Shadow Train (13 page)

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Authors: J. Gabriel Gates

Tags: #Fiction, #fantasy, #magic, #teen martial artists, #government agents, #Chinese kung fu masters, #fallen angels, #maintain peace, #continue their quest

BOOK: Shadow Train
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She'd asked her grandmother about it when they got home that evening.

“That's the Song of Peace,” Lily Rose told her. “What a mighty fine song it is! And you sing it better than anyone, sugar plum.” That was all the old woman had ever said on the subject.

Dalton had consulted
The Good Book
a few times in the ensuing years, looking for answers to all kinds of questions, but it never showed her anything else. Her grandmother was always asking her to sing the song for people—for the geezers at Middleburg Retirement Park, for the kids at the nursery school, and of course for the church—anywhere people might be in need of a little solace and rest. She tried to arrange a tour, so that Dalton could perform at all the churches in the area, and she was always urging Dalton to practice her singing. Dalton knew her grandmother's dream for her was to be a famous recording artist, sharing her talent and that special, mysterious song with the world, but Dalton had always resisted. For a while she wanted to be a lawyer, then a dental hygienist. Lately, she'd been thinking of going into architecture. She was open to doing just about anything, except being a singer.

It wasn't that her first performance of the song had freaked her out or anything like that. It was simply that no other songs she sang could compare to the one she'd learned from
The Good Book.
Singing them was like eating dry rice cakes when you knew you could be feasting on a porterhouse steak. She was always hesitant to sing the Song of Peace, and only did it when she couldn't talk her grandma out of it. She never told anyone why, or even admitted it to herself, but the truth was, deep down in her soul she wasn't sure she was worthy to perform that glorious, transcendent song.

“I don't know if I can do it, Grandma. I haven't sung it in so long,” she protested now.

Lily Rose came over and put a comforting hand on her shoulder. “I know you're scared, honey bun,” she said. “But that venom old Master Chin got a dose of is powerful stuff, and even in someone as strong as he is, it moves fast. Faster than all the herbs and poultices and magic and prayers we have. The only chance he has is to go into a deep, deep sleep—so deep that his heart almost stops beating. Then the venom will stop spreading, and we might be able to save him. But if you don't sing for him, Dalton, he is going to die.”

Lily Rose's age-worn face was as kind as ever, but there was such gravity in her extraordinary eyes that it filled Dalton with alarm.

Dalton looked from her grandmother to Master Chin, who was still twitching, sweating, and muttering in his sleep, and she sighed. She hardly ever cried, but she felt like she might now.

“I know, darlin',” her grandmother soothed. “There's nothing in the world scarier than your own power. But I'll tell you a little secret: the only thing scarier than using it is not using it.”

Dalton felt her grandmother take her hand and squeeze. She felt the old woman's thin, loose skin; her swollen, knobby knuckles; and most of all the strength and vitality that Lily Rose still had, despite her age.

And, Dalton suddenly realized, the greatest fear she had wasn't of her own power or her singing or how it might affect people. Most of all, she feared letting her grandmother down and not living up to the beautiful, saintly, unattainable example she'd always set.

“You're good enough, Dalton. Always have been, always will be,” Lily Rose said simply, as if she could read her mind. “You can do it—and you must.”

She squeezed Dalton's hand once more, then turned and left the room, shutting the door behind her.

As soon as she was gone Dalton moved closer to Master Chin's bedside and gazed down at him as he tossed fitfully, his brow furrowed and sweaty. Taking a deep, slow breath and closing her eyes, Dalton began the song.

Outside, the birds went silent as if they didn't want to miss even one exquisite note. The melody washed over Dalton, lifting her up with each soaring phrase. Lyrics came to her in a language she didn't understand, and yet they soothed her as they seemed now to soothe Master Chin. The sound of her own voice gave her goose bumps.

And when she looked down, Master Chin had settled into deep and peaceful sleep, with a placid smile on his face.

* * *

The Toppers sat around a large round table in Spinnacle's VIP area in chairs made of sleek, burnished steel with black leather cushions. The floors were of polished hardwood. Expensive abstract paintings graced the walls and fine silk curtains framed a huge picture window that looked out across the barren winter fields north of town. A deepening twilight seemed to descend upon them through the skylights above, its luminous purple fading fast to the desolate blackness of night.

Once, this place and all its sophistication and luxury had been a symbolic refuge for the Toppers—the one place in town where their Flatliner enemies could never follow them simply because they couldn't afford it. That had never bothered Zhai before. Now he felt like he was in enemy territory.

