Lucas Ryan Versus: The Hive (The Lucas Ryan Versus Series) (9 page)

BOOK: Lucas Ryan Versus: The Hive (The Lucas Ryan Versus Series)
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“Pick me up,” I said, with a crooked smile.

LEVEL 11:
Uprising

 

 

 

I stared at the mystery in my locker with a new smile. What lay before me was unbelievable and beautiful. Emotions and feelings began to possess me, but they made little sense. I felt misguided, but understood. Angry, yet calm. Hot and cold. Up was down. Yes was no. So, I did the only thing that came natural to me...I poked at it.

“Here goes nothing,” I shrugged. Olivia inhaled a chunk of oxygen from behind me. I stole a quick glance her way to see if she could see what I was standing in front of. She could.

Before me was one thing and one thing only, my reflection. My excited face, staring back at itself. In place of my open locker door was a long mirror that stretched the entire length of the opening. It was crystal-clear, with cold air coming from it. Soothing and inviting, like an opened refrigerator door on a hot summer day. The shiny surface shuttered with tiny ripples, like a pool of water. Gentle waves would dance along its surface as my breathing increased. In the wild reflection, I could see General Love clutching at his bare gun holster behind me. I couldn’t hold in my smile.

“Lucas?” Olivia spoke, cautiously. When she did, a small portion of the magic mercury pool bulged out for her, as if reaching for her words. I immediately thought, ‘TRUST ONLY HER.’

“Trust me,” I whispered back. My eyes found hers in the reflecting pool. With a quick wink, I reached out in front of me and tapped my fingertip against the silver waves. A thousand miniature eruptions scattered across its perfect surface. Mirrored bubbles popped and fizzed liked a soft drink. I found it hypnotically exquisite. Electricity filled my fingertip and raced through my body, down to my toes. Purple waves of energy pulsed off of me, shooting down the school halls, in all directions. The weapons that aligned the lockers popped from their magnetic prison and fell to the floor in a domino effect.

“Lucas!” Olivia screamed. Our ears filled with a whirling buzz. It was everywhere, and building in strength. Olivia slammed her hands over her ears. I closed my eyes and jammed the rest of my hand into the unknown. My mystical armband followed easily until my arm had disappeared past its elbow. I waited for something to grab my hand, or my arm to disappear into another dimension. None of that happened. Instead, the buzzing stopped and the sound of laughter came from over my shoulder. With half my arm still embedded in the pooling mercury, I turned to find General Love and all of his soldiers, standing in a circle around Olivia and I.

“Uh oh,” I swallowed.

“Thank you, Mr. Ryan,” General Love smiled. With a wicked twitch in one eye, he stabbed a large handgun into my face. Its barrel settled right between my eyes. The rest of his team were eerie statues with freshly loaded assault rifles pointed at us. Something was off though. There was an unnatural gleam in all their stares. Their eyes looked wrong, evil. Whatever it was, it sent a warning signal to my gut. I tightened in place and Olivia started to shake.

“I think I’m stuck...” I mumbled.

General Love bellowed like a crazy hyena, “Looks like you broke it, boy!” He stomped one step closer, just an inch from my face. So close I could taste his bad breath. “You mind getting out of my way, I want that weapon!”

His voice burrowed itself in my head, but that wasn’t what stole my attention and scared me to my core. When he spoke his last few words, he did it with two tongues. At least that’s what it looked like. A set of blood red snakes taunting me from behind perfectly white teeth. Both snapped inside his mouth like two tiny whips before disappearing again.

I tried to scream, but nothing came out. The rest of my arm slid into the locker.

“Give me the weapon!” General Love demanded, again.

I gritted my teeth together. “It’s...not...a...weapo...”

 

FFZZZZZZZZZZZ...BOOM!

