Authors: Neil Gaiman
Josephine was a bit more used to Walking now, which made the transition smoother for me; but we were stumbling along the path rather than gliding, the gait of a weary traveler who has been on their feet for far too long.
I think Hue is getting tired,
Josephine thought at me. Well, it wasn't really
thinking
at me, exactly; it was more that I was aware of her thoughts. Like she was saying them out loud, even though I knew she wasn't.
Probably,
I answered.
I don't know how much this takes out of him, but he's been sleeping a lot.
Let's try not to make so many trips,
she suggested.
We can Walk side to side and gather up as many Walkers as we can find, then take them back all at once.
It wasn't a bad plan, and if I had Josephine do most of the side-to-side Walkingâmeaning we'd go from dimension to dimension rather than back and forth through timeâthere was far less chance of us being detected. I had to make these next few trips count.
With that in mind, I cast about for the strongest source of Walker energy I could find.
And I found it.
Close
.
Well, relatively speaking. We had been docked on one of the prehistoric Earths in InterWorld's future. Hue took us back in InterWorld's timeline, which took us forward in Earth's timeline. The Walker essence I was sensing was on a parallel planet, an Earth that had never recovered from the meteor impact roughly sixty-six million years ago.
The energy I was sensing on this planet, this dead planet, was
strong
. Very strong.
Could it be a trap?
Josephine asked silently.
A few days ago, I would have said no. I would have said there was no way to simulate Walker energy from someone who wasn't a Walker. I would have said we would
know
.
I knew now that wasn't true, so all I said was
Maybe
.
The landing sent a jolt through us both, like when you're going downstairs and hit the floor sooner than you expected because you thought there was another step. The ground was hard and unforgiving, reddish, and cracked like a dry riverbed. The air was thick with dust and ash, the sunlight filtering weakly through the haze. It smelled like rot and marshland, the landscape restricted to a color palette of grays and reds and browns. Despite the warm colors, it was freezing.
“Ugh.” Josephine wheezed, lifting her sleeve to her mouth and nose. “It smells like bad water.”
“Yep,” I said, doing the same. “Hold on.” I closed my eyes, partly to concentrate and partly because they were stinging and watering. Taking a deep breath through my sleeve, I focused on the strong, clear pulse of familiarity, of power just like mine, the same way I'd found Josephine. It was here, still, laid out before me like a trail of bread crumbs.
“This way,” I said, starting off through the trees. Josephine followed, coughing.
“This dust is really thick,” she observed, voice muffled by her sleeve. “Did a volcano explode or something?”
I ignored the jolt of adrenaline that went through me as her question reminded me of the rockslide that had killed Jerzy and fractured my shoulder. I wanted to stop and take a deep breath, but that wasn't really an option. Instead, I shrugged and said, “Maybe. More likely it was a huge meteor.”
“You mean like what killed the dinosaurs?”
“Yeah. This is a version of Earth that suffered longer-lasting effects from that, whatever it was.”
“You just said it was a huge meteor.”
“That's what it probably was,” I said. “But no one really knows for sure. Evidence suggests it was a meteor, but scientists have a few other theories.”
She tilted her head, looking curious. “Aren't those things we could find out, though? Like if it
was
a meteor and whether or not there was an Atlantis, and what's up with the Bermuda Star, and . . .”
“There's actually nothing up with the Bermuda Star,” I said. “It's called the Bermuda Triangle on my world, and it's mostly a myth perpetuated by television and other media.”
“But all those planes and ships went missing,” she said, looking disappointed.
“Not really. There haven't actually been any more disappearances or wrecks in that area than any other,” I said. She continued to look disappointed. “I mean, at least on my Earth. Maybe it's different on yours.”
“Maybe,” she said, perking up. “But what about the other stuff, like Atlantis or the missing crew of the
Maria Christine
?”
“I haven't heard of that last oneâmight've had a different name on my world, if it happenedâbut the fact that you and I both come from a world with Atlantis myths might mean there's something to them.”
