Elfangor's Secret i Look for other titles by K.A. Applegate: #1 The #2 The #3 The #4 The #5 The #6 The #7 The #8 The #9 The #10 The #11 The #12 The #13 The #14 The #15 The #16 The #17 The #18 The #19 The #20 The #21 The #22 The #23 The #24 The #25 The #26 The #27 The #28 The #29 The #1 The Andalite's Gift #2 In the Time of Dinosaurs #3 Elfangor's Secret Invasion Visitor Encounter Message Predator Capture Stranger Alien Secret Android Forgotten Reaction Change Unknown Escape Warning Underground Decision Departure Discovery Threat Solution Pretender Suspicion Extreme Attack Exposed Experiment Sickness The Andalite Chronicles The Hork-Bajir Chronicles ALTERNAMORPHS The First Journey ii Elfanaor's Secret K.A. Applegate AN APPLE PAPERBACK SCHOLASTIC INC. New York Toronto London Auckland Sydney Mexico City New Delhi Hong Kong iii Cover illustration by David B. Mattingly If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book." No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher. For information regarding permission, write to Scholastic Inc., Attention: Permissions Department, 555 Broadway, New York, NY 10012. ISBN 0-590-03639-4 Copyright ©1999 by Katherine Applegate. All rights reserved. Published by Scholastic Inc. APPLE PAPERBACKS, SCHOLASTIC, ANIMORPHS and associated logos are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Scholastic Inc. 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 19/901234/0Printed in the U.S.A. 40First Scholastic printing, May 1999 iv For Michael and Jake v Elfangor's Secret 1 Prologue Aristh Elfangor-Sirinial-Shamtul was done with war. Sick to death of it. He had caused the Yeerk infestation of his own prince and created the abomination now called Visser Three. He had been unable to save his friend and fellow aristh Arbron, now trapped forever in the body of a Taxxon. Disaster piled on disaster. Failure on failure. Now he was done with it all. He had escaped to the planet called Earth along with Loren, the human he loved. He would morph to human. Live as a human. Get lost amid the humans. Maybe even somehow, someway, find happiness. But he still had possession of the greatest 2 weapon the galaxy had ever known: the Time Matrix. The Time Matrix could travel backward through time the way a Z-space craft could travel through space. It gave the person who controlled it power beyond imagining. A person traveling backward could rewrite history. Using the Time Matrix, entire species could be exterminated. More than exterminated: They could be made never to have existed. It was too much power to trust to anyone. Especially, Elfangor thought bitterly, a failure like him. The Time Matrix was a sphere, taller than a human. Destroying it was physically impossible. But it could be hidden. For a while, at least. He found an empty place. Nothing but trees. Using only the equipment available to any human, he dug a hole and rolled the device into it. He covered it. And then, he morphed to human. Two hours later, he was no longer an Andalite. He was trapped. Human. Human forever, no longer a part of the vast war raging between Andalite and Yeerk. He was free. Or so he thought. Many years later, he returned to the same spot. Desperate enough to try to use the Time 3 Matrix. The spot had become a construction site. This time, there would be no escape. His time ran out. Just a few yards from the machine that could have given him all the time in the world. 3 4 Tobias My name is Tobias. In the history of Earth I may be the strangest creature ever to live. I mean it. You have to look at mythology to find anything as weird as I am. Maybe the griffin, which was supposed to be half lion and half eagle, or the centaur, half human and half horse, or whatever. But those are myths. I am reality. I am half human, half hawk. Red-tailed hawk, actually. Buteo jamaicensis, like that tells you much. Homo sapiens, meet Buteo jamaicensis. But that's not even the end of the story. Because in addition to that bizarreness, there's this: 5 My father was an Andalite who had morphed to human. So you could say I'm Homo sapiens, Buteoja-maicensis, and Andalite. What would the Latin name be for Andalites? Don't know. Is the glass half empty or half full? That's what they always ask, to see if you're an optimist or a pessimist. Am I some kind of hideous freak of nature, a twisted concoction of mismatched parts? Or am I something new and wonderful? Depends on the day. Depends on whether I'm with Melissa, wanting to make her happy, wanting her to hold my hand, wanting to be able to take her to a movie and a burger afterward like any other guy can do with a date, maybe even hold her hand, maybe kiss her, maybe . . . Yeah, at times like that, the glass is half empty. But there are other times. Times when the sun is high and hot. When the cumulus clouds are like gigantic mountains floating through a blue sky. Times when the warm air billows up beneath my wings and I barely have to flap and all of a sudden I'm so high, so totally, absolutely free, free in a way I never was as a human, free to soar and soar, alone, nothing but the sound of the wind ruffling across my feathers . . . and on those days the glass is spilling over. This was a full-glass day. 6 I was high in the air, I don't know, maybe a thousand feet up, the beach just ahead of me, a sweet thermal lifting me up. I could see the ocean, I could see the beach and all the people spread out there. On a day like this, it was hard to be a pessimist. Yeah, Earth was being invaded by the Yeerks. Yeah, all that stood against them were five kids and one Andalite with the useful power to absorb the essence - what Ax calls "DNA" - of animals and then morph into them. And yes, we were probably even losing the last war that humanity might ever fight as a free species. But on a stunning day like this, what I saw spread out below me was not possible Controllers, but people having a nice day at the beach, loving the sun, loving the warmth, taking it easy. Even the slaves, standing by to attend to their masters and mistresses, seemed to be having a good time. 7 Jake Tobias came swooping in through the open hayloft. he reported. I gave him a slight nod of the head. But I didn't acknowledge his presence beyond that. Cassie's slave girl was still in the room, cleaning out the cage of an injured and very vocal goose. And as Cassie is always reminding us, the fact that a slave may not be as bright as a regular person does not mean they can't tell tales. This particular slave was mostly deaf, which of course partly accounted for her status. But Cassie claimed the girl was otherwise reasonably smart. Cassie grabbed the girl's arm to get her atten- 8 tion, then, enunciating very clearly, said, "You can go now, September Twelve." "Yes, mistress," the girl mumbled in her guttural, barely understandable speech. It came out "Yeth, mithreth." She turned and left the room. Melissa looked up at Tobias and winked. "Been out flying?" Ax arrived a moment later. Marco was with him. "So, what's up?" Marco demanded. "What's this meeting about? Don't you realize I have important stuff going on? I lead a busy, busy life." "Really?" Melissa asked naively. Melissa has never really gotten Marco's sense of humor. Tobias asked. "Excuse me, but I no longer need friends, real or imagined. I was playing Pong. My dad bought one for us. It's so cool. Even my mom was into it, which, in a way is sad, because seriously, who wants to be doing stuff with their mom?" Tobias said. Everyone laughed. Except Ax, of course, who had no idea what a prom was. Or why it would be funny to have your mom as a date. He's not one of us. So what can you expect? 9 "We have information from the Chee," I said. That made Marco groan. "Swell. Trouble. It always is. You know, Erek never contacts us to say, 'Hey let's have fun!' It's always 'Hey, how would you all like to go and get yourselves killed?'" "What does Erek have?" Melissa asked. "He has information that the Yeerks are putting together a new front organization. This one, unlike The Sharing, is aimed at a very specific target." Ax asked. "Our troops," I said. "Especially troops being sent to the war in Brazil." Cassie made a skeptical face. "Why would the Yeerks want to make Controllers of troops heading toward the jungle? What do they care whether we wipe out a bunch of Primitives?" "It's not the war they care about," I said. "It's that things are tough for our boys down there, and I guess harsh conditions like that make it easy to get recruits. I mean, you're in the jungle, right? You figure 'How much worse could life get?' But most of the troops survive the war, they come back home, and the Empire rewards them with homesteads, slaves, cars, and so on. Lots of times they get jobs in government or else stay in the army. Suddenly the Yeerks have another one of their own in a position of power." 10 "What are we supposed to do about it?" Melissa asked. "That's thousands of miles away." I shrugged. "I don't know. But what are we supposed to do, sit around while the Yeerks destroy the war effort? Let the jungle rats continue to take up valuable land that we need?" "Yeah, it would be a pity if some of the Primitives escaped alive," Cassie said. I shot a look at her. Had that been sarcasm? She smiled blandly. I had long suspected that Cassie might have slightly radical tendencies. A lot of blacks did. Blacks and a lot of Jews, although not in my family. My dad was a certified POE - Patriot of Empire. Still, if you had any Jewish blood in you at all, you had to be extra careful so no one thought you were a radical. I knew Cassie was soft-hearted toward her own slaves. But I'd never heard her make any kind of subversive remarks about the war. I'd always just assumed she was sentimental. Even now, it was impossible to be sure what her tone of voice meant. I'm not very good at that kind of thing. I'm a mostly straightforward kind of guy. It might have been an innocent remark. Or not. I felt my stomach churn. We couldn't denounce Cassie as a subversive. We knew for a 11 fact that the Triple S was heavily infiltrated by Yeerks. Denounce her to the Triple S and we might as well just turn her over to the Yeerks, and then all was lost. What was I supposed to do? I intercepted Marco's gaze. He gave a slight nod. A "told you so" nod. The question was, where would Melissa stand if it came down to eliminating Cassie? I knew Melissa was no radical. But she was Cassie's best friend, despite being white. I shook my head, trying to focus. The Yeerks, They were my problem. Not radicals. If the human race survived the Yeerks we'd have all the time in the world to round up the radicals and take care of them. In the meantime . . . I gave Cassie a blank look, not acknowledging what she might have meant. "We have to try to deal with this. Personally, I don't want a world filled with Primitives any more than I want a world filled with Yeerks." "Jungle rats and slugs," Marco said with a laugh. "Now there's a nice world for decent people to live in." "Wonderful! Wonderful, I /ore it!" The voice was unknown. I spun around, ready to do battle. Standing there, as though it had appeared 12 from thin air, stood a creature who could not possibly be from Earth. It looked at first glance like the mating of a small dinosaur and a large prune. It had two legs and balanced its body with a stubby tail. The hands were weak, flimsy things, with too many joints. The head didn't fit with the birdlike body. It was humanoid in shape, with a narrow lower jaw and big, mocking eyes. The skin was wrinkled, like a prune. The flesh was dark, almost jet-black, relieved only by green that rimmed the eyes and mouth. "Who are you?" I snapped. "Me? Oh, I'm hurt. Devastated! You don't remember your old friend the Drode?" 