said Ax.
Ax began to morph at the opening to the tunnel that I had started. Taylor watched with fascination. I was just grossed out.
Andalite features melted into a blue-black pool until nothing was left but an oily slick. It was as if everything Andalite had to be forsaken before the Taxxon could be born.
But then, out of the pool, the beast took shape. Four round, red, jiggling eyes shook in the pool like tiny internal organs. The body grew larger and larger. It was like watching time-lapse photography of a fungus. First it grew out, flat along the floor, then up. It was hideous. The strong, beautiful Andalite body transformed and corrupted.
The bloated worm neared full size.
We waited anxiously, silent, ready.
Ax didn’t move. The big Taxxon just stood there motionless, as if in a trance.
Ax protested, speaking at last.
Before you could blink an eye, Ax shot down the tunnel.
I held my breath, wanting to be sure he wasn’t going to come racing back for a quick lunch. It was a good distance to where Ax was working, farther than you could see. But you could hear — no, you could feel — the sound of digging. A high-pitched, far-off ringing. The sound of teeth scraping dirt. Of dirt being devoured.
The sound sneaked up on you because it was so soft, barely audible. But it filled your head until all you could imagine was the Taxxon digging. And digging. Yard after stinking, slimy yard.
I shook my Andalite head, trying to break the trance. Beads of sweat flew off. I hadn’t realized how hot it was below ground. Four large animals make a cavern oppressive.
“Did you like it, Andalite?” The voice came from the far corner of the chamber where the gigantic steel gas main intersected it. Taylor leaned against the pipe. She was the only one who looked relaxed.
“Well?”
“Being a Taxxon, silly,” she replied. “I bet you did. Some individuals are cut out to be lower life-forms.”
“You know I’m right,” Taylor said to Rachel. “You know this one is weak.” She gestured at me.
Rachel slashed the air.
“You wouldn’t dare. Hurt me and there’s no explosion. You won’t let this opportunity pass. You won’t let emotions get in the way. You Andalite bandits — you’re too much like us.”
Rachel growled and snapped her jaws, but backed away. Taylor’s words hung in my mind. This was a Yeerk plan. Every deadly detail was Yeerk. Mass destruction. No provisions to protect the innocent. That was to be expected, I guess. But we’d jumped on board.
Rachel let out a small roar. She rolled her huge head from side to side. she announced in thought-speak that everyone but Taylor could hear.
Marco was uncharacteristically silent.
Jake paced back and forth, a big cat in a small, confining cage. I moved nearer to Rachel, brushing Jake in the process. He let out a repressed snarl.
I thought of all the stories Ax had told us of entire planets enslaved. Of how what couldn’t be enslaved was killed. Of great and peaceful societies destroyed by Yeerks.
A Yeerk was in the corner, not twenty feet away. A creature capable of the greatest evil, cowardly hiding inside a human so that no one would see the threat. How many were there now? Thousands? Fewer? More? Every day there were more human slaves. It was my first thought in the morning and my last thought before I slept.
They’d killed Elfangor, my father. The father I never knew.
The day would come when there would be no one left. An entire planet erased. I couldn’t let that happen.
Rachel rose on hind legs and cautiously lifted the sewer cap just enough to peer out. Standing erect, she was taller than the ceiling. She pushed the cap aside. Jake followed her out with a lightning leap. Marco brought up the rear.
Their time in morph was almost up. They needed to demorph and remorph, and Rachel needed to do a quick check-in at home. I’d been in morph about an hour and a half. Ax’s turn at digging was almost up.
They put the cap partially back and disappeared. It was just Taylor and me underground.
“Your friends have left you,” she observed. “What if they don’t come back?”
 
; This was part of Taylor’s fun. To play with my head. I didn’t answer. I wouldn’t let her affect me. When she walked slowly up to me, I didn’t move. When she reached out with her real hand and touched the fur just above my shoulders, I didn’t breathe.
“A handsome species,” she complimented, sounding not like a teenage girl, but like a sly, sophisticated Yeerk. “You deserve more than your tradition allows.”
I backed away.
“Your friends don’t understand how powerful we Yeerks are,” she continued. “But I know that you do. We will have no place for your friends in our new society, but you … every comfort you wish would be yours. We could rule together. Join us.”
I jerked away, shocked that I’d let her go on so long. She laughed. A long and confident laugh.
I said quietly.
“Of course we are. Of course we are. But think … democracies need leaders, and laws to protect the citizens. Someone has to make the laws …”
“You deserve more,” she persisted, then grinned, turned, and walked away. It was an odd thing to say. I felt like a doomed mouse, poked and prodded by a clawed cat. I couldn’t respond. I could only look away.
A crescent of light illuminated the chamber. I heard yelping and looked up to see two wolves pawing and pushing at the heavy iron cap. They slid it open and leaped down, landing very hard.
