JOURNAL#23
(CONTINUED)
ZADAA
Loorbrought me to the flume by herself. That was cool. I wanted the chance to say good-bye without Saangi there. I chose to wear the white tunic of the Rokador, rather than my Ghee armor. It was a heck of a lot more comfortable. Besides, once I got to Second Earth, I'd be changing into local clothes anyway. Loor and I made our way past the raging water at the bottom of the restored waterfall, through the abandoned Rokador tunnels, down into the trapdoor that was marked with a star, and finally down through the cleft in the rock that led to the large cavern, and the flume.
The two of us stood near the mouth of the tunnel, not sure what to say. We had triumphed. Again. In a big way. In spite of the awkward conversation the night before, we had grown even closer. Or maybe it was because of the conversation. Zadaa was safe, and I felt as if we had tipped the balance in the battle with Saint Dane. Still, there was more to come. We knew Saint Dane wouldn't crawl into a ball and give up. There were battles ahead, but our confidence was pretty high.
"I want to see Second Earth again," Loor said.
"You will," I assured her. "Let's hope it'll be to sightsee."
"Give my regards to Mark and Courtney," she said. "And rest, if you can."
"Yeah, like that'll happen," I said, chuckling.
Iknew we would see each other again, so this wasn't a tearful good-bye or anything. I gave her a quick hug, and was about to step into the flume when the tunnel came to life on its own. I stood next to Loor, watching curiously as the light appeared in the distance, along with the musical notes.
"That's weird,"Isaid.
"Could Alder be returning?" Loor asked.
Ididn't know. Besides you two guys, Alder was the only Traveler who knew I was on Zadaa. Another Traveler might have decided to pay a visit, but I couldn't guess which one. The rock walls began their transformation into crystal as the light grew brighter. Loor andItook a step back from the tunnel to give the arriving Traveler some room. The sound of the musical notes filled the cavern. We shielded our eyes. A shadow appeared out of the light. The Traveler had arrived. Before the light had the chance to shrink back into the tunnel, the shadow leaped out at us. It happened so fast, there wasn't time to react. A moment later the light disappeared, and I saw who it was.
Saint Dane.
He jumped from the tunnel, directly at us, letting out a hideous, guttural scream. He had a sword. A very big sword. He held it high over his head, ready to strike. Loor pushed me out of the way. I stumbled and fell to the cavern floor. As usual Loor's first thought was to protect me. Like her mother before her, the price for saving my life…
Would be her own.
Saint Dane thrust the sword forward. Loor tried to dodge it, but wasn't fast enough. I watched in horror as Saint Dane ran his sword through her chest. I froze. My brain wouldn't accept what I was seeing. Saint Dane drove the sword through Loor. My Loor. The Traveler from Zadaa. I saw the blade come out her back, slick with blood. He drove the weapon so deep that his hands were pressed against her chest. He looked her square in the eye and said with a brutal anger that I felt to the depths of my soul, "Nowdie!"
He pulled the sword out just as quickly. Loor fell to the ground. For all I knew, she was already dead. Saint Dane turned to me, holding up the bloody sword. I saw the fury in his white eyes. I was next.
"You think you have won?" he seethed. "You think you have outwitted me? We haven't even begun."
I think I was in shock. Thirty seconds before, Loor and I were talking about her visiting Second Earth. Now she lay dead at my feet. I couldn't think. I couldn't breathe. It all felt so impossible. But it wasn't. Loor was dead, and if I didn't snap out of it, I knew I would be next.
Saint Dane was out of his mind with anger. When I think back on that moment, I realize that our victories on the other territories had pushed him to the limit. Losing Zadaa had sent him over the edge. To win this territory, he had taken off the gloves. He used less trickery. He appeared as himself. He wanted to beat us straight up. He proclaimed this to be a demonstration of his strength. I think the person he was reaUy trying to prove something to was himself. He had failed. He was ready to declare victory in the battle for Halla, but he underestimated the Travelers. He underestimated me. Most importantly, he underestimated the character of the people of Zadaa. He called them weak, and some were, but in the end we never would have saved Zadaa without the courage and wisdom of the people themselves. Saint Dane was losing. After his failure on Zadaa, he knew it. He was like a wild cat that was backed into a corner. In other words, he was dangerous.
He stalked me with the bloody sword. I got to my feet and turned sideways, taking a defensive stance that reduced my target area. Loor's lessons were well learned. As Saint Dane stalked closer, his body transformed. He changed from his normal image into that of the Ghee warrior who had beaten me so badly. My knees went weak. History was repeating itself. The moment I dreaded was here. I was going to have to fight this guy again. Saint Dane knew how to get into my head. I had nightmares about that fight. This time there was no chance of a last-minute rescue. One of us wasn't getting out of that cavern.
I wished I had decided to wear my Ghee armor. I didn't even have a weapon. Saint Dane didn't care. This wasn't about sportsmanship. It was about revenge…and death.
This is what I trained for.
"I will give you this much credit," Saint Dane seethed. "You are stronger than Press said. But that means nothing to me now. If killing you is meant to be, I am more than happy to be the executioner."
He lunged at me. I ducked and rolled toward Loor's body. I had to stay focused. I couldn't think about her. I needed her weapon. While jumping back to my feet, I grabbed her wooden stave. I was now armed. I spun to face Saint Dane, who held the sword high once more.