13 Jake I've never seen you before in my life," I said. "Well ... No. Not in this life, perhaps." "Yeerk," Melissa said. "Some new host body." "Marco," I said. He nodded. He began to slowly morph to grizzly bear, his favorite morph. Ax demanded. <0r should I say, what?> The creature grinned. "You, at least, are no different, Aximili-Esgarouth-lsthill. Still the arrogant Andalite." "Shut up, Ax," I snapped. "I am Supreme Leader here. I'll ask the questions." Having put one pushy alien in his place, I moved back to the 14 other. "What do you want?" I demanded. Out of the corner of my eye I saw Marco changing. The creature sighed. "Well, as much fun as it is to see you all this way, I suppose for us to move on I'll have to return you, temporarily at least, to your usual condition: sanctimonious, self-righteous, and utterly tedious." There was no flash of light. No bang. Nothing changed. Except that everything changed. I changed. Suddenly, instantly, I was a different person. I stared at the Drode. I knew now who he was. What he was. Whom he served. I shot a look at Cassie. Then at the girl standing beside her. Melissa was gone. Rachel was there. "So glad you're back with us, Rachel," the Drode leered. "You know you're still my favorite Animorph." "What was all that?" Marco demanded mid-morph. "Some kind of hallucination?" "No, no, no!" the Drode said. "It is glorious reality. Big Jake, Jake the perfect leader, Jake the compassionate, nothing more than a jumped-up little dictator with delusions of grandeur who insists on being called Supreme Leader!" "No, that was not reality," Cassie snapped. "I 15 do not own a slave! That's sickening! What are you talking about?" "And where was I?" Rachel demanded. "I was thinking how I'd have to turn Cassie in for not approving of some war down in Brazil," I admitted. "That's not reality." "I will tell you about reality," the Drode said eagerly. "Your country is an empire, ruled by terror and torture. It has made war on the nations to the south. It slaughters peoples it calls 'Primitives.' It enslaves anyone with an IQ below eighty, as well as anyone born with what you call defects. All in all, it's my kind of place." "That's bull!" Marco said hotly. "I assure you it is all true. The Yeerks are within months of consolidating control. The lack of freedom among humans has made their conquest ever so much easier. Your few books, your two radio stations, your single television channel are all censored. Your technology is fifty years behind where it should be. Poverty is widespread, curable diseases run rampant, some women are forced to breed to repopulate the dominant white race while at the same time, in the major cities the poor and homeless are rounded up and shot -" "Jake, let me take care of this little worm," Rachel said. 16 "What's this all about, Drode?" I asked. I wasn't at all sure I wouldn't take Rachel up on her offer. "The Time Matrix," the Drode said. Ax's stalk eyes snapped around to stare. "Oh, it existed," the Drode said. "It exists. It was found by a lowly human-Controller, who uses the name John Berryman. He's an actor. Not a very successful one. A lowly Controller whose Yeerk was, until he lost the battle for Leera, none other than Visser Four. And why did he lose the battle for Leera? Why, because of all of you. Ironic, eh?" "What does this have to do with all that other stuff?" "The Yeerk, the former Visser Four, has used the Time Matrix. He has traveled backward in time and is changing historical events. He's rewritten the past in an effort to bring about a Yeerk victory and give himself greater power. You ... the other yous ... are unaware that life was ever any different. You have all been raised in an environment of delightfully ferocious oppression. It's all quite wonderful!" "But slavery? Some genocidal war?" Cassie said, her voice cracking. 17 "Why are you here?" Rachel demanded. The Drode sighed. "Sadly, I am here to offer you the chance to undo it all." He spread his hands wide and smiled a hideous smile. "I want to help." 18 C a s s i e I laughed. "You want to help. You. Meaning Crayak." "Yes, it is rather puzzling, isn't it?" the Drode mocked. Ax asked. "It's all part of a deal. My master, the great and glorious Crayak, and your friend, the simpering, meddling nitwit called the Ellimist, have a deal. Neither of them really approves of a mere Yeerk possessing the most powerful device in galactic history." "In other words, this Time Matrix could endanger Crayak himself," Marco translated. The Drode laughed. "Don't be a fool. Nothing threatens great Crayak. However. . . one doesn't 19 want mere baboons blundering about with Time Matrices, does one? Who knows what harm they might do? Oh, sure, it's all fun and games when they end up starting genocidal wars or engendering race hatred -" "Yeah, what's more fun than that?" Rachel said dryly. "- but who knows what other damage a fool with such power may do?" "Crayak could grab the Time Matrix himself," Jake said. "He has the power." "Mmmm, well . . ." the Drode said. Crayak and the Ellimist were to humans what humans are to ants. Nearly omnipotent creatures. One evil. One good. Perhaps. We could never be entirely sure. Tobias said. The Drode put his hand to his ear. "Did I just hear a bird chirping?" "You mentioned a deal," Marco said. "Yes," the Drode said. "A deal. And here it is: The six of you will be allowed to follow the Time Matrix. The former Visser Four set off on his journey two days ago. You will be translated back to that point and then the quanta that make up your 20 atoms will be ... tuned. Yes, that's a good word for simple minds to comprehend. You'll be fine-tuned at the subatomic level to resonate with the movements of the Time Matrix as it travels through time. Your own memories and personalities will, of course, be buffered. Protected against changes." Ax demanded. "Resulting in the effect that, like an echo, you will follow the Time Matrix. It plucks the chords of time and you reverberate." He stopped and shook his head in admiration of his own words. "Brilliantly explained, eh?" "That's the deal?" Jake asked. "That's it?" "There's something else, isn't there?" I asked the Drode. The Drode laughed. "Oh, yes. There is something else, little Cassie. Cassie the killer with a conscience. Kill 'em, then cry over 'em. That's our Cassie." "What's the something else?" I repeated, not letting the evil little creep see that his words had hit home. "My master Crayak has demanded a price. A payment." "A payment." "Uh-huh," the Drode said in a parody of coyness. "What?" 21 "One of you," the Drode said. "You can attempt to save your reality, put everything back where it belongs, end slavery, replace tyranny with democracy, millions of lives saved, let freedom ring, glory hallelujah in exchange ... in exchange for one, single life." "A life?" I asked. "The life of one of you. That is my master Crayak's price: One of you must die." 22 C a s s i e This is insane!" Marco said. "I mean, I've said things were insane before, but this is totally, abjectly insane!" He pointed at the Drode. "You go back and tell that manure pile Crayak, and the Ellimist, too: This isn't on us. They can fix this and leave us out." "If we do nothing we go back to that other reality, don't we?" I said to the Drode. "Jake's some kind of junior Nazi, I'm a slave owner, all of us living like that?" "Why wasn't I even in the group?" Rachel demanded. "You? A violence-prone sociopath like you, Rachel?" the Drode said with a happy laugh. "You were in a reeducation camp. This world has 23 little room for bold, aggressive females. You were being taught your place." "Say what? My what?" Suddenly, around the Drode's wrist, an oversized watch appeared. "You all have to decide," the Drode said, holding up the watch. "Two minutes. Ticktock, ticktock. Then all goes back to what it should be. Tick. Tock." He was gone as suddenly as he had appeared. "My place?" Rachel muttered, not quite believing the word. "No one teaches me my place." "Okay. Two minutes. Visser Four is running around the past messing up the future. I don't think there's much question that we have to do this," Jake said. Ax said, Jake nodded. "No choice. Too much hangs on this. Millions of lives versus one? Not even a question." "Bull," Marco said. "This isn't our fight. We sit this one out." Rachel rounded on him. "What? And I go back to some reeducation camp? And slavery is back? And we're murdering natives down in the jungle or whatever? I don't think so. I can't believe even you could be this much of a weasel!" 