33tobias PDF
33tobias PDF
33tobias PDF
1 My name is Tobias.
And I don't think I could have felt more uncomfortable if I'd just been
asked to give an impromptu speech on the French Revolution in front of
an all-school assembly.
Well, okay. I guess that would be pretty bad. But this Friday night was
definitely right up there.
Back when I was a regular kid, school dances made me a little uneasy.
I've always been a loner and all, and they just weren't my thing. But
now! Now that I spent most of my life as a red-tailed hawk - hunting,
flying, protecting my meadow - dances made me feel even weirder.
2 Why had I let Rachel talk me into this? I mean, what do you do with
your arms? They just dangled there. Stiff. Awkward. And my eyes! I'd fix
a stare on someone and forget, until it was too late, that people tend
not to do that. A big, burly redhead noticed as the raptor in me burned
a hole through his girlfriend.
"Jerk!"
I'd been cool enough at the last school dance. That was more of a group
thing, I guess. Tonight it was ... I don't know ... a date? No, no, no.
We were all there. Pretending to be acquaintances.
I looked ridiculous, I was sure of it. And I was sure that everyone else
thought so, too.
Did Rachel?
3 gleamed in the strobe light. Her bright eyes caught mine. I knew she
wanted me to dance with her. I just couldn't do it. My human body was
sweating. I felt confined. I needed air. I looked away.
Just Tobias. Even if it were safe to tell you my last name, I'm not sure
I'd know what to say. Whether it would be a human name, an Andalite
name, or just "hawk." I don't know. Because, see, I'm a little of each.
My friend Marco unlike me, was in paradise. He was belting out lyrics
like his first name was "ice ' or something,
"Hah. Man, And also a bonus hah, ' He grinned "This is a natural high A
good music high. A lots-of-girls-in-short-skirts high, A people laughing
high. This is fun Do you two remember fun?"
Rachel caught my eye again. Again I looked away, up at the clock. Twenty
minutes left in morph. Not much time.
"Okay. Which proves what I've always known: Neither of you is any fun,
and together, even less. I'll just have to find my own party. Later."
I had too much on my mind. So much to take in. Lights. Music. A lot of
songs I didn't even recognize. I'd been gone too long.
"What do you mean? You have a full, well, at least fifteen minutes left.
You saying you'd rather be sitting up in your tree, watching owls eat
nocturnal rodents, than be with me?" she asked. Her tone was somewhere
between challenging and coy. Dangerous in either direction.
"It's just all these other people. The noise. This body ..." I looked
around, worried that someone might overhear. But no, not with human
ears, not with this much noise.
"You mean your body. The body you're in now is your body, Tobias. It's
who you truly are. Normally, naturally."
5 We'd been through this before. I didn't know how to answer. And I
didn't know why she was pushing it.
Ever since I overstayed the two-hour time limit in morph I've considered
hawk to be my true form. Hawk is the body I have to keep if I want to
help the other Animorphs and Ax combat the Yeerk invasion. Why was
Rachel ignoring reality? She knew as well as anyone that I'd be out of
the fight if I stayed more than two hours in human form.
All of which must sound strange. Possibly insane. So let me back up.
Here's the situation: The human race is under attack by a cruel and
scheming enemy. As you're reading this, the parasitic alien species
called Yeerks continues to enslave human minds. Armed with a capability
you can't even imagine till you've seen it in action, the Yeerks wrest
from us the one thing we hold most dear: free will.
Once one of these slimy, gray, sluglike parasites squirms into your ear
canal, and melds and shapes itself to all the crevices of your brain, it
controls you. That's right. It dictates your every thought. Your every
move! The Yeerks have created an army by infesting and controlling alien
races.
Humans.
Who's fighting them? What's the human race's best arid only hope in this
war? A young Andalite cadet, along with five kids who call themselves
the Animorphs because they alone, of all humans, possess a unique
Andalite technology: the power to morph. To become any animal they can
touch.
After many months, the powerful alien called the Ellimist gave me back
my ability to morph. Even made it possible for me to morph into my
former human body. I could choose to trap myself in my human form now,
but I would lose my morphing power for good. Do you see? I would be
useless. Unable to honor my responsibility to Earth, powerless to resist
Yeerk evil.
"Just dance with me, Tobias. Please." A slow song started. I was
surprised. I actually knew this one. Goo Goo Dolls. Couples filled up
the dance
7 floor. Cassie and Jake were on the other side of the gym, swaying
gently, arms around each other.
Out onto the dance floor. I slid my arms around her waist. Felt her
hands on my neck.
8 time!
I jerked away to get a better look. Human eyes are worthless for long
distances.
Could the clock be right?
"Oh, God. Rachel. Eight minutes," I whispered wildly. "I have to get out
of here."
"Stay? Rachel, have you lost it? I have to find a place to demorph. Now!"
Tacked to the cork was the image of a bald eagle, wings spread wide,
soaring in a deep blue sky. And a northern harrier on a fence post,
silhouetted against the clouds. "Tobias, I want to explain . . ." She
broke off as her eyes followed mine to the picture of the red-tailed
hawk and the caption beneath it. "Longevity in the wild," it read.
"Almost never reaches the figures attained by captive birds guarded
against disease and predation. A generous estimate: eighteen years."
Rachel was in my face, now. Intense, words spilling out. "Look, the
fight is important to us all, Tobias. So important to you that you've
given up everything human to be a warrior. What am I even saying? You
risk your life every day. I understand all that. I do. We're the same,
you and me. Warriors."
She paused to consider her next words. She was embarrassed by what she
was about to say. Fighting to get past her embarrassment. "But you've
got to realize that there's more. I'm not just a warrior," she said, her
blue eyes glittering so close to mine. "I'm a girl. I'm trying not to
let myself be dragged off the cliff, away from all normalcy, into this
insane life we live. I don't like what it does to me, Tobias, and I need
to be a girl again. I need a little bit of normalcy, okay? Not a lot,
but some."
She pushed back, away from me. I'd never seen Rachel so emotional.
Unless, of course, the emotion was an act. Unless she was stalling me
just to eat up the minutes, to trap me, to -
"All the things we're supposed to live while we're in school, Tobias,
you know, dances like this, nights out at the movies, walks on the
beach. That stuff is passing us by. I want those
I cut her off, repeating her words out loud. "Yeah. If I were human. If."
So she'd finally said what I'd known she felt all along. It made sense.
She was right. She did need normalcy. Rachel had gone pretty far out on
the edge in this war.
"I need to go," I said flatly. I turned and walked hurriedly toward the
T-shaped intersection, where the long hallway off the gym met an even
larger corridor running from the front of the school to the rear. The
hall was quiet, but populated. Kids leaning against the lockers.
Talking. Hanging out.
"What the ... !" I stopped suddenly. My escape was blocked by one of
those collapsible metal gates that pull between walls.
12 Two or three steps out into the hall, I sensed someone else was
there. I froze.
In front of orange-painted lockers, not fifteen feet away, stood Vice
Principal Chapman. Controller. Nemesis.
He didn't see me because he wasn't alone. He was focused on the kid he'd
cornered against the wall.
Rachel! I looked back at her. She was still in the hallway. I don't know
how much alarm registered on my face. I'm pretty out of touch with
facial expressions. But she obviously read the surprise in my eyes. She
tiptoed to the corner and peered around.
"Oh, I know you, Erek," Chapman said with his Vice Principal
Disciplinarian voice. "I know your face, all right. I've seen you at
meetings of The Sharing. I'm just saying I saw you throw away a
cigarette just now."
"No way, Mr. Chapman," Erek said, sounding exactly like the kid he was
supposed to be.
"We don't need young men such as yourself smoking, especially not with
the added attention. The media."
At one level it was funny. The idea that Erek, an android beneath the
holographic exterior, would smoke. And the idea that Chapman, a
"Tobias!"
The clock was ticking down and I wasn't even sure Rachel was on my side.
14 Rachel grabbed my arm "Over the gate," she ordered. "There's no other
way. I'll hold off Feyroyan. Meet you outside." For a second our eyes
met. She flashed a hint of a smile,
I dashed around the corner. Dove at the metal gate. It clattered and
crashed as I struggled to gain a foothold,
"Hey! Hey, get down from there! What, do you think you're doing?"
Chapman yelled. I was out of practice with this body, I was clumsy But i
was climbing.
And headed for the tiny space between the top of the gate and the
ceiling. Hardly an opening at all, but it would have to be big enough. I
"No, you're wrong." Feyroyan's voice bounced off the ceiling. "That's
Tobias, I'm sure it is."
I brushed the top just as Chapman and Fey-royan reached the bottom.
Chapman grabbed hold and the gate swayed.
I hoisted myself up and through the gap. My chest scraped. I blew the
air out of my lungs and pressed through the opening. My shirt caught a
gate iron and held me. I thrashed. A shot of adrenaline hit me like a
fist. The shirt ripped. I was free.
I scrambled down the opposite side and jumped to the floor, turning to
run even before I landed.
I raced down the dim, empty hallway, footfalls pounding so fast the
sound was nearly continuous. I wasn't running from Chapman. I wasn't
running from Feyroyan, or the dance, or Rachel, or the raptor display. I
was running for my life.
I dove at the panic bar, burst outside, and bounded across the field.
Feet pummeled the earth. My chest heaved. The chill of night air
enveloped me - night air that felt like home.
"Demorph!" I screamed inside my head. "De-
16 morph now!" I focused, I willed it with all that was in me. I closed
my eyes.
Nothing.
Still nothing.
Only my human body, my burning lungs, the throbbing pain from the
scratch across my chest.
Nooo!
Wumpp. "Ahhh!"
Thud. "Ouch."
In the darkness not much was visible. A human arm against the dirt.
Human fingers. And then!
All I could see was a lattice of feathers spreading across the skin of
my hand Finally!
So happy.
And when, all at once, the brilliance and precision of hawk vision
replaced fuzzy human sight, the number of stars multiplied. Hawk vision
isn't worth much at night, it's true. Except for stargazing. All the dim
little luminous points you can just barely make out as a human blaze
into focus with hawk eyes.
"Tobias?"
Mr. Feyroyan's voice was more tentative now, uncertain. He stood alone
in the middle of the playing field, searching for me in the shadows. He
was one of the few friends I'd had when I was in school. He was a
teacher, but he was young, and a dreamer. I'd always thought he was like
an older me.
I struggled with the shirt Rachel had picked out for me to wear to the
dance. It was still buttoned around my hawk body. I tore at it with my
beak, stabbed at it with my talons. Finally, I was clear of it.
It was tough to gain altitude in the cool air. I flapped hard and
circled the school. No sign of Rachel. But I spotted Jake on the front
steps. He was alone, thinking, I guess. Maybe just enjoying a minute of
peace and quiet.