"You have been practicing," he said. "No matter. You are still a weak boy. I should have killed you on Denduron."
He came at me with the sword. This time his movements were shorter, quicker. He slashed the weapon back and forth. I deflected the blows with Loor's stave. He wanted me dead. I wanted me alive. If I was going to beat him, I was going to have to use his anger against him. But I had to be smart. The last time I tried that, it backfired and I landed in the hospital. This time I would end up dead.
I ducked away from his attack and spun toward the other side of the cavern.
"It's over," I said. "You can't outwit me. This proves it."
"Ahhh!" he ran at me and chopped down with the sword like a lumberjack. I ducked away, but couldn't counterstrike. He was too good. He may have been making bad attacks, but he kept recovering in time to block my counters.
"Go back to whatever cave you call home," I taunted. "You have no chance of controlling Halla. We're too strong. The people of the territories are too strong. You're in way over your head."
"Rahhhh!" he bellowed, and unleashed another attack. I blocked two of his shots, spun, and cracked him on the back of his head, knocking him off balance. My confidence grew. I had to force myself not to think of this as revenge. I had to stay in control. I couldn't think about how he nearly beat me to death. I couldn't think about Loor. I had to be the warrior she taught me to be.
"Your bravery is impressive, but foolish," Saint Dane said as he circled back for more. "You are not invincible. You will meet the same fate as Press, and Kasha…and Loor."
I attacked. I faked a shot to his gut, then spun and drilled the other side of my stave for his head. He was ready for me. He didn't go for the fake and knocked my second shot aside. He followed by lashing at me with the sword. I moved quickly enough so that I wasn't sliced, but the blade smacked me in the back, stinging. I had committed the number one mistake. He had goaded me into making the first move. It nearly cost me my life. I wouldn't do it again.
"You're running out of territories, Saint Dane," I said. "Your campaign is running out of steam. We are all over you. We know your tricks. We know how you think. And…we're the good guys."
Saint Dane thrust his sword at me. I knocked it away, spun the stave, and hit him square on the side of his head. I heard him bellow in pain. I didn't stop. I hit him again, straight in the gut. He doubled over and dropped the sword. I wanted more. All the anger, all the frustration, all the hatred for this guy poured out of me through Loor's stave. It was payback time. I had no sympathy. I pummeled him. I hit him in the head, the knees, the gut. I gave him every bit the beating he had given me, and more. I had won, but that wasn't enough. I wanted to kill him. Yes, I'll say it. At that moment I wanted to kill him.
I had lost control. I was in a frenzy, beating him mercilessly. It was exactly what he wanted. When I was in control of my emotions, I was in command of the fight. As soon as I let my emotions take over, Saint Dane turned it around. He took the beating, backing into the far wall of the cavern. He looked as if he were ready to pass out, but he wasn't. He surprised me by ducking down, reaching into his Ghee armor and pulling out a short, three-bladed knife. It was a weapon from Eelong, the three claws of a tang beast. He lashed out with the knife, catching my forearm. I screamed, and lost control of the stave. He lashed at me again and I dropped it. It clattered to the cavern floor, out of my reach. I was about to be skewered.
Without thinking, I threw myself backward. Saint Dane slashed with the knife again, catching and slicing the front of my tunic. I did a full backward somersault. Saint Dane got his feet back under him and charged. This was it. He was coming in for the kill. He let out a roar of bloodlust. I finished the somersault and landed on my back. I saw Saint Dane charging with the tang knife held high, ready to plunge down at me. I didn't move. There was no way I could get out of the way fast enough. He was coming in full throttle and I was on my back. I had only one chance left.
Without taking my eyes off him or moving my body, I reached out and grabbed the sword that had fallen to the ground. The sword that had killed Loor. Saint Dane's eyes were locked on mine. They were on fire. He had a single-minded purpose-kill Bobby Pendragon. I felt the handle of the sword…Saint Dane lunged at me… I brought the point of the sword up and…Saint Dane impaled himself square on the blade. His eyes stayed locked on mine. I saw his look change from rage to shock. The unthinkable had happened.
I had killed Saint Dane.
His body transformed from that of the Ghee warrior back to his normal self. But the agony and shock were still there. The blood-red veins on his bald head seemed to glow. His white eyes grew dim. It was over. It was all over.
Or so I thought.
Saint Dane hung there for a moment, then his body turned to black smoke before my eyes. The dark cloud floated away from me and moved quickly to the mouth of the flume. There it grew and transformed back into solid form. Saint Dane stood there, looking totally fine. He wasn't hurt. Not even a little. Making things worse, he was strangely calm. Gone was the anger. He even had a small smile on his face. I lay on the ground, still holding the bloody sword. My brain had frozen. I couldn't move.
"I see you are capable of rage," he said cockily. "I will remember that."
"How could you…?" was all I could gasp.
"Didn't Press tell you how futile it would be to try and kill me?" he said with a smirk. He kept his eyes on me and shouted into the flume,"Quillan!"
The flume came to life. He was getting away. I didn't have the strength, or the will to try and stop him. Truth was, I didn't know how.