 

The top of my locker exploded in cold, silver light that shot through the ceiling of the school. A giant wave of sparkling energy flashed outward, covering everyone in its chilly wake. My sight blurred and every inch of my skin covered itself in fresh goose bumps. Another pulse of energy rolled over us, stunning General Love and his men. More energy filled the halls, growing with ferocity and the sound of a freight train. With a dull thud, I jerked my arm free from the locker opening.

“Olivia! Hold on!” I screamed out. Her hands had found my waist before I had even finished my panicked announcement. My locker continued its assault on the school’s structure, carving an even larger hole into the roof. Classroom doors flew open, desks flipped over inside of them, and glass shattered and ricocheted everywhere. All the locker doors imploded, sucking themselves in with the familiar sound of metal crinkling.

With the next round of explosions, General Love found himself flying backwards in slow motion, three feet off the ground. His team of hooligans suffered the same fate. All of them slowly rolling and spinning through the air, their weapons just out of reach from their emptied hands.

“Urrrgggh!” General Love gurgled. It sounded inhuman and echoed loudly. His rage was almost as deafening as the mind bending explosion. Fear choked me and I made the only decision I could think of...I ran.

“Come on!” I yelled through the storm, and jerked Olivia behind me as I started to run. I had no idea which way I was headed, only that we needed to get there, fast. Olivia locked her fingers in mine. Our feet carried us quickly down the hallway while everyone else spun around in mid air, turning like the second hand of a clock. We ran down the hall, watching as jagged pieces of glass and debris bounced off of our moving torsos. I couldn’t believe it.

We made our way around the final corner of the building, where the school library was located. The two large entrance doors were now gone, probably because they were mostly made of dark, tinted glass. We pushed through the opening and found ourselves surrounded by all the library’s books. They were attached to the ceiling in messy stacks that reached below like an upside down city of words. They were only a few feet away from our heads. As we ran underneath them they would rustle and slam their spines against the closest stack next to them. The empty bookshelves lay toppled over, spinning on the floor. All the desks in the room had scattered themselves along the walls, hanging crooked and broken.

Just when I thought it couldn’t get any weirder, my cell phone, slash, magic gauntlet, began to ring. My personal ringtone started to play much louder than expected. It was a very popular song from the 80’s and absolutely embarrassing...

 

‘TURN AROUND, BRIGHT EYES...EVERY NOW AND THEN I FALL APART...’

 

Olivia looked at me with wide eyes. “You gonna answer that?”

Embarrassed and terrified, I pulled my gauntlet up and reached for the touchscreen.

 

‘TURN AROUND, BRIGHT EYES...’ it continued to serenade us.

 

It was blinking with two small ovals on the screen. The shapes resembled the outline of my index and middle fingertips. I placed them on the flashing images and my musical ringtone stopped with a tiny pop.

“Um...that’s better,” I tried to joke. Olivia smiled with a tiny pout. Just then, all around us, the room began to change back to normal. The bookshelves stood up in place again. The desks crawled down the walls like mechanical spiders and marched themselves back to their original resting spots. The books flew down from the ceiling and perched their paper bodies back where they belonged, on the shelves. Spinning shards of glass found their way back into the frames of all the windows and picture frames. Within seconds, they healed themselves, leaving fresh new glass and reflections.

“Not possible,” Olivia whispered. I rubbed my eyes, trying to make sense of the situation.

 

~ Keep moving. Room 99. ~

 

The voice was back. I was too shocked to argue with it though. I pushed past Olivia, snatching up her hand as I did.

“Let’s go, the computer lab is just around the corner.”

“What’s in the computer lab?” Olivia asked, but followed me easily.

“Hopefully, some answers,” I said. We exited the library and ran into the computer lab that was located just outside. The door slammed behind us and I quickly turned out the lights. There was a computer keyboard and monitor on each desk in the room. All of them powered off and still. I tapped on the nearest computer’s keyboard, trying to wake the machine up. Click, click, click. Nothing. If this one didn’t work, none of them would. I had hoped the voice in my head directed us here to send for help. I didn’t know what to do next. I shook my head in defeat and watched Olivia for a moment. The world fell quiet, for a few seconds, at least.