I swooped in low to land on the branch of a birch tree a few feet above him.
<Hey, Jake.>
He looked up. Jake's my age. But there are times when his eyes are the
eyes of a tired old man. "Where have you been? Rachel said you were
jammed. Guess you made it."
18 Rachel might have been pulling for the time limit. <l made it. Where
is Rachel?>
Jake shrugged. "Don't know. But that's the least of our problems. Before
Chapman busted him, Erek gave me some bad news. I need you to find Ax.
Tell him to meet us at the barn."
<Tonight?>
"Yes!" He stopped short. "No. I mean, no. We can't tonight. We've got
parents waiting up for us. Better tomorrow morning. Saturday."
"It's the Anti-Morphing Ray," he said. "The Chee have lost track of it.
I mean they've got nothing."
<Yeah? That's bad.> I was having a hard time tracking. My mind was still
back with Rachel and a ticking clock.
"Erek says the Yeerks are ready to test it." He paused for a beat. "On a
live subject."
He let that one hang in the air for a minute. We both knew what it
meant. The AMR. The ultimate weapon. A ray that could force us out of
morph. Make us revert to natural form. We'd tried once to destroy it.
We'd lost.
Morphing was our only weapon. All we had. The Yeerks had to be stopped.
No discussion.
"But how do you bust up a Yeerk plan when you don't know where to show
up to -"
19 Three chattering girls came out of the door and ran down the steps
past Jake.
Jake massaged his forehead with his fingers. "Man, I don't even know the
people in my classes anymore."
"Yeah. Look, find Ax. You and him. tomorrow, bright and early. We have
to get on this."
<l'll be at the meeting tomorrow. Jake, I'll make sure Ax is there too.
But get some sleep, man. okav"'>
"Oh. don't worry about me, I'm into catnaps. You know, like Napoleon
did. Twenty minutes here, twenty there. Pretty soon you've slept eight
hours and it hasn't even slowed you down." He stood up and leaned
against the railing.
"I'm glad you made it Tobias You're our eyes. Our ears. Our air force If
we lost you we'd be nothing Like Joan of Arc without her sword. Patton
without his pearl-handled pistols , , ."
20 never be sure anymore what was sincere. And what was just expedient.
He'd been the most open of guys, back in the old days. What you saw with
Jake was what you got. But he'd been a leader for a long time now. He'd
learned to say what he needed to say.
Jake needed me as one of the Animorphs. He liked me, respected me, was
happy for me when I was happy. And, when he had to, he used me without
regard for anything but winning.
I took off and winged toward Ax's scoop on air that was welcoming and crisp.
21 Cassie's parents were gone for the day. Her mom was working at The
Gardens. Her dad was at a vet conference.
Rachel was lounging on the hay bales, fighting to stay awake after a
late night. Blue eyes appeared, disappeared, reappeared at half-mast.
Cassie was preoccupied with a bald eagle, tending it even though she
said it was living its
22 final days. It had fought a terminal illness, and lost. It was hard
to look at it. Feathers matted. A patch missing from the chest. A noble
creature at the end of its time. I shuddered at the thought.
"Let me get this straight," Marco said. "Erek got busted, not because
he's an android walking the streets in a hologram shield. Not because
he's an informant for the 'Andaiite bandits.' But for smelling like
cigarettes?"
"it was because Chapman Knows he's a member of The Sharing," Rachel
said. "Members aren't supposed to be troublesome. You know. More Boy
Scouty than the Boy Scouts. Especially because they have this big thing
going on, this new community center. There'll be media, there. Have to
watch that image."
The Sharing is a Yeerk front organization. On the surface, a do-good,
family-oriented get-together. Beneath that veneer, the Yeerks used the
wholesome enticements as a means of recruiting Controllers.
"Or Rachel and Calvin Klein clearance racks." Marco shot her a sidewise
glance. She ignored him.
<Ah. Yes. As we say on the home world: "A test of will may lead to
wisdom; a loss of will breeds but defeat.">
"Hey, everybody!" Jake said loudly. "Sorry we're late, but Erek has
breaking news. Listen up!"
"As I told Jake," Erek started, "we know the Yeerks are ready to test
the AMR. But they don't have a test subject," Erek continued.
<Why can't they use Visser Three?> I asked. <You know, get him to morph
the nightmare alien beast-of-the-day, then turn the ray on him?>
Eric nodded. "The next time you make an appearance, i believe the Yeerks
will do everything in their power to capture you. Or, failing that, at
least fire the weapon at you."
"Well, then," Marco said, "we just won't get caught. We won't let them
see us. Or hear us. Or smell us , , "
Everyone turned to look at him. "Look, on the way over I started thinking."
"Anyway, I was thinking, maybe that's exactly what we should do: Let the
Yeerks capture one of us Provide them with their test subject. Me, for
Instance. I let them take me prisoner. The rest of you follow secretly.
They'll lead us straight to the AMR. Exactly where we want to go. in a
position <o destroy the weapon."
25 ask this once. Are you insane?? Jake, dude, think about it. Not that
I should even be considering the details of a scheme as idiotic as this
one, but what happens if we don't get there in time? If they drag you
off and we can't trail you because we get held up by, oh, I don't know,
a few dozen Hork-Bajir and a small army of Taxxons? The Yeerks get to
use that AMR on you. And assuming it doesn't kill you - and that's
assuming a lot - you know what they'll get when they forcibly demorph
you? A human kid. Kiss our cover good-bye. Kiss us good-bye."
Rachel shook her head in disagreement. "Yeah, it's dangerous. But I say
we do it. Jake just isn't the one to go. You're too important, Jake. We
need you planning the attack on the AMR. So I volunteer."
<Prince Jake, Rachel? If I may say so, I believe the only logical answer
is for me to go. I am Andalite, after all. Should the AMR prove
successful and the Yeerks are able to demorph me, they will get what
they are expecting: an Andalite^
"Makes sense," Marco said. "I mean, given that we're even talking this
way, like we'd do it."
I watched Jake all this time. He was nodding. Like he bought what
everyone was saying. But he was remaining quiet. So was Erek.
26 Jake had another idea in mind. He was just waiting for someone else
to suggest it.
"You could die, Ax," Cassie emphasized. "Are you sure you want to do this?"
<l am sure.>
"We don't know where they're keeping the AMR," Jake said, not committing.
Now Marco was watching Jake. He'd seen the same reluctance I'd seen on
Jake's face. The same holding back.
We were missing something. I knew that much. I just wasn't sure what it
was. And then I knew.
I swooped down from the rafter to the floor. Loose straw swirled in
small eddies as I touched down. A ray of light from a crack in the barn
wall bathed my feathers in yellow light. It was almost too much. Too
theatrical. I half-expected angels to hover up out of the hayloft and
break into song.
27 L saw the confirmation in Jake's eyes. And in the hologram that gave
Erek eyes.
<Look, they turn the ray on Ax in morph, right?> I said. <lf it works
they get an Andalite. And they get proof the AMR works.>
Cassie nodded, reluctant. Rachel kept her eyes down. She was biting her
lip. Angry, sad: the two emotions are very close together in Rachel.
<l'm the one,> I repeated. <The Yeerks don't know hawk is my true form.
They'll think hawk is a morph. They capture me in morph, so they think,
as a hawk. They turn the ray on me, nothing will happen. I mean, they
won't get an An-
Cassie first, with that look of tender knowing she reserves for moments
of significance. I could tell she was proud of me. And worried.
Jake made a face I see too often. It's a look of disgust. Disgust with
himself. He hadn't wanted to single me out, make me go on what might be
a suicidal mission. He'd waited till I could volunteer.
<Tobias is correct,> Ax said. <But the mission could last longer than
two hours. To play the part convincingly - to make the Yeerks think
you're an Andalite in morph - you will have to "demorph" to Andalite at
some point, Tobias. I believe you will need to acquire me.>
<Acquire you?>
<Yes, of course.>
Acquire Ax? None of us had ever morphed an Andalite before. What would
it be like? I felt a sudden, overwhelming rush of anticipation. Mixed
with anxiety. I chose not to share it.
29 "The trick now is to choose the best time and place," Jake said. "We
have to act fast. But we want to be in control of the capture as much as
possible."
"And it has to look credible," Cassie added. "I mean, the Yeerks have to
believe it's a legitimate coup on their part. They can't suspect a setup."
"I say tonight," Rachel answered. She still looked troubled. Her
enthusiasm sounded forced.
Marco rolled his eyes. "Yeah, we saw the ads on TV. Yeerk-a-Thon. They
built the new community center and now they're going to broadcast the
dedication. Full media coverage. A huge deal. They're obviously drawing
members from other states, going more nationwide."
"We were planning on being there one of the nights anyway," Jake said.
"To identify new 'full members' and learn more about the extent of The
Sharing's influence."
"I can't go tonight, not on such short notice," Cassie said. "My parents
will be back by evening. I can't just disappear."
"We can't pass up this chance to get close. I think we should risk it,"
Jake decided. "The
"There's something else you need to know," Erek added. "We do not think
the Yeerks built this community center out of concern for the community."
"We only have a few hints. Some vague information. But we think there is
some underground construction there, probably a subterranean connection
to the Yeerk pool."
"Listen, everybody head home. Make contact with the parentals and meet
back here early tonight if you can." There was energy in Jake's voice.
"We have work to do. And, um, Tobias?"
<Yeah?>
31
Ax climbed the steep rise of the hill near his scoop and I hitched a
ride on a fading thermal. It was dusk. The sun was enormous on the
horizon, about to disappear. Vibrant orange and purple warmed the
forest. I landed on a low branch in a clearing on the hilltop.
33 have that DNA in you from now on. It is a very unique genetic mixtures
<0h, we all know how much you think of your species, Ax,> I kidded.
He lifted me off the branch with gentle arms and set me on his shoulder.
I squeezed as carefully as I could with my talons. I felt his muscles
slacken as I acquired him.
Paamp! Poomp!
<Yaowww!> I gasped as I slowly rose off the ground. With one eye shifted
to the back, I witnessed a huge, muscular rump grow out of my rusty tail
feathers. And although I couldn't see them yet, I could feel four strong
legs support me, responding to my growing bulk.
Yes, it was all the things I'd imagined it would be. Confident. Alert.
Poised for combat.
But there was another element that took me off guard. Something bubbling
happily away beneath the rationality. Nothing giddy like a dolphin's
playfulness. Something less simple.
<Man! I had no idea.> I turned my head toward Ax. His eyes were smiling,
the way they do.
<Keep in mind that you are experiencing instinct. The Andalite mind in
its untrained state. Our culture teaches us to temper and control our
optimism, to give equal value to realism. We have become, regrettably, a
race of warriors. But that is in response to necessity. Down deeper,
beneath that, I believe we are a peaceful species, in love with
learning, not combat. But to learn - and to fight - you must be joyful.
