The Soldiers of Halla tpa-10

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The Soldiers of Halla tpa-10 Page 12

by D. J. MacHale


  “Couple times,” he answered. “The bad visibility will make us tough to hit.”

  He seemed confident at the controls. I mean, he wasn’t like a fighter-jock or anything, but on the other hand, he wasn’t looking around with a “What’s this button do?” attitude. I figured that as long as we didn’t hit anything, we’d have a chance at getting away. The helicopter behind us stopped shooting. I guessed it couldn’t see us anymore. Mark knew what he was doing. I watched him for a few seconds, amazed at the transformation that had happened over the past five years. It kind of made me sad, because the time had been rough on him. You don’t become toughened like that by hanging around reading books and eating carrots. Mark had definitely been through some stuff.

  A huge shadow passed overhead. Or should I say, we passed under something huge. I ducked. I know, dumb. It was an involuntary reaction. I saw through the bubble roof that it was one of the wrecked bridges that had connected Manhattan to the rest of the world.

  “Where are we going?” I asked.

  “Home” was his answer. “But not until we shake this guy. We don’t need to show him the way.”

  Another shadow flew overhead. I ducked again. This time it wasn’t a bridge. It was the other helicopter.

  “Did he see us?” I asked.

  “Let’s find out.”

  Mark pulled back the joystick. We immediately shot skyward. I was pressed back into my seat, fighting nausea all the way. It was like being on a ride at Play land. A really sickening ride that could end in certain death at any second. Knowing that didn’t help the nausea. It was a reminder that as much as I was a spirit from Solara, I was still very much a human being. At the moment I was kind of wishing that I was a little less human. The wrecked tower of another bridge appeared out of the haze. Mark veered us to the left. We would pass by safely, but too close for my taste.

  “So? Did we lose-”

  Two rockets hit the top of the bridge’s tower. It exploded, sending off a cloud of smoke and a shower of metal shrapnel. Mark banked hard to the left and flew down. Chunks of metal hit the chopper, pinging the surface, rocking us.

  “No,” Mark said.

  “‘No’ what?”

  “No, we didn’t lose him.”

  Mark dropped us down to the river again. We leveled off and flew over the choppy, dark water.

  “Why don’t we go over land?” I asked. “Because I don’t want anything falling on anybody.” Good answer. I hoped we wouldn’t be the ones doing the falling.

  “So we just try to lose him in the haze?” I asked. “That. Or I’ll drop him in the harbor.” Mark said that so matter-of-factly I actually believed he could do it.

  “You have a plan for this or are you just winging it?”

  He didn’t answer. Not good. We were approaching another bridge. The roadway loomed overhead. No sooner did we pass under it, than the roadbed exploded. The chasing helicopter was above us. Still shooting.

  “You ever play chicken as a kid?” he asked.

  “No, and neither did you.”

  Mark laughed, as if remembering the geeky kid he used to be. That kid was long gone. “He’s not giving up. We’re going to have to play.”

  There was a reason I never played chicken. It was dumb. It was a test of wills. There was no point to it other than to prove who was the bigger idiot. But this was Mark’s show. I wasn’t going to argue. We flew under another bridge. It could have been the Brooklyn Bridge. It was hard to tell. We were going too fast and I didn’t care anyway. Mark accelerated and drove us skyward again.

  “We’ve got to get far enough ahead of him to make this work,” he explained.

  The haze cleared a bit once we were over New York Harbor. It was still pretty thick, but visibility had increased slightly.

  “He can see us now,” I cautioned. “Good. I want him to.”

  Up ahead I saw the last bridge before open ocean. It was the long Verrazano Narrows Bridge that connected Brooklyn and Staten Island. Its two towers still stood tall.

  Mark explained, “For whatever reason, this bridge is still pretty much intact.”

  I twisted and looked back to see that the chasing helicopter had fallen far behind us. I caught glimpses of it through the haze to see it was just clearing the Brooklyn Bridge.

  “Maybe we can lose it now,” I offered hopefully.

  “No way. We’re in the open now. It’s going to have to end here. One way or the other.”