“Huh.” She looked thoughtful. “I guess so. Would that be another way of finding out, do you think? Walking to different worlds and seeing if they have the same myths, or finding one where Atlantis never sank?”
“Yeah, probably. And that,” I said, removing my sleeve from my face long enough for her to see me grin, “is what we call perks of the job. We do get to go off Base sometimes.”
“That's awesome,” she said. “I can't wait to explore.”
“When we're done saving all the worlds,” I reminded her.
“I know,” she said a little testily. I suppose I didn't have to keep reminding her how serious this was; there wasn't anything wrong with looking forward to dessert while knowing you still had to eat your vegetables.
“I used to have a whole book about stuff like that,” I said after a moment, trying to make conversation as we slogged our way through the thick, dank air. I knew I should save my breath, but we hadn't had much chance to talk about anything other than tactics and technical ship stuff. I knew next to nothing about her, except what I assumed we had in common.
“Stuff like what? Modern mysteries?”
“Yeah. My aunt gave it to me.”
“I had the same one,” she said. “Aunt Theresa?”
“Yeah.” I smiled. “Blue cover?”
“No, green. Yellow title.”
“Mine was black, I think. Don't remember; I got it when I
was really little. Mom and her sister didn't talk much, really.”
“I guess that's how it was for us at first, but they got closer after the accident,” she said.
“What accident?”
“The car accident.” Josephine glanced sidelong at me. “When Mom lost her arm.”
I paused, once again struck by the realization at how different we all were, even though we were all essentially the same. When I'd first come to Josephine's world, when I still didn't know what was happening or why, I'd gone into her house and seen the woman who was my mom but wasn't, who looked like her and sounded like her but had different hair and a prosthetic arm.
“That didn't happen for you,” she said.
“No,” I admitted. “I remember one car accident we were in, but it wasn't bad.”
She was silent for a moment, considering that. She didn't seem upset, just thoughtful. Josephine was like that, I was learning; she tended to mostly roll with the punches. I guess she'd had to.
“Well, it was bad for us. I have a scar right here from when I hit my head.” She pulled her sleeve away from her mouth long enough to push her hair back. I couldn't make out the scar with how my eyes were watering from the dust in the air, but I nodded anyway. “And I only sort of remember what happened. I woke up in the hospital with Dad sitting
next to me, and he told me we'd be staying there for a few days while Mom had surgery.”
“I'm sorry,” I said, unable to think of anything else.
“Whatever,” she said. “Don't pity me or anything. It wasn't that bad. Mom's used to using the prosthetic now, and she can do most things pretty easily. She even makes jewelry.”
I automatically reached up to touch the necklace beneath my shirt, the one I always wore. My mom had made it for me the night I left home, and I wondered if Josephine's mother had been able to do the same before she left.
“Is it just me, or is it getting harder to breathe?” she asked.
“It's not just you,” I said, pausing. “And do you hear that?”
We both stopped, holding our breaths for more than one reason. Had I heard a faint rustling nearby? Now I wasn't sure. There was the same unnatural stillness that had surrounded us since we arrived: no birds, no breeze, no insects. But now there was a heaviness to the air, a sense of
waiting
, of anticipation.
I tackled Josephine to the side as I felt the ground shudder behind me and slightly to the right, my only indication that something was about to happen. I felt a rush of air over my head, and heard a shrill, strangled sound that made my spine tingle. It sounded almost like a bird, but . . . not.
I rolled defensively to my feet, some small part of me noting with pride that Josephine was doing the same.
A shape loomed up out of the red dust at us, beady eyes glinting in the scant light. It looked like some sort of ostrich or emu, but . . . well, not nearly as silly. Large, flightless birds have always looked kinda weird to me, you know? Not this one. For one thing, it was probably close to twice my height, and I know I'm not exactly big, but
still
.