I think an ancient Andalite inscribed that on a shormitor.>
Ax whipped his tail blade through the air.
Fwapp!
<Shormitor?>
<Ah.>
<ln fact, it was on shormitors of the Elupera that I learned the early
tail-fighting masters spent a lifetime trying to cultivate and listen to
instinct. Trying to forget what culture had taught them. Let the innate
defense mechanism kick in, as you humans say. You should have a natural
advantage in this regard, Tobias,> Ax said as he
<l will teach you something,> Ax said, backing up. <A move I rely on
frequently. The torf. You begin a common strike and then, millimeters
before impact, twist your blade to the side, so that only the flat of
the blade connects with the target. It won't do much to a Hork-Bajir,
but it will knock a human unconscious. We will use this trunk as a target.>
Ax repeated the move in slow motion for me to see. But I wasn't paying
complete attention. I could see in all directions at once. Front, back,
left, right. At the same time!
<Now!> Ax yelled.
FWAPP!
<Yeah, great. You know you're a warrior when you take down a tree. And
can't get your blade back.>
<Ahhhhhh!>
<l should have let you familiarize yourself with the Andalite body
before suggesting tail-blade practice. We will refresh ourselves with a
drink, and perform the evening ritual.>
The very last glimmer of color was disappearing from the sky, absorbed
by the mysterious indigo of night.
38 <Look to the last bit of orange,> Ax said. <That's how the ritual
begins.>
<From the rising of the sun to the setting, to its rising again,> Ax
said, <we place what is hard to endure with what is sweet to remember,
and find peace.>
He stopped.
<That's it?>
<That is it.>
<Me too
39 Saturday night. The grandest night of The Sharing's giant publicity gala.
I cruised over town, skimming above the neon McDonald's signs and
telephone poles and car headlights, toward the new community center.
Faint at first, then more definite, came sounds from the celebration.
Voices filtered through night air. Jaunty strains of a \jazz band,
Shrieks and giggles from the younger members. And above it all --over
the acoustic wash that grew more insistent the nearer I got - boomed a
deep, formal voice.
<Jake, Ax, I'm here,> I called down into the crowd. As long as I stayed
clear of the spotlights, I knew I could fly fairly low without being
seen. Even so, I kept a sharp eye on the human-Controller security
guards who lined the perimeter.
He couldn't answer me. But he rolled his eyes in agreement, then turned
his head to the right and nodded toward the buffet table.
The shouts were coming from the end, where an elderly man stood next to
a cotton candy cart, surrounded by children.
"Son, I just don't think it's safe to give you any more. Where are your
parents?"
41 cotton candy streaked his hair, hung from his chin like a ghostly
beard, and blew from his fingers as he forced his way to the front of
the line.
<Ax-man! It's Tobias. You've got to get control of your morph. Right
now. You can't make a scene.>
<0h, boy. Ax, where are the others? You're supposed to be helping me
guide them. They're in fly morph, don't forget. They can smell dog poop
and see about six inches, and that's it.>
42 body these words. Who, with their achievement, keep our organization
running on course . . ."
<Fondue?> Ax asked.
<A warm pot of chocolate. Liquid. Brown.> I couldn't think of how to
describe it. From fifty feet up I scanned the buffet table. Marco was
black against dark brown. I could barely see him at this distance.
<Marco, what exactly are you doing in the fondue?> Rachel asked.
<Exactly? Well ... I wanted to see if it would still taste good sucked
up through a fly mouth. You gonna help me or do you just want to bust me?>
Ax moved toward the chocolate fondue. A fly buzzed out of his cotton
candy beard. This fly was more easily visible: black against pink.
<Could be, how would I know what fly you're looking at? I was just in
the middle of this big cloud, sticky and sweet and . . . Where's Cassie?
43 Where's Ax? Man! Five minutes in and we're all messed up.>
<0kay, that is you, Rachel, just follow the cotton candy. It's Ax. The
sticky cloud.>
<ls there some reason you think I'm not fine?> Cassie pressed, anxious now.
"This year's highest honor goes to a young man who moved swiftly to the
top of our ranks," the emcee intoned. "A devoted member of our
community." Applause thundered through the crowd. Tom rose from his
chair and accepted a plaque.
Naturally Jake heard all this, since we'd included him in our
thought-speak. He was fidgeting. Nervous. Looking like he was about to
jump out of his chair and run for the fondue. Or maybe just for the exit.
Then I saw Jake's eyes roll up toward the sky in what could only be an
expression of "Why
45 me?" I glanced back at Ax to see what had upset Jake. The Andalite
was wearing a pink, cotton candy beard and had his hand immersed in the
chocolate fondue. The chocolate was up to his wrist.
He pulled his hand out, held it up in front of his face like he'd just
discovered it was made out of gold, then began licking his fingers.
44
<He will?> Marco shrilled. <What do you mean, he'll eat me?>
<l'm on something! I'm moving. Hey! I'm ... I'm ... I'm dripping!>
Had I been seen? The Yeerks had seen a red-tailed hawk. Way too many
times, in all the wrong places. Had they seen me now?
<l've dripped!> Marco yelled. <l . . . Okay, I'm off Ax's hands. I'm
back on the surface of the
46 chocolate. Near the edge. Don't eat me! I'm serious: Do not eat me!>
<lt's what you dip in the fondue,> I yelled. <Ax, grab a strawberry! Use
it to dip him out.>
<0kay, Ax, listen very carefully,> Marco hissed. <Do not eat the
strawberry. I repeat: Do not ->
<Guys,> I cut in. <Visser Three just arrived. In human morph, of course.>
Standing just back from the Visser were four guys who could only be
security. They looked like the kind of guys you'd see with a Mafia don.
Jake had gone pale. He was staring, staring as the Visser pulled his
hand away from his own face and examined his palm.
<l'm okay,> Cassie said. <Missed me. Fly reflexes. Very cool. It was
close, though.>
"A fly!" the Visser said. "A fly!" he snapped to his guards. The four
human-Controllers bounded forward.
I didn't see Cassie. I was torn. Should I go lower? Risk being noticed?
Then I caught sight of a fly again.
Cassie circled Jake and landed on his forehead. <Where am I? I'm not sure.>
For a long few seconds the two of them glared at each other. Visser
Three, leader of the Yeerk forces on Earth. And Jake, his unrecognized foe.
Jake released the Visser's hand. Jake smiled. The Visser smiled. Or at
least they formed their mouths into smiles.
Visser Three moved on down the table. Everyone breathed. Jake leaned
over to say something to his parents. Then he got up.
He walked straight through the buffet line, found Ax, and grabbed him by
the arm, not at all gently.
48
Jake and Ax parted ways. Jake went around the back of the community
center building. Back away from the lights. He tried two of the doors.
Both locked.
He stepped away into the darkness and reappeared a moment later carrying
a cinder block. Part of the leftover debris of construction.
He nodded. Then he swung the cinder block into a low window. The
tinkling of glass was swallowed up in the booming sound of the emcee's
voice announcing the next honoree.
50 I took aim on the shattered glass. Plenty of room for me, if I folded
my wings. More than enough room for the others, once they found their
way there.
Down I flew, down through the cool, dark air, focusing on the glittering
outline. Down through reaching shards of glass that could slice me open,
end to end.
But of course I'm more accurate than that. I can hit a mouse on the run
through tall grass. Flying through a hole in a window is really nothing
special.
Zoom! Through! I flared my wings and tail, killed my speed, then resumed
level flight.
It suddenly struck me just what level of cash flow The Sharing controls.
Serious cash. Not the kind of money you make selling Furbies on the
black market.
51 wind, no thermals. Nothing but flat, dead air. And very little room
to maneuver, hemmed in above, below, and on both sides.
But at the same time, it's exhilarating. A roller coaster for birds. One
wrong move and you crumple a wing. Humans think it's scary to be up
high, but not for a bird. For a bird altitude is safety.
I turned a corner and practically ran into Ax. I landed on his back,
enjoying the respite.
<True. And yet there is no reason why I cannot do some damage. Merely by
way of adding authenticity and realism.>
Ahead was a set of stairs leading down to the basement level. They were
roped off, marked with a hastily written sign: under construction. keep out.
The basement was dim and filled with building materials. Piles of floor
tile in one corner. A stack of plywood sheathing against the wall. A
contractor's table saw. Plastic tarps.
Before the words were out of my mouth, I realized I'd spoken too soon.
Behind the stairs, shielded by a temporary partition, flickered
blue-green light. Computer screens. An entire wall of them! Flashing
camera images from the celebration outside. The stage. The food tent.
The playground. The bandstand. Over the door hung another makeshift
sign: event security.
One man sat with his back to us, watching the screens. Mesmerized by the
flickering images.
Without warning came the echo of hard heels pounding the concrete floor.
Rapid, metered steps. Approaching.
Next to the surveillance room was another door. Ax moved quickly toward
it. He pushed on it. Just as I noticed the arrow taped to the wall
above. break room, the arrow read.
53 The door opened. And there, directly in front of us, were four
Hork-Bajir. Seated around a card table. Elbow blades hanging casually
off the chairs. Tails slung back across the floor. Each held a hand of
cards tightly in his claws. A single, unshaded lightbulb dangled from
the ceiling.
I could feel the vibrations of Ax's hearts hammering. My own heart was a
machine gun.
The footsteps were now just yards away.
No choice. Back, into the security room. Hope the guard on duty there
was still watching his screens. Hope we didn't make a sound.
Too much noise! The guard had to hear us. Had to!
But no. Nothing. He still watched his screens. The enemy was out there,
out somewhere in camera range. Not right here, in the same room.
The footsteps from the hallway followed us. Stopped. Four black boots,
inches away. One pair was crusted with dried mud.
54 "Nan. Thought I saw some kid heading round the back. Then I lost him."
I wasn't too worried these guys would get us. Ax's tail was cocked and
ready. The table would go flying and these two would be counting in base
five before they could draw their weapons.
But that would cause an uproar. The Hork-Bajir would come running, and
it wasn't time for me to be captured. Not yet. Not till we knew where
the secret entrance was.
Funny I should think that particular thing. The next words out of the
guard's mouth were, "Just left the entrance. Passed off my shift to
Lacsar-Four-Fifty-Four."
"Any animals?" the TV man asked, never glancing away from the screens.
He wasn't mesmerized by the screens, I realized. He'd been ordered not
to look away. On pain of death.
"We kicked a few dogs. Sprayed some bugs. Waste of time, you can't keep
every possible animal morph out of an open-air celebration. Could have
told Visser Three that."
