Postby Felix » Sat Jul 25, 2009 11:03 am
Chapter 3 – Airship Attack!
At first I thought it was just the wind whistling past my ears, but shortly the sound became unmistakable: the faint whine of an approaching airship. I looked over at Emili, who glided nearby. She was staring curiously at a small village below us, one of several we had already passed over. She didn’t seem to hear the airship over the sound of the wind, so I called out to her. “Hey, hold up!”
I slowed myself and touched down on the nearest hilltop, but Emili glided on past, still involved in her examination of the village. She either hadn’t heard me, or had ignored me; probably the latter. I watched Emili glide nearer to a dark mountain peak, one of the last summits we would pass before reaching Colony Mountain. Something about the peak caused a sick feeling to crawl into my stomach. I instantly leapt from my perch and took off after Emili. “Wait!” I shouted as loud as I could manage. “Emy, turn back!”
Almost at the same moment the words left my mouth, the mechanical whine began to increase in intensity, and a familiar whup-wp sound reached my ears. And still Emili glided on. “EMILI!” I screamed.
She finally turned and looked over her shoulder, a confused expression fixed on her face. She opened her mouth to make some reply to me, but her words were drowned out as the high-pitched whine suddenly exploded into a deafening roar. Emili passed over the mountain peak, and at the same instant, a huge dark shape shot up from behind the mountain, directly in Emili’s path. The airship’s huge lights came to life, and my dim world was flooded with white. I was blinded.
“Emili! Where are you?!”
“Here!” came the gasped reply. I tried to find Emili’s position from her voice, but could determine nothing other than that she was somewhere in front of me.
I feared colliding with the airship, so I tucked my wings and allowed myself to fall. I plunged below the range of the headlights before spreading my wings again. After my eyes readjusted to the darkness, I looked up to see the airship hovering above me. And there was Emili, directly in front of it, flapping wildly in a blind panic.
“Emili! Let yourself fall!” I shouted up to her, but it was no use; she couldn’t hear me over the tumult of the airship’s engines. I had to help her, so I began, with a grunt of effort, to power my way back upward with slow, laborious flaps. But it was too much effort, and would take too long for me to make it back up to her altitude. I glanced around quickly and my eyes came to rest on the mountain peak from behind which the airship had emerged. Of course, the peak sat right in the middle of the airship’s lights, but it was my best shot, so I took it.
I glided at reckless speed towards the mountain and landed awkwardly on its side, almost knocking myself out as I narrowly dodged a rock. I scrambled up the mountain, climbing faster than I ever had before. At one point, I risked a glance back at the airship. A hatch had opened at the front of the vessel and shadowy figures were moving about inside, surrounding some strange mechanical device that I couldn’t quite make out. It had some sort of slender protrusion, however, and this was aimed straight at Emili who still flapped and spiraled blindly in the light, though she was clearly beginning to exhaust herself.
I continued my climb. It seemed like an eternity before I reached the top. I had, of course, re-entered the intense light as I climbed, but this time it seemed that my eyes adjusted more easily, and I was only partly blinded. Standing on the peak, I squinted against the lights and could make out Emili’s shape flitting about.
Over the roar of the airship I heard an odd, wheezing sound, followed by a loud clunk, and something zinged through the air. It missed Emili by a breath, and struck the mountain near me with a clank of metal. It was a complex, thick net, part rope and part chain, attached to a long chain connecting it with the device from which I assumed it had sprung. The ramifications of what I was seeing slowly sank into my head. Whoever was in this ship was trying to catch Emili!
There was a clicking sound, and with a grind of metal against stone, the net slid off the side of the mountain and swung away into emptiness, where it was slowly retracted back towards the airship. There was another wheeze and a clunk, and another net fired from the airship. This one seemed to appear from another part of the ship. Clearly, the enemy had more than one of these net launching machines. Luckily the second shot became a second miss, harmlessly flying past both Emili and the mountain where I still stood, transfixed by what I was seeing.