“This isn’t happening?” Olivia cried, still holding my hand tightly. It felt wonderful, even with all the apocalyptic mumbo-jumbo going on.

“We’re okay, for the moment,” I said, with renewed confidence. She looked at me intensely. She was far from believing me. I leaned in to repeat my last statement when something stopped me. Her eyes, they were different. Well, one of them was. She had one bright blue eye, but her other one was a deep brown now. She had lost one of her contacts and her natural color was right in front of me.

“How do you know that?” she snapped, as if I was crazy. I couldn’t stop staring at her eyes. She filled with anger and insecurity.

“I promise we’ll be okay,” I said, in a goofy fog. My stare locked on the newly discovered secret. She realized something was wrong.

“What?” she huffed. “What’s wrong?”

I blushed a little, “You have a brown eye now.”

“Oh,” she cringed, and whipped her head away from my prying eyes. Her hands searched her pockets for her contacts case, but she quickly realized, it was gone. She hid behind her falling hair.

“You okay? Are you hurt?” I asked, softly. She slowly pulled her hair from her face and slid it behind her ears. She looked up at me for a moment and then reached up and removed the other blue contact. She let out a long deep sigh and tears began to well up in her eyes. She was scared and unsure of everything.

“Those were my favorite pair of contacts,” she said. Her mouth pulled down into a frown. I could see the weight of the day on her face as she became overly shy. With all the horribleness of the morning, she was worried about someone seeing her without her contacts in. We had just survived an impossible explosion, and that’s what she was upset about. Nervously, I let a small laugh escape my mouth.

She snapped at me, “Is there something funny?”

“No,” I said.

“Spill it.” Her paranoia was in full bloom.

“Brown eyes,” I said, carefully. She stepped closer to me, forcefully wiping away her fresh tears.

“So!” her voice cracked. I gently took her hand in mine. She tried to pull away from my advance, but I wouldn’t let go.

“Better,” I smiled.

Seeing her true eye color made me forget about everything. The futuristic explosion in my locker, the out-of-his-mind General chasing us, the fact that the school was being held hostage, or that I had no idea what to do next. There was only her big, wonderful, brown eyes. She started to calm down as my answer started to sink in. She ran her purple streaked hair behind her ear, and waited for me to say something. But before I could say anything else, one of the black screened monitors came to life, with a blip of wild colors.

“Lucas, look,” Olivia pointed to a familiar image on the screen. It was the hallway in front of my locker. We were watching a live feed from the schools security system. I leaned in for a closer look.

“It’s the General and his men,” I said, surprised. They were all spinning in slow motion, just above the ground. With a quick thud they were all on the floor again, flailing around, trying to find their bearings.

“What’s happening? How can we see this?” Olivia asked. I shrugged my shoulders in confusion.

“I don’t know.”

General Love climbed to his feet, quickly. He ordered his men to do the same. All of them found their weapons and disappeared off screen. General Love slowly stepped to my open locker, studying the emptiness that was before him. A hollow black shell of tin and dust. He smashed his fist into the locker next to mine and turned toward the camera we were watching him on. His eyes studied it for a long, paralyzing minute. Staring up at us through the digital screen, I could feel my skin crawl. Could he see us? No way he could see us.

“I think he can see us,” Olivia trembled. On the screen, the General’s eyes began to glow white. It was faint, but it was there. And just as quickly as they started to shine, they stopped.

“So do I,” I gulped. The computer screen fell black again. Olivia and I looked at each other, nervously.

“I’m scared, Lucas,” she whispered.

“We’ll be fine.” I tugged on her fingers, lightly. I found it amazing that she was still holding my hand. She nodded without a word and followed me as I led her out the door of the computer lab. It had been a waste of time going in there. Why did
it
tell me to go there? Maybe so I could see that image on the computer monitor. Maybe
it
wanted me to see the General’s eyes, those ghostly eyes.

