Katie Leigh was standing at Landon’s right shoulder, and when the snowballs subsided for a moment, he saw Jeremiah Crane pass behind a crate ahead of him. He glanced over at Katie Leigh to see that she’d seen him too. She had spoken passionately many times about getting even with Brock and the Cranes since the ordeal in the Library, but he needed her to focus. He then watched her pupils dilate and her eyes narrow. Before he could try and stop her, she was chasing after Jeremiah. As she sprinted away, Landon faintly heard her say, “You’re mine.”
Suddenly, the horn sounded. Riley and Landon weren’t sure which team it was for until Peregrine said, “I’m out.”
“What?” Landon asked as he turned his head away from the incoming snowballs to look at Peregrine. Splattered across her chest was the residue of a single snowball. She’d been eliminated.
“Riley!” he started. “Katie Leigh’s gone and Peregrine’s out. We need to get out of here. Follow me.”
After stopping another snowball from hitting him in the chest, Riley turned toward Landon and followed him out of the clearing. As they moved to safety, they fought to keep clear of the snowballs. Once clear, they continued to run, not paying attention to where they were headed but attempting to get as much space between them and the red team as possible.
Landon stopped running once they reached a series of partitions that formed a concave wall. He pressed his back against the barrier and turned to Riley to regroup and devise a new plan.
“So what do we do now?” he asked as he caught his breath, but before Riley could answer, Landon reached out and pushed him. “Look out!”
Passing inches away from his right shoulder, a snowball zoomed by Riley. Without blinking, Landon formed a snowball and blasted at the red team member that had shown up. It was Scott Anders, an African-American boy the same age as Katie Leigh. Landon’s snowball rocketed into his abdomen, and the red team’s horn blarred.
“Woah, that was a close one,” Riley said as he looked over at Landon, whose hand was still outstretched. “I owe you one, and when did you get so good at this? You’re awesome!”
“No, I’m not . . . and I’m just glad I noticed him in time,” Landon returned. He didn’t look at Riley. He’d realized he couldn’t take his eyes off the field for an instant now that Peregrine was out of the game. He had a wide extensity, but his tactometric sensitivity was still lacking, even though his abilities had become much more instinctual. His eyes darted from one opening to another, ready for anyone who might come at them. “Anyways, as I asked before, have any ideas for what we do now?”
“Not really.”
“Me neither. All we can do is just keep moving and hope we feel the snowballs coming before they knock us out of the game.”
“Agreed,” Riley replied.
Suddenly, Katie Leigh bolted out from behind a large crate. Before he noticed the blue tag on her shoulder or who it was, Landon had lifted up a snowball and shot it at her. Luckily realizing it seconds before it hit her chest, he flicked his hand and redirected the snowball. A loud clang reverberated throughout the field as the compressed ice hit the empty metal crate.
“Katie, where’d you go?” Riley asked once she’d joined them against the partition wall.
“No time for that now,” Landon interjected. “We’ll have time for explanations once the game is over. Right now we need to keep moving.”
Katie Leigh and Riley agreed, following Landon as he passed through a gap in the wall. They entered the large circular area in the center of the playing field. It was wide open and still had a thick layer of snow covering the ground with the tread marks of everyone who’d walked on it during the opening ceremony.
“This doesn’t seem like the best place to be,” Katie Leigh said. “We’re right out in the open.”
“You’re right,” Landon replied. “Let’s move over there.”
They ran across the open field as fast as possible, but just before they passed through another gap in the wall, Brock Holbrooke strolled in front of them, blocking their exit. He had a large smile across his face and an even larger number of snowballs circling his body. It was like a collection of moons orbiting a planet, or perhaps more appropriately, due to their speed, electrons circling an atom’s nucleus.
“I’ve been looking for you,” Brock said as he stepped forward and turned toward Landon and the others.
“Quick! Throw everything you’ve got!” Landon yelled.
They moved away from Brock while pulling snowball after snowball off the ground and throwing them at him. None of the snowballs hit; every one that was thrown was snatched out of the air and added to Brock’s growing arsenal. He didn’t need to make his ammunition; they were giving him an endless supply.
Brock took a few steps into the opening, providing just enough room for the Crane twins to enter the field behind him. They spread out, surrounding Landon and his friends.
“What do we do now?” Riley asked once he felt his compatriots’ backs pressed against his. They had moved together, pivoting around as a single unit. Anticipating their enemies to unleash the massive supply of snowballs at any second, they’d stopped throwing their own and returned to defense.
“I must say I’m a bit surprised. I’d expected you to get knocked out right in the beginning . . . especially you, roomie. But I guess I can’t say I’m upset that I get the pleasure of doing it.”
Without a moment’s hesitation, Brock lifted up his arms and forcefully threw them forward as if he were shoving someone across a room. Every snowball that was circling him froze in its orbit and flew at breakneck speed toward Landon and the others.
Landon didn’t even think. He just widened his stance, raised his hands, and made a fluid sweeping motion with his arms. The snow around them lifted off the ground and swirled up, like ice cream out of a soft-serve machine, until it connected above their heads, creating a protective dome. The bombardment of snowballs made a series of repetitive thud noises as they collided a split second later with the snowy casing.