Normally, the guys would have been laughing and joking around, but now they all waited, staring at each other in stony silence.

Zhai glanced at his watch. Seven-ten, and still Rick hadn't shown up. The way things looked, none of the other guys would say a word until he did.

Just as that thought crossed Zhai's mind, he heard the sound of heavy footsteps pounding up the steps to the second floor, and a moment later Rick entered the room with Bran a few feet behind him. Zhai noticed something different about their demeanors at once. Rick's usual arrogant grin was even more brazen and cockier than he'd ever seen it. Bran, on the other hand, looked exhausted and nervous. If Zhai had believed in vampires, he might have thought that Rick was growing more powerful by sucking away the lifeblood of his best friend.

“Hey,” all the guys said to Rick and Bran, almost in unison. Bran returned the greetings, but Rick remained silent as he took his usual place in the corner, slumped into his chair and put his size-thirteen feet up on the table.

Zhai cleared his throat. “Okay, thanks for coming, guys. It's been a while since we all hung out like this, huh?”

His icebreaker was met with an awkward silence, so he continued. “Look, I know some of you are pissed that I've been helping the Flatliners look for Raphael Kain, and I get that. I really do. But what you all need to understand is that whatever problems we've had, Raphael and I are bound by the Wu-de. That means we're brothers, training under Master Chin, no matter what our differences are. So even though he's sworn himself to be my enemy, I'm obligated to look for him. Besides, think about it: if I help bring him back, that's also the best way to end our feud with the Flatliners. Raphael can't keep hating us if we save his life, right?”

Michael Ponder was the first to speak up. “Even if we agree,” he said, “how do you expect to save his life or find him or whatever? He got hit by a train in case you forgot. And he got vaporized. We all saw it. He's gone, Zhai. And good riddance.”

Some of the other guys nodded.

Zhai tried a new tack. “All right, look—I'm not asking you to agree with me or even understand where I'm coming from. All I'm asking is that you let me borrow the little pieces of broken crystal you picked up from the tracks after Raphael got hit. I'll even buy them from you, if you want.”

“Why?” Cle'von Cunningham asked. “What are you doing with them?” He didn't seem angry or concerned, just mildly curious.

“Well . . . okay, this may sound strange,” Zhai said. “But . . . the thing is, those guys are looking for them—the guys in the Derby hats we saw that night, with the snake. If they get hold of them, something bad is going to happen. They already attacked us—Master Chin and me. And Chin got hurt—badly. ”

“So we won't give the pieces to those guys,” D'von said. “But that doesn't mean we should give them to you. Unless you need them for something.”

“Yeah,” Cle'von agreed. “Why exactly do you need them?” Everyone looked at Zhai.

A waitress came in with a pitcher of water and put it on the table. Sensing the tension in the room, she turned quickly and walked out.

Rick took his feet off the table and leaned forward in his seat. It was the first time he'd moved during the conversation. “He wants to use them to find Raphael Kain,” Rick said, his eyes burning into Zhai's. Zhai noticed a greater intensity about him than usual, and it was unnerving. It was all Zhai could do to keep from looking away.

“Is that right?” Michael Ponder asked, his tone verging on outrage. “Is that why you want them?”

Zhai looked around the table at his friends. He felt them all slipping away from him, like a tide receding from a deserted beach, leaving him stranded, alone.

“Yes,” he said simply. “We all saw what happened during the blizzard. There are things going on in Middleburg. Crazy things. Supernatural things. Those guys in the hats belong to a cult called the Order of the Black Snake—Obies for short. And Master Chin said that if we don't bring Raphael back and keep the crystal shards away from them, we're all going to be in very serious trouble.”

“And he knows this how?” Rick asked smugly.

Zhai hesitated. “There are these tapestries,” he explained. “Maggie's mom does them—”

D'von blurted out a big, deep laugh, cutting Zhai off. “That crazy old broad who leaves her house about once every three years?” Cle'von laughed too and all the other guys joined in, except Bran. He sat there the whole time, perfectly still, taking everything in, as if his slightest movement would cause the whole world to shatter.

“No,” Zhai argued. “You need to listen. She's not crazy. She works on the tapestries all the time—that's why she never goes anywhere. They're important—they have some kind of strange power. Maggie's mom draws all the designs and then embroiders them—and they show the history of Middleburg. And its future.”

“Zhai, come on!” Dax Avery scoffed. “You sound as crazy as old lady Anderson. This is ridiculous.”