Jake paced back and forth before the tunnel opening. The new morph allowed him eight paces before he had to turn around. Better than the five in tiger. He was silent for a minute, then, looking at the watch I wore,
I took a few steps into the tunnel.
I looked at Taylor. She sat with her back against the wall and glanced from me to Jake to Marco with casual suspicion. I looked hesitantly at the opening of the tunnel. It wasn’t really large enough for our power morphs.
I said. I took off the watch, checked the glow-in-the-dark numbers. Put it around Jake’s right front leg.
Feathers turned to thin skin that stretched tight as an umbrella over wing bones. Blindness banished all trace of light. It had been dark already, but now there was a vision void. A nothingness that made my heart pound.
Then, a new sense. A kind of hearing. The sharpest hearing you’ve ever known. I couldn’t make out everything, but the higher sounds were crystal clear.
Then suddenly, it was more than mere hearing. I could tell exactly where all sounds came from. They formed a picture of my surroundings. So much like sight. So different, too.
I was echolocating. I was a bat.
No answer. I flew a long way, maybe a quarter mile, until I came to something strange. The tunnel became something else, something expanded. A hollowed-out space. A large cavern-room. Like maybe Ax had gone nuts and circled up and down ten or twelve times.
I could hear Ax now. Closer. The high-pitched screeching of Taxxon teeth on dirt and small rocks was almost deafening to bat senses. Extra-loud echolocation was necessary to see over the noise. The tunnel continued on the far side of the chamber. I flapped my wings and flew in.
WHAP!
I flew into Ax’s backside and slapped to the tunnel floor.
The tunnel had narrowed to barely bigger than the circumference of the Taxxon. Usually a Taxxon’s vigor made its tunnel at least large enough for it to comfortably wiggle out.
Marco said.
Marco and Jake crawled through the pitch-black until they bumped into Ax.
They bit into the soft baggy flesh and pulled.
“Skreeeee!” Ax cried involuntarily.
The hulking worm began to move. Marco strained and fought. Jake snarled and pulled. Inch by inch they dragged Ax out. By the watch around Jake’s leg, it took a full five minutes to reach the carved out, earthen cavern.
Less than two minutes to go.
Jake said.
No answer.
We collapsed in the darkness, exhausted and terrified, thankful to be together.
I demorphed and prepared to dig again as a Taxxon. But then …
“Hey, what’s going on?”
A faint light, way down the tunnel. It was coming nearer, bobbing as it came.
Jake and Marco saw the light, too. We watched as it increased in size and brightness until at last Taylor emerged into the earth-cavern. Rachel was in grizzly morph right behind her, her body wedged tight in the tunnel.
Taylor crawled on hands and knees in the Taxxon goo. There was no question the Yeerk was in full control. It was the kind of thing Taylor-the-girl would never do. Her hair was a mess, plastered to her face by Taxxon slime. One hand gripped an electric fluorescent lantern.
“What happened here?” Taylor demanded, looking at the cavern. When my eyes adjusted, I saw what a strange place the cavern was. It wasn’t square or round or ovoid. Nothing normal. It was an undulating, chaotic intersection of many different, smaller tunnels.
Ax answered honestly.
do not remember,> Ax confessed.
“Andalite incompetent,” Taylor raged suddenly.
I didn’t need to be reminded. Jake didn’t want me eating them. He also didn’t want Taylor seeing me morph straight from hawk to Taxxon.
I hopped to the opening of the tunnel Ax had dug and flapped a little to get out of sight. My wings scraped the tunnel sides and I crash-landed about fifty feet in.
I warned.
I was better prepared this time. I was ready when the instincts reared up and told me to follow the smell of my friends.
I turned my ravenous, empty belly to the tunnel instead. I rushed forward to the place where Ax had stopped. Fierce hunger propelled me into the soil wall.
I was more aware this time. I felt what was going on around me. What was going on inside the Taxxon mind. It wasn’t simple hunger. It wasn’t pure rage.
No. What drove the Taxxon to eat and dig was more complicated. It was something I understood. A sort of insecurity or fear.
Yes, a fear … grossly exaggerated … beyond anything humans experience … a desperate fear of not having enough … a terror of starvation … a horror that your essential needs will go unfulfilled … a horror demented and contorted by the Taxxon mind until it became a sick, murderous evil.
I wouldn’t have understood, or even noticed, if I hadn’t been hawk for so long. I’ve experienced just enough of that feeling to recognize it.
A whole species of terrified overeaters. It made me almost sorry for them.
Almost.
I dug and thought of Taylor. The Yeerk and the girl. What they’d let themselves become …
Was anyone all evil? That couldn’t be possible. I’ve heard that even Hitler was good to his dogs.
Taylor had been too insecure to face her peers without her beauty. She’d done what she had to do to make the fear go away.
Evil, even the worst evil, has banal origins every human can understand.
The Test Page 6