A rueful laugh. "Got that right. Anyway, I do have to see the sub-visser
about . . . Ouch!"
"What is it?"
"Darn wood chips drive me crazy! Sharp like pins! I hate that lousy
entrance shift," he muttered. "Tramping around like I'm some human
eight-year-old."
The guard stood up, slipped off the shoe, and knocked it against the
table leg, showering Ax with topsoil. And a wood chip. I breathed. Ax
breathed.
They walked on. Past us and toward the wall of cameras, where a man sat,
his back to us, monitoring the pictures.
He turned.
Of the fifty or so screens, nearly half pictured the same spot. Ail from
different angles, so it
<Wood chips.>
The big Yeerk-a-Thon was winding up. They were making closing speeches.
The six of us were above and around the playground. While we'd watched,
three people had crawled in through the kiddie tunnel. None had crawled
out the far side.
58 sides by trees, with an open playing field at the far end, and the
community center wall defining the left side.
We'd spotted guards atop the community center, guards in the woods,
guards pretending to sit idly on the bleachers behind the batting cage.
A person was approaching, a man, feet crunching across the wood chips.
<lt's Tasset,> Jake said. He was in owl morph, with eyes that saw
through the night like it was noon on a cloudless day. <From the
sporting goods store,> Jake whispered. <0ne of our known Controllers.
ID'd him at the Yeerk pool.>
<0kay, we'll follow him in,> Cassie said. <Just tell us which way.>
Marco, Cassie, and Rachel had stayed in fly morph. They would try and
enter the tunnel. And come back out again.
Ax was out of camera range behind some trees. He was standing between
two guards, not twenty feet from either of them. Needless to say, he was
standing very still.
59 directed. His owl morph was better for this kind of night work. I
could see the flies. Jake could SEE them. <Those are the windows of the
community center. Keep those on your left. Okay, now I've lost one of
you. Never mind, got you back. Close up. Stay together. Drift a little
to the right. Now just hover there.>
I landed soundlessly on one of the jungle gym poles and perched still as
a statue. I had seen the camera angles and knew where to be to stay out
of view.
Tasset stooped and disappeared under the slide.
<l see him,> said Cassie. <He's blue and green and there are about
ninety pictures of him, but I definitely see him.>
Cassie and Marco flew behind Tasset. The cameras would never pick them
up. But there might be other dangers. There were always other dangers.
<Red lights, I think,> Marco called. <l think maybe he popped open a
hidden panel. Up under the slide. Possibly red light. Who can tell? You
all know what fly vision is like.>
60 Dee-deep.
Dee-dee-dee-dee.
Tasset moved out from under the slide and crouched to enter the
adjoining concrete tunnel.
The tunnel was large, like one of those big concrete sewer pipes. You
couldn't quite stand up in it, but you didn't have to crawl, either.
Tasset was about to go in when two other Controllers poked their heads
out of the tunnel. He backed up to let them pass. Which they did. Silently.
Ax spoke up for the first time. <Prince Jake, I see additional humans
approaching. I may have to withdrawn
<Do what you have to do, but stay close for the big finale. You may need
to remove one or more of the guards,> Jake said tersely. <Marco? Where
are you and Cassie? You're out of my line of sight.>
<We are right behind this guy's big butt,> Marco said. <And we see light
at the end of the tunnel.>
<Good grief,> Rachel muttered. <This is so not the time for your feeble
attempts at being funny.>
Rachel always teases Marco. That was noth-
61 ing new. But there was a deeper note of stress in her thought-speak
voice.
Psssst.
Woooooosh!
<Ahhhhhh!>
<Yeeeeooooow!>
Two flies shot out the near end of the green tunnel, back to where
they'd started.
<With a serious pressure diff going. That was one heck of a ride!>
<0kay, back out,> Jake ordered. <Cassie? Marco? You guys are done. Ax?
Are you set?>
62 <0kay, me and Cassie wish you all luck, and we are motoring on outta
here,> Marco said. Then he laughed. <The Yeerks have no respect for our
intelligence, do they? Like we wouldn't know this was a trap? Like we'd
think a sewer pipe in a playground was a sensible entrance for the Yeerk
pool?>
<A setup,> Rachel said. <Bait. Maybe they figured that even if we sensed
a trap we couldn't resist.>
<Yeah, and it turns out they were right,> Cassie said darkly.
<But there are two levels of security, over and above the guards,> I
pointed out. <That seems meticulous, doesn't it? Code-activated panels
under the slide and in the tunnel? If they want us in, why make it
complicated? Not the easiest thing to infiltrate.>
Marco said, <You know, Rachel, when you're in fly morph, talking
ruthlessly about guerrilla warfare, and force and surprise and all, I
just find it so exciting, and yet disturbing. You know? Like a Britney
Spears video with tanks.>
63 <Well, okay, it's a trap,> I said. <A trap is what we came for. Let's
just get this over with.>
Nobody said anything. Everyone knew that's what needed to happen. We'd
discussed it. Planned it. It was just that none of us had ever willingly
surrendered before.
Another Controller walked out of the community center and started across
the wood chips, toward the slide.
<Rachel?>
<Me? Who do you think you're talking to?> She feigned surprise at his
question. <Bring on the ambush!>
But I heard the struggle in her voice. She was masking concern. Why?
Rachel never worried. At least not about herself.
<No, of course not. It's not that.> She paused. <Listen. Dm. You take
care of yourself. I mean ... be careful. Okay? Whatever happens? If it
comes down to it, save yourself and forget the stupid mission.>
I smiled inwardly. She was concerned about me. If I had been human . . .
looking into
64 Rachel's eyes, feeling her next to me, I might have . . . But she was
a fly on my hawk body. Which was good. I could keep my cool. A hawk's
feelings aren't exactly visible to others.
<l will,> I said simply. Then added, <l have a lot to lose.>
65 <tveryone out. Everyone but Tobias and Rachel,> Jake ordered. <Ax? Be
ready. I'm going for the lights.>
Dee-deep. Dee-dee-dee-dee.
The faint electronic chime met my ear just as a ripping gust of wind
rose up and whistled through the jungle gym.
Sheeeewooooo.
66 A cold wind that ruffled my feathers and sent a chill down my spine.
I lifted off. Powered my wings to gain altitude. A rope banged a hollow
note on the metal flagpole. The leaves on the trees rustled and swished
with the air. And the emcee's voice from back at The Sharing's
celebration rang out above it all.
Thunderous applause.
I spilled air from my wings and fell into a dive, gaining speed every
instant.
<Hang on!> I yelled to Rachel.
I veered a violent right, just a few feet from the playground. Into the
tunnel. Insane! Too fast! No way to control my speed!
Wings and tail straining, straining, catching all the air I could catch,
straining to absorb the energy of my own momentum.
FWAPP!
He shot away just as I blew into the tunnel, banked into a turn that
nearly ripped the ligaments out of my wings, and shot through into the
circle of light.
Outside the lights of the playground were snapping on. Outside Ax, now
clearly illuminated, was running for his life, pursued by all the guards.
That was the plan. Ax risking his life for no purpose but to make it all
look real, to make it all seem as if I'd been trapped in the midst of a
genuine attack.
68 "Ahhhgggg-ggghhhha. Ahhhgggg-ggghhhha."
My heart skipped a beat. I knew that sound. The throaty, heavy breathing
of Yeerk-infested Hork-Bajir. Pumped up. Ready for action.
69 lights on!
And a girl. A human. For a millisecond I thought ... No, no, of course
it wasn't Rachel. This girl was a couple of years older. Tall, thin,
blond. Sleek chinos, leather loafers. A knit top even Rachel would admire.
Preppy.
Supermodel.
Yeerk.
Chapman cleared his throat. I hadn't even noticed him, standing there
right next to her.
"A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush," he offered, smirking.
"Shut up, Chapman," the girl said calmly. "You sound like some
pun-spouting villain from a Batman movie."
Sub-visser?
She stared at me like she could see right into my mind. Like she knew
who I was, what I was. And wanted to hurt me because of it. I swallowed
hard.
<Tobias, what's going on? Why aren't we mov-ing?> Rachel was all energy.
<Put up a fight! Let 'em know you don't want to be here. Come on, play
the part.>
I let out a screeching cry. More for effect than for anything else.
Hoping to scare them. They shuffled a bit as I flapped up. And then,
airborne, I lunged at the nearest monstrous mass.
"Galaash! Ahhh!"
My outstretched talons gouged his eyes. Wrist blades slashed the air
around me.
Whaack! Wummph!
"Didn't think we'd be waiting for you, did you, Andalite?" she said
coldly. "Well, here we are. Surprised? I hope so. I love surprises,
don't you?"
"Oh, did I forget to introduce myself?" She brought her hand to her
cheek in a motion of mock surprise. "So sorry. I'm Sub-Visser Fifty-one.
Second-in-command to Visser Three in this part of space. Call me Taylor."
"Shut up, Chapman!" she snarled and stamped her foot like any spoiled kid.
She laughed. "No, no, friend Andalite. We've seen the red-tailed hawk
before, haven't we? I said, haven't we, Chapman?"
"Yes, Sub-visser!"
"Oh, good, it does speak," Taylor said and clapped her hands.
This time the tail came first. I felt it push out of my feathers and
begin to grow, thick and wide, into its natural arc. Felt the blade
emerging at the end. How I must have looked! A blue-tailed hawk.
From the palm of her hand came a hissing noise, louder and louder, until
...
Shooopooof!
Chapman and the Hork-Bajir tried to back away. Too late. The Hork-Bajir
clawed at their own eyes. Chapman writhed, as if he was crawling with ants.
<What's going on?> Rachel cried. <l can't feel my legs. Or my wings. I
can't move!>
<She shot us with a gas or something. She got Chapman, too. And a
half-dozen Hork-Bajir.> They were falling to the ground like giant dominoes.
Thud. Thumpf.
Then she walked over to where I lay and smiled again, eyes aglow with
self-satisfaction.
And she called out, loudly enough so her henchmen could hear: "And pick
up the Andalite filth, too. We have a special place all picked out for him."
I felt a stab of cold terror. No. No, if Rachel and I were separated ...
No one to bring word of the Anti-Morphing Ray's location to Jake. No one
to bring rescue.
And Rachel? Left here, unseen, a fly? Paralyzed in morph? My God, she
might never. . .
<Tobias! I'm slipping off your feathers! I'm falling!> It sounded like
she was starting to cry.
Minutes into the mission, and we were finished. Trapped. No way out. No
help waiting.
75 dark corridor. Another Hork-Bajir held up a metal box, and the first
one crammed me into it and sealed the opening shut, blacking out any
hint of light.
<Rachel! Rachel!>
Bumps and jolts as the Hork-Bajir knocked the box against his leg with
each step.
I was alone.
Total.