“Is it?” Zhai asked. “You all saw what happened that night. The giant snake, the Obies, Orias, Aimee, the train—and what about that thing Maggie did? All that power that came out of her when she put the homecoming crown on her head and went after the cobra? You guys can't deny that you saw it.” Zhai's voice rose with desperation on each word.

“Sorry, man,” D'von said, and Zhai couldn't believe how much in denial they were. “Those Flatliners are blabbing all over school about how they're going to kick our asses for beating up their friend. And we're supposed to help them? Gimme a break! It's not happening.”

All the Toppers looked at Rick to make sure he was in agreement, and then they nodded, too.

Coming into this meeting, Zhai believed that the friendship and respect he shared with the Toppers would be enough to convince them give him the shards. Now, he saw that the regard they'd once had for him was nothing compared to their hatred for the Flatliners—and their fear of Rick.

“I'm still your leader,” Zhai said sternly. He stood and looked around at each of them, one by one. “And I'm ordering each of you to bring me your piece of the ring—by nine tonight.”

Something in his tone—true authority, he thought, perhaps a gift of Shen—was making them take him seriously. They all looked like little kids who'd just been yelled at by their parents—except Rick, who was chuckling.

“Something funny, Rick?” Zhai asked.

“Yeah,” Rick said, slowly coming to his feet. “It's funny that you still think you're the leader here.”

The energy in the room changed as the group, frozen in silence, waited to see how Zhai would respond to Rick's challenge.

“I seem to remember that the last time we talked about leadership, I beat you down in your backyard. So, yes, I am the leader,” Zhai said, fighting to stay calm.

“You betrayed every one of us the minute you started looking for Kain,” Rick snapped. “You're a traitor, Zhai. I'm the leader now.”

Zhai glanced around the table, gauging the reactions of the other Toppers. They were all staring down at the table cloth, avoiding eye contact with him. The only one who looked back at him was Bran, but he still had that wild, vacant expression in his eyes.

“The law of the Toppers says you can only become the new leader by beating the current leader in a fight,” Zhai said.

“Let's do it,” Rick said, already rolling up his sleeves. “And we can make it even more interesting.”

“How?” Zhai asked.

“You win,” Rick said. “And the guys will all give you their pieces of that useless broken glass.” He looked at the others for confirmation. “Isn't that right?”

They all nodded but kept silent. Rick smiled lazily, enjoying himself. “If I win, I get control of the Toppers and all the pieces of that stupid ring—which I will then grind into dust. So if it's true—if that is the way to find Raphael—we'll never have to look at his miserable face again.” He chuckled again, and it sounded guttural, almost unnatural. “Deal?”

Zhai stared at Rick. There was something different about him, but Zhai couldn't figure out what it was. Was he bigger somehow? Maybe. Cockier? Definitely. Whatever it was, it gave Zhai an uncharacteristic feeling of dread. Still, this might be his only chance to gather up the shards of the ring and, by extension, his only chance to save Middleburg from the Obies.

“Deal,” Zhai said.

Chapter 10

Finally, Raphael couldn't take it any longer.
He'd napped in the big leather command chair for hours, gone through his kung fu form no less than ten times, and done pushups on the cab's ancient-looking floorboards until his muscles trembled. He'd even tried to decipher the strange markings on the train's gauges. When every other option was exhausted, he'd stared out at the billows of fog whooshing past the windshield until he felt like he was being hypnotized.

But still, the train continued its inexorable and meteoric forward motion. It didn't slow or speed up or turn. And the fog didn't abate or change, not even for an instant. Though he was rocketing toward some unknown destination, Raphael felt like he was in an eerie state of suspension.

He had no clue how much time had passed—minutes, hours, or
days
. He was leaning toward days, although strangely enough, he was neither hungry nor thirsty. For hours, he'd obsessed over what might be going on in Middleburg and how he might get back there, but after a while he'd simply decided it was out of his control and pushed it out of his mind. He was terribly bored for a long time, but eventually that receded, too, leaving him pleasantly vacant, neither happy nor sad, neither relaxed nor anxious, utterly devoid of expectation.

He'd also given up trying to guess where the train might end up. For all he knew, it would go on like this forever. The thought terrified him at first, but now he was strangely okay with it.

This feeling of complete surrender reminded him of his Master Chin's
qigong
training, and he immediately settled down in the leather armchair and began to meditate.

More time passed—again, he had no idea how much—but sometime during his meditation, the thought came to him:
Pull the lever. Stop the train.
Abruptly, he opened his eyes, stood up from the chair, and approached the train's control console. Before, he had been afraid to touch the brass lever that he guessed was the throttle. Now, he grasped it confidently with both hands and in a slow, smooth motion he pulled it backward, toward himself. The all-consuming hum of the engine lowered in pitch with each inch the lever moved, and Raph kept pulling until the brass shaft was perfectly vertical. It clicked into place, and the massive locomotive gave one final lurch and stopped.