It came to me that Emili’s luck couldn’t hold forever; I had to do something, so I jumped from my perch and flapped madly toward Emili. “Emili!!” I shouted when I thought I was close enough for her to hear me.
She whirled around, eyes wide and panicked. “Mark! Thank goodness!” She paused for a breath, which came in a ragged gulp. “H-help me! I can’t…-gasp-… see a thing!”
Whzzzzz…
One or both of the net guns were preparing to fire. “Drop, Emy!” I yelled, tucking my own wings and praying that she had heard me.
Clnk! Clnk!
Both nets fired, but sailed over us as we plunged like rocks. “Now glide!” I instructed. We unfolded our wings and glided under the airship, towards Colony Mountain.
“Th-thank you,” Emili sputtered, nearly crying with relief.
I grunted, knowing we were still far from safety. “Glide straight towards that mountain, and when we land, climb for your life.”
She nodded, and we glided in silence, or whatever is closest to silence when a thunderously loud airship is hovering nearby. The airship was fully behind us now, but I noticed that the sound of its engines changed in pitch slightly, and I had no doubt that it was turning to give chase. Colony Mountain loomed closer. Mere moments later, the mountainside was bathed in white light, and I knew the airship had turned and was right behind us.
Whzz-clnk! Whzz-clnk! …Whzzzz-clnk!
One , two, and then three large nets whizzed past, one only inches from my head. They jerked against the end of their tethers and halted midair, dropping and swinging back in a large arc to dangle harmlessly below the ship. There was another barrage of wheezes and clunks. How many of these machines did they have on the ship? More nets sped past, and I knew it was only a matter of time before one found its target.
But the mountainside was now right before us. Emili was slightly ahead of me, and I watched her land near a towering formation of rocks and scamper behind them into the relative safety they provided. I slowed myself to land, feet out, preparing for the familiar impact.
That’s when a force ripped into me from behind and threw me against the rocks. I landed hard on my chest with the crunch of ribs cracking against stone. My world flickered and turned hazy as I fought for consciousness, while pain throbbed steadily through my chest and head. I attempted to move, but my broken ribs and the heavy net on top of me made sure that such a feat was impossible. There was a distant clinking sound, and the open ends of the net began to constrict, pulling me back into its tight embrace. My wings became tangled up in the net’s intricacies, and attempting to fold them was useless, and only brought pain, so I gave up. I felt myself lifted away from the mountainside and swinging out over nothing. Through the holes in the net I could see the earth swaying far beneath me, and as the clinking sound continued, the ground dropped further away while I was reeled in towards my fate.
“Mark! I’m coming!”
I twisted my neck and saw Emili detach from the mountainside and hurtle toward me. She landed hard against the outside of the net, causing us both to swing like a pendulum. “I’ll get you out!” She promised.
She began tugging at the net, trying to get it to open, but I knew it was a useless effort. Not even a knife would have cut me loose, due to the metal chains interlaced through the net.
“Emy, fly away!” I told her. I had to shout to be heard over the continuous roar of the airship.
She looked at me through the net, and I recognized a rich fear, running rampant through her eyes. I had rarely ever seen her afraid, and it was strange to see it now. Suddenly she clenched her eyes and shook her head roughly, and when they reopened, I saw that determination had driven out the fear. This was the Emili I recognized. “No way! I’m not going anywhere! If I did, who would save you?”
“You have to get away while you can,” I reasoned weakly. “Don’t go back to the mountain or they’ll see you. Fly straight down and find a place to hide until they leave.”
Emili’s eyes hardened and her lips pressed together in a determined frown. Her stubborn nature was taking over, increased in its intensity by her loyalty to me. “Don’t you tell me what to do, Fledgling!” She seemed about to say more, but instead lapsed into a grim silence.
And that, apparently, was that; Emili was staying. She clung tightly to the outside of the net as we were cranked continuously closer to the roaring monster above, and though I truly wanted her to be safe, a selfish part of me was deeply relieved to know that Emili would be with me through whatever ordeal we were about to experience.
Oh, and what an ordeal it would be.