Read The Earth Dwellers Online

Authors: David Estes

The Earth Dwellers (34 page)

Nobody moves. Nobody breathes. The forest is silent.

Then there’s a laugh and I think we all ’bout jump outta our skins, ’cept maybe Skye, who don’t seem to know the meaning of the word scared.

“Don’t shoot,” a voice says. It’s as familiar as the durt stuck to my moccasins.

Nobody moves. Nobody breathes.

“Wilde, tell your shooters to relax.”

Wilde looks at me, her mouth open slightly, dips her chin. And then, of all things, she stands. “Shooters! Stand down,” she says.

I drop my bow ’cause there’s something ’bout the voice in the woods…

A black-skinned girl steps from the tree cover, her dark robe floating ’round her heels. Holy tugballs! I know that girl, ’cause that girl is Sadie.

 

~~~

 

After the initial excitement dies down, we gather ’round to talk. The Stormer Riders are watering their horses and pretending like there’s not a huge army of brown-skinned people setting in the durt, gawking at ’em.

I’m ’bout to burst with excitement and questions, but Circ’s squeezing my hand so tight I know he’s telling me to be patient. I ignore him. “Sadie, what in the name of the holy god of all things surprising are you doing here?” I ask.

Sadie looks at Wilde, who merely shrugs at her. “We’ve come to fight,” she says.

“Fight who?” I ask, remembering the pointer stuck in the durt at Wilde’s feet.

“Whoever needs to be fought,” Sadie says. She looks at the giant Stormer setting beside her, Gard I think his name is.

“You can tell them,” Gard says. “You were the one who garnered the support of the Riders.”

“Well, it wasn’t just me. Remy helped, too.” She nods at the dark, lean guy setting on her other side, the one whose smile seems to come easier’n a hot day in fire country. If I remember correctly, they had some kinda a thing going, like what Circ and I have. “We talked a lot about what you”—Sadie gestures to Wilde—“said when you arrived in storm country. About how these people…the Glassies?...were threatening all the tribes. How they’d start in fire and ice country and then move to water and storm country. Remy and I decided we better do something about it before it came to all that.”

“And then, unbeknownst to me, you convinced the vast majority of the Riders that this was the wisest course of action,” Gard says. The twinkle in his eye doesn’t match his words. Is he angry or does he find it funny?

“In the end you agreed, Father,” says Remy.

“You could have talked to me first. I would have listened,” Gard says.

“What difference does it make?” Sadie says. “We’re here now, aren’t we?”

I want to laugh at the almost identical look of embarrassment that flashes across Remy’s and Gard’s faces. But I don’t ’cause I’m trying to be all serious the way Wilde and Skye are.

“We’re glad you’re here,” Wilde says. She tells ’em about the Icers.

“Mother Earth,” Sadie says. “This is real, isn’t it?”

“Why are they doing this?” Gard says.

Wilde shrugs. “They fear what they don’t understand.”

“And their leader’s a searin’ baggard,” I add helpfully.

“There’s that, too,” Wilde says, smiling grimly. “And what of the Soakers? Did they have an opinion?”

I lean in, curious for Jade’s sake. After all, the last thing she did in storm country was kiss that Soaker boy, Huck Jones. If he’s hiding in them trees, it’ll be another person I’ll have to protect. And the person I’ll be protecting him from is Skye, who’s leaning in too, her eyes gleaming.

“Admiral Jones agreed with us,” Gard says. “He tried to convince the other captains but couldn’t get a majority. After the way his father led, he refuses to force them to do anything they don’t want to.”

“I don’t blame him,” Wilde says. Skye and I lean back at the same time. I guess we’ll be saving that fight for another time.

I glance at the sky above. Time’s a-wastin’; the sun’s already over its peak. Who knows where Tristan is, whether he’ll come through for us, but we’ve gotta hold up our end of the bargain. “Uh, Wilde,” I say.

“I know,” she says. “We can’t delay any further. It’s time to move on the Glass City.” We stand as one. “We’d be honored to fight with you by our sides,” Wilde says to Gard, extending a slender hand.