  We flashed over the bridge, directly between the two towers. Mark pressed the chopper on, headed for open ocean.

  “Now what?” I asked.

  “Now we play.”

  Mark banked the chopper hard, doing a one-eighty. In seconds we were on our way back toward the bridge, and directly for the other helicopter. We drifted to the left, headed toward the south tower.

  “If we’re lucky, he won’t know this bridge is still in such good shape,” Mark growled. His calm was gone. He was now focused and intent.

  “What if we’re not lucky?” I asked.

  “Then we’ll see who’s chicken.”

  I couldn’t see the other helicopter through the haze. But at the speed we were traveling, it couldn’t be more than thirty seconds before we’d cross paths. Or collide head-on. Mark gripped the joystick and fired a rocket. It sailed straight ahead, hitting nothing.

  “What was that for?” I asked.

  “I want him to know where we are.”

  Our helicopter continued to drift to the left until we were lined up directly on the south tower of the bridge. It looked as if we were flying at an altitude just above the roadbed.

  “Look out!” I shouted.

  A rocket was incoming, shooting out of the mist. Mark easily dodged it.

  “I guess he knows where we are,” he said.

  “This is crazy!” I shouted. “Let’s just try to lose him.”

  “We won’t, Bobby. He’ll keep coming. Then other choppers will join him. We’ve got to end it here.”

  That’s when I saw it. Maybe a half mile ahead, directly in front of us. We were on a collision course with the other helicopter. Chicken time. I figured the odds were fifty-fifty.

  “Shoot it!” I screamed.

  Mark fired off a shot, then another. The oncoming chopper dodged them easily and fired back. Mark dipped our chopper and veered left, ducking both missiles. He then brought us back up to the same level as the enemy helicopter. On this course we would fly just over the roadbed of the bridge, inside the south tower… and crash head-on with the other chopper.

  “Keep shooting!” I shouted.

  “Don’t need to,” Mark said calmly.

  The chopper fired another rocket. It missed us, and didn’t let off another shot. It was starting to look as if our hunter didn’t care about shooting us down anymore.

  “He wants to kamikaze into us,” Mark said, reading my mind.

  “That’s not how you play chicken!” I screamed. “He doesn’t know the rules.”

  The oncoming chopper was about to reach the bridge.

  “Mark, I can’t let you die.”

  Mark smiled. “I won’t. We’ve got him.”

  Huh?

  I looked ahead. We were a couple of seconds away from flying head-on into this guy. In seconds we’d be wreckage. I squinted. It was going to hurt.

  Suddenly the oncoming helicopter exploded in midair. One second it was bearing down on us, the next there were chunks of wreckage scattering every which way.

  “Gotcha!” Mark shouted.

  The doomed chopper’s rotor spun wildly off on its own. The skids flew in opposite directions. The remainder of the rockets exploded, followed by a violent eruption that had to have been the fuel tank.

  Mark pulled back on the joystick, and we sailed up and over the carnage.

  “Whooooo!” he yelled, totally psyched.

  “What the heck happened?” I shouted.

  “I told you, that bridge is pretty much intact. It’s a suspension bridge. All
of the cables are still there that connect the two towers. Trouble is, you can’t see them through the haze.”

  I looked back over my shoulder in time to see the shattered helicopter hit the bridge roadbed, bounce off, and plummet toward the ocean below.

  “So you lured him into a spider web,” I said. “That’s why you were flying so close to the tower.” I punched him in the shoulder. “You could have told me, you know.”

  “I could have, but I didn’t want to look bad if it didn’t work.”

  “If it didn’t work, looking bad would have been the least of your worries. That was awesome, Mark.”

  “Thank you. Now we gotta get down before they send more choppers after us.”

  I sat back in my seat and tried to catch my breath. I don’t know what was more shocking: The fact that we had nearly been killed by that chopper, or that Mark Dimond was the cool pilot who set the trap and calmly sprang it, saving our lives. We flew back toward Manhattan, staying low to the water in case any other dado pilots came looking for us. I remembered the tip of Manhattan as being a place that was loaded with tall buildings. It was like a whole separate city. Not anymore. It looked as if the buildings had all been sheared off around the tenth story. It wasn’t like Rubic City on Veelox, where the city was simply crumbling from age and neglect. No, something had happened here. Something bad.

