “fireman’s” grip.

  “You okay?” he said, but it came out, “oo…ay?”

  Finn turned his back to Willa and pulled her hands around his neck so that she rode on his back like a cape. She held tight; he felt her soft cheek pressed against his neck. He swam. Swam hard. Kicking and pulling through the sea, more like a machine than a man. Finn supposed this crazy strength had something to do with his exposure to a massive jolt of electricity just before he’d jumped. He’d been in the ship’s engine room. A world away from here.

  But he didn’t much care about the source of his power, only its efficacy.

  Finn’s progress was admirable, his churned wake joining the wide white strip of aerated seawater thrown out by the ship’s propeller. The water sparkled and fizzed like a freshly poured soda. Viewed from overhead, Finn and his passenger were invisible, not even a speck in a strip of sea paved flat by the passing of a hundred and thirty thousand tons of steel.

  “…invis…” Willa said. Or tried to. “D…sh… dow.”

  Finn didn’t bother trying to answer, saving his energy for his breaststroke. If he could get close enough to the Dream for his hands to start flashing, however faintly, his voice would likely return.

  But that was the problem—as hard as he was swimming, they weren’t catching up. Not even close. Granted, Finn had slowed the rate with which the Dream pulled away, nearly matching the ship’s forward progress. But he wasn’t gaining on it. Not an inch. And if he eased back at all, the ship visibly pulled farther away.

  He knew what had to be done. Knew the one chance they had. The likelihood of drowning was slim, given the state-of-the-art software upgrade running their projections—DHI 2.0. But it hardly mattered. If they remained invisible, lost at sea, their human bodies would stay asleep on board, unable to awaken. They would be locked in what the Keepers called “Sleeping Beauty Syndrome,” or SBS—a hologram no-man’s land where their sleeping bodies never woke, and their hologram projections could not be reached.

  King Triton’s code offered the promise of rescue, but Triton’s agents could not rescue what they could not see. He and Willa had to move closer to the Dream. But how?

  “F…thhh,” Willa said. Choking Finn with her left forearm, she tapped him on the shoulder with her right hand, forcing him to look back. He saw something no thicker than a tree branch sticking out of the water, moving quickly toward them, cutting a fine wake to either side.

  A fin? A shark? The object sparkled as it caught starlight from a dazzling sky. A pipe. A periscope—an old, rusted periscope moving very fast and coming right for them.

  Captain Nemo? Finn wondered.

  Finn uttered a series of wet burps and patted Willa’s arms, indicating: Hold tight. Then he swam hard—straight for the periscope, now eight to ten yards to his right. He had to time it perfectly; he could ill afford to undershoot or overshoot his target.

  The approach of the periscope—its sudden appearance out of nowhere—seemed to suggest it was part of a rescue attempt. Arranged by Wayne? How could he know of their predicament? They’d only been in the water a matter of minutes. Had the sub been following the Dream all this time?

  Or was this a result of his calling for King Triton’s help, as he’d been instructed?

  Finn calculated his position, adjusted with a swift backward flutter kick, stretched forward, and grabbed the briskly moving periscope with both hands. His arms felt like they would tear from his shoulder sockets. The submarine was moving much faster than he’d imagined.

  With Willa holding on to his neck for dear life, the two surfed and coughed for air. Somewhere in the deep recesses of his mind, Finn understood that as a hologram he didn’t need to concern himself with breathing; but instinct dictated otherwise.

  During the next gulp of air, he saw the Dream’s lights as distinct strings. The sub was pulling closer.

  Finn’s hands suddenly appeared, clasped around the periscope. They flashed and pulsed light—then vanished. Finn ducked into the water and closed his eyes. With the next lifting of his head, he clearly saw the hologram images of his arms. He was visible again. Willa, too.

  “Return!” she said, gargling the word.

  The suggestion hit Finn as a beacon of hope. Philby, a fellow Kingdom Keeper, or Storey Ming, a shipboard ally, would be attempting to cancel their current hologram projections and “return” them to their sleeping selves, on board ship. Having failed to accomplish the task immediately after Finn and Willa jumped, hopefully they had not given up altogether. With Finn and Willa back in range, it was imperative the Return be attempted again.