Gard grabs it, his hand looking like that of a giant next to Wilde’s. “We shall be victorious,” he says.

“And go with honor and strength,” Sadie says.

The way they say these words, I can tell they’re more’n just words to ’em. They’re important. Maybe they’ll help us in some way we can’t fully understand yet.

I think there’s a lot I don’t fully understand, that I haven’t come to terms with. It’s like I can’t get my pebble-sized brain ’round the magnitude of what we’re ’bout to do, like this is just another day and tomorrow I’ll wake up and hug Circ and curse Perry and crack jokes with my sisters…

But it ain’t just another day. This is THE DAY. More’n likely the last one. There’s so much I need to do.

While the Stormer leaders go to organize the Riders, and Wilde and Feve begin preparing our people for the final leg of the journey, I grab Skye’s arm. She looks at my hand and then at me. “Siena, don’t,” she says.

“I hafta,” I say.

“You don’t hafta do nothin’.”

“Don’t make me hurt you,” I say, pulling her into a hug.

At first she struggles against me, all hard and sharp angles, but then she softens, squeezes back. “You ain’t dyin’,” she says.

“Then neither are you,” I say.

Still locked in an embrace we pull back, looking at each other. “Siena, I—I might hafta put myself in more danger to do what I gotta do.”

I glare at her. “I’ll chase on after you wherever you go.”

“Promise me you won’t,” she says.

“I can’t,” I say. “I ain’t gonna live without you. Not again.”

“Oh sun goddess,” she says, trying to look angry but failing at it. “You can be so burnin’ stubborn sometimes.”

“I get it from you,” I say. We hug once more and then she just walks away, toward the front, where Wilde and Feve are waiting.

Circ’s standing nearby, the sun browning his skin and showing off the muscles of his bare chest. “Looking smoky,” I say, whistling. “Just hanging out there looking pretty?” He should laugh. He’d usually laugh. He walks over. Serious Circ. “Don’t,” I say, realizing I sound just like Skye even as I say it.

“Don’t what?” he says, putting an arm ’round me.

“Don’t make a big thing outta this.”

“Like you just did with Skye?” he says. “Siena, I’ll make a big thing out of this, because it
is
a big thing. You are a big thing. You’re everything.”

“I’m just me,” I say.

“You’re all I want,” Circ says. “All I ever wanted. And now…”

“Now you’ve got me and there ain’t no fire-stick-wielding Glassy gonna change that. So let’s give ’em scorch, you and me, just like the old days.”

Finally, Circ laughs, ’cause he can’t help it ’round me. “Okay,” he says, pulling me into a big ol’ hug.

A rumble of thunder and a cloud of dust fill the air as hundreds of Riders gallop past us, toward the front of the column. And still we go on holding each other, just a moment longer, then another. If this is the last time I’ll ever hold him, I’d better make it good.

Finally, when my people have already started marching, and the Riders are leading the way, and the whole world is dangling from the edge of a cliff, we pull away.

The world can end now. I’m ready.

 

 

Chapter Thirty-Nine

Tristan

 

T
he transporters will make five trips to the surface, carrying fifty soldiers with each go. They’ll be a mixture of sun, moon, and star dweller men and women, hand selected by the leaders in each subchapter. Although I’ve warned the leaders about the toxicity of the air, we’ve all agreed that masks won’t be necessary for such a short amount of exposure. Soon we’ll all either be dead or inside the filtered atmosphere of the Dome. In five hours we’ll have nearly ten thousand troops positioned throughout the desert, all around the New City, surrounding it.

All the soldiers and their leaders have been briefed about what to expect up there, how hot it is, how big everything looks, but they won’t fully appreciate it until they see it for themselves.

I don’t know if it will be enough, but we can’t risk delaying the attack any longer. If the people of the Tri-Tribes get there first…

I don’t even want to think about the bodies in the sand. Seeing the Icers like that was enough tragedy for a lifetime.

