Read Them Page 10


  D-Caf grinned and raised something from below the surface of the water. I have a weapon. Do you want it?

  Yago stared. A Rider boomerang. It was a cruel-looking thing, toothed blades all along one edge.

  When everything was dissolving and right before we fell, I picked it up, D-Caf explained.

  Give it here, Yago said, but without any great pleasure. He wasnt a weapons person. He had no clue how to throw the thing. In fact it seemed likely hed end up cutting off a few of his own fingers.

  On the other hand, it was probably a good thing to

  Aaahhh! Aaaahhhh!

  A cry of shrill panic.

  Yagos head snapped around, looking for the cause. It was Roger Dodger, a kid, going wild, slapping at the water and looking like he wanted to jump out of it.

  The kid went still. He said, I. . . I felt something.

  You nearly gave me a stroke, Burroway snapped.

  Maybe it wasnt anything, Roger Dodger said doubtfully.

  Then Burroway shrieked. Something bit me! Its in the water, something in the water bit me.

  There was a pause, everyone waiting, staring, all conversation done for now. And then it was Shy Hwang yelping and holding up a bloody arm with something still attached, something squirmy and muscular. Panic took hold and everyone was running, Yago included, running through the water, an absurd slo-mo parody of actual running.

  At first the herd had no direction, it darted and circled like a flock of startled birds, then headed toward the nearest of the low islands.

  Hwang kept shouting, complaining, yelling, though Yago could see that whatever had grabbed his arm had let go now.

  My leg! someone screamed.

  Yago splashed, digging his arms in to propel himself forward, taking giant moon-gravity steps. His leading foot landed on nothing and he plunged facedown into the water. He sank beneath the surface. Claustrophobia shot syringes of adrenalin into his bloodstream and his brain began to slip gears, catching, slipping again.

  No air, no air, no air. His eyes were open, blind, nothing but brown silt, swirling mud, choking him.

  Then he felt it, the slide of flesh over flesh, the slimy touch of it across his belly. He slashed with the boomerang and came within an inch of gutting himself.

  Yago screamed into the water and kicked against nothing.

  Something grabbed his arm and pulled. He broke the surface, gasped, and tried to shake loose D-Cafs grip.

  Let go of me, you moron! he yelled. He lowered his legs and touched ground. The water was up to his chest, no more.

  You were kind of splashing a lot, D-Caf said, giving him a sideways look. He held up the boomerang. I got this back. You must have dropped it.

  One of those things attacked me, Yago said.

  D-Caf held out the boomerang, ready to surrender it again.

  Keep it, Yago said. No way he could act as if the blade meant something. No way he could put himself any more in D-Cafs debt.

  Rather than risk hitting another hole, Yago leaned into a swim. He was a strong swimmer, though only on the surface not underwater, and he was soon well ahead of D-Caf.

  The little twitch had seen him panic. Okay, everyone was panicking, but D-Caf had been calm and hed seen that Yago was not. That was bad. No one could know about the claustrophobia. It was a glaring weakness. Someone would use it. Maybe even D-Caf himself. He was a twitch, but he was also the one whod shot one of the Mayflower pilots. If youd do that, youd lock someone in a box without a second thought, lock them in a closet with no light and no handle on the door, bury them alive in a casket and . . .

  Get a grip, Yago, he told himself. Get a grip. Youre Yago. Youre Yago, man.

  Yago went through his ego mantra: Yago was the First Son. Son of the first African-American female president. He held undisputed title to hottest teen in America. The world. Everyone loved him, or else

  feared him. How many letters from how many girls? Hundreds of thousands. Millions. I want a picture, a lock of hair, a worn T-shirt, to see you, kiss you.

  Hed been on the cover of just about every magazine. Teen People had named him Sexiest Teen Alive. The New York Times Magazine had called him the Brat in Chief. When hed changed his hair to spring green, half the kids in the country had followed suit. When hed had the cat-DNA eye treatment it had suddenly become one of the most common cosmetic procedures.

  He was Yago, after all. Even here, even with no White House, no magazines, no fans, no letters, no . . . He was still Yago.