"This has been such an amusing diversion," Saint Dane said. He was back to his old, confident self. "In spite of what you may think, Pendragon, this isn't over. I can lick my wounds and move on." He glanced down at Loor's body and added, "The question is, can you?"
The light from the flume enveloped the demon Traveler. He took a step back and was gone. As the light disappeared, I could hear his laugh fading away.
I dropped the sword. My mind was reeling. What had just happened? One minute Saint Dane was dead, the next he wasn't. One moment he was desperately trying to kill me, the next he was back to his old self, as if his attack had all been a planned stunt. Maybe it was. Maybe this was one more way of throwing me off balance. If that was the case, he'd done a pretty good job. I had discovered that under the right conditions, I was capable of taking a life. Or maybe I was only capable of taking Saint Dane's life. But his life couldn't be taken. My head hurt.
That's when I remembered Loor. I rolled over onto my knees and crawled to her.
"Loor!" I shouted. "Loor!"
The Ghee warrior lay still. The front of her black armor was slick with blood. Lots of blood. I lifted her head. There was no sign of life. I wouldn't accept that. I couldn't. I felt her neck for a pulse. There was none. I lifted her eyelid. She stared ahead, looking at nothing. It was impossible, but true.
Loor was dead.
I was brought back to the moments when life abandoned Osa. And Kasha. And my uncle Press. I had been there for all of them, and I was there for Loor. I cried. No, I sobbed. Not Loor. Never Loor. It wasn't right. I put my hand on the wound that Saint Dane's sword had made. The wound that had spilled her blood. It was warm.
"No," I whispered. "This can't be happening. I will not accept this."
So many memories of Loor came rushing at me. I remembered when I first met her on Denduron, and she wouldn't accept me as a Traveler. I had memories of nearly drowning her in the river when I thought I was rescuing her from an enemy that turned out to be Alder, of her holding her mother as she died, of standing by me on Cloral at Uncle Press's funeral, of meeting you guys on Second Earth, of jumping into Lifelight with me and battling the fantasy monsters in the Barbican, of standing with me in the rain here on Zadaa, hoping for a kiss.
I pressed my hand into her chest as if I could close the wound. Trying to bring her life back. Praying that she could be saved. This was her moment of victory. She had saved her home territory. I didn't accept that she could die at the moment of her greatest triumph. It wasn't right. I didn't believe for a second that this was the way it was meant to be. I wouldn't let myself believe. The tears ran down my cheeks, my eyes stung, but I wouldn't take my hand off Loor to wipe them away. I was determined to make this nightmare go away, but it wasn't going anywhere. This was real. Loor was gone and I was alone.
It was at that very moment, the instant when I believed that all hope was gone…
That I felt a heartbeat. It was weak, but it was there. Her heart was beating. I quickly took my hand away from her chest and felt her neck again. There was a pulse. I must have missed it before. She was alive! But for how much longer? I didn't know what to do. I had to get her to a doctor, but there was no way I could carry her up through the crack in the rock using the footholds dug into the stone. No way. I had to get help. My mind went into hyperdrive. Saangi. I had to get Saangi. But first I had to cover the wound so it wouldn't bleed anymore.
I quickly took off my Rokador tunic and with the sword, I cut the sleeve off to make it into a bandage. I cut the other sleeve off and wadded it up into a pad. My idea was to put the pad on the wound, then tie it down with the other sleeve to stop the bleeding. That's how you stopped bleeding. Direct pressure. The makeshift bandages were ready. I went back to Loor and untied the front of her armor chest piece to get at the wound. I pulled the two leather pieces apart and saw…
There was no wound. Huh? I checked around the area, but there was no wound to be found. How could that be? I saw Saint Dane impale her. I saw the sword come out of her back. I reached over and grabbed the sword-it still had her blood on it. There was still blood all over her armor. It was real. That had to have come from somewhere. What had happened?
"Pendragon?" Loor said weakly. She was awake!
"Don't sit up," I warned. "You're hurt. Saint Dane-"
"I know," she said. "Saint Dane came at me with the sword. I did not move in time. He… he killed me." Loor's hand went to her chest. She felt the area where there should have been a wound. She looked at me with wide, confused eyes. I was just as confused as she was. Loor moved to sit up.
"Let me help," I said, and went to give her a hand.
"No, I am all right," she said. "Pendragon, what happened?"
"What do you remember?" I asked. Loor sat up on the edge of the flume. She was shaken, but otherwise totally okay. "I remember him coming at me out of the flume. I remember the sword. I remember his white eyes looking right at me. He said 'Now-"'
"Die," I finished the sentence. "He said, 'Now die.'"
Loor continued, "I remember. I felt like I was falling. But it was not a frightening thing. I felt safe. There were people around me. I knew they were friends, but I did not recognize anyone. They were unfocused shadows. I said I was ready to go with them. A woman said that it might be my time, or not. We would know soon. They were all very happy to see me, and I was happy to see them as well. I liked being with them. I was happy. But I do not know who they were. Then somebody said, 'This is not the way it was meant to be, Loor.' It was a man. I knew who he was, but I didn't. The voice sounded familiar, but I couldn't see him. The next thing I knew I was here, looking up at you."
"I guess it wasn't time" was all I could add.