24 But Rachel was wrong. It hadn't dawned on her yet, or maybe on the others. But I know Jake. There was only one life that Jake would trade away like this. Marco, too, knows Jake very well. There was a history between Jake and the evil force called Crayak. It was Jake, more than any of us, who destroyed the Howlers and saved the Iskoort, two terrible blows against Crayak. Jake assumed that he would be the one to die. Marco had seen this instantly. He wasn't arguing in favor of the awful future we'd seen. He was arguing for the life of his best friend. "We're just going to let it all happen?" Rachel went on, in full outrage mode. "All we just experienced? Slavery? Censorship? Wars? Secret police rounding up the homeless and -" "-and Pong?" Marco interrupted, breaking her momentum. "Look, don't be stupid. This could just be an elaborate trap. Anyway, how do we exactly fix the past? I mean, exactly? Does one of you have a history book stored away in his head? How do we fix history if we don't even know how it's broke?" It was Ax who answered. Tobias muttered. "Okay, look, time is short. It's down to a vote," Jake said. "What? The 'Supreme Leader' wants a vote?" Marco mocked. He was stalling. Eating up the two minutes. Tobias said reluctantly. "I'd rather die than be a slave owner," I said. "But..." I let it hang. I couldn't look at Jake. I felt sick. I felt Marco staring at me. He wanted to see if I understood. I met his gaze. I nodded slowly. I wanted to explain. Jake meant more to me than anyone in the world. He meant as much to me as my own parents. But I couldn't walk away from this. The society we'd just glimpsed? No. Whatever the price we paid we had to stop that. Marco smiled a small, sad half smile, accepting my verdict. Ax said. 26 "Someone's going to teach me my place? Yeah, right. Let's do it," Rachel said, laughing at her own swagger. "Marco?" Jake asked. "Here's my vote: We go home and watch TV. Fifty channels, there's gotta be something on." Jake shook his head. "I don't think so. The Drode said there was only one channel in that reality." "One?" Marco asked, sounding shaken. "One." "Well, then Visser Four is my meat." "Unanimous," Jake said, smiling in amusement at Marco. Marco turned away from Jake. The grin disappeared. He looked like he wanted to cry. Our eyes met again. And not for the first time I realized how smart Marco is underneath all the jokes. He knew we were going to do it. He knew his best friend's life might be the price we paid. He also knew we couldn't go into this hopeless battle thinking about nothing but that single, terrible fact. I leaned close to Marco, so that only he could hear, and took his hand in mine. "Crayak is not going to have him." Marco nodded. He squeezed my hand. "You got that right." "Okay, it's unanimous," Rachel was saying. 27 "But not till I get a chance to pack some clothes, get some things, okay? In other words, you Drode piece of dog doo, not yet, okay? Not yet! Not yet!" she yelled. But she was yelling it to a large creature that seemed to be made entirely of steel. 28 Not yet!" It was dark. It was raining. And there was a very large man, on a very large horse, wearing very steel armor right in front of me. "Rrr-EEE-hhhuhhuhh! Rrr-EEE-hhhuhuhuhh!" The horse reared up and pranced in surprise. Hooves as big as dinner plates flailed. I had appeared right in front of it. We both had. Cassie was beside me. "Oh, man!" I said. "I knew he'd do this!" I glanced around in the dark. I didn't see the others. No surprise. I barely saw the knight on his horse. A damp, sputtering campfire away 29 through the trees cast just enough yellow light to outline the almost dainty metal boot in the ornate stirrup, the long steel shank of his thigh, the chain-mail glove that gripped the reins, the elbow joint, the helmet with a pointed visor decorated with elaborate filigree. The red-and-gold logo on his shield. And, of course, the sword that hung at his side in a red scabbard. "The Tin Man?" I said under my breath. "Uh-uh. I don't think so, Toto," Cassie said. My feet were sinking into mud. And it occurred to me that sitting on a horse in the pouring rain was probably not a good time. The red knight was very likely to be cranky. The armored man got his horse under control. Barely. Then, he drew his sword. SCHWOOF! Definitely cranky. "Sorcieres!" he roared, his loud voice muffled by the visor. "What?" I asked. "I don't know," Cassie said nervously. "I don't exactly speak French." "French? He's speaking French?" "Like I know?" Cassie said, a little shrilly. "I've only had half a year. I got a B minus on my last test." 30 The knight rattled off a string of French. And then he pointed his sword right at me. I held up my hands, palms out. "Chill," I said. "No problem here. Just a couple of wet girls from the future out for a walk. Nice meeting you, we'll just be on our way. No-ay problem-ay." "Where are the others?" Cassie wondered. "Anglaises?" the knight shouted. "Hey! I know that word. It means 'English,'" Cassie said, sounding pretty pleased with herself. "Anglaises! Espionnes!" "Spy!" Cassie translated, nodding her head like she was proud. "Espionnes. Espionage. Spies. English spies. That's what he said." I swiped my hand back over my forehead to get some of the water out of my eyes. It didn't work. I looked at Cassie. "You know, Cassie, when he says 'English spies,' 1 don't think it's exactly a compliment." "A moi! A moi!" the red knight yelled, still holding the sword toward me. Suddenly there came the sounds of hooves pounding mud. I glanced back and saw a vague shape pelting toward us. I caught a glint of steel armor and green fabric. And now, from all around us, men were running, sloshing, pounding through the mud. "This is looking bad," I said. 31 We were surrounded. We were getting more and more surrounded. And in the black night I saw fire-limned swords and axes and lances. "I don't know where or when we are," Cassie said. "What are we supposed to do?" "How about stay alive?" "Morph? For all we know, one of these guys is Visser Four. We can't morph!" "You have another idea?" The new horseman arrived like thunder. He splashed up and reined in. The hooves of his horse threw up mud and clumps of soggy grass. And now there was a very long, very sharp spear leveled at us from behind. "They see us morph, they'll kill us," Cassie whispered. "It's dark," I said. "Besides, they'll figure we're something supernatural. Probably run away." I had absolutely no confidence that I was right. But I wasn't going to stand there and be shish-kebabed without a fight. The new knight, the one with faint traces of green on his mud-spattered, battered shield, took over questioning us. His visor was up, revealing a dark hole where we could have seen eyes and a mouth if it had been light enough. The green knight rattled off a rapid-fire question. We shrugged. I don't know if he noticed that 32 I shrugged with somewhat larger shoulders. Or that my skin was turning leathery and gray. "Ce sont des sorcieres anglaises," the red guy explained. "We're English," Cassie translated. "I'm thinking maybe 'witches.' English witches. Spying English witches." "English?" the new knight demanded. "Well . . . American actually," I said. "Yes, we're English," Cassie jumped in, speaking pointedly to me. "Totally English, Rachel, because what would a couple of Americans be doing here in France in the past, right? Back when people still wore armor and stuff? I don't think so." "Ah. Right. English," I agreed, though my voice was thickening as my tongue began to grow in my mouth, and my upper lip melded into my nose and began to grow. "Rachel!" Cassie said. "You're not. . ." But I was. And right then, the French guys noticed. The green knight yelled something I don't think Cassie will ever be able to translate, and then he lowered his lance to horizontal, spurred his horse, and charged. 33 C a s s i e Lookout!" Rachel tried to jerk aside, but she was growing fast and her legs didn't exactly match the rest of her. She was a tangled, horrific mess of mismatched body parts. I leaped toward the spear. Missed! I fell into the mud at the horse's feet. It was huge, looming high over me, draped with embroidered fabric, its head encased in jointed steel armor. Half by accident, half by instinct I kicked the horse's knobby left knee. "Ahhh!" I thought I'd broken my foot! 34 The horse stumbled. The spear's point missed Rachel by millimeters. The green knight plowed on, right over me! Hooves jackhammered the mud around me. "Rachel!" The horse's chest slammed Rachel hard. But Rachel was bigger, now. Not as big as the horse, but not small enough to be knocked over, either. The green knight backed his horse off, cursing and yelling. The red knight spurred his own mount. He raised his sword high over Rachel's lumpy head. Sproot! Sproot! Two immensely long, curved white tusks exploded from Rachel's face. The sword whizzed as it slashed in a downward arc. CHUNKTH! Sword blade hit tusk! Rachel exulted. I walked back, stumbled, fell on my butt in inches of mud, picked myself up and slunk back into darkness, away from the melee. Out of the firelight. I was no use to Rachel. Not as a human girl. 35 I was already morphing to wolf as fast as I knew how. Where was Jake? Where were the others? Why were Rachel and I left to deal with this alone? Was Jake still alive? Rachel raved. The two knights were having a hard time trying to control their horses. The mud sucked at their hooves. The bizarre new smell of elephant sent their horse brains reeling. The foot soldiers had stayed out of the fight so far, which was all that had saved Rachel. If they had charged, she'd have been hacked apart. But the knights hadn't given them a signal. And I guess the concept of initiative for average guys was still a few centuries in the future. The fire blazed up suddenly. Pounding hooves! A flash of steel, coming down hard! Rachel cried as a three-foot cut appeared in her shoulder. The two knights spurred past Rachel and turned to come back at her. One with now-bloody sword raised. The other with lance lowered. "Rrrachllllrrr!" I tried to scream a warning. But my mouth was pressing outward, filling with long teeth. 36 I was only half-morphed. No matter. There was no time! I bounded forward and fell, facefirst, into the mud as my legs twisted and shrank. I staggered up, but my arms were morphing to front legs. Fingers gone and replaced by pads. Time wasted! The knights charged. Rachel bellowed. The horses whinnied in fear but kept going. The knights passed Rachel on either side. It happened in an instant. Rachel cried in pain, even as she twisted and threw her trunk sideways. I could see the spear protruding from her flank. There had to be two feet of sharp steel blade and wood shaft buried in Rachel's side. I saw a horse, riderless, disappear in the darkness. Then I saw the red knight. He was held high in the air, a thick, powerful trunk wrapped around him like a python. Chain-mail hands clawed futilely at the trunk. He screamed something to the men below him. "Hreee-EEEEEEE-uh!" Rachel bellowed in elephant rage. The green knight was wheeling back around. He pulled his sword from its scabbard. 