  “What’s the story here?” I asked Mark, gesturing to the sad remains of a once-great city.

  Mark nodded. “They didn’t officially give it a name, but they should have called it World War Three,” he said. “Except that it wasn’t about countries. It was Ravinia against the rest of the world.”

  “Who won?”

  “Nobody. Though I guess you could say it was Ravinia. Once it came to power, Ravinia thought it had crushed all of its opposition. But a revolt was brewing. It took centuries to grow strong enough to challenge the Ravinian authority. Up until then, if you weren’t a Ravinian, you lived in squalor. The people finally grew strong enough to fight back in numbers large enough that it scared the Ravinians. So this is how they dealt with the revolt.”

  “By destroying the city?” I asked.

  “Many cities. But not before moving the most valued possessions of the world to their various conclaves.”

  “So that really was Big Ben back there? And the Taj Mahal and the Mona Lisa!”

  “Yup. They have hundreds of those garden spots all over. Once they looted the world of its treasures, they unleashed Armageddon. Basically, the entire arsenal of mankind was ignited. I think in some places they even used nukes. Like in Washington DC. From what I heard, it only took a few days, and the entire non-Ravinian world was laid to waste… along with most everyone in it.”

  Looking down at the devastation, Mark’s story seemed possible. It truly was Armageddon.

  Mark continued, “They didn’t kill everyone, of course. There were survivors. But not in any numbers, and certainly not enough to stand up to the Ravinians.”

  “When did it happen?” I asked.

  “I’m not exactly sure. I think it was about four years ago.”

  That rocked me. “Four years ago? That’s all?”

  Mark turned away from his flying long enough to give me a dark look. “I think it was the turning point of Third Earth, Bobby.”

  I couldn’t breathe. Was it possible? Had we been sent back too late? Was the battle for Third Earth, and Halla, truly over before we’d had a chance to stop it?

  Mark looked back ahead. He had tears in his eyes. “I just don’t get it,” he said. “Obviously this is all about Saint Dane, but what does he gain by destroying most of the population of Earth?”

  I didn’t answer. I knew of course, but it wasn’t the time to give Mark a crash course in Solara. Still, he deserved an answer. Every last survivor deserved an answer.

  “Because it’s about more than just Earth,” I said. “And it’s about more than Halla, believe it or not. What Saint Dane is doing is crushing the positive spirit of man. Once that happens, he can rebuild a universe any way he chooses.”

  Mark frowned and nodded. There was no way he could understand exactly what my words meant, and maybe it didn’t matter.

  “But there is hope,” I added.

  “Is there?” he asked, sounding tired and a little more than skeptical.

  “The hope is you, Mark. And everyone like you. It’s about all those who were exiled through the flumes.”

  Mark gave me a surprised look.

  I added, “Why do you think Saint Dane wants you dead?”

  “Because we’re all that remains of the opposition.”

  “That’s more true than you know. What happened to you when you went into the flume in the Bronx on Second Earth? Where did you go?”

  Mark’s expression turned dark. “Cloral,” he said softly. That was all he said at first. I think it was tough for him to wind his mind back to that time. He was struggling to keep a lid on his emotions. I didn’t want to press him, but I had to know.

  “I messed things up pretty bad, Bobby.”

  “You?” I said, trying not to laugh. “Mark, with all that’s been going on, I don’t think there’s anything you could have done that would make it any worse.”

  He didn’t believe me. Something was eating him up.

  “Tell me,” I said.

  After another minute Mark got himself together and told me his story.

  “A couple dozen of us ended up on Cloral in that under- water cave. I was the only one who knew enough to swim out. But once we got to the surface, it was nuts. It wasn’t like the Cloral you described in your journals. There were battles between barges. The raiders were everywhere. Each barge was like its own fortress trying to defend itself. We were picked up by some raiders and forced to work on their ships. It was nasty.” He looked me dead in the eye and said, “It’s where I learned to fight. You don’t want to know why.”