Loor nodded thoughtfully. "Pendragon," she said, "something has been bothering me."
"Yeah, no kidding," I said.
Loor ignored my sarcasm and continued. "There have been other times where things did not make sense to me. Did you not think it was odd how you recovered so quickly from your wounds after the fight with Saint Dane?"
"Well, yeah," I said. "But I figured I was a quick healer. I've always been a quick healer."
"But you were nearly killed," she said. "Your recovery was nothing short of impossible. And what of Alder? That arrow should have killed him, yet he was up and fighting with us so soon afterward. Did you not think that was unusual?"
"I had a few other things to worry about at the time," I said. "And here," she said. "I should be dead. Iwasdead. Yet I am not. How can that be?"
Good question. I wished I had an equally good answer.
"Could it be because we're Travelers?"Iasked.
"I do not know," she answered. "None of us knows our own true history. We were not born of our parents' blood. There is much we have yet to learn."
"Then why did Osa die? And Kasha? And Uncle Press? They were Travelers."
Loor gave this some deep, troubled thought. She said softly, "Maybe it was because you did not know you could heal them."
Those words stunned me.Ilet them sink in for a minute, then rejected the idea.Ijumped to my feet and paced.
"No way," I said. "That's impossible. This isn't about me.Ican't bring back the dead."
"Perhaps not," Loor said. "Or perhaps with Travelers, it is different."
"So you're saying I could have saved Uncle Press? And the others?"
"No, but only because you did not know. You told me that Uncle Press said to you that killing Saint Dane was futile, because he would only come back in another form. Saint Dane is a Traveler. We are Travelers. We may be more alike than you think."
The idea was incredible. I would have thought it was ridiculous, if not for what had happened to Loor. She was dead.Iknow she was. There was no heartbeat. She had a mortal wound. Yet there she sat, as good as new, and the wound was magically gone. I wasn't ready to accept the fact that I had incredible healing powers, but it would have been stupid to ignore the fact that there may be more to being a Traveler than we first thought.
I was about to suggest we get her back home, when the flume sprang back to life.
"You gotta be kidding me!"Isaid.
Ihelped Loor to her feet, and we backed far away from the tunnel. Neither of us wanted to be sitting ducks again. It was too late to climb out of the cavern. Whoever was coming, we had to face them. Though just to be safe,Iquickly picked up the sword that Saint Dane had left behind.
The flume did its normal pyrotechnics with light and music. I squinted through the bright display to get a glimpse of who would be coming back at us. This time there were no shadows emerging from the tunnel, primed to kill. The light disappeared and the music stopped. Nobody was there.
"Look!" Loor said.
Resting on the bottom of the flume, near the mouth was a brightly colored square box. It looked like an elaborate gift. It had bright red and yellow stripes and looked about the right size to hold a big pumpkin. The whole thing was tied up with a bright red bow.
"I've lost my mind," I said.
Loor walked boldly over to examine the package. I was behind her, but without the same enthusiasm. There was a huge, yellow tag dangling from the bow. Loor looked at it, then held it out for me to see. There was one word written on the rectangular tag. In fancy letters was the word PENDRAGON.
"Oh, great," I said with absolutely no enthusiasm. "Is it my birthday?"
Loor pulled off the tag and found that it was folded in half. She opened it to see what was written inside. Her face fell.
"What?" I asked quickly.
She turned the tag around so I could read it. It said: "With my compliments. S.D."
"S.D.," I said. "Cute. Do I want to know what's inside?"
"Don't you?" Loor asked.
I didn't, but I had to. I thought back to the time Saint Dane had made a present of Gunny's hand in a bag. There was every reason to believe there would be something just as nasty in this box. I knelt down and pulled off the ribbon.
"This might be dangerous," I said.
"There is only one way to find out," Loor said.
I grasped the sides of the lid, winced, and pulled it off. Instantly a jack-in-the-box clown popped out. It was a scary-looking thing, with a garish smile and a jester's hat. It was on a spring, and bounced around while laughing over and over. I thought I recognized the laugh.
"There is something else inside," Loor pointed out.
Sure enough, there was an envelope in the bottom of the box. It was bright blue and looked sort of like a birthday card. Again on the outside was the word PENDRAGON. I rolled my eyes and opened the envelope. Inside was a single sheet of heavy paper. It was bright yellow, with fancy, red writing. It read:
Riggedy riggedy white
Come and spend the night
We'll play some games
Some wild, some tame
Cause if you will, you might
Your hosts on Quillan, Veego and LaBerge
"What does it mean?" Loor asked. "It means I'm going to Quillan."
I'm writing this journal to you from the territory of Quillan, in very strange surroundings. More of that in a second.
I reluctantly left Loor in the flume cavern on Zadaa, convinced that she was healthy, but clueless as to why. Did I bring her back from the dead? Do I have that kind of power? Do all Travelers have that kind of power? Loor raised a lot of good questions. I've never been sick a day in my life. If ever I was injured, it never lasted. My coaches used to call me the Terminator, because no matter what happened to me, I kept coming back. I never thought twice about it…until Loor died. Or un-died.