The sound of the train's engine had disappeared, leaving in its wake a silence that was even more eerie than the drone of the engine had been. As he stared out the window, he thought for one disorienting moment that he was still moving—the fog remained outside, just as it had been since he'd first awakened on the train. But a second later, he realized that the billows and wisps were no longer moving. They stood in heavy, static sheets, like an infinite series of gray curtains that slowly drifted closed or opened, revealing more gray curtains behind them.

Despite his desolate surroundings, he felt a shock of excitement at the prospect of getting off the train and exploring, and he hurried to the door of the cab and opened it. Clambering down a metal ladder, he sighed in relief as his sneakers hit the hard-packed earth.

He looked around. A warm breeze hummed softly around him, stirring the fog, but that was the only sound or movement he could detect. Off to his right, he could see railroad tracks stretching away until the haze and mist swallowed them up.

The train looked just as he remembered it from the glimpse he'd gotten back in Middleburg. The engine was huge, probably over thirty feet tall and a hundred feet long—and black, as if the whole thing was made of cast iron. Here and there, the black was accented with another metal he couldn't identify. This strange, greenish alloy formed the stairs, the seams around the engine's massive, barrel-like boiler, and the menacing triangle of the cowcatcher. The engine's single headlight, too, gave off a strange, vaguely greenish glow.

Attached to the engine was a series of boxcars, as huge and black as the engine. They were all identical, just big, black rectangles, and Raphael counted nine of them before their lineup disappeared into the fog.

I wonder what's inside them,
he thought. What kind of cargo would a supernatural train speeding into oblivion carry?

He hesitated for a second and then decided to find out. In a few strides, he made his way to the nearest boxcar. There were a few steps of greenish metal leading up to a massive, square doorway, and when he mounted them and grabbed the door handle, he got a closer look at the material the car was made of. Leaning closer, he ran a hand over it. Sure enough—it wasn't made of metal at all. It had been carved of some black, granite-like stone. It reminded Raphael of a slab that would cover a grave, and he quickly pulled his hand away.

That's when he heard a sound from inside the car.

Footsteps.

“Hello?” he said, leaning closer to the door, but the only answer was the wind, whispering across the flat, empty land.

Taking a slow, steadying breath, he reached up and gripped the greenish metal handle. He expected that the huge, stone door would be too heavy for him to pull aside, but it seemed to be perfectly weighted, and as he pulled the handle, the latch released, and the big granite slab slid to his right.

The sun or moon—or whatever indistinct light source it was that illuminated this world—shone into the black interior of the train car as Raphael peered inside.

At first, he could see nothing but formless shadows, then came the sound of quick footsteps approaching. It was a man with a heavy paunch at his beltline, a balding head, and dim, squinty eyes. Raphael thought for a second that he recognized him, but before he could figure out how he knew him, the guy charged at him.

“Close the door!” the man said. The desperation in his voice was frightening, and he had a wild look in his eyes. Something about him—the urgency of his tone, the glazed intensity of his expression, or maybe the way he appeared from the recesses of the shadows so suddenly made Raphael think of an insane ghost.

“Close it! Close it! Close it!” the man said, charging Raphael with rising fury.

Raph heaved on the heavy door with all his might, and the last thing he saw before it slammed shut was the man's eyes staring at him, electrified with madness, and his grease-stained hands, groping toward Raphael through the fast-closing gap of the door. When it shut with a bang, Raphael jumped down from the ladder and the sudden overwhelming fear he felt sent him running away from the train.

Wisps of fog clung to him like spiderwebs, slipping around him as he ran and his heart beat fast, pounding in his chest. After a moment, the fear of getting lost overcame the fear of the man in the boxcar and he slowed to a jog, and then to a walk. When he turned around he could no longer see the train.

This can't be good,
he thought, and ran back in the direction he'd come. He ran toward the train for as long as he had run away from it, then twice as long, but it was gone. There was no sign of train or tracks. There was nothing but the fog, endless and listless, enshrouding him.

“Hello?” Raphael yelled, his fear coalescing into a wave of frustration. “Hello!” he shouted with all his might, but no one answered his call. There wasn't even an echo.

With a groan, he fell to his knees and buried his face in his hands. He'd been lost before, when he was a kid exploring the woods around Middleburg with Zhai. That was scary, but it was nothing compared to this. This time, he hadn't just lost his way, he had lost his world. And this time, there was no friend to keep him company.