Sensation started to return and I realized I'd been stuffed into a box
half my size. A straitjacket that pinned my wings against my body.
Jammed the vestigial Andalite tail up into my neck.
Rachel! Oh, Rachel. Could she escape this underground network? Somehow
survive?
77 She would. Sure she would. She had to. She was Rachel, after all. Rachel!
Where was she? All I could think of was a paralyzed fly, helpless and
vulnerable on the floor. Someone would step on her. She wouldn't be able
to get out of the way, and someone would kill her.
Better than the alternative. Life as a fly. Trapped, like me. But so not
like me. I could see, soar . . .
And the plan? Rachel was supposed to have seen where they took me, then
lead the others in. First prove the Anti-Morphing Ray didn't work, then,
in the rescue, destroy the thing for good measure.
Fatal.
The hawk brain, the animal part that still, even now, lived apart from
me, untouched by human reason, began a low, defeated moan. A death moan.
So hot in the box. Like an oven. Warmer, and warmer still. How much more
oxygen could there be? Were they trying to suffocate me? Was that it?
Interminable!
The only external input were the wobbles and bobs as the holder of the
box hit me against his leg. The ride continued.
That's it. Keep talking, Tobias. Keep talking. Stay sane. Hold on. Don't
think . . .
Zeeewooozeeewooo.
All six walls of the box began to buzz. Vibrate. And then: Poosh!
79 She sat alone at a long table near the door of the large, gloomy,
windowless room. To her right and left, armed Hork-Bajir, standing at
attention. Above, a network of steel beams and conduits and a daunting
maze of wire.
"You may as well demorph and make yourself comfortable while we wait,"
she continued.
Nice try, I thought. Demorph and make myself comfortable. Yeah, right!
Wouldn't she just love an Andalite to infest. That would get her noticed
by the Visser. Why don't I plunge my head in the sludgy Yeerk pool while
I'm at it?
"No?" she prodded, mocking. "Don't want to demorph? Worried about that
whole Yeerk-in-the-head thing? That's okay, my little Andalite birdie.
You stay just the way you are. For now."
81 mere was a loud banging on the door. Two Hork-Bajir scurried to open
it, knocking into each other on the way. A clatter of arm blades as they
struggled to disentangle themselves. One finally made it to the door.
<Superb,> the visser muttered as he swaggered into the room. <lt now
takes two of you to open a door, I see. Yes. Excel lent.>
He strode, with graceful Andalite steps, toward the center of the room.
He paused briefly to grind a hoof into one of the offending Hork-Bajir's
toes. A muffled cry.
Perhaps it was the knowledge that this Yeerk had managed something that
years of battle had been unable to do: take down the great Elfangor.
Stamp out that brave warrior's life. Or maybe looking into Visser
Three's eyes made me face the hard reality that despite all our
campaigns - the numerous ways we've succeeded in weakening and slowing
his invasion of Earth - this Yeerk still stood powerful and strong.
<l was detained by the festivities outside, the planning of our new
base, the reassigning of duties to more . . . trusted officers. Hmmm.>
He scanned the room like the queen of hearts, looking for someone to
behead. <And, oh yes,> he
I was stunned. Surely this was a bluff. Surely Ax had gotten away. The
visser waited, clearly hoping to get a rise out of me.
No. I refused to believe him. If he'd found anyone in morph, he'd have
brought them straight here, to test the ray. We were too valuable as
guinea pigs.
Lies.
<Yes. Well.> His stalk eyes drooped slightly. <Shall we proceed to the
matter at hand? I think our friend here has waited long enough.>
The door was opened again. This time by a single Hork-Bajir. Two small
human-Controllers in white lab coats emerged timidly.
They looked haggard. Like they hadn't slept in days. They gaped at
Visser Three, then looked away.
Dr. Singh flipped several switches on the base and shaft of the
instrument. The other man appeared to connect power to the three-circle
device. The two men then stood together. Their
85 expressions were a disturbing mix of hope and pride and terror.
Together they pressed sweaty palms down onto a large black button.
I would have laughed, if I weren't sick with fear. They were like a pair
of hopeful kids in a science fair being judged by a psycho-killer.
The corresponding black circle in my glass cube glowed with an eerie light.
I closed my eyes. Hoping the ray wouldn't kill me, but knowing full well
that it could.
I waited.
Woomp, woomp.
I opened my eyes.
The two little scientists looked unsettled. Their eyes darted nervously
from the telescope object to their charts, to their controls, to me.
<A very noisy machine,> the Visser called loudly. <You'll want to work
that out now, won't you. Smooth out the details. Fine-tune the
instrument . . .>
Visser Three stood completely immobile. A stillness fit led the room.
I would not have been surprised to see an actual column of steam rise
from his head.
"No, Visser, no! You don't understand. This must be some sort of
Andalite trick. It is inconceivable that the ray should not work." The
other one held up a paper brick of calculations and shook it desperately.
"Look through our work, Visser. You will see that it is perfect. That
the work is valuable. That we are valuable."
Visser Three stared hard at me with his main eyes. I stared back. Did he
suspect? Did he guess that this game was rigged?
<l don't have time for this,> he said, disgusted. <This Andalite is all
yours, Sub-Visser. Make the Andalite demorph. Infest him. I leave the
task to you. This is your specialty. Do not disappoint me.> He walked
leisurely toward the door.
"Nooo!"
The Hork-Bajir looked more interested now, as they dangled first one,
then the other scientist down into the pit.
I looked away. I could do nothing to shut out their howls of pain. Howls
of pain that went on till, at last, with the visser gone, the Hork-Bajir
released their hold and dropped the Controllers into the pit.
The sub-visser looked shaken. Maybe she guessed that she had just
glimpsed her own future.
"You can make this easy, Andalite," she said slowly, deliberately. "Or
you can make it... horrible." She paused. "It's all up to you."
89 She planted her face inches from the glass - uncomfortably close -
and stared icily into my hawk eyes. A zoo animal on display. That's how
I felt.
I decided to answer. <l won't give you another Andalite body to infest.>
90 deep. Inside, she and Rachel were like night and day.
"No, of course you won't." She mocked. "Brave Andalite. Your sense of
honor is ridiculous. It will get you nowhere."
She walked across the room with placid determination. Turned her
attention to the control panel. It looked like something I'd seen at the
modern art museum. Three large circles - maybe six inches in diameter -
that stood out vividly against a silver-gray background. Blue, red. And
black. That last one I knew. The AMR. But the other two?
She hesitated before the panel, almost like she was afraid. Then
suddenly, startlingly, slammed her hand down on the red button. The
circle in my cube glowed a deep crimson. I watched it pulsate with color.
<Ahhhhhh!>
A dagger. . . twisting . . .
<Ahhhhhhhhhh!>
Stopped,
Gone.
She laughed. A pure, girlish sound. She might have been giggling about
some boy. "I can make you feel anything I choose. That, in case you
couldn't tell, was pain - the lowest setting. I'd like to know what you
think. No, really. Be honest. Our scientists appreciate feedback.
Especially from a mighty Andalite."
Indescribable pain. Staggering pain. Pain that ate into me, chewed at my
guts, twisted every nerve ending.
Tell her! Tell her! Make it stop, tell her, tell her, tell her!
Me, the human me, the boy inside kept screaming tell her, tell her!
But the hawk ... the hawk suffered dumb, helpless. The hawk had no way
out. The me that was a bird, the body, the physical me didn't know that
there was a cause for the pain.
Didn't know it could make the pain end. And already, for the hawk, the
pain had become a fact of life. Reality.
Life was hunger. Life was killing. Life was danger. Life was pain.
The hawk could manage it. Not on a conscious level, of course, but by
shutting down.
94 IE
Off.
On.
Make it stop!
Go away, human. Go away, little boy. The hawk knows. The predator
understands because he understands nothing.
But somehow . . .
Using the half of me that was equipped to process pain, I was enduring
it. Close down your human mind! It's your only hope, I told myself.
Focus on the hawk. Focus on the part of you where the pain is less
subversive. Less destructive.
Sink into your hawk self, Tobias. Deep into your raptor self.
Insanity! Madness!
The living room was fairly dark. As usual, the shades were drawn. It was
about four o'clock and
96 he'd just come home. From work as a roofer. His face was tanned and
leathery. A beer can in his hand.
"Yeah, so what?" My uncle's voice. Raspy and cold. He sat on the couch,
where he spent most of his time. Even spent the night there, too, now.
With empty, tired eyes he stared at the TV. He had the scanner on as
well. Tuned to the police band. Spouting a stream of mundane reports.
I spoke cautiously. "Well, it's like an honor," I said. "I mean, the
committee picked my drawing out from hundreds of entries. Just something
I sketched during art class. I had no idea it would make the state show."
"Do you get prize money?" he grumbled casually, not even turning to look
at me.
"No? So then what's it worth? If it won't help pay the bills, what good
is it?" He glanced at me patronizingly, then back to the TV. "When I was
about your age I already had a job. At this car lot. Washing the cars.
All the money went to my mother. All my earnings. Because Dad wasn't
around. It was tight..." He broke off and leaned back into the couch.
97 / stood there at the foot of the stairs, unable to move. I felt the
tears welling up in my eyes. Couldn't show him that.
I told myself, No big deal, Tobias. Just some dumb drawing. No big deal.
No answer.
Stupid to cry.
Then, through blurry eyes I watched a car pull up to a house across the
street. A mom and daughter got out. Walked together to the front door.
The little girl was carrying a page smeared with finger paint, crumpling
it a little as she walked. The mother stopped, took the picture from her
daughter, and carried it into the house like it was the Mona Lisa.
It was like someone had set out to shove my life in my face. Here,
Tobias, take a look. Take a look at your life, and at the lives of
normal kids. Take a good long look.
Tan.
98 Feathers. A wing.
"Give it up," Taylor said, her voice dripping sympathy. "Do you think I
like doing this?" She laughed her sudden mall-rat giggle. "I will break
you. I will. Now demorph, Andalite. Surrender and the pain will end."
! flapped wildly around the cube. Like an insane chicken in its cage.
Nowhere to go!
Broken feathers littered the bare bottom of the cube. And had I been
more aware, I would have noticed I'd sprained a wing.
100 "Here we go again," Taylor said brightly. "Ready? No? Too bad!"
Rick Stathis. There, at the top of the hill. Waiting for me on the
sidewalk on a frigid winter morning. His breath billowed like an angry
bull's. A wide, brawny frame concealed under a heavy black coat. Pale
blue eyes searched the block, hoping to see me coming.
There was no escape. He would harass me. Punch me. Why did he have it in
for me? Why me? I could run the other way. Take the long route to
school. But he'd find me eventually. Pound on me extra hard. My stomach
churned. . .