Having the ability to heal quickly isn't what's got me freaked out. It's more about why. Healing that fast isn't normal. Neither is rising from the dead. Saint Dane is a Traveler with powers that defy the imagination. We're Travelers too, but we don't have those same powers. Or do we? I have to admit, I sat here trying to change myself into looking like somebody else. It didn't work. All I accomplished was feeling stupid.
Still, I can't ignore the facts. Loor was dead. Then she wasn't. Whether I did it, or she did it herself, or it was the combination of both of us, I don't know. But it happened. That leads me to the biggest, most troubling question of all: Am I human?
Don't laugh. Humans don't rise from the dead. Humans get sick. Humans don't have the power of persuasion. And most of all, humans don't shoot around Halla trying to stop Saint Dane. (I know, you guys did, but you weren't supposed to.) It raises other questions too. What happened to my family? Uncle Press said my mother and father weren't my real parents. Then who were? Where did I come from and why was I living in Stony Brook? How could all records of their existence have disappeared? That's impossible, isn't it? None of the Travelers know where they came from. They were all told that their parents weren't their biological parents, but were never told who their real parents were. I have to admit, it's got me all sorts of worked up again. I had put all those questions aside to focus on Saint Dane. Now they're coming back to haunt me.
And speaking of Saint Dane, he has led me to the territory of Quillan. Actually, he invited me. Or had me invited. I'm writing this journal from my room. It's in this monstrous castle where a couple of characters named Veego and LaBerge live. The castle is right out of the Brothers Grimm, but this room looks more like I'm living at the circus. The walls are purple and yellow striped; the ceiling is covered with balloons; I'm writing on a desk that looks like a giant hand; and the bed looks to be floating in the air. I have no idea what's holding it up. Oh yeah, there are hundreds of dolls in the room. Clown dolls. I hate clowns.
I'm supposed to have dinner with my hosts soon, so I should finish this journal. I have no idea what's in store for me here, other than some scary clown nightmares. But I feel certain this is where I should be. Saint Dane brought me here for a reason; I need to find out what it is.
As I wrote before, please be careful. Whatever he's doing on Second Earth, assuming he's really there, I've got to believe it's in the early stages. I don't think you're in trouble. That's not his style. It's not you he wants to beat, it's me.
The adventure on Zadaa has changed me in so many ways. I've learned some things about myself, and discovered some new and disturbing questions. Above it all, I still think we are closer to beating Saint Dane. He's starting to sweat. No, he's starting to panic. It's my job to keep the pressure on, so that's what I'm going to do.
I miss you guys. I love you guys.
And so we go.
END JOURNAL #23
SECOND EARTH
"What are you reading there?"Andy Mitchell said."Highlights?"
Mark quickly rolled up the yellow pages of Bobby's last journal. He had already read it three times. "N-No. Uh, what's 'highlights'?"
Andy plopped down next to Mark with a bag full of burgers and fries. "You know,Highlights.That kid magazine they have in doctors' offices where you gotta find the picture of the pencil hidden in the tree and whatnot."
"Oh. No. This is just, uh, something I'm working on," Mark said.
"Yeah? Another one of them stories about Pendragon?" Mark shot Andy a surprised look and asked, "What did you say?"
"You know, like that one you wrote about, what was that place? Da-doo run run?"
Mark relaxed. He had forgotten that Andy had seen Bobby's first journals. In fact, he had stolen them from Mark. Mark and Courtney had to pretend that they had written the story themselves so Andy wouldn't spread strange rumors about what really happened to Bobby…that weren't rumors at all.
"Denduron," Mark corrected. "No, it's just an article. Leave it alone."
"All right, jeez, lighten up." Andy handed the bag of food to Mark. "Here, eat something. You look like hell. Sorry it took so long. Nothing's close to anything up here in the boonies."
Mark took the burgers, but didn't feel like eating. His mind was in too many different places. Courtney was lying in an operating room, near death, from an accident that might have been caused by Saint Dane. They still didn't know if she would live or die. As horrible as it was, worrying about Courtney kept his mind from spinning to all the other things that had him so worried.
Saint Dane was on Second Earth. Was he there to lay the groundwork for his attack on their home? As much as he wanted to think there was another reason, Mark couldn't come up with one. His worst fear was about to come true. There was going to be a battle for Second Earth. That is, unless Bobby could stop Saint Dane for good.
That thought brought Mark back to the strange news from Bobby's latest journal. Of course, Mark was thrilled that Zadaa was saved. But that also brought bad news. With so many losses, Saint Dane was getting desperate…and violent. He nearly killed Bobby out of sheer anger. Hedidkill Loor, which brought up some truly unsettling possibilities.
Loor had returned from the dead.
How strange was that? It was good news, yes, but disturbing news just the same. How could it have happened? Other Travelers died, and stayed dead. Mark saw one die himself, Seegen, the Traveler from Eelong before Kasha. What was different about Loor's death? Was it Bobby? But Bobby was there when his uncle Press had died. The same with Kasha. Those two didn't come back from the dead. Whatever the reason was, it brought something to light that could not be denied. There was something unusual about the Travelers. The simple fact that they healed so quickly was enough proof that they weren't normal. Or at least normal by the standards of the territories they came from. That brought Mark around to the bottom-line question that disturbed him the most.
Who was Bobby Pendragon? Really? They had been best friends since either could remember. Now Mark was faced with the possibility that Bobby wasn't just randomly chosen to be a Traveler. He was different. More different than even he could imagine.