37 About half the foot soldiers were running away gibbering and yelling. But the others were coming to the knight's aid, charging at Rachel. I tried to stand up but suddenly I was staggered by a blow on the back of my neck. Wolf instinct rolled me over, almost as fast as a cat. THUNK! A spear impaled the ground beside me. I saw a wild look on the face of the foot soldier above me. He tried to yank the spear free. Now, I was fully wolf. And the man realized he wasn't going to yank that spear out in time. I bared my teeth and snarled. He turned and ran, yelling something over his shoulder. I didn't know what, but I had a pretty good idea that it included the French word for 'werewolf.' Rachel bellowed, "Hrrrr-EEEEE-yah!" I was up. And now I had all the wolf's enhanced senses. I could smell the elephant. I could smell the horse. I could smell sweat and filth and moss and mud. I could smell fear. And in a flash of lightning I saw a scene from a medieval nightmare. The remaining knight in wet, muddy armor, shield gone, astride a massive horse festooned in dirty green livery, was charging, sword held for- 38 ward. Toward what he must have thought was a dragon. And the dragon - the African bull elephant- was charging straight for him, tusks thrust out, trunk high in the air holding the squirming, helpless, screaming red knight. It was no contest. Maybe with a lance the green knight might have had a chance. Not with a sword. And not against Rachel, who was going to slam his brother knight down on him with the force of a dropped safe. I scrambled out of the mud and ran, full tilt at the knight. Padded feet flew! A foot soldier loomed up before me, crossing himself frantically as he waved an ineffectual sword at me. I snarled. He fell to his knees. I leaped, soared, landed lightly on the man's bowed head, kicked off again, and sailed through the air. I hit the green knight. He fell away. He hit the ground, shoulder first, then facedown in the mud. I landed on top of him. Many tons of gray flesh went plowing by, tree-trunk legs motoring easily across the mud. The knight tried to get up. The mud held him captive. I said in frustration. I heard new footsteps running. And my wolf 39 senses detected a new smell. One that was definitely out of place in this era. I was pretty sure it was salsa. I looked up and saw Jake and Marco. Jake. Still alive. 40 J.t was not a good situation. I was seriously annoyed. One knight was stuck in the mud. A foot soldier was on his knees praying and quaking. The other knight was being held up by Rachel's trunk about six feet in the air. <0h. Hi, Jake. Hi, Marco,> Rachel said. Cassie said. "So, there we were, suddenly appearing in the middle of a bunch of tents full of guys wearing armor," I said conversationally. "Naturally we figured we'd better lie low. Not attract attention. Not cause any trouble." Rachel asked. 41 I leaned over and grabbed the green knight's arm. Marco grabbed the other and we yanked hard, trying to get him up out of the mud while he cursed us in French. "I figured I'd try the subtle approach," I said. "But, of course, that's just me. It hadn't occurred to me that what I should do is morph into elephant and STOMP PEOPLE INTO THE MUD!" "Why would I be mad? Just because at the very moment I'm thinking 'Cool, we snuck past the guards,' I suddenly hear an ELEPHANT?!" Marco laughed. "Half the guys back there in the tents are wetting themselves and babbling about dragons and devils." Rachel said. I sighed and rubbed my forehead. "Rachel?" "Do you think you could put that guy down and demorph so we could get out of here without wiping out ten thousand future French people who might be descendants of these two guys?" she grumbled. I helped the green knight get to his feet. "Sorry," I said. "How do you say 'sorry' in French?" "Sorreeee?" Marco offered. "Ah em verreee sorreee." 42 "That's very helpful, Marco," I said. Cassie had demorphed. Now Rachel put the red knight down gently and began to demorph as well. I saw the red knight heading toward a dropped sword. "Hey! Uh-uh," I said. "No no no." He stopped. Just then Tobias swooped down through the trees. Another bird of prey was with him. Ax, in harrier morph. "Very funny," Rachel said. " They started it. Cassie: Tell them who started it!" "Okay, look, we're all together. Let's get out of here before we draw the whole French army down on us," I said. "There must be a couple hundred guys back in that field up there." Tobias said. Ax suggested. "And us between them?" Marco said. "Great." "Two armies? What war? What year?" Cassie asked. 43 I shrugged. "The green guy there speaks English, I think," Rachel said. I looked at the knight. Despite the armor he wasn't really much bigger than me. Standing in the mud without a weapon he wasn't too intimidating. "Excuse me, sir, can you tell me what year this is? And who's fighting this war?" "I do not parlay avec weetches," the knight said in haughty, heavily accented English. Marco stifled a giggle. "I'm not the weetch." I pointed at Rachel. "Those two are the witches. I saved your life." "Hey!" Cassie objected. The knight thought it over for a moment. "It ees the year of our lord fourteen-fifteen. The forces of the Roi de France, hees highness royal Charles VI, under command du Constable de France and Princes of the blood royal, are here unis pour... to repel I'envahisseur, Roi Henri five of England, who has laid claim unjust to the throne of France." "French and English? Whose side are we on?" Rachel asked. "We're not on anyone's side," I said. "We're just here to make sure Visser Four doesn't mess with whatever is supposed to happen here." "But we don't know what's supposed to happen here," Cassie pointed out. 44 Tobias said. "Okay. First thing: We don't do anything till we find Visser Four. And when I say don't do anything that would include squeezing French knights with our trunks till they pop open like an overboiled hot dog." "He has on armor! He barely felt it!" Rachel said hotly. "Let's get airborne," I said. "What we're looking for is anyone who doesn't belong. Also we're looking for the Time Matrix. Ax?" "What does a Time Matrix look like?" "Better and better," Marco muttered darkly. "Okay, just look for... just look. And remember one thing: We are just as likely to mess up the future as Visser Four is. So be careful. Cover this whole area. If we're some kind of quantum echo or whatever then Visser Four must be nearby. Anyone spots him, we'll need to move fast and hard." I looked around at all my friends. I tried to make eye contact with each as I repeated. "Fast and hard. You understand? This guy has the most dangerous weapon ever created. We can't let him get away. His personal history ends here." 45 M a r c o The sun was barely up. Gray dawn. We flew. We looked at stuff. We demorphed. We remorphed. We flew some more. The sun was coming up and we still had not seen anyone who we thought was Visser Four. However, I'd seen some really cool armor. Mostly on the French side. The English guys looked pretty raggedy. And about half of them seemed to have serious digestive problems. Every five minutes you'd see one of the English soldiers run off into the bushes and . . . well, let me put it this way: What they did you don't really want to see, especially with high-power osprey eyes. I was over the English camp for about the twentieth time. The head guys, including this 46 guy I thought might be the king, were attending an old-fashioned mass. You know, in Latin. Their third mass. Which made me wonder if they had any hope of winning. I mean, one church service, maybe. But three? That's not a sign of confidence. That's more like "I'll be there any minute now, Lord, so have Saint Peter make up my bed." The guys themselves, knights, soldiers, archers, and so on, were a nasty-looking bunch of humans. No one looked like they'd washed their clothes any time this century. Faces were dirty. Teeth were rotted - and I mean yellow-and-black, gnarled-looking rotted. They were pompous, swaggering knights and whatever, who had literally four and a half teeth in their whole head. And speaking of heads, here's a clue: You didn't want to have really good eyesight and see these guys' hair. We're not just talking fleas. We're talking lice. And not one or two. Every head was like a Manhattan of lice. A Hong Kong of fleas. There were crawling little bugs packed onto some of these guys like fans at a Phish concert. And skin? Scabs, rashes, bumps, boils, warts, things you thought might be beetles stuck on their faces but that were actually moles. It was pockmarked city. Virtually every face looked like someone had fired a shotgun at it. Deep holes you could almost stick a finger into. 47 Smallpox, of course. It was not an attractive crowd. English or French, it didn't matter, except that the French had more horses and cooler armor. Ax wheeled through the sky, twenty feet above me, closer to the French lines. <0h yeah? What were Andalites like three, four hundred years ago?> Ax sniffed, Rachel demanded. Cassie said. Jake agreed. 48 The sun was rising above the horizon now. The mass was breaking up. It didn't look like they'd have another. I guess three were enough. The guy I thought was probably the English king was hanging out with some of his boys, all laughing very loudly the way people do when they're scared peeless but want to look cool. I took a look at him. No, he did not have a twenty-first-century body. He was about as skanky as anyone. I checked out his boys, a bunch of burly-looking troublemakers. I guess they were his main knights, but if it hadn't been for the chain mail and the swords you'd have figured them for a bunch of Mafia hit men. They weren't all buff like some Schwarzeneg-ger action hero. Most were beefy, even fat. I doubted any of these guys had ever even heard the word salad. But they weren't fat fat, they were like, "Ah-hah! Your blade merely penetrated my belly fat and one kidney! A flesh wound! Have at you, sir!" These boys were trouble. And now the king was talking to his troops. He jumped up on a fallen tree and started bellowing and waving his arms like a politician or a football coach. I couldn't hear everything he said, but the basic idea was, "Men, we're outnumbered, but 49 we're here for a good reason, which is that I want to be king of France, so let's go kick some French butt and we'll all be mighty pleased with ourselves on the off-chance that we actually survive." Basically the same kind of heroic nonsense we Animorphs tell ourselves before we go into battle. Then, quite suddenly, I saw him. Not a knight. One of the archers. He was carrying a bow and a quiver full of arrows. His clothes were the same uniform as the other archers: a sleeveless leather jacket decorated with steel studs over a chain-mail shirt; and pants that looked like they'd been sewed together by seamstresses with only three fingers and a ballpoint pen for a needle. He was with a bunch of archers moving toward the French lines. I alerted the others. <0ver there at the tree line. He's an English archer.