And there was Aria. The young woman who said she was family. Who said
she would give me a home. Care about me, even. Aria. In truth, nothing
but a mask - a morph - for Visser Three. Visser Three, plotting my death.
I was a dupe. Again. -
False hope.
101 Rapid surges of memory now. Inexorable. The cube was hot. Stifling.
I struggled to draw a breath.
"UhhhIAhh!"
Bam! His fist against my face. I reached up to cup my bloody nose. But
it was hard as bone. Curved. Sharp at the tip.
I landed on the dusty floor of Jake's attic. Pried the lid off of a
Rubbermaid container to eat the food I was too squeamish to kill.
Trapped in morph. Forever. Never to morph again. Never to be human again
...
Accept it.
I can't!
Staring out at the crescent moon. The stars. <l want to go home!> I
cried in a whisper. But I knew as I spoke I had no idea where home was.
"Your people are trillions of miles away. They grow weaker every day.
There's no one to save you."
102 The prey. I was the prey. I was the hunted in every story of animal
cruelty Cassie ever told us about.
The Canada goose clubbed to death on the golf course. I felt my skull
shatter. My confused, terrified cries. Chilling, jubilant grunts of
aggression from the boys with baseball bats.
The fly lying quivering and scared on the concrete. As two classmates
pulled off first one wing, then the other. A scientific experiment, they
said. I felt appendages rip off my body wall.
The drone of plane engines. A frightening man-made shadow trailing me,
tracking me. Responding to every turn I made. I was the wolf. Across
untouched snow that glared in the sunlight. Paws pounding. Breathe.
Breathe, breathe.
I was the wolf I'd seen so many times in the video clip. That wolf, with
foam trailing from its mouth. Exhaustion and terror in its eyes. The men
in the planes shot everyone else in my pack. From the air. High-powered
binoculars and a rifle. Big game hunters who say I ruin their sport. So
they will chase me down. Chase me until I can't run anymore. And fall,
heart exploding, onto the plain. Victim of slaughter.
Better for the wolf who cannot fathom the evil depths in their
predators' hearts. Who sees this
103 merely in terms of nature's hierarchy. Man is smarter. Man has run
wolf down the way wolf runs down the caribou.
Visser Three towered huge and horrific above an injured Elfangor. Closed
him in monstrous jaws. The Visser's shrill cries of victory rang in my
head. Elfangor. The father I never knew. My link to everything strong,
enduring, and good in the universe.
Murdered.
Anger boiled inside me. A rage whose power made me shake. Energy that
rose up and took control. Infested me. I will end him! I will end that
Yeerk! The hatred carved away my insides. Scarred me, scraped me clean.
And I shot toward the earth, in full dive. Opened my wings quickly, to
slow my descent. Glide in. Glide faster! Ready, now! Talons strained
forward, outstretched. Closed over the prey. Punctured the skin. Into
the heart. Around the skull. Too efficient for the squirrel to scream.
<Noooo!>
And I shot toward the earth, in full dive. Spread my wings wide, to slow
my descent. Easy, easy. Now! Talons sprang forward. And reached.
"Gilalll. Ahhh!"
The Hork-Bajir grabbed his eyes in anguish. Blinded. I rose in the air
to reach sufficient altitude to dive and strike again. And as I flew, I
felt the burden of a thousand wounds, each one fresh and vivid in my
mind. Weighing me down.
How can you carry such a weight? All the pain I had inflicted. Seemingly
inevitable. Perhaps avoidable. Strikes made by me. A hawk. A warrior. A
ruthless kid.
One deafening shriek, comprised of the voices of all those I had faced
in combat over-
105 powered me. Shook me. Hork-Bajir. Taxxon. Rabbit. Squirrel. Human.
And then:
Silence.
Peace.
106 Arrrgh!" The sub-visser ran at the nearest Hork-Bajir and gave him a
shove. He grunted, but knew better than to respond further.
"I'm a fool!" she raged suddenly, inexplicably. "Of course the pain ray
can't break you! You're using your morph as a shield. Any sentient
creature would long since have wilted from this much pain. Whatever ugly
bird you are now isn't sentient. It can't be! You would never have
lasted ..."
She flipped rapidly through a manual the scientists had left on the
console. She stopped on a page near the end, smiled, read some more,
then slapped the book shut and tossed it across the table.
107 "It's all about contrast, don't you think?" Tay-lor asked. "That's
the way life is, eh? You don't know pain unless you know pleasure. You
don't know what it is to be strong unless you've been weak, isn't that
right, Andalite?"
<l don't know,> I managed to say. <Let me know . , . if you ever become
strong.>
"You think I'm weak now?" she shrilled. "I have you in my power,
Andaiite. You call me weak? No. No, I was weak. Now I'm strong. I know
the difference. And when you submit, you will know the difference, too."
Her hand moved over the blue circle. She hesitated, seemingly savoring
her moment. Then she slammed down her fist.
"Pleasure, Andalite. Fun, isn't it? Remembering happy days back on your
filthy planet? Are you
108 recalling happy times, running across the grass? Of course, you are.
Up and down, Andalite. Pain and pleasure. I will take you into madness,
Andalite."
Pleasure.
Don't leave me, Tobias the hawk. I know what she will do, I know what
the foul Yeerk will do, but oh, oh, no sadness, no fear, all gone.
Happy! Joyful!
Such happiness. Not for a hawk. Pleasure was human domain. Purely human.
/ raced through the garden, stopping at a raspberry bush. Frothy ocean
waves crashed against the rocks. A fairweather wind tousled my hair. I
picked a berry and ate it. So sweet on my tongue. Sublime. The sun on my
face.
"Young man!" From the hilltop house, perched like a lighthouse above the
cove, came an elderly woman. Graying hair. A strong, deep voice. Of
course! These berries were hers. This
109 garden. I was an intruder. I turned to run. But no, something kept
me there. A kindness in her eyes.
Into a kitchen washed with light. Walls painted warm tones of yellow.
Deep shades of blue. Cozy, comforting heat enveloped me as I neared the
stove. And the aromas! Hot cider. Homemade cinnamon rolls. Raspberry tart.
When no one else cared, Professor Powers fed me and told me stories.
Gave me the illusion of home.
"You have at most twelve minutes left in morph. Maybe less! Are you a
fool? Do you want to live out the rest of your life eating roadkill?
Never to know such pleasure, such happiness again?"
No, no, no, no, I was all alone, me, just me, just Tobias, the boy.
"Time's almost up, Andalite. You'll never run free again. Never use that
fantastic tail of yours. You'll die, so soon. How long does a hawk live?"
Rachel?
I want you with me, to be part of me, my life, not to die a bird, not to
die for nothing.
Rachel?
Rachel! Rachel!
I coasted in for a landing on her ledge and knocked gently against the
glass with my beak.
Dink. Dink.
The others say morphing makes even Rachel look bad and I can understand.
It strains the definition of beauty. But to me, she looked natural and
strong. I liked watching her change. She was an eagle now.
We spread our wings, like parachutes. Caught the air just above a
whitecap breaking on shore. We found a thermal and caught the free ride.
Up and up and up again. Circle after circle. World's greatest carnival ride.
<There is nothing, nothing like this, Tobias!> she shouted, awed by the
sheer joy of flying.
Pain.
Pleasure.
Pain.
The sun. ' watched it burn and shimmer. Intense and warming.
I remembered the Ellimist. The voice that came from everywhere and nowhere.
And I flapped down from the beam in Cassie's barn to see the clothes
Rachel picked for Ax's day at school. Smiling at Marco's sarcasm:
"Rachel, he looks like he's going to the country club to play polo. He's
like a bully magnet. Even I want to beat him up."
And Ax: "Yes, ' am fully human. Mun. Hyew-mun. Human. Huh-yew-mun."
Then, the time I stood next to Cassie. Over a large flowerpot on her
back porch. We'd all come
113 over to see them. Two baby rabbits. "Parsley" and "Pansy" Marco had
named them.
And the moonlit night I galloped across the field behind Cassie's bam.
Ax just behind me. He said the grass there was of superior quality.
Richer soil.
I closed my eyes again. Still feeding with Ax. Still crushing lush grass
underhoof.
I felt the pleasure ray shutting down. I realized I was in the cube.
"Your time is up. Do you understand that? You can never escape your
morph. You will be a bird till you die."
Me?
114 IH
You vile little bird!" she shrieked. "Who are you? To sacrifice your
body! Do you realize what you've done?"
Still in a stupor I rolled over and saw her pacing in front of my cube,
thinking visibly. Running through her options. If she couldn't present
Visser Three with a new Andalite-Controller, what was left?
Her fear was obvious. It twisted her face. It made her breath come short
and fast.
;The Andalite bandits. Give me their location!" She stamped her foot on
the floor like a
115 frustrated, tired child. "Tell me where they are. I demand it! Where
are your friends?"
I was silent.
"Oh, wouldn't they?" she snapped. She walked back to the table. Toward
the three-color device. I could tell she had more to say, but she
bottled it, and said simply, "I pity your innocence."
Right then ! had only one thought. If I could distract her, maybe the
torture would stop. If I could draw her out, maybe she'd forget to press
the button. For a moment. At least for a moment.
I couldn't take any more. I couldn't. The hawk was defeated. The human,
defeated. Me, whatever I was, I was defeated.
- and touched the side of her face. "There was a time when I ... this
body . . . was the prettiest and most popular girl in her school. When I
had a party, everyone . . ."
I'd struck a nerve. Keep going. Keep her hand from the button.
<Everyone what?>
<He's going to kill you. Feed you to the Taxxons. Or do the job himself.>
<You've failed him. Visser Three won't tolerate failure. You know that.
But I guess that's life in the happy little Yeerk Empire.>
She looked hard at me. She knew I was trying to provoke her. She knew :
was trying to delay the pain.
117 She also knew I was right. <l won't give in,> I said. <Do you know
why?> "No."
1,
me sub-visser snorted derisively. "He needs me. I'm his expert on humans."
"Not like me!" she yelled, flying into a sudden rage. "I'm a voluntary,
do you not know that? This girl, this human, chose this life, chose to
invite me in to take control! Why? Why? Because she'd seen humans as
they truly were. She chose us over her own people. Why? Because humans
are weak and petty and stupid and we will rule them all, we will make
them ours, all of them!"
<A human would have to be very weak and foolish to turn against her
own,> I said.
119 kind of twisted person I was dealing with. She seemed to make no
sense. I was throwing anything out there. Saying anything. Anything to
keep her going, talking. Away from the button.
"Weak? Foolish? When I ... when she walked down the hall at school,
there wasn't a boy who didn't dream she was his." She came right up to
my cube. Her breath steamed the glass. "Not a girl who didn't wish she
were her. She was homecoming queen. Tennis champion. Student-body
president. She was the princess, and the school was her court."