"Mark?" a woman's voice called. It was Mrs. Chetwynde. She entered the waiting room along with Mr. Chetwynde. Both looked tired and scared. Their eyes were red. They had been crying.
Mark jumped to his feet to greet them. "You made it!" he exclaimed.
"We've been here for a while," Mr. Chetwynde said. "We've been with Courtney."
Andy stood up and joined Mark. Mark asked, "How is she?" He wasn't entirely sure he wanted to hear the answer.
The Chetwyndes exchanged looks, as if they weren't sure which one of them should answer. That wasn't a good sign.
"Is she okay?" Mark asked more insistently.
"She's out of surgery," Mrs. Chetwynde said. "She's got problems. She lost a lot of blood. The doctors have done all they can; now it's just a matter of time."
Mr. Chetwynde continued, "She's really banged up. Broken ribs. Her left arm was broken in two places. She has a terrible concussion…"
"Wow," Andy said without even thinking.
"The real damage was internal," Mr. Chetwynde said. "There was lots of bleeding. That's why the surgery took so long. They think they repaired it all but, they just don't know for sure. The next twenty-four hours are going to be critical."
Mrs. Chetywnde said, "If you boys hadn't found her…" She didn't finish the sentence. The words caught in her throat.
"What happened, Mark?" Mr. Chetwynde said, holding back tears. "The police said it was a hit-and-run. How did you find her?"
Mark was prepared for that question. He knew it was coming. "It was luck, mostly," he began. "Courtney called me yesterday to say she was riding into town to meet some guy named, uh,-"
"Whitney," Mr. Chetwynde said. "The police told us. Nobody can find the guy. He's not registered at the school."
"Yeah, we found that out too," Mark said. "This is Andy Mitchell, by the way. He's a friend of mine; he gave me a ride up this morning."
The Chetwyndes smiled at Andy. Andy nodded. He wasn't used to being polite.
"Why did you decide to come up?" Mr. Chetwynde asked.
This was the tough part of the story. Mark couldn't say that he was warned by Bobby Pendragon in a journal from across time and space that an evil demon might have been stalking Courtney. That probably would have made their heads explode, along with Andy's. Mark decided to be as vague as possible.
"It was just a feeling," he answered. "Courtney talked about hanging around with a new guy, but for some reason it didn't feel right to me. I can't explain why. I'd been planning on visiting her anyway. It was lucky we decided to come up when we did."
The Chetwyndes nodded. They accepted his reasoning. So did Andy. It was close enough to the truth. Mark continued quickly to get past that rough spot. "When we got here, we found out that Courtney didn't make it to class this morning. She wasn't in her room and her bike was gone. That got me thinking the worst, like she never made it back from her date last night. So Andy and I drove into town. We saw the fresh skid marks on the road, and when we stopped to look, I saw Courtney's book in the bushes. That's how we found her."
Mrs. Chetwynde started to cry. "Thank you, Mark. Both of you. You are both angels."
Andy shuffled uncomfortably. Mark felt a little awkward too.
"It's getting late," Mr. Chetwynde said. "You shouldn't drive home. We can put you guys up in a hotel for the night."
Mark wanted to stay in the worst way. If they wouldn't know about Courtney for another day, he wanted to be here. He looked at Andy and said, "What do you think?"
Andy shrugged and said, "Sure, what the hell."
Mark winced at his language in front of Courtney's parents. He looked at the Chetwyndes and said, "That's great, thanks. But, uh, I gotta call my parents and tell them what's going on. They sort of don't know we came up today. If you could talk to them for a second and tell them you're here and all, I'd appreciate it."
"No problem," Mr. Chetwynde said. "What about you, Andy?"
"I'll call my parents," he said. "No problem."
Mrs. Chetwynde said, "But first you should see Courtney. She wants to talk with you."
"Really?" Mark asked. "She's awake?"
"For now," Mr. Chetwynde answered. "I don't know for how long, though. She's pretty drugged up. She's in intensive care, just down the hall."
"Awesome!" Mark said, and started to walk off. He suddenly stopped and turned back to Andy to say, "C'mon."
"Nah, it's cool. It's you she wants to see," Andy said.
Mark walked back to Andy and said, "If it weren't for you, she wouldn't be here right now. She should know what you did."
Andy looked at the Chetwyndes. They nodded encouragement. Andy shrugged and followed Mark. As they walked along the corridor toward the intensive care unit, Andy scratched nervously.
"Look, uh, Chetwynde's not exactly a fan of mine," he said. "I don't want to bother her or nothing."
"She should know how much you helped," Mark said. "Just say hi."
"Yeah, well, I've never seen a banged-up person before," Andy said nervously. "What if I do something stupid, like puke."
"Don't" was all Mark said.
The two guys found the nurses' station and asked where Courtney was. The nurses broke out into big smiles. They said that normally only family members were allowed to visit in intensive care, but seeing as Mark and Andy were the two heroes who saved Courtney, they'd be happy to make an exception. Besides, they said, Courtney had been asking to see Mark. The nurse led them through the corridor. There were only four rooms, and none of the others was occupied. Mark figured that in such a small town, it was a big deal to have somebody in intensive care. The nurse walked them to the last door at the end of the corridor and stopped.
