Read i e4a5a8edf2d8eda0 Online
Authors: Unknown
volley. Coughing explosions left fresh craters in the field, but the tendrilless were overreacting.
Jommy continued to dodge, spinning the wheels right and then left.
Petty, who had not properly strapped himself in, was thrown sideways into Kier Gray. The
deposed President shoved him away in a tangle of arms and legs.
As the woods loomed in front of them and the tendrilless ships closed in, Jommy knew he
would have to crash and dodge his way through the trunks, grind underbrush with his wheels,
and hope the armor could withstand any impacts.
One of the dropped bombs exploded right behind the vehicle, and the concussion threw
the car several feet in the air. After they crashed to the ground, Jommy spun and swerved, still
accelerating toward the forest.
Flying low, the first enemy bomber streaked past the car, its pilot furious at having missed.
He skimmed just above the speeding vehicle, as if he meant to smash the car’s roof with his
landing wheels.
Tall trees loomed up like a wall directly in front of the attacking craft. The tendrilless pilot
pulled up frantically, but too late. Unable to clear the treetops, the attack craft scraped the high
branches, which ripped out the underbelly. Hurtling out of control, the tendrilless fighter
reeled, arced around, and plunged like a missile into the ground.
While the others in the car cheered, Jommy couldn’t let his attention waver for a second.
He drove headlong through the small marker fence and into the line of trees. Once in the
forest, he was forced to slow, threading his way through the randomly spaced trunks. Branches
crashed and crunched beneath him. He caromed off a thick spruce, ripping away a great
chunk of bark, then he lumbered through a gully, spraying dry leaves. Ahead, the forest was
even thicker.
The two remaining tendrilless bombers soared over the treetops, still searching. Now that
their comrade was dead, Jommy knew they would never give up. The canopy was dense
enough that they could not easily see the car, but they must have some kind of technological
scanners that could pick up the heat of his engine or the ten-point steel of the vehicle’s armor.
He knocked down a small tree, which did not even damage the reinforced fender. The
gauges showed the engines overheating. He crunched along, plowing a path through the
woods, all the while knowing he couldn’t hide.
The two invader ships came back over the treetops in a methodical search pattern. When
they spotted the car and homed in on it, they dropped another volley of aerial bombs. They
meant to destroy the whole forest if they needed to.
Jommy saw them coming. “Hold on! We can’t get away from this.” Despite himself, he
closed his eyes, hoping the armor would be sufficient against the destruction.
Like fireworks, a dozen explosions erupted through the woods. Fireballs knocked down
trees; blast waves snapped trunks like toothpicks. All around the car, tall pines and oaks
toppled. Boughs smashed across the car’s roof and hood. A towering pine crashed immediately
to their left, scraping and scratching with its needle-filled branches. A thick, shattered trunk
fell on top of them like a sledge hammer, burying them.
But the car’s armor held.
As the fire continued to swell and trees fell all around, the car was trapped under the
avalanche of broken wood. Completely trapped. Even when the trees stopped falling, the blaze
increased in intensity, rapidly becoming an inferno that spread through the forest. The car was
immobilized, caught in the heart of a furnace.
Jommy shut down the systems. “There. We’re completely safe.”
«
^
»
As the librarian stared at her baby’s exposed tendrils, Anthea’s own thrill of fear was echoed
and doubled in her mind. The newborn somehow knew that he had been discovered—and
instinctively understood the danger to both of them.
“Oh, my!” Mr. Reynolds took a half step backward. He raised his hands in a warding
gesture, as if afraid he had touched something that might contaminate him.
Anthea tried to come closer. “Please, Mr. Reynolds! It’s not what you think.”
His eyes wide and round, the librarian jumped, as if he wanted to bolt out into the streets,
regardless of the danger. “Not what I
think
? I think it’s a slan baby!” He blinked several times,
gaping at the child. “Yes, indeed, I’m sure it’s a slan baby.”
“Believe me, we’re no threat to you—”
Outside, thunderous explosions made the walls shudder. The candles threw uncertain light
and strange shadows.
The librarian made a quick move and dashed around the table. “Help!”
Anthea bounded in front of him, drawing strength from what she had been through, from
what she knew might happen. She picked up one of the heavy tomes on the table. Without
thinking, she swung it hard and bashed him on the back of the head. The hardcover hit his
skull with a loud thump. Reynolds let out a heavy “oof,” then sprawled face first on the
polished floor. His round glasses bounced off his face and clattered to one side.
Anthea knelt beside him, her heart pounding. “I didn’t mean that! I’m so sorry, but you
didn’t give me any choice.”
The librarian groaned, though he remained unconscious. Anthea touched his head, then
the pulse at his neck. “I think you’ll be all right.” She looked at the book with which she had
hit him, noted the irony. The title was
The Hidden Slan Threat
.
On the table, the baby had turned his head so he could see her. She felt the continued
strange connection with him. Her infant son seemed very aware of what was happening, and
she felt a wash of secondhand relief coming from him, confident that his mother had taken
care of the threat.