What was going on? I'd never heard a Yeerk talk this way. This was
Taylor I was hearing. At least as much as the Yeerk inside her.
She ignored me. Her eyes scanned the air as she searched her mind for
the past.
"There was nothing she couldn't do! Had it all. Humans have pleasures
that Yeerks ... a different world of senses, of sight and sound and
touch and . . . nothing she couldn't have! The memories, when we first
came together, I went through them all, of course, you have to when you
first infest a new host, and they were so . . ."
Suddenly, she fell to her knees on the cold, barren concrete.
She covered her face with her hands. Hands that ! had seen change^ Hands
I knew were artificial,
Keep her talking, Tobias. Buy time. It's all you have.
"Terrible," she said. "Horrible. The pain. You can't . , . well, yes,
maybe you can imagine. We lost our left arm. Her right leg. And my face
. . . some came to see me in the hospital, some friends. Never again,
after that. Word went around. She's a monster. She's hideous. One day !
was queen. The next day, nothing."
"They held out friendship. Hope, in her darkest hour, they made me
believe that her life wasn't over. That I had a future. Then came the
offer, !f I . . . she . . . would enter their center circle - take
advantage of everything they had to give me - they would repair her
body. They had their own members' hospital, they said. In-
Taylor scrambled to her feet. She plastered her hands against the glass
of my cube and stared at me. Her glare was intense, compelling. As if
she were trying to make me understand.
"Maybe it seemed a little weird at first." She slammed her palms against
the cube and I shuddered. "But all I could think about were the kids at
school. I hated them for forgetting me. All she wanted was for things to
be the way they had been. I wanted to be envied. Envied. Do you
understand!" she demanded. "I wanted all of that, all the memories, the
sweet, perfect memories, I wanted to live that life."
She's crazy, I realized. She's insane. The Yeerk. The girl. The line
between them all confused.
Hawk. Boy.
Yeerk. Girl.
"I took the deal." Taylor laughed dryly. "Two Controllers helped me, in
my wheelchair, I waited down in the pool, not knowing what host,
"This girl, this Taylor person, this insignificant injured girl wasn't
my goal, of course, I was a sub-visser, I was slated for a host who held
a vital position. My mother, the chief of police. I betrayed her, of
course. Helped them take her involuntarily."
Her eyes flickered. Shame? Surely not. Not from the Yeerk. But the
human? The human who was half of this split personality? Maybe.
"I didn't want her, the older woman. I wanted these memories. I wanted
the life I knew would be mine when the Yeerks, when my people, had
repaired the body. And now, I am beautiful once again," she said
triumphantly. "But look at you! Look at what you've become! How pathetic
your hawk body is! A nothing creature. All for nothing."
<No. You're a weak, misguided human girl. And you are also insane.>
She hung her head. For a long time she said nothing. Looked at nothing.
Then, at last, she raised her face to me and smiled.
"Then join me in my madness, Andalite," she said and sent my body and
mind reeling into hell.
124
blue button glowed. I laughed crazily. Like being tickled, I couldn't stop.
And then:
I threw myself against the side of the cube. My beak cracked. Splinters
of pain electrified my face.
The red button roared and I was gripped with grief. My aunt's voice: /
don't want him! He's nothing to me. Where does Loren get off dumping him
here?
<Stop!> I cried again, barely able to speak. I fell into a corner. The
room was dimming quickly now. The light that had seemed so bright was
just a dull glow. Disappearing.
Disappearing . . .
Ax, Jake, Cassie, Marco. How could they do this to me?! Abandon me here!
I hate everyone who isn't here. Who isn't going through this with me.
<Ahhhh!>
What did this lunatic girl want from me? What did she want? She no
longer cared what she got out of me. This was pain for its own sake.
Hurt for no purpose but to hurt.
She would kill me. No, no, she wouldn't! She would keep me alive, alive
in this inferno.
126 <l'll tell you,> I screamed. <Yes, I'll tell you! Ax ... in the
woods. Cassie. Jake. Marco. All just human kids. Anything . . . anything
to make it end!>
No sound coming from me. Or did she not hear? Or was I not making a
sound? Was I even still alive?
Dimming . . .
And I was walking in the woods. A path lined with trees whose upper
boughs met in cathedral arches. Near the school. After a play we'd put
on. "Is your father here tonight?" the teacher had asked.
127 of me? I looked beyond it into the evening sky. And froze.
Two moons cast a warm yellow light over the woods. Over thick
asparagus-spear trees.
What!
<Tobias,> he said.
<Don't be afraid.>
I watched as a tail arced upward. Curved slowly over his back and moved
toward me.
A new surge of memories! But how? How can they be memories when I
haven't lived them? They're new to me, though they seem like mine. No,
these were not my own.
They were . . .
128 <Pull up! Pull up! War-Prince Elfangor!> An urgent transmission from
the commander of the fighter squadron. On the view screen: a Des-badeen
tanker in the distinctive figure eight design.
Every particle of my body focused on the hole of the figure eight. Guide
the ship through that opening. Clearing it was my only hope.
129 / fumbled wildly for the clasps. The sides of the ship scraped and
erupted into fire. Searing heat scorched my arms and flank.
Ka-choomp!
The ship ejected me into space. But I couldn't clear the Desbadeen
craft! The gray wall of steel filled my vision!
<Ahhhh!>
Rods of fire in every bone. My body tossed from wall to wall as the pod
hurtled uncontrollably through space. Stars streaked the blackness. The
Dome ship. Too far. . . too far. I was alone.
Red colored the air. Screams and bellowing filled my head. The battle
raged on the Taxxon home world.
"Sssseeeeeyaaa!"
"Sssreeee!"
130 atinous eyes. Those who say you can't read emotion in Taxxon eyes
are fools. I saw terror there. A plea for life. My hearts pounded. Nausea.
"Ssssnnnnaaaaa!"
I cut a gaping hole in its side. It released my arm. Fell to the ground,
shrieking in agony. I turned, and with a retching noise expelled the
morning's grass.
I stood on the grass near the Dome ship's lake. Stared into the crystals
that grew up from the water. A seductive, hypnotic green.
Loren. I longed to have her here next to me. To hear her say my name. To
see our son.
I performed a ritual for his safety and health.
Five years since the Ellimist returned me to my proper time. Five years
since I left my life on Earth to resume Andalite form and honor my duty.
The icy tail blade against my forehead cooled my fevered mind. Kept me
alive.
131 <You're not alone in your suffering. You may die, Tobias, but never
alone. You are one in a legion of great warriors. Valiant Andalites who
have died for freedom. Your lineage is courage and bravery. If you live,
you carry our torch. A burden carried by many. A singular honor. . .>
<l'll make the Andalite filth talk!> Visser Three's far-off, threatening
voice struck my ear.
Just as the light was about to extinguish, I felt the torture device
flicker, and stop. The pinprick of light began to grow. Until at last I
no longer looked into darkness, but saw the cube around me. I was
flattened against the floor. Defeated, but alive.
He stood behind Taylor. Her face was blank. No emotion. Then I saw her
glance down at the floor. At the hatch that opened onto the starved
Taxxons below.
Two Hork-Bajir banged through the door just behind the Visser. They
carried a thick pole slung through a large wire cage. In the cage, a
bald eagle.
An eagle!
<This eagle was found near the community center. How audacious and
foolhardy of your
133 friends, Andalite! For we have seen the bandits use this morph before.>
<Tell me all you know. Or I will feed your fellow Andalite to the Taxxons.>
The bird was badly injured. With a broken wing. Blood ran down its leg.
Feathers matted and missing from the chest.
I breathed.
<You dare defy me! You dare resist!> He swung his tail blade and whipped
his stalk eyes savagely. <Now!> he screamed.
The hatch remained closed. Instead the door opened and two slobbering
Taxxons, monstrous centipedes, skittered in on their rows of needle legs.
<No! This one will die! That one,> he pointed at me, <will talk.>
A Hork-Bajir undid the latch. The Taxxons rushed the cage, knocking it
over in their eagerness. The eagle flapped and squawked, but it was over
in a few bites.
I was coming back to life. I even tried to rise. The visser peered in at
me, disappointed. But no longer in an eager rage.
<Kill this one, too,> he said flatly. <But do it slowly. See if you can,
at least, do this much well,> sneered the visser as he turned and left
the room.
This would be it. I knew that. I would die in the next round of torture.
I would try to die well. I braced myself for the attack, took a last
look around the room. It was just me, the sub-visser, and twelve hulking
Hork-Bajir.
And ...
I stumbled back.
136 I knocked my head against the glass just to make sure I was
conscious. I was. So what I saw growing up from the floor, behind the
sub-visser, was no mirage!
135
Ax?
<The others jumped off outside,> he said, as if he'd read my mind. <They
will be along shortly. As soon as I open the door. We morphed fleas to
travel on the body of the doomed bald eagle from Cassie's barn.>
"Hear me, Andalite," Taylor said to me. "You've caused me to lose the
visser's trust. You may well have destroyed me. And now, I will make you
pay. Oh, yes. I've given you pain. I've given you pleasure. You've
experienced them in succession. But never both at once. I will tear your
mind apart!"
Fwapp!
Fwapp!
The nearest Hork-Bajir went down, not even knowing what had hit him.
Rachel.
She looked at me. Even with dim bear vision she could guess what had
happened to me.
138 Marco shoved Taylor rudely aside. He had no way of knowing who she
was. What she was.
<0h, it's a gorilla, all right, lady!> Marco yelled. <But this here is
the new, improved gorilla morph. Now with tools.>
He reached the wall and heaved a grappling hook into the air. Over a
steel beam. It clanked and connected.
Three Hork-Bajir dashed after Marco. Jake let rip a fearsome roar.
A blur of Andalite tail blade and one was down. A snarl and chomp of
wolf jaws and another fell to the floor, cradling his leg. That left
five. Five dazzling, muscular machines of destruction.
Marco leaped at the wall. Feet against it, hands clutching the rope, he
climbed quickly toward the ceiling. Nostrils flaring. His small eyes
widening as he strained in rhythmic grunts toward his goal.
139 Taylor was running for the weapon cabinet, torture device in hand.
Cassie grabbed her heel. Yanked back and forth.
"Get off me! Yahhh!" She slammed Cassie across the muzzle with the
control device.
Marco was swinging from conduit to conduit now. Flying across the
ceiling like a giant monkey in the rain forest canopy. Two Hork-Bajir
were in pursuit, just one swing behind. Another midway up the rope. It
wasn't hard to tell they had evolved as tree-dwellers. Marco grabbed for
a smaller pipe.
<Waaaaahhh!>
It was no pipe at all! Just a bundle of wires, unsecured. They began to
snap under Marco's weight.