"How is she doing?" Mark asked her.
The nurse frowned. That was a bad sign. "You'll have to ask the parents," she answered. "Don't be long, okay?"
Mark knew that was bad news. People were quick to give good news. It was time to see for himself.
SECOND EARTH
(CONTINUED)
Mark tentatively entered Courtney's hospital room.Hemotioned for Andy to wait a second. He wanted to see her first. When Mark rounded the curtain and saw her, he gasped. Courtney was a mess. Her face was black and blue. Her head was bandaged. Her left arm was in a full cast that was held in position by a steel rod that kept it away from her body. She was hooked up to all sorts of tubes and wires, with bags of various colored liquids dangling over her and monitors spewing out graphs and data. Numbers flashed that had no meaning to him. There was an incessantbeep…beep…beepcoming from one of the machines that Mark figured was her heart rate. He was grateful that he couldn't see the bandages from all the surgery. That would have put him over the edge.
He walked tentatively up to the bed. He couldn't tell if her eyes were closed because she was sleeping or they were swollen shut. That's how bad she was.
Mark leaned down and softly whispered, "Courtney?"
Courtney's eyes fluttered and she said with a weak voice, "You don't have to whisper, dork. This isn't a library."
Mark smiled, in spite of the fact that he wanted to cry. Courtney may have been hurting, but she was still Courtney.
"We gotta talk," she said with a raspy voice.
"I know," he said. "But first you gotta see somebody. I know this is weird, but if it weren't for his help, you'd still be out there."
Mark gestured to Andy, who reluctantly walked to the foot of the bed. He stood there, looking uncomfortable.
"Hey," he said to Courtney. "You look good. Seriously. Considering."
Courtney moved her head a few inches and looked at Andy. Mark said, "Andy gave me a ride up here. That's how we found you."
"What happened, Mitchell?" Courtney said. "You get visited by three Christmas ghosts who changed you into a human being or something?"
Andy smiled. "That's funny, Chetwynde. Glad to see you still got such a hysterical sense of humor."
Courtney gave him a thumbs-up with her good hand. Andy backed toward the door. "I'll let you guys talk," he said to Mark.
"Hey," Courtney called to him in a weak voice. "Thanks. Seriously."
Andy nodded. "No problem. Get better, all right?"
Andy left, and Mark and Courtney were alone. Mark pulled up a chair and sat right by Courtney's head. He didn't want anyone to hear what they were going to say.
"You're going to be okay," Mark said. "I guess there was all sorts of internal stuff going on but they got it in time and-"
"He's here," Courtney said.
Mark nodded. "I know," he said soberly. "Bobby wrote that Saint Dane knew you were seeing a new guy."
"The new guywasSaint Dane," Courtney said.
"Yeah, I figured," Mark said. "He's gone. Nobody can find him."
"You got journals?" Courtney asked.
Mark smiled. He was prepared for this question too. "Bobby was on Zadaa. It's over. They saved the territory. You can read about it when you're feeling better. Things are looking real good."
"Yeah, real good," Courtney said. "Except that Saint Dane is here."
"Right," Mark said, deflated. "That."
The two sat there for a moment, the only sound coming from the steady beep of the heart monitor.
"Mark," Courtney said. "If I don't get better-"
"Don't say that! You're gonna be okay."
"Call Tom Dorney," Courtney said. "He can be an acolyte with you. I don't want you to be alone."
"I won't be alone, I'll be with you," Mark said. He was desperately trying to hold back tears.
"Yeah, maybe," Courtney said. She took a difficult breath and then said, "But if I make it out of here-"
"You will."
"Okay, when I get out of here, I want you to know, I'm done hiding and feeling sorry for myself." She drew another tired breath and said in a clear voice, "Mark, I want that bastard."
Mark looked right into Courtney's eyes. She may have been hurting and weak, but her eyes told the real story. The fire was there. She wasn't going down without a fight. Mark took her right hand and squeezed it.
"Me too" was all he said.
An hour later Mark and Andy were watching TV in their room at the Derby Falls Motor Lodge. It was a cheesy room with two beds that smelled like disinfectant, but they were comfortable. Andy was busy with the remote control, trying to figure out how to get the in-room movies for free. Mark's mind was elsewhere. He hadn't said much since they left the hospital. There was so much on his mind, most of which he couldn't share with Andy. He decided to focus on Courtney, and her health. At least everyone was on the same page there.
Andy gave up and flicked off the TV with the remote. He sat up and started putting on his sneakers. "I'm going out for a smoke."
Mark watched him for a second, then said, "This is weird."
"Gee, you think?" Andy said sarcastically.
"I don't mean Courtney," Mark said. "I'm talking about you and me. Let's be honest. We hate each other."
Andy struggled with his shoe, then said, "I don't hate you, Dimond. We're just on different frequencies."
"Yeah, well, I hated you," Mark said with a smile.
Andy smiled too and said, "I don't blame you. But hey, things happen for a reason, right?"
"I don't know what else to say but…thank you," Mark said sincerely. "If it weren't for you, Courtney might be…" He couldn't finish the sentence. "You're an okay guy."