> <0n our way,> Jake said. The English were definitely moving. The French, who had to outnumber them four-to-one, 50 waited very calmly. In fact a lot of them were off riding around, talking to each other, drinking, scarfing snacks, making out with women, and gambling. Between the two forces, a narrow, muddy field hemmed in by trees on both sides. Rachel said. I could see her bald eagle wheeling down toward me, turning wide circles. Jake said thoughtfully. Rachel asked. Cassie pointed out. Ax said. Jake admitted. Cassie said. I said. 51 I stopped talking because I saw something no bird ever, ever wants to see. Ever. I saw about two thousand guys notch their arrows, draw their bowstrings back to their ears, and suddenly elevate straight up. Straight up at me. 52 M a r c o I was staring down at about two thousand arrow tips, and two thousand guys squinting up at me along the arrow shaft. Flit! Flit! Flit! FlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlit! The air was filled with arrows. It was like some weird backward hail. It was a wall of arrows! Flit! An arrow passed clear through my wing. I banked hard. Flit! I yelled. There was a sharp pain in my wing, and blood streaked my 53 feathers. The wing was weaker, but I could still fly. Rachel yelled. I said frantically. I beat wing but now it was like every idiot on the ground was trying to murder me. Already, they were reloading. But I was hauling. Hauling not exactly in a straight line because one wing was dragging, but I was moving. I headed more or less along the front of the English lines, trying to stay in no-man's-land. One thing I knew for sure: I didn't want to try and cross directly above the English troops. Unfortunately, that was a bad insight. The archers were on both ends of the line, in the woods! I was heading straight for another couple of thousand archers! Ahhh! I tried to turn. I tried to haul. I would have run on air if necessary. Arrows snapped into place, up came ttie bows, and . . . FlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlit! Clean miss! I was out of the way, and now I could watch where the arrows were heading. Down they came. The arrows arched toward a column of Frenchmen on horses. Maybe three hundred guys, many loaded up in fabulous armor. Some in less-than- 54 fabulous armor. But all yelling from behind their visors, all with long lances leveled. The French cavalry went straight for the archers. The archers were behind a lame wall of spikes angled out toward the horses. Unfortunately for the English, their spikes wouldn't stay up in the mud. But the spikes weren't the important issue. The important issue was the arrows. FlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlit! Thousands of arrows, all shooting up, all arching, all seeming to hang in the air. Thousands of these arrows just sort of waiting, poised at the top of their arc. A fly could not have gotten through that wall of arrows. Down and down to stick in French arms and necks and shoulders and heads and thighs and faces, and all of a sudden what was happening below me was not a joke anymore. FlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlit! Arrows flew again, tracking the approaching column of rowdy, disorganized cavalry. The main knights seemed almost invulnerable at first with all their armor. Even their horses were armored along the back of their necks and over their heads. But the arrows were so thick that they found their way into the narrow slits in knights' visors. Men were dropping. Horses were dropping. 55 If I'd stayed one second longer, avoiding the arrows would have been like avoiding raindrops in a thunderstorm. If I had stayed a second longer I wouldn't just have been shot. I'd have been a pincushion. Now the screaming started. Guys with arrows sticking through their necks, into their stomachs, out of their sides, all fell and crawled and stood up and fell again. And it wasn't just the men. Horses were screaming, too. And that's not a sound I'll ever forget. The cavalry fell back. They didn't look good. They plowed right into their own lines, practically riding down their own people. The English kept coming. Looking a little more sure of themselves, too. Like maybe two masses would have been enough. I tried to find Visser Four again. I looked for that weirdly clean face, the weirdly white teeth. And that saved my life. Because I saw now that the archers were forward, half in the woods, and they had shifted their aim. Suddenly, the arrow barrage had changed direction. I yelled, spilled air, and plunged like a rock. I saw the English archers release their strings. I saw arrows fly! Right. At. ME! 56 FlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlit! Hundreds of arrows arched toward me as I dove toward the ground. Hundreds of arrows, some so close I felt the breeze from them, blew above me. I raked, opening my wings to catch air. But now my injured wing failed. It collapsed, seemed to break in half, and down I went at impossible speed. Flump! I hit mud, beak first. I maintained consciousness for about a half second. Passed out. Woke up to hear Jake yelling, 57 Rachel I saw him stick, literally stick, in the mud. I was high above and to the right, off the main field. I was in bald eagle morph - the only one of us nearly big enough to drag an osprey up out of the mud. I dove. Jake yelled. I had Marco in plain view. A crumpled little wad of dirty gray-and-white feathers in the middle of what was, by the standards of 1415, probably the most dangerous piece of real estate on Earth. I fell like a stone. No, like a missile, because 58 I was under control, directed, aimed with a dozen tiny movements of tail and wingtip. Jake yelled. FlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlit! The arrows! I opened my wings wide, spread my tail feathers, pulled my talons up, and did an impersonation of Wile E. Coyote trying to stop in midair after he's just run off a cliff. It didn't work much better than it does for Wile E. The arrow barrage flew. Two or three missed me by millimeters, but most were well below me. As soon as the arrows were by, I folded my wings, making the smallest possible target, and dropped again toward Marco. Jake yelled. I swept down, barely avoiding hitting the mud myself, and dug my talons into Marco's back. Only we weren't outta there. I flapped with all my strength and managed to drag Marco about three feet through the mud. But there was no way we were getting airborne. FlitFlitFlitFlitFlitFlit! The arrows flew again, this time far overhead. And then I heard a bloodcurdling sound. The roar 59 of battle lust from hundreds of throats. Or maybe not so much battle lust as sheer terror. I shot a look to my left. The English were suddenly running. Right at us. To the right: the French, running, galloping, and also doing some screaming. We were about to be stomped by several thousand really unattractive shoes. I asked Marco. The first wave of English troops was ten seconds away, still yelling, brandishing spears and swords, their boots making sucking noises in the mud. The French maybe twelve seconds away. Then, suddenly, from the woods near at hand, a horse burst at a run, heading straight for us. I knew that horse. At least, I hoped I did. Cassie said. Marco yelled. The English from the left. The French to the right. Arrows still filling the air above us. And a single horse kicking up dirt clouds and splashing through mud puddles as it came. 60 Marco said tersely. <0h, man,> I said, bracing for the attack. In a flash, the English soldiers were all around us, yelling about Harry and England and just generally yelling. Thick, felt-shod, rag-wrapped feet stomped all around us. Then, hooves. Feet! Hooves! Someone tripped, facedown, landed beside Marco and me. At least I thought he'd tripped. Till I saw the short arrow sticking out of his chest. It was the green knight. He lay on his shield and tried to breathe. I stared at him, unable to look away. Unable to stop myself from thinking that at least he wouldn't live to tell the story of the witch who became an elephant. Cassie cried. Brown horse legs were tall in a forest of shorter limbs. I sank talons deep into bone and skin. It had to hurt. But Cassie didn't complain. Marco did the same, and then we were off. Two big mud-encrusted birds of prey latched on to a horse's front legs as the horse tried to shove through a melee. And the melee had just gotten radically worse. 61 Cassie, and we, were shoved by the force of the packed bodies around us, toward the French. Now, battle was joined. There was no way out. I dug my talons deep. A horse might survive this hell of yelling, slashing, screaming, shoving, grunting, stabbing madness, but a bird is a fragile animal. I heard Cassie cry. I assumed it was the pain of my and Marco's talons. But it was much more likely that the pain came from the spear that had been shoved deep, deep into her haunch. Cassie stumbled. She fell, facedown. I disengaged just in time to avoid being crushed. Then a foot came down on me. I heard the tiny bones in my back and wings snap. It hit me then: I was going to die. Not Jake, me. Mine was the life Crayak would take in payment. I was going to die almost 600 years before I was even born. 62 Ax Prince Jake cried. Tobias shouted. Prince Jake ordered. The two groups of humans rushed together and began to attempt to murder each other by the use of edged pieces of steel in various shapes and forms. Some of the humans rode atop horses. Some appeared to be wearing artificial skin made of thin sheets of metal. It is one of the rare examples of artificial skin that makes any logical sense. But I did not have time to ponder the ques- 63 tion of armor. Cassie, Rachel, and Marco were wounded and very possibly dead. Flying high above the battle, I caught only occasional glimpses of them. A struggling horse, lying on its side. Two birds. All ignored by the murderous humans around them. At the same time, I was attempting to keep track of the movements of Visser Four. He had fired many arrows from the bow that was almost as long as his own body was tall. He had fired more slowly and with less skill than the other archers, but no one had seemed to notice. And now, he was moving. Many of the English archers on both wings of the battle had laid down their bows and were drawing swords and daggers. Now I saw the disadvantage of the steel artificial skin.- The archers, dressed only in cloth, and carrying light weapons, were able to move more nimbly through the mud. They were able to jump in and stab several of the armored knights through their visors. But Visser Four was not a part of this slaughter. He had backed away from the battle into the trees. And now he appeared to be climbing a tall tree. I cried. Tobias said hotly. 