I’m about to leave the palace when she walks in through the front door, like she owns the place. Her posture is upright, her face stern, her uniform unwrinkled. She’s a leader and a soldier, through and through.

“I was wondering when I’d see you,” I say.

“I was busy keeping my soldiers’ emotions in check,” General Rose says, “and I figured you were even busier.” Then she smiles, and she’s not a general, just a person, the mother of the girl I love. “Tristan, thank God you’re alive.”

To my surprise, she steps closer and hugs me, her embrace far warmer than I expected it to be. “Uh, thanks. You too.”

“We’ll find Adele, even if we have to smash every last pane of glass in the New City,” she says. How does she know that behind my façade of leadership, my every waking, aching thought is of her daughter?

“I know,” I say, even though I don’t.

Pulling away, she says, “The first Capitol transporter just left for the surface. The other subchapters have sent theirs too.” I’m amazed at how quickly she switches roles, from general to mother to friend, and back again, like they’re cloaks she can swap in the blink of an eye.

“Good,” I say. “We’ll be on the last one.”

She nods. “I want my daughter to be there,” she says.

I don’t understand. Where does she want Adele to be?

“Elsey,” she clarifies. “She refuses to be left behind and I won’t have it any other way. She marched to the Capitol with my soldiers, stayed at the very back with the medics and cooks.”

“It’s not safe,” I say. “And there’s only limited space. We need every—”

“—soldier we can fit,” she says, finishing for me. “She’s getting big, but I’m sure I can carry her on my shoulders for a half hour if I need to. This isn’t a request.”

I think of what it will mean to Adele to have her whole family together soon after we find her. “And she’ll stay in the cave when we march on the city?”

“Of course,” the general says.

“Done,” I say. “Roc and Tawni can look after her.”

“Did my nose just itch?” a voice says from the corridor. Roc walks in, holding Tawni’s hand loosely.

Tawni immediately goes to Anna and hugs her. “I wasn’t sure I’d ever see you in person again,” Tawni says.

At that, General Rose laughs. “I might be getting old, but I’m still tough. And I suspect you’re made of tougher stuff than anyone thinks.”

“Trust me,” Roc says, interjecting, “we all know the kind of stuff Tawni’s made of. I can’t say anything fresh without getting a palm print tattooed on my cheek.”

“He gets slapped a lot,” Tawni says.

“Why does that not surprise me?” Anna says.

“Because it’s Roc,” I say, without blinking.

“Soooo,” Roc says, “why did I hear my name? And Tawni’s too?”

“You’re babysitting Elsey while the big kids go fight,” I say. “You’ve been volunteered.”

Roc frowns. “By whom?”

“Me,” I say, punching him in the shoulder.

He sighs. “I’m sure my presence and wooden sword will be missed on the battlefield,” he says, “but I
am
injured.”

“Good,” I say, glad to hear him agree without a fight. Even if everyone else I care about will be in danger today, at least Roc and Tawni and Elsey will be safe.

 

~~~

 

Time passes with the speed of an inter-Realm night train. Transporter after transporter leaves from what used to be the secret cave on the outskirts of the Capitol, and which now is as well known a place as the palace.

We cram as many soldiers as we can fit into each load, just like all the other subchapters are doing. The half-hour ride to the surface will be cramped and miserable, but surely no one’s thinking about that right now.

I shake the hands of each man and woman that board the transporter, thanking them. It’s strange to see sun dwellers and moon dwellers and star dwellers mixed together, like they’re no different from one another, like they weren’t trying to kill each other not so long ago. When I look into their eyes, I can’t tell the difference. They’re just people. Just soldiers. Why were they fighting in the first place? I’m not sure anyone really knows the answer.

I could have gone ahead with the first load because I’ve been to the surface before, but I’d rather make sure everything runs smoothly, that everyone leaves on schedule.

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