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The Dark Planet

Page 13

by Patrick Carman


  white powder found its beginning.

  Thirty long rows of red bulbs the size of a man's head lined the

  floor of the room. Brown leaves fanned out in perfect form,

  which children tended and preened. One boy was carefully

  picking seeds from the tips of the leaves. A very tiny girl was

  trimming an overgrown plant. Two more were tilling the soil.

  The vines grew from the bottom of the bulbs, through the floor,

  and into the vine room below.

  "You there!" said Red Eye, stopping the platform ten feet over a

  boy's head. "Stop what you're doing and go help with the

  trimming."

  "Yes, sir!" cried the rail-thin boy of 3700 days. He came

  alongside the small girl at the trimming station and began

  carefully tearing bits of yellow off the edges of the otherwise

  orange, floppy leaves. The leaves and the seeds were used to

  make bars like the one Commander Judix had eaten a few

  hours before.

  The platform continued on, rising through the planting room and

  into the barracks level, where the boys and girls slept. There

  were three barracks in all: one for the boys, one for the girls,

  and one where Hope cared for the very young children between

  1500 and 2500. Only one level remained--the engine room-which was also where Red Eye and Socket slept. No one but

  Red Eye and Socket was allowed in the gloom and noise of the

  pounding engines.

  "We'll take the new boy down to the drying room and put him

  right to work with the greens," Red Eye said as the platform

  arrived on the barracks level.

  "Oh, no, you won't."

  Red Eye and Socket whirled around and saw Hope, who had

  been standing next to the platform waiting for the new arrival.

  They had long grown weary of this meddling lover of cast-off

  children.

  "I had a feeling we might find you here," said Red Eye. "We've

  already placed the boy with the green team. Aggie's been slow

  today and they've fallen behind in the drying room. That girl is

  getting lazier by the minute."

  He smiled, feeling his cheeks push against the bottom of his

  goggles.

  "I hear Aggie had a beating last night. That true?"

  Even with goggles to hide his eyes Socket's expression always

  gave him away. "She had it coming. The little monster tried to

  blind us!"

  "We agreed you'd tel me before disciplining a girl. Did you

  forget about that?"

  Red Eye laughed and spit sprayed from his mouth. His voice

  became grim and mean.

  "We don't take orders from you," he said. "You're here by

  invitation only."

  "She's already more trouble than she's worth," added Socket.

  "If it's trouble you want, it's trouble you'll get," said Hope. She

  had a steely resolve that put both of the men back on their

  heels. They knew the truth: If push came to shove they'd have a

  hard time running the Silo without Hope. She had medical

  training no one else had. When kids became sick, which

  happened a lot, Hope took care of it. As for the little ones--the

  snot-nosed, whining little ones!--Red Eye and Socket couldn't

  stand them and refused to take care of them. None of the 1500's

  would ever become 4200's without Hope's mothering.

  "Just stay out of our way," said Red Eye, regaining his

  confidence. "The recruits are mine to deal with."

  "We'll see about that," said Hope. She put her hand in her

  pocket and Socket flinched, cowering behind his brother. Hope

  had another reason to be feared, but she almost never used it.

  The mere fact of its existence was enough to keep Red Eye and

  Socket from going too far.

  The first of a two-layered bay door slid open on the outside wall

  of the room. This sent all three of them moving quickly down the

  hall that separated the two barracks. Hope, who was in the best

  health of all of the adults, had no trouble arriving at the bay door

  first.

  "Do you really need to be here?" asked Hope. "Why not give

  me a few minutes to make a proper introduction?"

  The two men looked at the door like two hungry lions awaiting

  the death of an injured animal. They weren't going anywhere.

  The second-layer door slid open and exposed the barracks to

  the outside world of the Dark Planet.

  "He's late," said Socket, leaning out and staring down toward

  the ground. There was a metal grate for a landing. It was rusted

  almost clean through and didn't look like it had much chance of

  holding Socket's weight.

  "I see him!" announced Socket. "He's coming up the ladder."

  Moments before, Shelton had opened the door and shoved

  Edgar out of the armored transport.

  "Up the ladder," he had said, "someone will be waiting for you."

  And then, without warning, Shelton had closed the door and

  driven away in a plume of flying dirt and rocks.

  Edgar had been mesmerized by the sight of the Silo. The beach

  on which it sat was not covered in smog like the forsaken wood

  had been. Something about the wood had trapped the poison of

  the Dark Planet more thickly, but here, closer to the sea, there

  was a lonely breeze blowing steady with the burning smell of

  oil. He could see the Silo rising tall into the sky, narrow at the

  middle, wider at the top and bottom. It was covered in a cake of

  rust and decay that flaked off in Edgar's hands and turned

  powdery and dry.