  The mantra calmed him. The claustrophobia terror had replaced the fear of whatever was in the water. And now, with the suffocation fear receding he could see the other fear more objectively. The herd was still in full flight, wallowing heavily toward the island. Jobs and his little gaggle were vectoring in, too, the fear having proven contagious.

  Yago slowed his pace. You didnt want to be the last person out of the water but, he sensed, you also didnt want to be the first person to step on that island.

  He bobbed high, looking for Tamara Hoyle. She was moving at a leisurely pace, carrying the baby high up on one shoulder. She wasnt worried about whatever was in the water. And she was in no hurry to reach the island. In fact, she was slowing down.

  Yago stopped dead. He tread water till he realized he was now in shallows, less than waist high.

  Yagos instinct for survival was ringing a big, loud bell. Tamara knew something. He didnt know how, but she knew something more than any of the rest of them did. Her and that mutant, eyeless freak of a baby.

  He was a hundred feet from the islands edge. The sun was coming up behind it but the mist still seeped through the strange trees and alternately revealed and concealed.

  Wylson and Burroway and Tate reached the island at about the same moment. They climbed, sog-gily, up onto the shore and immediately came the earsplitting metallic shriek of a Rider.

  Two of the alien monsters appeared, stomping on foot through the mist. They stood there, staring balefully down at the humans with their face full of insect eyes.

  Wylson raised her hands as if in surrender. We dont want to fight, we dont want to fight, she practically sobbed.

  The humans still in the water froze. Even Tamara was stock-still, waiting, watching. She seemed to feel Yagos eyes on her and turned to glare at him.

  Suddenly, a sharp pain on the back of his thigh. He flailed, reached around, and touched something slime-coated and powerful.

  It had him.

  If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as unsold and destroyed to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this stripped book.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher. For information regarding permission, write to Scholastic Inc., Attention: Permissions Department, 555 Broadway, New York, NY 10012.

  ISBN 0-4397-3997-7

  Copyright © 2001 by Katherine Applegate. All rights reserved. Published by Scholastic Inc. SCHOLASTIC, APPLE PAPERBACKS, and associated logos are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Scholastic Inc. REMNANTS and associated logos are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Katherine Applegate.

  Cover Art by Jonathan Barkat

  Cover Design by Ursula S. Albano

  121110987654321 1234567/0

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE HOW DOES BUGS BUNNY DO HALF THE STUFF HE DOES?

  CHAPTER TWO YOURE REALLY JUMPY, YOU KNOW THAT?

  CHAPTER THREE IM THE PRESIDENTS SON, YOU KNOW.

  CHAPTER FOUR I HATE THIS PLACE.

  CHAPTER FIVE EVERYTHING DIES, HUMAN.

  CHAPTER SIX I THINK WE NEED TO HAVE A MEETING.

  CHAPTER SEVEN AN ALL-OVER SQUIRM.

  CHAPTER EIGHT IS HE SOME KIND OF MUTANT?

  CHAPTER NINE WE COME I
N PEACE?

  CHAPTER TEN BOSCH.

  CHAPTER ELEVEN HERE THEY COME! HERE THEY COME!

  CHAPTER TWELVE DONT MESS WITH A MAKER.

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN MOTHER IS CONFUSED.

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN THE CHAMELEON.

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN BACK TO THE SHIP.

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN GET UP OFF YOUR KNEES AND DEAL WITH IT.

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN WE HAVE TO RUN. CAN YOU RUN?

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN KILLER EARS? KILLER EARS? WAS THIS GUY ON DRUGS?

  CHAPTER NINETEEN THE BABY IS HUNGRY.

  CHAPTER TWENTY ID RATHER BE AT DISNEY WORLD.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE I THINK THEIR BOSS IS COMING.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO FEED A FREAK TO THE FREAK.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE SING TO MY PEOPLE OF MY DEATH.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR MMM, BABY WANT SOME NUM NUM.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE DONT TELL ME YOU ENJOYED ALL THAT.

  K.A. APPLEGATE REMNANTS 4 Nowhere Land THE SUN RISES, AND WITH IT , HOPE .

 


 

  K. A. Applegate, Them

 


 

 
Thank you for reading books on BookFrom.Net

Share this book with friends