And then I recognized the Andalite mind.
Yes, it was all the things I’d imagined it would be. Confident. Alert. Poised for combat.
But there was another element that took me off guard. Something bubbling happily away beneath the rationality. Nothing giddy like a dolphin’s playfulness. Something less simple.
Optimism. That was it. Intense optimism.
Ax whipped his tail blade through the air.
Fwapp!
I flexed the massive muscle that was my tail. I was tentative. I imitated the figure-eight exercise Ax was doing.
Ax said, backing up.
Ax repeated the move in slow motion for me to see. But I wasn’t paying complete attention. I could see in all directions at once. Front, back, left, right. At the same time!
I neared the tree, centered myself, and shifted my weight to my hind legs as Ax had.
I let it rip. My tail hurtled toward the trunk.
FWAPP!
I yanked and twisted. I couldn’t free my blade.
Ax grabbed my arms and leaned back. After a few seconds,
We landed in a heap. Eight legs tangled.
We walked over to a nearby stream. Ax stuck a hoof in. So did I. I waited to see what I should do next. It was so pleasant, this cool, gurgling brook. So refreshing. So satisfying.
Wait. What? I was drinking! I looked at my hoof. It looked normal. But the thirst in my … in my legs was being quenched. It was amazing. It was also a little creepy.
The very last glimmer of color was disappearing from the sky, absorbed by the mysterious indigo of night.
I stopped drinking and turned all eyes on the stripe of color.
He stopped.
Saturday night. The grandest night of The Sharing’s giant publicity gala.
I cruised over town, skimming above the neon McDonald’s signs and telephone poles and car headlights, toward the new community center.
Faint at first, then more definite, came sounds from the celebration. Voices filtered through night air. Jaunty strains of a jazz band. Shrieks and giggles from the younger members. And above it all — over the acoustic wash that grew more insistent the nearer I got — boomed a deep, formal voice.
“Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls. Good evening …”
Tall, white tents reached up into my airspace. Spotlights crisscrossed the sky. Stage lights illuminated the podium and the blue-suited master of ceremonies below. Round, white-clothed tables dotted the grass.
I caught sight of Jake. In a dress shirt and tie, seated at a banquet table next to Tom, his dad, and his mom.
He couldn’t answer me. But he rolled his eyes in agreement, then turned his head to the right and nodded toward the buffet table.
“That’s three!” somebody exclaimed.
“Is he getting another one?”
The shouts were coming from the end, where an elderly man stood next to a cotton candy cart, surrounded by children.
“Son, I just don’t think it’s safe to give you any more. Where are your parents?”
I circled around, trying to see what Jake wanted me to notice. Trying to stay up, out of the lights.
There was Ax, in human morph. Wisps of pink cotton candy streaked his hair, hung from his chin like a ghostly beard, and blew from his fingers as he forced his way to the front of the line.
I laughed. Ax with a human mouth is dangerous. Andalites have only a vestigial sense of taste. Nothing like the explosive sensory overload from the human mouth.
I looked back at Jake. He was shaking his head slightly, like an exasperated, but amused, parent.
“Friends …” the man at the podium continued. “Three words encapsulate The Sharing’s appeal: Opportunity. Involvement. Dedication. Change. Hmm, that’s four.” There was a slight pause and feedback hum as he thought that one over. “But then, that’s just like The Sharing, isn’t it? Exceeding expectations.” The crowd cheered approval. “Tonight we honor members who embody these words. Who, with their achievement, keep our organization running on course …”
I couldn’t think of how to describe it. From fifty feet up I scanned the buffet table. Marco was black against dark brown. I could barely see him at this distance.
Ax moved toward the chocolate fondue. A fly buzzed out of his cotton candy beard. This fly was more easily visible: black against pink.
Cassie said.
“This year’s highest honor goes to a young man who moved swiftly to the top of our ranks,” the emcee intoned. “A devoted member of our community.” Applause thundered through the crowd. Tom rose from his chair and accepted a plaque.
Naturally Jake heard all this, since we’d included him in our thought-speak. He was fidgeting. Nervous. Looking like he was about to jump out of his chair and run for the fondue. Or maybe just for the exit.
Then I saw Jake’s eyes roll up toward the sky in what could only be an expression of “Why me?” I glanced back at Ax to see what had upset Jake. The Andalite was wearing a pink, cotton candy beard and had his hand immersed in the chocolate fondue. The chocolate was up to his wrist.
He pulled his hand out, held it up in front of his face like he’d just discovered it was made out of gold, then began licking his fingers.
Disgusted bystanders backed away from the dessert area, pointing.
Light! Blinding light! A searchlight beam had swung wildly. I flared my tail, cranked my wings, flew out of the light.
Had I been seen? The Yeerks had seen a red-tailed hawk. Way too many times, in all the wrong places. Had they seen me now?
Marco yelled.
The Illusion Page 3