  "Hurry it up! We can't keep this door open all day," Socket

  yelled from above. Edgar had begun climbing the rusty ladder,

  taking special care not to grab the rungs that looked like they

  might pull free in his hand. He instead chose to hold on to the

  rails along the sides to pull himself up.

  "He's a strong climber," said Socket, turning back toward Hope

  and Red Eye. " Really strong."

  "He only wants inside," said Red Eye. "He'll slog off as soon as

  there's work to be done. You can count on that." But Red Eye

  had no idea what he was dealing with until Edgar crawled

  inside the Silo to safety.

  Edgar stood up, not the least bit breathless from the effort. As

  the door swoosh ed shut behind him he became aware that he

  was trapped inside the Silo, the very place of his maker's

  childhood.

  The three people who stood in front of him were each, in their

  own way, surprising to Edgar. There were Red Eye and Socket,

  with their wild hair and goggles and benders at the ready,

  waiting to whip a new and unpredictable boy into shape. They

  were pale and thin, mean and unhappy.

  Hope, on the other hand, put him immediately under her spell.

  He'd seen dark-skinned people on Atherton before, so that

  didn't surprise him. She was tall and lanky and looked down at

  him as if her only duty in the world was to take care of him. With

  patchy gray hair and big, dark freckles beneath sorrowful eyes,

  she was soulfully beautiful in a way that couldn't escape notice

  by a frightened boy of twelve from Atherton.

  Socket bobbed up and down to get a better look at Edgar

  through his cloudy goggles.


  "Something's been beating the life out of 'im."

  "He's fine," said Hope. Even with the bruises and scrapes from

  hitting the trees, Hope could see that there was someone very

  special in front of her. "This boy's never been outside."

  "Has, too!" cried Red Eye. He'd been thrown outside to fend for

  himself as a child and it made him furious to look at this

  seemingly perfect creature before him. "Where have you been

  hiding, boy? Where? "

  Edgar hadn't thought up what to say. In his awestruck encounter

  with the Dark Planet it hadn't occurred to him that he might not

  look like everyone else.

  "You better start talking," said Socket.

  Red Eye and Socket had both been thrown out of a compound

  at a young age for beating up younger boys, and the thrill of

  picking on someone small had never left Socket. "We can get

  the information from you whether you want to give it or not."

  Socket dragged his bender across the metal wall of the Silo and

  it scraped sickly.

  "I just... well, I don't really remember where I came from," said

  Edgar. "I've been lost for a while."

  It was the best lie Edgar could come up with and it didn't even

  come close to tricking Hope, but it did seem to work well

  enough for Red Eye and Socket.

  "Maybe some work will jog your memory," he said. "And there's

  plenty of that to be had. Move!"

  He stepped aside and guided Edgar to walk in front of him.

  "The day is already half over," said Hope. "In a few hours I'll

  see you in the barracks. I'll have some food and water waiting

  for you, and we'll have a look at those cuts and bruises."

  Socket dug down in his greasy pocket and pulled out a bar. "He

  can make it a few hours without drinking up all the water and

  eating our food," he said, taking a bite.

  "Get him Ramsey's old olive greens," Red Eye told his brother.

  Socket scurried off and Edgar glanced around the metal

  landing, overcome by the idea of Max Harding living in this Silo.

  Everything about the Dark Planet was so much worse than he'd

  imagined it would be.

  Hope knelt next to Edgar again and looked deeply into his

  eyes.

  "You are something different, aren't you?" she said. She was

  especially surprised by his skin and his eyes, which were both

  full of life and vibrancy. "Wait until the girls get a look at you."

  Edgar smiled awkwardly and Socket came banging down the

  metal floor, throwing a green shirt at Edgar.

  "About time," said Red Eye, who hated to be kept waiting. "Put

  that on and move!"

  Edgar was shoved forward onto the round platform, followed by

  the two men who had taken him captive. Edgar surveyed every

  thing very carefully while he changed his shirt. As they

  descended from level to level, he noticed one thing above all

  that interested him greatly. All through the Silo there were metal

  beams and girders. The ceilings, the walls, even some parts of

  the floors on the different levels were crisscrossed with an

  endless array of hand-and footholds. This place was made for

  climbing.

  When they arrived in the drying room Red Eye nearly threw

  Edgar off the platform. "He's one of you now," said Red Eye to

  the green team. "But don't get used to it. He'll be leaving along

  with Vasher in... what is it, Socket? Four days?"

  "Four days! Four more days and you're both shipping out. And

  we'll get double our reward! Ha!"

  Aggie and all the other members of her team were looking at

  Edgar slack-jawed, as if they'd never seen a boy before in all

  their lives. Edgar didn't look like a person born on a dying,

  poisonous planet. They were completely captivated.

  By nightfall they would find Edgar even more interesting than

  he looked.