“Hello.”

The voice seemed to come out of the mist, and as it swirled away, Raphael saw a familiar figure standing before him: black fingernails, long black hair, dark eyes. Only his outfit was different. Now, he wore a robe the color of fresh, spring green.

“Magician,” Raphael said. “Why am I not surprised?”

The Magician's cunning eyes narrowed as he laughed. “Ah, asking me questions now, are you?” he said.

“Just tell me where I am and how I get back to Middleburg,” Raphael said. Then, on second thought, he added, “Please.”

“Very well,” the Dark Teacher said. “You are in the borderland of the Dark Territory.”

“Dark Territory . . .” Raphael said. “I thought that was just a railroad term.”

“It is,” the Magician said. “The Dark Territory is the destination of the train you have been riding. Middleburg is its second-to-last stop.”

Raphael thought of the man in the boxcar. Suddenly, he remembered where he'd seen him before: he was a gas-station attendant from Middleburg. He remembered the guy's name, too. It was stitched on the front of the uniform he always wore:
Don.
But the last time he'd seen him wasn't behind the counter of the gas station; it was in Middleburg's newspaper. There had been a photo of him next to an article. Raphael remembered the headline, too:
local man hit by truck and killed.

Raphael balled his trembling hands into fists and addressed the Magician again. “There was a man on the train, in one of the boxcars. I know him.”

The Magician nodded.

“Where is the train taking him?”

The Magician scowled. “I will not repeat myself,” he said and turned to disappear back into the fog.

“Wait!” Raphael called after him, his mind racing. “Why is the train taking Don to the Dark Territory?” he asked again, desperate to know.

When the Magician turned back to Raphael this time, he was smiling. “You know why.”

The breeze that had been warm and calming a moment before seemed, to Raphael, to drop a few degrees. He shivered.

“Because . . . he's dead,” Raphael said. The Magician didn't respond. He didn't have to. Raphael already knew it was true.

If what the Magician was saying was right, Raphael had just been on a train full of ghosts, speeding toward . . . what?

“What will happen to him in the Dark Territory?” Raphael asked warily.

The Magician gazed at Raphael. “That information is usually withheld from the living,” he replied sternly.

His answer made Raphael feel a little better: it meant he was still alive. For a second, he had been afraid he was a ghost, just like Don. But another thought followed closely behind the first: if the Dark Territory was where people went when they died, maybe his father was there, too. And maybe that meant Raphael could see him again. The idea filled him with a dizzying feeling that was half elation and half terror.

“If I get back on the train and go there—to look for my dad—will I be able to get out again?”

The Magician's grin faded. “You can get back on the train, but know this: those who enter the Dark Territory are rarely the same when they come out.”

Raphael frowned. “What does that mean?”

“They are re-formed,” the Magician said.

Raphael wasn't sure if he meant
reformed
or
re-formed
, but either way it sounded a bit ominous. Getting back on the train also sounded like a bad idea—besides, he didn't even know where it was anymore.

“Okay, so if I don't want to get back on the train, where should I go?” Raphael asked.

The Magician pointed to his right. “This direction is time.” He pointed the opposite way. “This direction is space.”

Raphael looked in both directions through the featureless haze.

“And which way to Middleburg?” he asked.

The Magician pointed in a third direction, which was also obscured by fog.

“That is the way. But beware, Raphael Kain. Those who inhabit the borderland are restless souls, rebels who have rejected their re-formation. If you attempt to cross the wasteland, you will have to fight them every step of the way.”

Raphael nodded. Phantom trains, parallel worlds, and creepy magicians all frightened and mystified him—but fighting was one thing he understood.

“Thanks,” he said to the Magician. He started off in the direction the Dark Teacher had indicated, then paused and turned back.

“You said something about time,” Raphael said. “Does that mean if I go in that direction, I can get to anywhere in time from the borderlands?”

“Of course,” the Magician said.

Considering the Magician's words, Raphael stared off into the distance, in the direction the Magician had identified as time. He had so many regrets; he had inflicted so many wounds in the past, and those he loved had suffered so much. If only he could go back and change things. He could make it so that Aimee never met Orias, Emory and his family never got evicted, or his mom never started dating that bastard Jack Banfield.

But there was one thing, more than anything else in the world, that he wanted to go back and change. The first time he'd heard of the Wheel he'd secretly thought of it, and with every mention of time travel since then, it had lingered in his mind, a dark and forbidden hope that he longed for with every thread of his being. . . .

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