Read Atherton #3: The Dark Planet (No. 3) Online
Authors: Patrick Carman
Tags: #Science fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure - General, #Children's Books, #Children's & young adult fiction & true stories, #YA), #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Ages 9-12 Fiction, #Children: Grades 4-6, #Young Adult Fiction, #Science fiction (Children's, #Adventure and adventurers, #Orphans, #Life on other planets, #Adventure fiction, #Social classes, #Science Fiction; Fantasy; Magic, #Atherton (Imaginary place), #Space colonies
scurrying off in clusters and
baa
ing as they went.
"You're bothering my sheep."
Edgar jumped back and lost his footing, dropping the tablet with
a bang as it landed badly on the rocks below. It was the
shepherdess Maude, out watching the herd much later than
he'd expected.
"Sorry, Maude... I was just passing through on my way to the
grove."
Edgar and Maude knew each other well. They both understood
the secretive nature of the other.
"I see," said Maude. She was a portly woman with a round face,
known for her strong personality.
Maude leaned against a shepherd's staff and clicked her
tongue in the direction of the herd.
"Edgar's not going to hurt you. He's only sneaking back from
someplace he doesn't want anyone knowing about."
Maude raised an eyebrow at Edgar and locked her eyes with
his in the dim light of night. She was worried about him, but she
also wouldn't pry or try to stop him. After all that Edgar had
accomplished in the past she had learned to let him go about
his business.
"I have to leave for a little while," said Edgar, knowing Maude
would understand.
Maude stabbed the end of the staff into the dirt and looked off
toward the lake.
"Where are you planning to go? There's not much around the
other side."
She had been all the way around the lake in search of pastures
and found nothing better than the ground she stood on.
Edgar didn't answer. He had discovered a crack along one side
of the tablet. The two sides were still stuck together at the
middle, but in the faint light Edgar could see that one had been
damaged.
"What have you got there?"
"Something I found. I'd like Samuel to have it, because there's a
lot of writing."
Then and there Edgar struck on an idea.
"Would you give it to him for me?"
Like the majority of people on Atherton, Maude couldn't read.
She didn't want any part of books or words, so there was no risk
in having her discover what the words said. She took the tablet
and examined it curiously.
"Where are you going, Edgar?"
Edgar hesitated before answering, but in the end he knew he
couldn't leave his friends without telling them where he'd gone.
"I'm leaving Atherton, but I'll be back. Make sure you tell them
I'm coming right back. I won't be gone long."
"What do you mean, leaving Atherton?" asked Maude, stricken
with fear for the boy. "You're not making any sense, Edgar."
"Tell Samuel there are things hidden inside," said Edgar,
pointing to the tablet. "If he can get the two sides to slide apart.
And tell Isabel I'm sorry--I'm really, really sorry. I didn't have a
choice. I had to go."
"Go where, Edgar?"
Edgar looked back toward the Raven, hidden in the night. He
simply couldn't imagine leaving his friends without telling them.
"The Dark Planet. To find out why we're here."
This news came as a shock to Maude. The Dark Planet? The
words rang in her head and she knew them. There was a buried
memory that would not surface, but it left a lingering feeling.
And, oddly, a smell. Like something burning, but what? She
sniffed the air deeply but it was gone.
My memory is playing
tricks on me,
she thought. She shook her head and looked
again at Edgar.
"I'll give this to Samuel," said Maude. She knew from
experience that Edgar was venturing out on his own and that
he'd have it no other way. She removed a pack from around her
shoulders. Inside were figs, bread, and a leather pouch of
water. Maude had often come out in the night, only to find
herself sleeping with the sheep and waking hungry and thirsty.
"It's my breakfast," she said, holding out the bag. "Take it with
you. Who knows where your next meal will come from?"
"This is just what I needed!" said Edgar. "Thank you, Maude!"
"And I'll tell them where you've gone."
Maude put her arms around Edgar and they embraced for a
long moment. For Edgar it felt like Atherton itself was holding
him and wouldn't let him go. It aimed to keep him here, to keep
him from knowledge it didn't want Edgar to have.
"Are you sure you want to do this?" asked Maude. "What if
you're about to see things you were never supposed to know
about?"
Edgar pulled away and backed up a few paces, sure Maude
was going to try to stop him.
"I can't stay here, Maude. I just can't."
He steadied Maude's pack on his shoulders and walked away,
expecting Maude to follow. But she didn't.
In the deepest part of night on Atherton, Samuel and Isabel
waited at the edge of the crevice for their friend to return. They
wondered where he had gone and vowed to wait all night if they
had to. They fretted over his safety and guessed at what he was
doing.
The Raven moved in silence, invisible against the dark sky.
Samuel and Isabel couldn't have known that before their very
eyes, as they looked out over the edge, their closest friend was
leaving Atherton without them.
THE SILO
If ever I return,
It will be on Gossamer's wings.
DR. MAXIMUS HARDING
INTO HIDDEN REALMS
CHAPTER 10THE FORSAKEN
WOOD
Sunrise on the Dark Planet was the saddest time of all. At night
a person could look out from the sterile safety of Station Seven
and imagine every thing was perfectly fine. There was so much
less devastation to see when things were truly dark, and this
made the dawning of each new day all the more depressing.
"What was that?" said Commander Judix from her bed. She
thought she'd heard something from the direction of the
forsaken wood.
Cleaners and Spikers looking for food?
Lacking evidence, her dismal outlook always pointed to the
worst possible scenario. If only she had allowed herself to
imagine what had
really
made the sound. She would have
discovered the arrival of a vessel from the forgotten world of
Atherton.