  CHAPTER 14THE WAY OF THE

  YARDS

  "I can't believe we're doing this," whispered Isabel. It was very

  early in the morning and the crisp, clear light of a new day was

  just underway. Dr. Kincaid and Vincent were back at the edge

  of Atherton searching for any sign of Edgar, which left the cave

  empty when Samuel and Isabel entered.

  "We're only going to take a quick look around," said Samuel.

  "We don't have to go any farther than that if you don't want to."

  But Isabel knew better. Samuel had packed enough food and

  water to last for days. He was planning on a big adventure

  whether Isabel went along or not.

  "Come on," said Samuel. "Don't you want to see if the lock will

  open? It's all we've talked about."

  Isabel wasn't so sure. "Are you positive it leads away from the

  Inferno?"

  "Positive," Samuel assured her.

  Isabel nodded, more enthusiastic than ever, and the two went

  deeper into Dr. Kincaid's cave. The small bag at her side

  containing her sling and dried figs made Isabel feel more

  confident.

  When they reached the back of the cave they found Dr.

  Harding's bed. Edgar had woken up right there after falling into

  the Flatlands, back in the days when Atherton still had cliffs. It

  was the place they had laid Isabel when they'd escaped the

  inside of Atherton before. She remembered waking there, the

  way her head had felt like it was half filled with sloshing water.

  But mostly she remembered how she'd stood at the edge of the

  newly formed lake for the first time and felt her heart breaking.

  "The last time I did this every thing changed," said Isabel.

  "There was a village-- my village--and the grove. When I came

  out, the places I loved were all gone."

  "You don't want to come back and find things changed a

  second time, is that it?" asked Samuel.

  That wasn't exactly right, but it was close. Isabel looked over

  her shoulder at the growing light of morning seeping into the

  cave.

  "I am curious to see what we'll find inside. But I worry I'll come

  out and find the new grove has been overrun by monsters or the

  whole place flooded and destroyed. I think about things like that

  all the time."

  "Back then there were also dangerous cliffs and Cleaners

  crawling every where," Samuel pointed out, walking past the

  bed and reaching down toward the round yellow door that was

  hidden on the floor of the cave. "You had almost no food or

  water and Mr. Ratikan to deal with every day. But those things

  are changed for the better now. My entire world is gone. The

  Highlands are under water and I'll never see them again. There

  was a lot I liked about that place, but I like the new Atherton a

  lot better and I don't think it's going to change again. I think this

  is the world we're going to live in from now on."

  Isabel thought of Edgar and let herself imagine that he was

  doing fine and that he would soon return in one piece. Her mind

  began to fill with the pending adventure and she knelt down

  next to the door.

  "Let's get on with it," she said. "They could be back anytime and

  we don't want to be caught opening this thing. Can you imagine

  what they'd say if they sa
w us?"

  Samuel's throat tightened at the thought of missing this chance

  and he went straight and fast at the dials on the yellow door.

  Eight of them were embedded in the center so that he could

  only see half of each spinning dial. There were mil ions of

  combinations, but he had the one that would open it memorized

  from the wooden tablet.

  T-H-E-Y-A-R-D-S

  He entered the letters, each of them clicking into place on its

  dial, and heard the hissing sound of the round door releasing.

  Samuel took the handle in his hand and pulled.

  He and Isabel drew in a sharp breath. The yellow door was

  open and the inside of Atherton lay in wait. A source of light

  was pulsing softly far below.

  "It's a long ladder," said Samuel, his voice shaking with

  excitement. " Really long."

  "You didn't mention that before," said Isabel. She was starting

  to wonder whether Samuel was cut out to lead their adventure.

  "Vincent carried you on his back when we came out. You were

  --"

  "I was almost dead, I know," said Isabel.

  Samuel took out the tablet. In the dim light of the cave he had to

  hold it just right to read it.

  "You see this here?" he said, reading four words next to the

  etched map. "There will be light."

  "So we won't need any," said Isabel. "Like we talked about."

  The two had agreed that carrying a lamp or fuel to burn would

  be difficult, and it appeared now they wouldn't need it. Samuel

  just wanted to make sure Isabel still agreed.

  "Then it's settled," he said, putting the tablet back into the pack.

  "We'll go down and see for ourselves. If things turn dark we'll

  come back."

  Isabel got down close to the hole and took the first rung of the

  ladder in her hands. She had a pack of her own and it was

  awkward creeping over the edge, but she managed it and

  began climbing down. Samuel followed, grabbing the inside

  handle of the yellow door and pulling it down over them.

  "What are you doing?" said Isabel, looking up and seeing

  Samuel's feet along with the bottom of the door about to be shut

  over them.

  Samuel tried to hold the door upright, but it was heavy and from

  where he stood, he could only hold on with one hand.

  "We don't want them to find it open," said Samuel, struggling to

  hold the round door. "And we have the combination now--we

  can open it back up whenever we want."

 

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