Kkkkkkkeeehh! Kkkkeh!
Sparks flew as the wires broke. But Marco held on, clutching the cable
like a vine, swinging desperately to reach the cube. One of the
Hork-Bajir dangled from a nearby beam. He raised his elbow blades into
position and slashed the wire.
A blue flash!
140 Thwoomp!
Two mammoth gorilla feet struck the top of my cube. It swayed violently
and smacked me against the wall.
<Sorry, man!> Marco yelled as he wrapped a giant hand around the steel
cable that suspended the cube. <But there's a time for delicacy and this
ain't it!> He tightened thick fingers around a bolt head, securing the
top of my cube to the cable. He twisted with all his might, trying to
loosen the connection that held me a helpless, dangling prisoner.
BOOM!BOOM!
BOOM!BOOM!
Four clawlike Hork-Bajir feet etched the top of the cube. Sent it
bobbing out of control.
"Gilaaaaaaa!"
Floomp. Tasssshh!
He crashed to the floor. Green-blue blood began to ooze from his chest.
Impaled on his own tail blade!
We were an out-of-control pendulum. How could the other Hork-Bajir
maintain?!
And then I saw how. He had found a hold. And the hold was Marco's flank.
141 contorted with agony, teeth bared, pressed onto the glass.
<Ahhhhhhh!> he screamed.
Red droplets began to spatter the top of the glass. The Hork-Bajir had
slashed and embedded a wrist blade deep in Marco's flesh. The more they
struggled, the more we bobbed. An unan-chored raft.
<No,> he gasped.
The sub-visser spun 180 degrees. From the weapon cabinet to the room's
center. She extended her arm. Her hand clutched a Dracon beam. Aimed . . .
<Marco!> I screamed.
Two more Hork-Bajir landed on the cube. "Arrrgh!" Taylor shouted. Cassie
leaped and knocked her down. Too late! She fired.
143 SB
C-H--BPT-E-R
ISEEEEW!
Dracon fire.
Keeeew!
KABLAMMMMM!
"Ghalaaaa!"
<Yeeaaaaaahhhh!>
Shards of glass shot out from the impact like shrapnel. Drawing blood
indiscriminately.
144 Wumph.
The dead weight of a Hork-Bajir arm collapsed onto me and held me down,
my back to the floor. I looked up through a hole, a cylinder burned
clean through his upper arm by Dracon fire!
Marco dangled from the red-hot wire. Flesh and hair began to sizzle.
Pain wracked my body. As though the impact had fractured every bone. But
I was conscious. Morph! Focus! The snarls and snorts of battle throbbed
in my ears as violence raged around me. I felt the changes begin.
Suddenly the Hork-Bajir body was lifted and thrown aside. I was
startled, vulnerable. I stopped the morph, twin Andalite arms budding
from my chest.
Blond hair glittered. Spotlights. An iron-strong hand closed over my
seven small fingers. Crushing them!
The sub-visser!
She yanked me across the piercing glass. Began to drag me across the
floor. But then let me
145 drop and ran back toward the destroyed cube like she'd forgotten
something.
<Help!> My voice issued as a dry hiss. Jake and Ax, two-on-five with
Hork-Bajir, couldn't hear my cry. The sub-visser picked through glassy
rubble and found what she was looking for: the miniature copy of the
control panel. With the larger control under one arm and the smaller one
in her hand, she headed for me again.
<Help!> I called again, desperate. But I was too weak! Cassie couldn't
hear me. I watched as she leaped off the table onto Hork-Bajir
shoulders, knocking him down.
Only Marco saw me. He moved to run, but collapsed to the ground in a
spasm of pain.
I tried to force the morph. Faster! Where was the tail! The blade!
<Ahhhh!>
I felt the red circle cut into my back. Cripple me. Then stop. She was
striking at me again with the torture device. But why now?
Again she clutched my delicate Andalite fingers. Out through the door
she dragged me. Onto a sort of balcony. Maybe forty feet long, but very
146 narrow. Not more than four feet wide. Projected out off the rock
face. Running into a small tunnel at the far end. An observation deck?
In an underground network of narrow tunnels? A putrid, earthy odor
filled my lungs. A stench I ...
"I don't know what you are!" the sub-visser yelled to make herself heard
over the shrieks of protestation from the involuntary controllers caged
at the Yeerk pool's edge, and the less horrific acoustic wash of the
dome. "I don't know what power you possess, that you can morph be-
148 yond the two-hour limit." An inhuman hatred coated her words. "But I
know that I don't care. You will die! Die! Die!"
She tightened her grip until the bones in my fingers cracked audibly.
And then, she released her hold.
147
"Let go!" she screeched, struggling to shake off my fingers. "Let go,
you filthy grass eater!"
Still holding the smaller control device in her other hand, she moved to
pry off my hold. The device slipped out of her hand.
I looked down and saw the control device replica still falling. Falling
Cooonk!
149 It hit a metal storage building and ricocheted off the wall of the
lower landing.
"You little . . ." She strained to reach me. To knock me off and send me
careening to the cavern floor. I was just beyond her grab. It was a
matter of seconds now. That's how much longer I could hold on. My
fingers were slipping. I was heavy. I was running on nothing but
adrenaline and that would give out in ...
"Rrrrrooowwrrr!"
Two brown claws closed over her shoulders, pulled back before she could
scream. I heard a thud and I knew she'd gone down hard.
A grizzly bear claw reached over the balcony, gripped my back, lifted me
up. Taylor lay incredulous on the floor. I focused on finishing the
morph to Andalite.
150 Rachel's mass filled the balcony. She began to growl. Deep, continuous.
She picked the sub-visser up off the floor. Taylor struggled, but
without result. Rachel's grip was unwavering, strong. She bellowed an
animal cry of retaliation.
For a split second, time froze. And I saw Rachel and Taylor
face-to-face. One strong. Her morph a crazy manifestation of an inner
strength and bravery. One weak. This girl for whom appearance had been
everything, honor nothing. This poor girl whose weakness had made her
easy prey for the Yeerks. And I felt pity. Pity for my torturer.
Rachel's claws closed on Taylor's neck. Crushing her esophagus. She was
turning blue, suffocating.
<She dies, Tobias. For what she did to you, she dies.> She moved as if
to slam Taylor against the wall.
<She will,> I said. <This is the Yeerk who lost a prisoner. Leave her to
Visser Three.>
152 Lt was a windy day. Sunny. We were all there, all but Rachel who'd
had something to do with her dad.
We were all in human form. Even Ax and me. I sat on the sand at the
beach. The breeze whipping my hair. The waves racing up the shore.
Ax was sitting next to me, unpacking a kite he had made out of scrap
wood strips and paper bags. Untangling the string. Preparing for a test
flight. A human hobby he said he found unaccountably peaceful.
Cassie was down nearer the water, scanning for any injured life.
153 Jake and Marco were playing catch, forcing levity. Jake rocketed a
flawless spiral through the air.
"Ax?" I said.
"Yes, Tobias?"
Ax made a sort of gasping sound and dropped his spool of string. His
eyes were wide with a startling intensity.
"A blade? Against your forehead . . ." He trailed off, his voice quaking
with surprise.
"Ax. What?"
He was clearly disturbed. Like I had just shaken his reality. The wind
began to drag his kite across the sand. He didn't care. Just sat there,
absorbed in his thoughts. I ran after the thing and brought it back to him.
154 He shook off whatever it was and regained his customary composure.
A flash of gold. Way down the beach. A tall, graceful form pushing over
the dunes to meet us. Rachel!
I jumped up. Ax was back to work on his kite, muttering something about
thick, clumsy human fingers. The others all now engaged in a game of
Frisbee that seemed to involve a lot of splashing.
And suddenly I had my arms around her. I buried my face in her hair. She
held me tightly.
"Yeah," I whispered. "Real bad. I came close to, you know. Awfully
close. I was so ... I mean, I didn't..." I took a couple of shaky
breaths. "I lost myself. Didn't know who I was. Not sure I do now."
Then, she said, "Hey, it's nice and warm. But there are some killer
thermals."
I smiled. "Let's fly."
"Okay, now let's fly," she said and laughed her wild, wicked,
self-mocking Rachel laugh.
And in a short time we were coasting on a thermal, high over the beach.
Over the distant hills. Over the city. Over everything.
The memory of the mission was far behind. The close call with death
forgotten. For a while.
Three days had passed. Three days of having the strange, sad secret
Andalite-turned-Hork-Bajir in my head.
Sleeping with her on the hard, cold deck. Awakened shaking, sweating,
wanting to tear my head open with my bare hands as I felt the awesome
grief of her nightmares.
Eating with her, if you could call the concentrated nutrient pellets
food. Going to the bathroom with her. A lot more togetherness than I'd
have preferred. Bad enough figuring out how to pee in a toilet designed
for Hork-Bajir. Worse doing it with an audience in your own head.
158 for the most part. I'd learned nothing more about him. Was this
really some voyage of redemption for him? Aldrea doubted it. And she
knew a hundred percent more about the Arn than I knew.
Jake was talking with Quafijinivon when we translated out of the blank
white nothingness of Zero-space into what now seemed to be the warm,
welcoming black star field.
"Quafijinivon says we are now in Hork-Bajir space. We may pass the Yeerk
defenses unnoticed. Or not," Jake announced. "We should get ready. We
don't know what we'll be walking into. I want everyone ..."
"Yes, Marco."
Jake blinked. Then he grinned. He and Marco have been best friends
forever. Marco knows how to knock Jake down a peg when Jake starts
taking his fearless leader role too seriously.
"I don't see why we couldn't have gone Z-space the whole way," Marco whined.
159 ized they were both laughing at the same thing and they both stopped
laughing.
"Just say it," Marco told them. "I am but a poor Earth man, unable to
understand the ways of the superior Andalite beings."
"Shredder fire!" Aldrea yelled, and suddenly I was up and running toward
the front of the ship. She had taken control of my body! It was so
sudden, so effortless.
Ax reached the "bridge" first. He leaned his torso forward and looked
over Quafijinivon's shoulder.
Tseeeeeew!
The Andalite fired again. A miss! But the cold, hard data from the
computer made it clear exactly how close it had come.
160 one of his engines or something. Enough to keep him busy until we
can land. They can't follow us down."
Ax and Aldrea both said roughly the same thing, which translated to
human vernacular was, <You've got that right.>
"So we let him shoot us down?" Rachel demanded. "There's one of him,
seven of us. Or eight."
The Andalite fighter was coming back around in a tight, swift arc. In a
few seconds his weapons would come to bear on us.
<l cannot fire on a fellow Andalte who is merely doing his duty. Do not
ask me,> Ax pleaded. <Maybe I could communicate ->