I rolled to the side again as the thing's headâalmost the size of my torsoâlunged toward me, fast as a striking snake. I got the impression of some kind of hooked beak before it spun past me, orienting on Josephine. Definitely carnivorous, definitely hungry.
I'd like to say what I did next was heroic, but it was probably closer to dumb. As Josephine darted backward to avoid the beak, I threw myself toward the thing in what I hoped was a coordinated jump. It probably looked more like I was flailing while falling, but I managed to get my arms around the thing's long neck anyway, legs wrapped around its body and feet off the ground.
It's times like that, half-astride the back of a prehistoric monstrous emu, that I wondered what I'd be doing right now if my life was normal. Probably not playing rodeo with a giant bird, that's for sure.
“Run!” I shouted, scrabbling for purchase as the whatever it was hopped and bucked. I managed to get an arm around its neck, locking my grip with my other hand. I felt feathers and rough, leathery skin against my arm, and then
I felt my teeth rattle as it tried to run me into a tree. Basic anatomy teaches that most mammal or avian creatures have to breathe, usually through a windpipe of some sort, and I was hoping this thing would be no different. Of course, with all the soot and dust down here, I might have been way off the mark. . . . Maybe this creature had evolved to not need oxygen? I probably should have considered that sooner.
Out of the corner of my eye I saw Josephine tuck and roll, lashing out with a well-placed kick against the joint of one leg. The creature tipped beneath me and I lost purchase, swinging around in front of it. This was not ideal, as now it was able to dip its head enough that the beak had once again become a concern.
I did the smart thing and let go, managing to land more or less neatly on both feet. Josephine dove behind a tree as the creature struckâthere was the sound of snapping twigs and creaking bark as the razor-sharp beak left a small crater in the trunk. I had no doubt that beak could snap my arm in half, if it caught me.
I was sorting through my mental index of potential weapons when I heard another sound, this one the piercing cry of something much larger. A shadow passed over us, blotting out what little sun there was, and the giant bird thing paused, lifting its head. I saw the pupils of its eyes contract to pinpoints; then it stood up to its full height and let out a challenging shriek. As it did, I noticed the distinct lines of
ribs beneath its feathery coatâwhatever it was, it was clearly starving. Either there wasn't much food here, or this thing wasn't high enough on the food chain to compete. If the latter was true, I didn't want to stick around to find out what
was
.
I made it around Josephine's tree just in time to see something large and sinewy crash through the forest, talons out. It was maybe the size of a small airplane.
Nope
, I thought, and grabbed Josephine's hand. There was no way we could fight these things; I had nothing on me except Hue, who was resting in the hood of my sweatshirtâand he was no match for monsters like these, anyway. Josephine was already moving, and we took off through the underbrush as fast as we could safely go, given the fact that we couldn't see more than six feet in front of us.
In retrospect, we probably should have gone even slower. The crashing and sounds of fighting were still all too close behind us when the dirt beneath my feet loosened, and I realized we were going downhill, fast. Despite my best efforts, my feet slid out from under me and I stumbled down the rocky ravine, Josephine beside me.
For a single terrifying moment, my shoes left the dirt and I was midair, with no idea of how far I might be falling. Then the ground caught me, not too gently; the wind got knocked out of me and I stayed there for a moment, stunned and in pain. The adrenaline caught up with me a second later, and
I shoved my sleeve back up against my mouth, sucking in breaths only partially filtered of dust. I could hear Josephine coughing beside me, but it was all I could do to concentrate on breathing, on not panicking that I wasn't getting enough air.
This place is a deathtrap
, I thought, dizzily.
How is there such a strong source of Walker energy here?
“Are we sure . . . this is the right . . . place?” Josephine wheezed, voice muffled behind her hands.
“Yes.” I coughed. “Well, I'm not sure
this
is the right place, since
this
seems to be some sort of deep . . . ravine. . . .” I paused. Josephine turned to look at me, expression both wary and weary. “Do you hear that?” I asked, feeling my shoulders slump. I was really tired of things trying to kill/maim/eat me.