Andy nodded. "Yeah, whatever." He stood and walked for the door. "You know," he said. "Maybe something good will come out of this."
"How do you figure that?" Mark asked.
"Bad things sometimes bring people together," Andy said. "You and I, we're pretty different. But when it comes to some things, like Sci-Clops, we click."
"True," Mark said.
"And we didn't kill each other on this trip. Not yet, anyway." Mark chuckled.
Andy continued, "Maybe we should think about working together on something."
"Like what?" Mark asked, surprised.
"I don't know. We both got our own projects going-you got the code thing and I'm working on the plastic steel. Maybe there's a way to, like, combine them. You know, two heads are better than one and all that."
Mark nodded thoughtfully.
'Think about it," Andy said, opening the door. "I'll be right back."
Andy closed the door behind him. Mark chuckled again to himself. As if he didn't already have enough to deal with. Never in a million years did he ever think that he and Andy Mitchell would become friends. The idea of actually working together on something was an even bigger stretch. Yet for Mark, neither seemed out of the question. Andy wasn't the guy he'd thought he was. There was more going on there. Mark wasn't a psychologist. He had no idea why some people became bullies and others victims. So much of what Andy had done to him over the years, all the torture, seemed so trivial now. There were bigger things to worry about. Way bigger things.
With all that Mark and Courtney and Bobby had been going through over the last few years, the one thing that helped keep Mark sane was Sci-Clops. It got his mind off the troubles of Halla, and let him relax and have fun. He didn't want to give that up. He needed it. The idea of working together with Andy Mitchell on a project-the brilliant Andy Mitchell, not the bully Andy Mitchell-suddenly sounded like it would be a whole lot of fun. Mark lay back on the bed, put his hands behind his head, and smiled.
Life, he thought, was full of so many strange surprises.
Courtney Chetwynde lay alone in her hospital bed. She was a fighter, and now she was fighting for her life. After Mark and Andy left the hospital, after her parents had said good night, after the nurses had changed shifts, she had taken a turn for the worse. Her blood pressure had dropped dangerously low. Her heartbeat slowed. The nurses feared that the internal bleeding had begun again. After a quick deliberation, the nurses decided to call in the doctors. If Courtney was going to survive, she would have to go back into surgery. Fast. The little hospital of Derby Falls wasn't used to handling this much excitement. The nurses scrambled to find the doctors, contact the Chetwyndes at their motel, and prepare the operating room. It was the night shift. Fewer people were on duty, which meant everyone had more to do. It wasn't chaos, but it was close. A patient was dying.
In all the frenzy nobody noticed that a young man with blond hair had entered the intensive care wing. He strolled casually down the corridor as the nurses hurried about, trying not to bump into one another. They were too busy to ask who he was. They didn't care. They had a patient to save. The young man walked calmly past the nurses' station toward the end of the corridor and stepped into Courtney's room.
Courtney was alone, and asleep. She had been given the first stage of anesthesia to prepare her for surgery. The guy walked up to the bed and looked down on the broken girl. He glanced at the vital signs monitor. She was barely alive. The guy reached out and gently put his hand on Courtney's chest. He pressed his flat palm over her heart firmly. All his attention was focused on Courtney. He closed his eyes. The only sound in the room was the steady, slowbeep… beep… beepof the heart monitor. Outside in the corridor nurses raced around furiously, trying to cover all the bases while fearing it was already too late.
The young man took a deep breath and exhaled. His entire focus was on Courtney. Slowly, ever so slowly, the weakbeep…beep…beepof the heart monitor, grew stronger. Courtney's blood pressure increased. The young man didn't take his hand away. He stayed focused. Courtney's breathing grew deeper. Vital oxygen was getting to her blood.
In a few minutes the doctors would arrive. They would find that Courtney's vital signs had not only stabilized, but improved. She would not need surgery. The nurses would be at a loss as to what had happened. They would have to scramble to explain why they turned the hospital upside down and got so many doctors out of bed for nothing. The Chetwyndes would arrive and be shaken by the ordeal, but grateful that Courtney was doing so much better.
None of that would happen for a while, though. The young man needed to finish his work first. He glanced once more at the monitors to see Courtney had turned the corner. She was going to live. With a satisfied smile he took his hand off her chest and folded his arms.
"Like I told you," the young man said, "I give, and I take away."
He heard a nurse out in the corridor yell, "Last room on the right! Hurry!"
The young man glanced at the door. Soon the entire emergency staff of Derby Falls Hospital would descend on the room to discover their patient had made a miraculous recovery. The young man glanced back to Courtney and chuckled. "I've been working such a long time to get this far, you didn't think I'd let you slip away so easily. This is just getting interesting."
The team of nurses and a doctor hurried into the room, stopping short when they saw the young man with the blond hair standing next to Courtney's bed.
"What are you doing in here?" a doctor demanded. "How did you get in?"
"I was just checking on my friend," the young guy answered innocently. "Is she okay?"
"Let's hope so," the doctor said, pushing past the guy, headed for Courtney. "Get him out of here! Do your parents know you're here?"
"It's cool," he answered. "I'm a friend."
"What's your name?" the doctor demanded.
The young man casually brushed back the dirty blond hair from his eyes. "It's Andy," he said. "Andy Mitchell."
(TO BE CONTINUED)