“Come on. We need to find Sophia,” I said, softly. Down the hallway I could hear the General and his team. They were close. He was barking orders to his men and he was irate.

“Double the guards at every possible exit! No one gets out of here! Find those two kids! Now!” General Love’s voice echoed everywhere. It seemed to follow us no matter how fast we ran.

 

So, we ran even faster.

LEVEL 12:
Short Change Hero

 

 

 

Olivia and I had made our way in and out of a dozen classrooms, three dead ends, and a girls restroom. General Love had tripled the guards at every possible exit in the school. There was no way out. As I tried to catch my breath, doubt and fear curled themselves around me. I was close to giving up when something along the wall of the latest classroom, caught my eye.

“I remember those,” I said, winded. Olivia settled next to me and turned toward the wall I was pointing at. An oversized pair of leather boots sat on top of a dusty shelf. They were worn, musty and faded black.

“Me too,” she sighed. We had stumbled into our Art class, Room 102. Those particular pair of boots were our class semifinal last year. Sketching them with messy chalks, counted as a third of our grade. She earned an
A
, I didn’t. I hated those boots.

“Stupid boots,” I shook my head.

Olivia asked, with a smile, “Didn’t you get a
C
?”

“I wish...
C-
.” We both let out a much needed laugh. It filled the empty room with a positive vibe. The moment was fantastically perfect and ended much too soon.

From outside the classroom windows came the sound of approaching helicopter blades, ripping and chopping through the morning air. The sound was thick and full. It had to be a military helicopter. Its arrival brought a sobering thought to my attention; where were all the local news choppers. The ones with the big colorful numbers painted on the sides and witty pilots who cracked jokes on the morning TV shows. The earlier explosion had to be large enough to be seen throughout the city. Where were all the sirens, the emergency teams? This crazy ordeal had “LIVE NEWSCAST SPECIAL” written all over it.

And the students, were any of them hurt by my locker’s hissy-fit? Surely, there had to be parents lining the perimeter of the school, demanding the safe return of their sons and daughters. The image filled my gut with a dull ache. What had I started here? My mind wandered as the helicopter’s engine faded away.

“Phone lines are still down,” Olivia reminded me, with the classroom phone dangling from her hand. She was standing just inside an open door at the back of the classroom. This adjoining room was where the teacher kept the art supplies and other teacherly things. It was also home to a tiny, personal bathroom at the very back of it. Not many students knew about it, but I did. I had discovered it one afternoon when the teacher had left the class to handle a personal matter, during school hours.

“How about your cell phone?” I asked her, already knowing the answer. The power was working, but our phone lines weren’t. General Love was probably behind it. Standard military procedure, no lines of communication in or out.

Shaking her head back and forth, “Nope. And yours?”

Glancing down at the alien technology embedded in my wrist, I smiled. “Nada. You’d think with the new upgrade I’d get better service.”

“Funny,” she giggled. I walked up to her, tapping the shiny smooth glass on it, nervously. She shuffled her stance, leaning toward me, slightly. Her dark brown eyes held me in their grasp. If this were a movie, this was a perfect moment to kiss her. She watched me fidget over the idea. If only I could’ve harnessed the courage to do something about it before we were interrupted.

The slender brown door to the bathroom behind us, flew open with a crash.

“You! It’s because of you!” Mr. Parker accused. He was shaking and pointing his finger at me, in a rage. Olivia and I stepped back as he continued his advance. “You, Mr. Ryan! All because of you!”

“What the...” I huffed. He stumbled up to us with his face as white as a ghost and beads of sweat peppered all over his forehead. His giant glasses dangled from his nose with new scratches and tiny cracks twinkling inside them. He was trembling with the same intensity of a drug addict.

“Do you have any idea what you have brought upon us, upon this world? Well, do you, Mr. Ryan? Do you?” He scratched at the temples of his forehead, just below the arms of his glasses.