  But how to signal them?

  The sub continued to gain on the Dream; the ship’s stern loomed ahead, black paint glistening. An oversized Captain Mickey, sprawled on a plank slung from the upper deck, had been installed on the stern. Mounted next to Mickey and the yellow letters that spelled out DISNEY DREAM were three large Disney brooms and pails from Fantasia.

  The sight reminded Finn of a near-deadly conflict Maybeck and Charlene—the final members of the Kingdom Keepers team—had had a week earlier backstage at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. If those brooms come alive too… Finn thought.

  He and the Keepers didn’t have a credo, per se, but if they did it might have been: Nothing is as it seems; take nothing for granted. Park attractions came alive at night. Disney characters turned out to be real—and the Disney villains, dangerous. Turns out that magic pens, evil curses, puzzling stairways, corrupt villains, secret passages, and dungeons all existed within the parks. All for real.

  Part of Finn was ready to get back to being a normal high school student and leave all of it behind. But in that order. He didn’t want to leave it all behind by drowning.

  “You see what I see?” Willa choked out.

  At that exact moment, the sub veered off course, steering well to port of the massive ship. The periscope began slipping through Finn’s hands; the sub was submerging. He would have to let go in a matter of seconds or be sucked under.

  To signal Philby and Storey for the return, Finn and Willa needed to be spotted from the ship—but without drawing undue attention. Finn needed passengers to notice, for the word to spread quickly, and for it all to be considered a big mistake a few minutes later. He could not invite lifeboats and alarms without drawing attention to the Keepers’ “misuse” of their holograms—an action that might get them locked up for the remainder of the cruise, and prevent them from stopping the OTs.

  Finn spotted a romantic couple leaning on the rail of an upper deck, and remembered all the fuss the night of the Sail-Away party.

  “Hang on!” he called to Willa, and let go of the pipe just as it sank beneath the surface. Again, Finn sank his face into the water and spoke the Triton code in a loud bubbling vo
ice.

  “Starfish wise, starfish cries.”

  Willa let go and treaded water.

  “NO!” Finn called out, aware of the physics involved. The two were instantly the objects of opposing forces: the concussion of the sub’s propeller wash and the downdraft of currents caused by its rapid descent. Willa was swept back, hands and legs held awkwardly in front of her as though she were crawling. Finn, slightly to the side, was caught in the downdraft, sucked deeper and deeper as he watched Willa zoom away.

  For him and Willa to have the best chance for a return, they needed to be together, and they needed to be on the surface. Finn didn’t trust the projection strength underwater, even this close to the Dream. He kicked furiously as he was pulled deeper still. He could feel the water pressure squeezing him smaller, compacting him. He had no idea if even a 2.0 projection could survive such pressure.

  His hand struck something hard and slimy. Finn yanked away and kicked out instinctively, spooked by the unyielding darkness of the depths. A shark? It had to be!

  The creature impaled him with its snout, striking him in the center of his chest. An instant later, he was struck again, then snagged under both arms—two sharks, not one?—and driven higher. Finn wrestled to be free, but the force of the water and speed of his escorts pinned him to their slick, snot-like skin.

  Only as Finn pulled toward the surface, where the moonlight and starlight penetrated, did he finally get a look at his captors. Not sharks. A different nose. Sleek bodies mottled gray and white. Spotted dolphins, fast as lightning, streaking for the surface.

  The Triton code, answered—again.

  Finn rolled and hooked on to the dorsal fin to his right, carried now by a single dolphin. The animal responded to his willing participation immediately, bursting through the surface, arcing through the air, and plunging back into the sea. It chittered playfully while airborne. Finn gave a spontaneous cry of joy.

  “Ooooo-weeee!”

  But it was a girl’s voice he heard, not his own.

  To his right, between his dolphin and the ship, Willa was straddling her dolphin like a pony, one hand on the dorsal fin, one high in the air like a bucking- bronco rider. The dolphins closed ranks, side by side, diving beneath the surface, then busting loose in high, acrobatic flight.

 

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