“Impressive! When’d you learn to do that?” Katie Leigh asked. “And now what do we do?”
“You two need to get out of here,” Landon answered. His voice was strained and a bead of sweat trickled down his forehead. The force to create and maintain the dome was taking its toll on him. “Brock’s issue is with me. I don’t think they’ll follow you if I stay behind.”
“Landon, that’s insane,” Katie Leigh said. “You don’t stand a chance against all three of them. We’re not leaving you. If I hadn’t run off—”
“Katie,” Landon interrupted with the same forced voice, “can we talk about this later?” The muted thuds of snowballs colliding with the dome continued. “It’s not like he’s gonna kill me. It’s just a game. Winning is the important thing. And, I have an idea. . . . I think if I put enough into blowing this thing up, I can give you guys the cover you need to get out, but it will only be for a second or two, so you’re gonna have to book it.”
Landon then shut his eyes and slowed his breathing. He could feel the internal heat radiate through his body as he fed the blazing fire of his abilities. His face relaxed, and then without warning, he yelled, “Go!”
Landon blew up the snow dome, sending thousands of snowflakes throughout the walled-in area, forming a dense fog. The force Landon put into causing the snow cover knocked Riley and Katie Leigh over, and it took a moment for them to collect themselves. But they managed to get to their feet and run fast enough to get out.
Landon was now alone with Brock and the Cranes. He stood in the center of the field, awaiting another volley of snowballs to come rocketing toward him, but nothing happened. Body heat radiated from his exposed hands and ears as he waited, and he became aware of how exhausted he was. This was the first time outside of his sessions with Dr. Brighton that he could feel the physical taxation of his abi
lities on his body. He also was a bit surprised that his plan had seemed to work. Riley and Katie Leigh were gone, and the blue team’s horn hadn’t sounded yet.
When the snow settled and he could see through the fog, he watched as Brock and the twins staggered to their feet. Landon’s force had knocked them over too.
Brock brushed the loose snow off his jacket. “Well, you’re just full of surprises,” he said as he formed two snowballs just above his out-turned palms.
The Cranes had also gotten back up and were shaking the snow off of their hair and face. Once they’d realized what was going on, they formed snowballs above their hands and stood ready to throw them at Landon once they’d been given the command.
Landon stood with his feet anchored into the ground, preparing himself to deflect the next volley of snowballs as best he could. It was a long shot that he’d survive even for a second now that it was one against three, but he was determined to hear the red team’s horn blast at least once before he was out.
Landon shut his eyes. It might not have been the best idea, but he needed to center himself, and just before opening them again, he heard Dr. Brighton’s voice echo in his head, Be water, my friend.
Landon looked back at Brock and could barely see his face. The snowballs he’d formed had grown to the size of basketballs. Then with a smirk, Brock blasted them at Landon.
Landon didn’t hesitate. He wasn’t sure if Dr. Brighton was coaching him from the sidelines—projecting thoughts into his head—or if his own brain was deciding to help, but Bruce Lee had given him an idea. Landon took a crouching step forward, and then with a motion of his arms, spun the two massive snowballs around his body and directed each of them toward the Crane twins. The snowballs moved at an unbelievable speed. Landon had used the force Brock had launched them with and then gave them a bit of an extra push when he released them.
They were flying at such a speed that even when the twins’ two balls of ice collided with them in midair, they didn’t even slow down. The Cranes never had a chance to defend themselves as the basketball-sized balls of snow met with their torsos, knocking them backward into the wall. The red team’s horn sounded twice.
Brock looked enraged. The whole thing happened in a split second and he was now faced with taking on Landon alone. In his rage, he started forming snowballs as fast as he could and sending them at breakneck speeds toward Landon, who was fighting to deflect them all.
It took all of Landon’s energy to keep up with the onslaught of snowballs Brock blasted at him. He didn’t try to stop them, but instead just deflected them into the air. It was taking less of his energy, but he was fatiguing. The muscles in his shoulders were burning, and his arms felt like jelly. He knew he physically couldn’t hold out much longer, but he just needed to keep it together for a few more seconds for his plan to work.
Brock never stopped, he just fired snowball after snowball as fast as he could form them. Landon would never tell him, but he was astounded by Brock’s skill and surprised at himself that he’d managed to last so long against the Gymnasium’s alpha dog. Then it happened. Landon tried to raise his arm to deflect another snowball, but he couldn’t react fast enough. The tennis-ball-sized sphere of snow broke through his defenses and hit him square in the chest. The blue team’s horn blared.
Landon looked over at Brock, who’d stopped throwing snowballs after he heard the horn, but he wasn’t really looking at his enemy. He was watching to see if his plan would come to fruition. Brock was so focused on defeating Landon, he hadn’t noticed the shadow above him that’d been growing and growing throughout their duel. So Brock had no warning when a snowball about the size of a small car fell from the sky, right onto his head. The sound of the red team’s horn rang out through the valley. Brock was covered in a dense layer of snow and eliminated.