64 I said. Tobias cried in anguish. I was disturbed by the possibility that my friends would be killed. But there was nothing to be done for them. And our mission was to stop Visser Four. I peered closely at his face. It was a normal human face. Perhaps with a bit more facial fat. He appeared to be of adult age, though young for that category. My estimate would be that he was twenty-five years old. Tobias pleaded. Jake snapped. I tried to stay focused on Visser Four. As I swept in a slow circle above the field of battle, I trained my osprey eyes on his blue human eyes. They searched the crowd. Then, found what they sought. I tried to extrapolate, to follow the direction of his gaze. It was an inaccurate game 65 at best. But I believed I saw what he was watching. In the middle of the English lines was a warrior wearing a dented gold ring atop his helmet. Many men in armor were close to him. There were several bright flags near him. I asked. Prince Jake asked in a frazzled, distracted voice. I said. Prince Jake yelled. I said. <0nly Tobias . . .> 66 To bias I yelled. Jake said. Ax said with infuriating calm. Both of them alike! All Jake or Ax cared about was the stupid mission. I could see Rachel and Marco, half-crushed by Cassie's horse body. No! Wait! Not crushed. They were shielding themselves beneath her. They'd be crushed, yes, but maybe not killed. If I could get to the woods, morph to polar bear, come back, break through . . . Insane! Jake was right. How many terrified soldiers on both sides would I have to kill? And how long would I last? 67 Ax said. I looked down. I could see Visser Four through a break in the trees. I saw him from above. He was drawing his bow. Ready to ... Flit! Too late! The arrow flew. Straight toward King Henry. Straight into the back of a young French soldier who fell like someone had cut his legs off. A miss! Of course! Visser Four was no expert archer. And it was a tough target. The king's face was uncovered. That had to be the target. A professional archer could have done it from this range, but not a novice. Still . . . Visser Four drew his bow again. He aimed very carefully. And now the king was surging toward the very place where Rachel and the others lay. Visser Four might not hit Henry. He might miss and hit Cassie or Marco or Rachel. "Tseeeeeer!" I spilled air from my wings, folded them back, twisted my tail to aim, and flew straight down. Down like a rock. I saw Visser Four's fingers begin to relax. I saw the fingers release. 68 The arrow flew! I opened my talons and twisted sideways to bring both talons into line. Flit! Fwapp! Talon hit arrow. Right talon hit but didn't grip. I blew straight down, my momentum carrying the arrow with it, canceling some of its speed. Left talon squeezed! I felt the shaft slide through my grip. Thunk! My talons closed around the feathered ailerons. It all took a tenth of a second. Then, I was carrying the arrow. Jake cried. I turned and saw Visser Four. He was staring at me with a mix of amazement and disbelief. And then, slowly, slowly on his face dawned recognition. I could literally see his lips form the word. The word Andalite! I thought, 69 Cassie I was in agony. I was lying on my side, with Marco and Rachel half-hidden beneath me. The spear had penetrated deep into my side and all I could do was to try and remember my horse anatomy. What had the spear hit? Not my heart, or I'd be dead already. My stomach? Intestines? Liver? Who could tell. But I knew that I was weakening. And I knew that if I demorphed, I'd leave Marco and Rachel exposed and helpless. Not to mention the high likelihood that a superstitious fifteenth-century soldier would almost certainly kill the weird, twisting abomination I would seem to be in mid-morph. We had to get away! But how? 70 The battle raged around us. The noise was horrific to my horse ears. Steel clanging against steel. The clank-clank-clank as crossbows were wound tight. Hooves and feet pounding in the mud, and landing, all too often, on bodies. Men grunted with the effort of swinging their heavy swords and maces and axes. Men cried out or moaned as they were hurt. They staggered and fell, from wounds or from sheer exhaustion. And all of this was all around me. On top of me! This, I would later learn, was the battle of Agincourt. One of the great battles of history. Glorious. That's what people called it: glorious. Shakespeare wrote a play about it. But I'm here to tell you there was nothing glorious going on. It was as glorious as murder. Rachel said. Marco demanded. Rachel said. It was Jake's voice. Coming from far overhead. This wasn't my body. I didn't know for sure what it could do. I didn't know how badly it was injured. he said. Then he added. I tried to stand. My legs worked. But I was 71 weak. I couldn't roll enough to get up. Not without crushing Rachel and Marco. Marco asked Jake. Rachel said. Jake said. Then, above all the clashing, yelling, horrific sounds of battle, I heard a new note. Screams of sheer terror. Screams like you'd hear from someone trapped in a nightmare. Feet stampeded. The king himself stood over me, recognizable for the dented golden crown on his head. He was staring off to the right. Gaping, mouth open, battle temporarily forgotten. The knight he'd been fighting sagged to his knees and began crossing himself and praying. Battle lines fell back. The king thought about it for a few seconds and decided he didn't want to go one-on-one with what was coming, either. And the devil - or what must surely have looked like a devil to these men of the fifteenth century - rode onto the field atop a magnificent warhorse. Marco asked. The Hork-Bajir - Tobias, actually - came 72 charging straight toward us. Brave warriors, warriors who'd gone face-to-face in this battle, life for life, suddenly bolted. The forest of legs around me parted. Rachel and Marco crawled out from beneath me. I rolled onto my side and struggled to my feet, woozy, weak, half dead, but not so dead I couldn't run a few hundred yards. Tobias yelled, turned his horse, and led the way back off the field. The horse said, Marco and Rachel grabbed my torn and bleeding legs, and we made off across the horrible field. Over the bodies of dead and wounded, knights and peasants. Rachel asked. Jake said. 73 AX Visser Four ran. But he was merely a human-Controller. So there was very little chance of him outrunning me. I was still in harrier morph. I swooped through the trees as he ran. Rising above the forest I could see the edge of a small village in the trees ahead. If Visser Four made it to the village it would be harder for me to stop him. There would be innocent humans about. But as a harrier I could do very little to stop him. Decision: Stay with the Visser and be helpless, or stop, demorph, and be able to attack? The village, a collection of primitive human 74 dwellings with roofs apparently made of grass, was very close. First: Keep him from the village. I flapped my wings harder and easily caught up with the running, panting, frightened Yeerk. I turned in midair and plunged toward him, talons down and forward. He looked up. Dodged to the side. Not fast enough. I felt my left talon catch the side of his head. "Aaaahhh!" he cried. I swept past and turned to come back after him. "Andalite filth!" he screamed. Genuinely screamed. Pure, unfiltered hatred blazing in his blue human eyes. He hesitated. I came for him. He broke and ran. But now there were other humans surging around us. A column of men on horses was blundering through the woods seemingly heading around toward the rear of the English lines. But there were other humans, too. They were running from the battle. Running toward the village. I could not demorph in plain view. The Yeerk must have known this. Now he stopped and put an arrow into the simple bow he used. He drew the arrow back and let it fly. My harrier eyes were able to see that it was poorly 75 aimed. It blew past and I did not even need to adjust my flight. He ran again, and I followed. Suddenly we emerged from the edge of the wood. There was an open space between the forest and the village. There appeared to be some sort of crop planted there. Villagers were calmly harvesting, going about their busy work as though nothing was happening. Possibly they were concerned that the battle or fugitives from it might trample the crop. These humans barely looked up from their work as soldiers, archers, and knights on horses went running past. Certainly they did not notice Visser Four. Or me. I swept up to Visser Four and raked his head again, laying the scalp open. He grabbed at me, but missed. "I'll kill you!" he raged. I bluffed. But a Yeerk does not rise to Visser rank by being a complete fool. He laughed at my silly threat. This was a pointless battle, I knew. In this morph I could injure him but not stop him. If I stopped to morph I could well lose him. There were two large structures in the village. One seemed to me to be essentially military. A 76 fort of some sort. The other had a large main building with a tall tower at one end. It was into this building that Visser Four ran. Through a tall door. The door had been open. He slammed it behind him. I flared my wings and pulled up, inches from smashing into the heavy-timbered door. I called in frustration. But there was no answer. We were far from the battlefield now. I was on my own. How to enter the large structure? How to ... And then, in a flash, I knew why Visser Four had returned here. He'd hidden the Time Matrix in this structure! I had minutes, maybe not even that. I landed on the stairs leading to the front door. I began to demorph. My Andalite stalk eyes began to writhe up and out of my feathered head. My fleshless bird legs grew meat and muscle and true bone. I rose, growing taller by the second. But all too slowly! Hands! I needed hands! Tiny, limp protrusions began to grow from my chest. My forelegs. But my wings remained wings. No fingers appeared. I yelled again. 77 Visser Four was going to escape. Now, at last, fingers! But too weak, too delicate and unformed to turn the heavy iron handle on the door. "Aiiiieeee!" someone screamed. A human. Perhaps upset at the sight of an Andalite struggling to emerge from . . . "Tuez-le! Tuez-le!" a new voice screamed. "Tuez-le!" Now it was a chorus. I twisted one stalk eye, only now beginning to work. There were half a dozen humans. Some were soldiers. Others not. The ones who were soldiers brandished swords. The others held huge forks made of sharpened wood. I was quite sure they were not welcoming me to their town. I cried. I lurched on half-formed legs to reach the door. My weak fingers closed on the handle. The angry villagers attacked. 78 Tobias < Prince Jake!