“Are you crazy?” I grumbled. Mr. Parker cocked his head to the side, with his teeth grinding together. He lunged forward at me, his hands reaching out like arthritic claws scraping through the air. Was he really about to attack me?

“Back off!” Olivia yelled. She cocked her arm back and threw one lightning fast punch. It connected with his chin in a bone-crunching smack. He fell backwards to the floor, crashing onto a pile of paintbrushes and charcoal pencils. He cried out in a pathetic yelp. I tried not to laugh too loud.

“Armageddon! The end! No hope!” he chanted, as if he were hypnotized.

“Shut up or I’ll hit you again!” Olivia promised, with her fists balled up at her sides. Mr. Parker winced and wiped at his broken spectacles.

“Please, no. Don’t hit me again,” he surrendered.

“Mr. Parker, what are you talking about? What did I do?” I asked, still flattered by the act of violence Olivia had shown.

“I overheard them talking...the General and his men.”

“Talking? About what?” I asked.

“About you,” his teeth chattered, sickly. “They came for you.”

“Me?”

“They came for...
it
,” he hissed. I slid my hand over the cold surface of my magical wristband.

“I don’t understand?”

“You’ve brought them here, Mr. Ryan.”

“Who?” I blinked.

Mr. Parker stared up at me, slowly trying to find his balance to sit up. He said nothing else, but it was obvious he knew more.

“What has he brought here?” Olivia asked, as politely as possible. He stood up slowly, adjusting his shirt. His eyes wandered from Olivia’s face to mine and then to my wild gauntlet. It made me instantly uncomfortable.

“You said the end...what do you mean? The end of what?” I asked, cautiously. His lips pulled together tightly in an insane grin.

“Everything.”

“Oh, bummer,” I rolled my eyes.

“This is no place for a hero, Mr. Ryan.”

“A hero?” I mumbled.

“And you are no hero...” he trailed off. He was babbling.

“Mr. Parker, I think you need some help,” Olivia said, coldly. He ignored her and continued to taunt me.

“You must be stopped.
It
must not come.
It
must go back to where
it
came from. You...must...be...stopped,” he said, determined.

“You’re crazy!” Olivia snapped. Mr. Parker began to cackle wildly in a fit. His eyes rolled back in his head, leaving only white, glossy globes. I grabbed Olivia’s hand and pulled her back to me. Inside his eyes something changed. The white filled with a crimson liquid that bubbled out onto his cheeks and down his neck. The lower eyelids started to quiver as if something were trying to get out. The skin poked out in tiny points of flesh. With a twitch of his head a silver tentacle slid out from each slit of his eye sockets. They slithered down his cheeks like tears and grabbed at his upper lip, pulling it back in a fierce snarl.

“Lucas!” Olivia screamed, with her hand over her mouth. Mr. Parker ran forward, pushing us out of his way. He sprinted for the main door to the classroom, overturning desks as he did.

“I won’t let you win, Mr. Ryan! I won’t!” Mr. Parker threatened, with his head still pulled backwards. He slammed into the door before ripping it open in a frenzied fit.

 

~ Stop him. ~

 

The voice warned, but I didn’t know what to do. That feeling was becoming awfully familiar. Olivia held onto my arm as everything turned much, much worse.

“He’s in here! I found him! Lucas Ryan is in here!” Mr. Parker screamed down the hallway.

“Oh no...” I gasped.

“He’s here! He’s here! He’s not alone!
It’s
here too!” he continued, at the top of his lungs. I ran for the door and slammed it close, locking it as fast as possible. From outside the door I could hear him still wailing and cursing. Still calling out my name.

“We have to get out of here, now!” I said, full of dread.

Olivia grabbed me tightly. “Did you see his eyes? What was in his eyes, Lucas?”

“Some kind of nightmare.”

“Some kind of...monster,” she added.

 

~ Get ready. ~

 

Uh oh, another warning. My wristband suddenly came to life, flickering with a single word. Olivia and I read the foreboding word at exactly the same time, our mouths dry with panic.

 

“Hide.”

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