She opened her eyes and saw the time. Six a.m. Another hour,
maybe two, and she would have to face Hope, the acting
mother in the Silo next door. It was an encounter she looked
forward to with a mounting sense of dread.
Escaping her bed and flopping down in the safety of her chair
was a complicated business, but one she was proud to handle
on her own. She had always preferred to manage these difficult
tasks herself without the aid of some idiot feeling sorry for her.
And she didn't want any fake parts attached to her, either. Her
legs were gone and that was that.
Commander Judix rolled her chair to a small window and
looked out. To gaze at the forsaken wood in the pale morning
light was to see the shattered remains of what once was. The
trees were last to go. They looked for all the world like a stand
in the deepest part of winter, or a burned-out forest reaching
helplessly towards the sky. It was the smog that made a person
realize the trees could never return. It snaked through grey
limbs, strangling their trunks. And somewhere in there were
monsters of a kind Commander Judix couldn't think of without
trembling.
She rolled away from the window and opened a cooling unit.
There was a small plastic bottle of milky water inside and she
removed it, mixed in two spoonfuls of white powder from a
container, and gulped it down. It left a chalky white film that
made her compulsively chew and lick at her waxy lips until the
feeling went away. There were small bars of food in the cooling
unit as well, and she took one, eating it without the slightest
emotion.
Commander Judix rolled in front of a mirror and pinned up her
brown hair. She hadn't washed it in nine days, not because
there was no water, but because the thought of having it dry and
brittle after a good scrubbing was almost too much to bear. After
five days her hair was soft as silk. She could run her fingers
through it for hours and not tire of the feeling. Soft hair was
something she could control, a small but meaningful pleasure
she hated giving up.
Looking again at the time, Commander Judix decided there was
probably enough of the early morning left to ride down the
corridor to Dr. Harding's laboratory. She hadn't been there in so
long, but things were getting desperate. Against her better
judgment she couldn't help but maintain enough hope to at
least check the old lab every few weeks. What if the blip
returned and Atherton came back online?
"I wonder what bad news today wil bring?" she said. She didn't
have to wait as long as she'd expected for trouble to arrive.
Already she could hear the familiar sound of footsteps coming
down the corridor that led to the Silo. From the distinctive long
stride and a light step, she could tell that Hope was coming.
Remember who's in charge here. Don't let her push you around.
Commander Judix rolled to the door and opened it.
"I won't let you take them. They're too young."
Hope had long since given up saluting or offering any other
signs of respect. As far as she was concerned this was not the
president or the supreme ruler. Station Seven was no longer a
command post doing important scientific work. It was an outpost
of the apocalypse like all the others. Some of the old rules of
behavior simply didn't apply.
"You're calling a little early this morning, don't you think?"
"You can't have them,"
Hope declared. She was a tall, graceful
woman with black skin. Her hair was very short and peppered
with white. She had the fierce eyes of a mother protecting her
children.
"We have no choice," said Commander Judix, engaging her
chair. Hope jumped out of the way as it passed by and started
toward Dr. Harding's laboratory.
"Don't do this, Jane," said Hope. She watched as Commander
Judix's chair stopped, spun around, and motored back. Hope
had called the commander by her first name, something she
hadn't done in a very long time.
Commander Judix looked up at the tall woman in front of her
with icy resolve. "We agreed that if you stayed you wouldn't
make trouble. Coming over here--
badgering
me this way at six
in the morning--and calling me that
name
... it's a lot of trouble all
at once."
Hope knew she was on shaky ground. She commanded almost
no power at Station Seven, less it seemed as time had gone on.
She had come to the Station as a doctor, but it was the children
who made her stay long after almost everyone had fled. It was
Hope's job, in the face of so much darkness, to keep the
youngest abandoned and orphaned children of the Silo from
dying before her eyes.
"You told me you'd never go below 4200," said Hope. She was
fighting mad. "You let two tyrants run the Silo and ship these
kids off to God knows where"--Hope trembled
momentarily--"Shelton said you might even take a
ten
-year-old.
You can't do that, Jane! I won't let you take them."
"Stop calling me that name!" Commander Judix screamed with
such force her emotionless, pallid face actually shaded with
color.
They heard steps clattering from two or three different
directions, the empty tin echo bouncing every where. It was
hard to say how many people were on their way.
"If I ask for a ten-year-old, you'll give me a ten-year-old," said
Commander Judix, trying with all her might to remain calm. "Or
would you rather I shut this whole operation down? Where will
all your precious children go then?"
Hope knew the awful truth. There was only one person who
could shut down Station Seven, and that was Commander
Judix. She alone kept the station running. It had been her
sickening idea from the beginning, but it was also a sort of
insurance policy. Every ten days she went to a keypad and
punched in a series of nine numbers. If the numbers weren't
entered, the power grid would go into irreversible shutdown.
Within a few days the air filters would fail, the defenses would
be down, every thing would be over.
"I know where I'll go when I don't enter the numbers," continued
Commander Judix. "I'm a former leader of the free world. Just
because this place has failed doesn't mean I can't escape. I've
already held on for years longer than anyone else would have.
There are plenty of places in this broken-down world where I
can sit this out in peace and quiet until the very end."
She was lying, of course. Station Seven was better than most
other places on the Dark Planet. The remaining enclaves,
scattered across the globe, were overcrowded, disease ridden,
and always short on food and water.
"What's happened to you?" asked Hope.
"When was the last time you looked outside?" asked
Commander Judix. "Our choices become more limited every
day. Our choices become
harder.
And I have to make those