  There was one question I had to ask. I had been holding off because I was afraid of the answer, but I couldn’t wait any longer.

  “What about Courtney? Was she with you?”

  Mark shook his head gravely. “No. I don’t know what happened to her. We went into the flume together, but she didn’t land on Cloral. Once other exiles started arriving, I started piecing together what must have happened. We figured that the Ravinians were tossing their enemies into the flume and sending them to other territories randomly. A few more showed up on Cloral. There may have been others, but I had no way of knowing.”

  Mark hadn’t yet heard about the Bronx Massacre and the multiple thousands of people that Ravinia tossed into the flume that black day in Yankee Stadium.

  He added, “I haven’t seen Courtney since we went into that flume together.”

  “We were afraid you were all executed,” I said.

  “Sometimes I wish we had been.”

  My heart ached for my friend.

  “How did you end up on Third Earth?”

  “I didn’t know what had happened on Second Earth, but from the way things were going with Ravinia, I was pretty sure it was lost. That meant Third Earth was the only territory that Saint Dane hadn’t brought to a turning point. As dumb as this sounds, I still felt as if we were on the mission, Bobby. I wanted to get here to try and stop Saint Dane. I gathered together a bunch of the other exiles, and we mutinied against the raiders. We stole a couple of skimmers and took off to the flume. I hoped that a Traveler would come by, maybe even you, and get us out of there, but nobody showed. I knew that traveling without a Traveler would damage the flume, so we sat and waited. I don’t know for how long. Too long. I was beginning to think we’d have to live in that underwater cavern, eating the fruit from the walls forever. I finally couldn’t take it anymore and called “Third Earth” into the flume. I knew it was wrong, but I guess I was going a little out of my mind. I expected things to start rumbling, but nothing bad happened. The flume activated normally and we were on our way here. Twenty of us. At first I thought it was o
kay. I hoped things had somehow changed. It wasn’t until we got here that I realized I was wrong. As soon as we set foot on Third Earth, the flume started rocking. It was like Eelong all over again, Bobby. The flume collapsed. It was my fault. Bringing those guys here was wrong. I’m the one who destroyed the flumes.”

  I smiled. Mark gave me an odd look. I guess that’s what happens when you bare your soul to your best friend, and all he does is smile.

  “You didn’t destroy them, Mark. It would have happened anyway.”

  “But… what?”

  I wanted to put his mind at ease, but I didn’t want to start the whole lesson on Solara just then.

  “The flumes were destroyed, Mark,” I said. “All of them.

  It had nothing to do with you. Trust me. There are bigger forces at work.”

  Mark stared at me a long time, trying to understand. He wanted to believe, but he was having trouble. “Are you serious or just trying to make me feel better?”

  “Both.”

  “You’re not kidding?”

  “No. It wasn’t you, Mark. I swear.”

  He relaxed. It was like the weight of guilt was physically lifted off his shoulders. Mark may not have understood it all, but he believed me. Probably because he needed to.

  Although, his story raised questions. I knew exactly how the flumes were destroyed, but now I wasn’t so sure when they were destroyed. I had thought it happened right after I was sucked into the flume on Second Earth. But if Mark had lived on Cloral for so long, the time lines didn’t match up. As confusing as that was, it actually fit with what I was seeing. Sort of. Mark aged when I didn’t. Though it felt like minutes, I may have been floating in time and space limbo for years. Or maybe time didn’t matter once you left a physical world. Or maybe now that I knew I was a spirit, any pretense of living a normal physical life didn’t matter anymore. Or maybe I should stop freakin’ worrying about things I couldn’t control. Yeah, that was the way to go.

  “Tell me what happened after you got here,” I asked Mark.

  “We barely got out of the flume before it was crushed under some big, marble building I’d never seen before. I figured it was a new flume on Third Earth until we started exploring. It was the flume in Stony Brook, Bobby. But it wasn’t the Stony Brook we grew up in.”

 

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