Landon might have been knocked out first, but throughout the last minutes of their battle, he’d sent every snowball he deflected to a place about ten feet above Brock’s stationary body—a trick he’d learned from Celia that day in the lake. With each new addition, the snowball grew and grew. Eventually, the weight of it was too much for Landon to hold while keeping up with Brock’s speedy projectiles and suppressing the full strength of his abilities, so when Landon was eliminated, he released the ball. A smile stretched across his face; if Brock had moved, the plan would have failed.
Joining the rest of the eliminated members of the blue team on a bench next to the faculty bleachers, Landon moved off the field, satisfied with what he’d accomplished. He hoped with Brock and the twins eliminated that Katie Leigh, Riley or one of the other two remaining members of his team would have a chance at pulling out a victory, but over the next five minutes, each one of them was knocked out of the game. The students had been nervous about Brock, Parker and the Crane twins, but for some reason, everyone forgot about Cortland Cartwright. He easily cleaned up the field once it was down to the final few. After all of that, the blue team lost again for the third year in a row.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
THE OLYMPIC TOWER
“How are you doing, Landon?”
Landon turned from the food services line; he didn’t recognize the voice, and he wasn’t sure why someone would stop him while he was getting his breakfast. Since the First Frost Frenzy ended a few days ago, Landon had received a confusing mix of praise, snubbing and contempt from his fellow students. His actions during the match, particularly with regard to Brock and the Crane twins, had placed him in a precarious position with the student body. Everyone had to now choose whether to support his challenging the most powerful students in the Gymnasium, to condemn him for embarrassing those same students, or to avoid Landon altogether, figuring that it would all blow over and things would return to normal.
To Landon, the First Frost Frenzy was just a game, and he was doing all he could to win. There was nothing more to it. A part of him wanted to make Brock, Jeremiah and Joshua understand that they couldn’t push him around like they did other students, but Landon never expected his performance in the game to stir such strong emotions within every student at the Gymnasium. He now understood that by eliminating the trio, he’d drawn the proverbial line in the sand and challenged the alpha male.
Landon was shocked to realize Cortland Cartwright was the one speaking to him. Landon had never met nor spoken to Cortland in the four months he’d been at the Gymnasium. They didn’t share a single training session together and were rarely ever in the same place at the same time. The only times Landon could remember even seeing him were in the cafeteria, but Cortland sat with Brock . . . so they’d never been introduced.
“Umm,” Cortland said after an excruciating period of silence. Landon had turned and was looking at him, but he hadn’t said a word. “I just wanted to tell you that you were awesome out there last Saturday. I don’t think anyone expected you to be capable of that.”
“Thanks . . . I think,” Landon replied. It took him a second to form the words in his brain. He couldn’t figure out if he was being praised or insulted.
“No, seriously, you were awesome.”
Landon continued to look at him strangely. He was having issues understanding Cortland’s intentions. Was he mocking him, as many others had in the past two days, or was he being genuine? By his demeanor and tone, Landon thought it was the latter. In the few seconds of knowing him, Landon felt like Cortland was just one of those naturally nice people with whom you couldn’t help but want to be friends.
“Anyways,” Cortland continued, “I was wondering if you wanted to sit with me for breakfast. I know we haven’t even spoken to each other before, but I have a feeling I’m going to be seeing a lot more of you after your meeting, so I wanted to try and get to know you better. What do you say?”
“What meeting?” Landon asked, confounded as to what Cortland was referring. “And I don’t know if sitting with you, Brock a
nd the Cranes would be such a good idea.”
“Oh, I’m not sure I was supposed to tell you about that,” Cortland replied. “And I’m eating alone. As his roommate, I’m sure you know. Brock’s not the biggest morning person, and the twins aren’t much better.” Cortland paused for a moment, turned and craned his neck, searching the cafeteria for something. “And it looks like Riley and Katie Leigh aren’t here this morning either, so you’d be eating alone too.”
“They normally get here a few minutes after me,” Landon quickly returned. He didn’t like being so predictable. He also couldn’t think of any excuse that would get him out of the situation, and Cortland’s insistence was making him feel an odd sense of acceptance, like being picked first for the kickball team at recess. “Lead the way, Virgil,” he said.
“What?”
“Sorry. Just something I always said to my mom.”
“No, I think I get it. Dante’s Inferno, right? Virgil was the guide. Just took me a second.”
“Yeah, that’s right.” Landon replied.
Cortland asked Landon all the usual questions one asks when first meeting someone, but he did it in a way that was easy. That usual awkwardness that comes with Where are you from? How old are you? and What’s your favorite color? seemed nonexistent. It was comfortable, like speaking with a best friend he’d grown up with. Unfortunately, the conversation didn’t last long. About fifteen minutes into it, someone came and tapped Landon on the shoulder.
“Landon.”
Landon turned and was surprised to find Professor Clemens standing over him. Landon and Cortland stood up.
The Search for Artemis (The Chronicles of Landon Wicker) Page 19