> Jake was already running. We'd both heard a faint cry from Ax. This one was louder, clearer. We must be running in the right direction. Jake said. I leaned down over Jake's flying mane, which allowed room for my spiked tail. The horse morph was huge. He'd acquired one of the chargers of a dead French knight. It easily carried my Hork-Bajir weight. Probably not much different from a man in full armor. We raced through the trees. Behind us, the battle resumed. I guess in 1415 having the devil 79 show up was a fairly normal occurrence. Nothing to stop a battle over. Not for long, anyway. We burst suddenly into the open. Ahead of us, a village. Peasants scattered as we plowed along the dirt street, knocking wheelbarrows over, sending unwary pedestrians sprawling. It wasn't much of a village, I guess. A kind of not-impressive fort and a church. The church was on a square. The square was full of runaway soldiers, the wounded, the scared, and a bunch of regular villagers. All were converging on the church steps. Half a dozen had hold of an animal that might have been a blue deer with a scorpion tail, but for the fact that it was half-covered in gray feathers. Jake asked. I said. Jake redoubled his speed and went plowing straight into the crowd. I rode till he was stopped by the compacted bodies around us, then I stood up on his back and leaped. Hork-Bajir are naturally arboreal. Meaning they live a lot of their lives in the trees. So they can jump pretty well. I jumped. I sailed over the heads of outraged villagers and slammed into a wooden door so thick and sturdy it might as well have been a tree. 80 WHAM! I landed on Ax. he yelled. Ax said, sticking to business despite the fact that the nearest villager was trying to stick him with a wooden pitchfork. I clambered away from Ax and snatched the pitchfork out of the guy's hands. If they didn't already believe I was a devil, they sure did now. I yelled. I grabbed the door handle, twisted it easily, and shoved back on the door. Ax and I together spilled inside. I slammed the door shut behind us, snatched up a four-by-four and popped it into the iron slots, barring the door. We were in a church. I was a seven-foot-tall creature with horns and a spiked tail holding a pitchfork. And I was in a church. I looked at the altar. I looked at the terrified priest who was shaking so badly he couldn't cross himself. I said to the priest. I added, looking at the altar. Ax was fully Andalite now. Which didn't help our appearance one bit. Ax said. 81 I muttered. Adolf Hitler. The most evil man in a long history of evil men. Tobias was up. He moved like lightning. The squat man with the funny mustache was jerked back, yanked around, and pinned against Tobias's Hork-Bajir body. Tobias's wrist blade was at his throat. I yelled. The soldiers dropped cigarettes and canteens, swung around, and leveled their guns at Tobias, 185 Tobias said grimly. Hitler was frozen with fear. Trembling with a Hork-Bajir blade pressed against his jugular. I said. Tobias said. From behind us, a new and sudden sound. BOOM!BOOM! The first tanks were firing down on the beach. I said. "Release my driver, please," the German captain said tersely to Tobias. 186 Visser Four leaped, shackled hands outstretched for the Time Matrix. I bounded after him. He took three steps. I took two. I clamped my jaws on his leg. Pop! Pop! Pop! The captain fired. Point blank at Tobias. Tobias jerked in reflex. His wrist blade cut deep. The driver - Hitler - fell to the ground. Visser Four rolled with me on top of him. Rolled over, pulling me with him into a shallow ditch. And overhead I saw the surreal vision of a bald eagle, six feet from wingtip to wingtip. 187 Rachel Ax and Marco were down. But not for long. They fluttered up out of the sand, fluffing their feathers, all damage repaired. It was true. We could not be killed. The same was not true of the soldiers. Two lay crying in pain. The others were silent. I swooped down to land beside my friends. I suppose we must have looked like vultures arriving at the scene of death. I closed my right talon around a grenade. I lifted it experimentally. It was heavy. Not as heavy as a salmon, though. I would be able to fly with it. Marco and Ax each tried to lift one as well, but they were much smaller birds. 188 <0ne is all it will take,> I said. <0r at least one at a time.> I grabbed the grenade firmly and began to fly. Taking off was hard, not impossible, but hard. I scooted across the bloody sand, flapped hard, turned into the breeze, and still barely became airborne. But once I had wind beneath my wings, once I had clearance, I soared. The breeze lifted me up. Above the dead. Above the beach of slaughter. Out of line of the whizzing bullets. Too high for the shattering explosions of artillery. Up I rose. Up and up, over the bluff. The first tanks were lining up, depressing their main guns to fire downward. Marco advised. I said, laughing. Marco pointed out. Ax said, I said. I turned into a tight circle, one wing low, the other high, tail spread wide to give me all the lift I could get. 189 Ax's harrier body flapped away, twenty, forty yards ahead of my flight path. I said. Marco demanded. I laughed. The distance closed with shocking speed. The harrier, the eagle, racing toward collision. Closer. . . Closer. . . Ax spun over on his back, reached, a sharp yank against my talons and a loud "Pop!" The grenade top dropped away. I glanced back and saw the ring and pin hanging from Ax's talon. ! looked ahead. A tank rolling past Cassie. I had perhaps three seconds. I was giddy. Filled with wild joy. I wanted to scream and laugh all at once. Maybe I did be- 190 cause as if from far off I heard Marco say, I looked toward my target. The hatch was open. The young, cocky soldier was shoulders up and out of the armored safety. He was turning a swivel machine gun toward the side of the road. Aiming at - Only then did I realize that Tobias had grabbed a German soldier. That he was holding him and - A sudden rush of movement. Visser Four, Cassie, an officer firing. Pop! Pop! Pop! Blood sprayed from the throat of Tobias's hostage. The tankman's finger tightened on the trigger of the machine gun. I saw it all, every detail, every nuance of movement as though it were inches, not feet, away. The hatch. The trigger. I released the grenade. 191 Tobias Bullets hit me in the face. I staggered back. I felt my wrist blade cut. Cut deep. A flash of movement overhead. I was still hawk in my mind and I knew that movement intimately well. An eagle! Flying low and slow, dropping . . . FWUMP! A muffled explosion. The German officer jerked in surprise. Then, the ammunition inside the tank caught fire. Pop .'Pop .'Pop! Pop! BOOOOM! 192 Flames shot from the tank hatch. Flames shot from the tank's gun barrel. It stopped moving. Flames erupted from the engine in the rear. I climbed to my feet. A flash of Cassie with her jaws on Visser Four, holding him as he stretched futilely to reach the Time Matrix. And then, a second explosion. BOOOOM! The tank's turret blew off. It twisted once in the air and landed. It took a split second. Time enough for a wolf to react, to jerk back. Not time enough for a human. Or a Yeerk. The turret landed. It crushed Visser Four from the waist down. The driver... the man who would, in another timeline, have been the most evil creature in human history, lay dead. Soldiers lay dead or wounded, slammed by the explosions. Rachel came circling down through the smoke. She landed on a dead tree branch. I expected her to be exultant. She wasn't. She said nothing. Marco and Ax landed seconds behind Rachel. We were almost alone, the five of us. Alive, uninjured, surrounded by death and destruction of our own making. 193 The wounded moaned. Cassie began to demorph. As soon as she had hands she went to the wounded soldiers. One French, one German. "You'll be okay," she told the French soldier. "It's not bad." She ripped a few strips of the man's uniform, grabbed a stick, and made a tourniquet. The other man, the German, died before she could even offer comfort. "Humans?" Visser Four gasped, seeing Cassie. "Humans all the time?" Marco stammered. Cassie replied. <0r was. Or wasn't. I don't know.> I said. Rachel demanded. Marco said. I said. Ax said. Ax said. He was already halfway back to his own Andalite form. My own hawk eyes returned, so superior to the Hork-Bajir vision. I turned my gaze on Visser Four. The head moved. He was still alive. Then I saw a smaller movement. I fluttered my wings and hopped over. I darted my beak down and snapped up the gray slug that was crawling down the doomed man's cheek. I said. The others came over. Cassie was human. Rachel mostly so. Marco as well. Just kids now, in a ditch, behind a burning tank, surrounded by bodies. 195 I asked. Marco held out his hand. He took the Yeerk. "We can't let him get a new host. Can't take him back to our own time. He knows now that we're humans. We leave him here, he dies slowly of Kandrona starvation." "They say it's a horrible way to die," Cassie said. Marco held the Yeerk out to Ax. the Andalite said. Ax looked at Rachel, then looked away. "No," Rachel said as Marco offered the Yeerk to her. I said. "I see," Marco said, nodding slightly. "No one's anxious to add another stain on their conscience? Everyone's had enough?" He flipped the Yeerk almost casually through the air. Threw it into the flaming hulk of the tank. "Starve or burn," Marco said, trying in vain to sound tough and indifferent. "His only choices. This is quicker." "We have to end this," Rachel said, sounding sad and sick. "No. Not yet," Cassie said. "There's still the Time Matrix. And there's still Jake." I wondered. 196 Ax said. No one said anything. We stood listening to the massacre on the beach. The roar of tanks trying to force a path around the far side of the burned-out hulk. Good guys or bad? Had we turned the battle for better or worse? "My turn, I guess," Cassie said softly. "I guess none of us will get through this without some terrible sin. This will be mine." I asked her. She walked over to the former Controller. Now just a human being. "What's your name? I ... someone told us, but I've forgotten it. Who are you?" 197 C a s s i e John," he gasped. "John Berryman. I'm ... Is he dead? The Yeerk? Is he dead?" "He won't bother you again," I said. I knelt down and wiped sweat from his forehead. It was running down into his eyes. "You're humans," John Berryman said. "The Yeerks don't know." I nodded. "We know. Yeah, we're humans. Mostly." "Kids." I nodded again. "I'm going to die, here." It wasn't a question. I didn't deny it. He could not possibly survive the massive injuries. "Mr. Berryman ..." 