Anthea hated herself for hurting Mr. Reynolds. She had never been a violent person. She
worked in a bank! Before today, she had never struck another person. But she had seen the
doctor try to kill her newborn baby, and her own husband had been gunned down trying to
protect them. When she’d fled, more people had tried to kill her. The city had been bombed,
and now Earth itself was in the middle of a war. Anthea was fighting not only for her life, but
for their child’s as well. A slan child—a slan born from two apparently normal people.
She had been driven to do many extraordinary things this day, and she feared she would
be forced to do many more.
In order to stay safe, she had to keep the librarian out of her way. Finding strength, she
rolled Mr. Reynolds over, picked up his hands, and began to drag him down the slippery hall.
Either through adrenaline or newfound physical strength, Anthea pulled the heavyset man
along without difficulty. Conscientiously, she picked up his eyeglasses, folded down the bows,
and tucked them into his pocket. She didn’t want to inconvenience the man any more than
she had to. Knocking him unconscious was bad enough.
The librarian’s office was just outside of the archives wing. She could tie him up there, and
she needed him safely out of the way before he regained consciousness. She hated to leave her
baby alone even if the room was not far away, but she could sense that the child was in no
immediate danger.
Inside the librarian’s office, stacks of books and periodicals were on Reynolds’s desk, on the
floor, on top of filing cabinets. Neatly lettered labels on colored index cards identified each
stack. Plastic wrappers and open cardboard boxes indicated that the man did much
cataloguing of his new acquisitions here. For a large city library, Reynolds didn’t seem to have
very much staff. At the moment, she was glad that no one else was in the large building.
On a special table were five old books, dog-eared, their spines cracked and dust jackets
torn. But they had been lovingly taped and bandaged, the bindings reglued. She could picture
Reynolds spending hours under his bright desk lamp, like a surgeon performing an operation
on these beloved and well-read tomes.
She wrestled Mr. Reynolds into the chair behind his desk, then looked around for
something to tie him with. When nothing obvious presented itself other than cellophane tape
on the desk dispenser, she removed the librarian’s blue striped necktie and quickly lashed his
wrists to the chair arms. Then she unthreaded the laces from his black Oxford shoes and used
those to tie his ankles in place. When that didn’t seem terribly secure, she also used the full roll
of tape.
When he groaned, she felt sorry again for what she’d been forced to do. It seemed so unfair.
Reynolds had been kind to her. She didn’t want to hurt him. She had never wanted to hurt
anybody—but the slan hunters had certainly changed that. With herself and her baby at stake,
she couldn’t trust anyone. But Anthea loved her baby far more than Reynolds could ever love
his books. The man would be safe enough here until someone else rescued him.
Anthea took a sheet of paper from the desk and quickly scrawled a note. “I’m very sorry.
We didn’t mean to hurt you. I did not ask for this, but I had to protect my child. I hope
someday you’ll forgive us.”
Rummaging in his desk drawer, she found a set of keys in a red envelope with a
hand-written word.
Archives
. For the padlock that secured the combination wheels? She took
the keys. Even without thinking, she knew she would have to open the vault and discover
what secret information the government had hidden from the public. Why didn’t they want
anybody to know the truth about the slans?
She ran back to the thick vault door and its heavy combination wheels. The padlock itself
couldn’t have been more than a minor deterrent for anyone determined to break in, but it was
one extra time-consuming step. She removed the key from the red envelope, inserted then
twisted it. When the padlock popped open, she removed it with one hand and set it aside.
The large combination wheels that locked the heavy vault were ready for her. In her mind
she remembered the combination Mr. Reynolds had so vividly recalled, the numbers that her
baby had detected with his slan tendrils. 4 - 26 - 19 - 12.
The baby’s bright eyes watched as Anthea turned the first wheel, felt it clicking through
numbers. She stopped at the mark for 4, ratcheted the next wheel into its appropriate position,
then the third, and finally the fourth. She heard a humming inside. It wasn’t just a simple gear
lock: She had activated an entire mechanism. Pistons and deadbolts rose up and down, pulling
aside, clicking into place, and with a hiss like a tired sigh, the vault door moved out of its
frame.
She bunched the soft blanket to prop the infant’s small head as she picked him up from
the table. Holding the baby, Anthea stepped back as the thick barrier groaned open. The
hinges and heavy hydraulics seemed well-lubricated and maintained.
She wondered how often anyone ever studied these archives. Considering the security
Mr. Reynolds had mentioned and how few curiosity seekers the government allowed, she
doubted very many had read the information contained within.
But now she intended to.
«
^
»
With Jommy’s car buried under the inferno of collapsed trees, he had sealed off the vehicle’s
environment systems, opaqued the windows, and switched on the air scrubbers and recyclers.
Then he sat back to wait.
He reassured his companions. “This may look like a normal car, but it’s practically a
battleship on wheels. The armor is sufficient against any temperatures a mere forest fire can
generate. The self-contained air systems can last for a day underwater, so they’ll easily filter out
a little smoke. It might get a little warm in here, but I prefer to call it cozy.”
“Have you ever tested it under those conditions?” Petty asked, clearly uneasy.
“Not exactly, but you can trust my calculations.”
While the forest fire burned for the next three hours, the car was buried in a furnace of
coals. Though the interior temperature became uncomfortably warm, the four occupants were
never in real danger. By the time night had fallen, the blaze had begun to die down. The
barricade of fallen trees and branches that had buried them was now little more than a rubble