198 "John. You kids. You're heroes, you know that? The Yeerks, they hate you so bad." He laughed. He coughed and choked up blood. "Don't know how you did it," he rasped. "Following him through time. He was trying to change the world. Bitter, very bitter. Change time, make humans weaker, easier to conquer, then replace Visser Three. But it was too complicated for him. He didn't realize. Landed here. Expected Nazis. Told the Germans this was the main invasion, rushed the tanks forward. Only . . . different Germans. They arrested him. Too complicated, see?" "It was too complicated for us, too." "Wanted to kill Washington. Wanted to change Trafalgar. Kill Einstein. Push the allies back into the sea at D-Day. Other plans, too, but you made him rush. Panicked him." Tobias asked. John Berryman laughed. "That was for me. It was to shut me up. I never gave up, see. I fought him. All night I'd keep it up. Keep it up in his head." "Keep what up?" Marco asked. "Shakespeare. I played Exeter in the play. But I memorized all the lines." I shook my head. "I don't get it." "Henry the Fifth. I know it by heart. Shakespeare wrote a play about Henry at Agincourt. 199 Visser Four couldn't figure out how or when to intercept Shakespeare. Not enough definite data. So he was going to kill Henry to silence Shakespeare, to silence me." "That's insane!" Berryman nodded weakly. "Insane. That's what he used to feel: that I was driving him insane. Wouldn't give up. " 'We few, we happy few, we band of brothers; For he today that sheds his blood with me Shall be my brother; be he ne'er-'" "Oh, God. I'm not going to be free. I'm dying. Oh, God." "Mr. . . . John. I ..." He looked up at me, exhausted. Beyond anything but pain. "What is it? Ask me your question." I wiped tears from my eyes. "John. I'm so sorry. But. . . John, do you know, did your parents ever tell you . . . How did they meet? When and where?" I saw puzzlement. Confusion. Shock. And finally sad acceptance. "San Francisco. 1967. My dad's name was John, too. My mom is Theresa. She was Theresa Knowlton." 200 I could feel my friends draw back from me. Cassie, the killer with a conscience, the Drode had sneered. Kill 'em and then cry over them. I wasn't going to kill John Berryman. John Berryman would never exist. 201 AX The Time Matrix was surprisingly simple to operate. It could be directed by thought-speak command. There were no codes to break, no subtleties to grapple with. Cassie told me the time and place and date. I morphed to human, made physical contact with the Time Matrix, and my friends did as well, keeping their own minds blank as possible. And then, very swiftly, we emerged in bright sunshine in the middle of a crowded street. Two humans, one male and one female, were staring directly at us. They did not appear to be alarmed. "Whoa! Cool," one said. He had a great deal of hair on his face and head. He wore colored 202 beads around his neck. He wore vision augmentation devices with blue lenses. "Did you see that, man? I mean, is that like, real?" The female had very long hair, also adorned with colored beads. "What's real, man?" the female wondered. "Real is just like . . . it's like . . . you know, like whatever, right?" "Right on." "Love, man. Love is like . . . you know. Like reality, right?" "Huh?" the male asked. "Urn, what?" the female asked. The two of them nodded in unison. "Amazing," Marco said. "The United States is gone, or at least way different; the Nazis never happened, Einstein, who knows? But hippies are right when and where they're supposed to be?" "What are hippies?" I asked. "Hip. Pees." "Dude, these are hippies," Marco said. "Look at this place!" I did as instructed and looked around. There was a large number of humans with very long hair and colorful beads. "The Drode said our own timelines were buffered, protected. Maybe the Time Matrix did that for John, too," Cassie suggested. "I mean, maybe while he was using it he couldn't disrupt his own timeline. This is part of his timeline." 203 Marco shrugged. "Or maybe hippies just had to happen, you know? Otherwise how would we have bell-bottoms?" "Over there," Rachel said, nodding toward a store. "That's the place. John Berryman's parents, John Senior and Theresa Knowlton, will meet right there, today. All we have to do is separate them. They don't meet, they don't get together, they don't have a kid named John, and Visser Four ends up in some other host, in some other place. He never finds the Time Matrix, And none of it happens. Time isn't altered." "We never travel back in time," Cassie said. "Jake doesn't die." "Neither does a Hessian officer," I said. "Or a tank full of soldiers." "Or a Yeerk." "Or Hitler," Tobias added. "How can we do this?" "What do you mean?" Marco demanded. "Oh, man, the colors, man!" A "hippie" had come up to admire the Time Matrix's shimmering globe. "Right, the colors, whoa! Cool! Go away. We're trying to figure out the space-time continuum here," Marco snapped. "What are you getting at, Tobias?" "Look, Visser Four changed history. Maybe for the worse. But maybe not. Hitler was just a lowly 204 nobody. No Holocaust! We want to change it back so there was one?" "You saw the way our future was," Cassie argued. "We still had slavery. We had no freedom. The Drode said homeless people were rounded up and shot. We can't let that happen!" "But we can let the Holocaust happen?" Rachel demanded. "Tobias is right. That future we saw, that future we were in, that's back when Visser Four had done all he did, but without us getting in his face. That was the result without our intervention. Maybe in that timeline he did ten more things. We don't know what the result is with our intervention. Maybe the future is better now. Maybe us saving Henry, and even taking out that Hessian officer, I don't know! Maybe . . ." "Heavy, man. Way heavy," a female hippie said. "We could use the Time Matrix, travel back to our own time, see what's happened. See if things are good," Tobias said. "Does that not seem foolish now that we see how complex that history is?" "I'm just saying we go take a look," Tobias said. "See how it all played out." "Hey, history is never 'played out,'" Marco said heatedly. "We start messing with the past, we mess with the future. Maybe we like the way things look to us back in our own time, but 205 maybe we've screwed something else up down the line." "We do that every day," Rachel said. "Every time we do anything, or do nothing, we change the future. Why is this different? Look, let's just go see. Maybe our own time is great now. I mean, maybe, right?" "Why are we here?" a voice said. 206 C a s s i e Five heads snapped. Six pairs of eyes stared. Four mouths and one thought-speak voice said the same word. "Jake?" He looked annoyed. "Well, duh. Like you don't recognize me? Hey. How did we get back here?" Here was my barn. "You're alive," Rachel said to Jake. He stared. "I really don't like the way you guys are looking at me. You're giving me the creeps." Tobias wondered. 207 "What? What hippie chick?" Jake demanded. "It was Theresa Knowlton," I said. "We didn't have to make the decision. She saw us. She was distracted. She missed meeting Berryman's father. Berryrnan was never born. It all never happened." "Excuse me!" Jake interrupted. "Why am I crossing the Delaware next to George Washington one minute and then I'm back here while you people babble about hippies?" Berryrnan had never existed. The Time Matrix was where he'd found it. Buried. We'd never gone back in history, except in our memories. Henry V had not seen a Hork-Bajir take to the field. Washington had crossed the Delaware and surprised the Hessian troops. Nelson and the British had defeated Napoleon's fleet. Einstein had left Nazi Germany to find freedom from oppression at Princeton University, where he had set in motion the creation of the atomic bomb. And on June 6, 1944, soldiers of the United States, Britain, and France had begun the final destruction of the evil man who, in another reality, had been nothing but a harmless old soldier. "You died, Jake," I said. "You died crossing the Delaware with Washington." I could see the spasm of shock on Jake's face. "Oh, my God," he whispered. "Did ... I 208 mean, in the end, did we do it? Did we put it all back right? Did we make it right?" I went to him and gave him a kiss on the cheek. "No. We didn't make it right. But we put it back, Jake. Leave it at that. We put it all back." 209 Don't: miss Animorphs #30 The Reunion With a clean face and conditioned hair I headed toward the school bus stop. And walked past it. Instead, I hopped on a city bus headed downtown. The warren of streets that is the financial and business center of our town seemed as good a place as any to kill time. To get lost without running the risk of running into anyone who knew me. There were movie theaters downtown. I figured I'd look around till I could catch a matinee of something loud and fun, Twenty minutes later the bus dropped me and thirty office-bound men and women in the heart of blue-suit central. It was still way early but already the sun was heating up the sidewalks and the exhaust from the cars, trucks, and busses was spread like a 210 grubby, smelly blanket over the concrete and steel jungle. Nice choice, Marco. I should have gone to the beach. I stood on the sidewalk and stared. Seething mass of humanity. I'd heard that phrase once and now I knew what it meant. It meant "office workers at rush hour." What was the big hurry? Did adults really like going to work? Or was Friday free donut day at the office? THWACK! I was down! My knees hit the pavement and my face landed in a planter full of cigarette butts and abandoned coffee cups. The enemy! I prepared myself for the next blow. Nothing. I looked up. No one had noticed I'd been knocked over. I got to my feet, dazed. I rubbed the ash, dirt, and stale coffee off my face with the bottom of my shirt. I was disgusted. And I was mad. A woman had run me over with her tank of a briefcase. Then she'd continued on down the street like nothing had happened. And no one had stopped to help me. "And they say my generation has no manners," I muttered. I gave myself a quick once-over - nothing 211 seriously damaged but my dignity - and set out after the woman who'd so callously whacked me. This woman had an appointment with the dirty pavement, courtesy of a well-placed Saucony Cross Trainer. I caught up to her about halfway down the block and followed a few feet behind. Waiting for my chance. Her briefcase was;big enough to hold a Doberman and built to maim, with steel corners and a big combination lock on the side. And what was up with that hair? The woman wore a stiff, curly blond wig. Think steel wool pad. Used. Slightly shredded. And yellow. I saw the perfect spot to exact my revenge. I skirted the crowd and hid behind a big, concrete column about a yard ahead, just at the corner of the courthouse. When Wig Lady passed - bingo, bango! BAM! She was going down. I peeked from around the pillar to see how close she was to meeting my foot. And then I bit my cheek to stop from screaming. The woman with the awful blond hair and the briefcase . . . Was my mother! Visser One!