The Secret by K. A. Applegate
idiot. No offense. Spiderman would annihilate Batman." Marco. Marco, sounding as serious as Marco is capable of sounding. "Two words.- body armor. Spiderman's webs would not stick to Batman's body armor. Homer, stay out here, boy. You can't go in." That would be Jake. And Homer, his dog. Homer is not allowed in the barn. Being a dog, Homer believes small animals are meant to be chased. Jake and Marco came through the small side door of the barn. Jake was in the lead, as usual. If we Animorphs have a leader, it's Jake. He's strong, inside and out. And really good-looking. Also inside and out. I mean, he's just an amazingly cool guy. Jake has had to grow up a lot in a very short time. It's weird to be a kid, and yet act like some kind of a general or something. We all decide the big stuff together. But when we're in a fight, it's Jake who has to make the little decisions a lot of times. The little decisions that could leave one of his friends dead. It made me smile to realize that Jake could still enjoy absurd arguments with Marco. I sort of worry about the pressure on Jake. Jake and I are kind of... you know. We like each other. As in like. Marco was just behind Jake. He's smaller than Jake, with longer, darker hair, laughing, dark eyes, and an attitude. Marco thinks the whole world is just a setup for a joke. Marco will tell a joke while he's bleeding and terrified and in pain. But there are times when his eyes lose their skeptical expression and grow glittery and dangerous. "Cassie," Marco said, "you look beautiful, as always. Your use of manure as a fashion statement is so tasteful." Then he gazed at Rachel and winced. "Yikes! Everytime I see you, you're taller. Stop it. Stop growing." Rachel patted Marco on his head. "Don't worry. I don't look down on you for being short, Marco. I look down on you just for being you." Marco grabbed his chest in pain. "Aargh! And Xena puts another spear in me." "Hi, Jake," I said, ignoring the usual Marco-versus-Rachel stuff. "Hi, Cassie," he said. He gave me one of his rare, slow smiles. "Hey, I heard this weird story. These two guys at school claim they were attacked by a pair of lab rats." "Really? I didn't hear about that," I said, trying not to make the fakey, shrill sound I always make when I'm lying. Jake raised one eyebrow and I quickly went back to cleaning out the cage. "What are we here for?" Rachel asked bluntly. Jake shrugged. "Tobias told me to get everyone together. He and Ax have something." Right on cue, we heard a flutter of wings. A hawk shot in through the open hayloft above. It turned sharply, killed its speed, swept its talons forward, and landed neatly on a rafter. It was a red-tailed hawk. Mostly brown on its back, a lighter, mottled brown and tan beneath. The bird took its name from its tail feathers, which were the color of rust. The hawk glared down at us with unbelievably intense brown and gold eyes. less-than Hieagreater-than the hawk said, a silent voice that we heard only in our heads. "Hi, Tobias," I answered. Tobias is the fifth human member of our group. Although he's not entirely human anymore. See, if you stay more than two hours in a morph, you stay forever. In his mind and heart, Tobias is still a human being -- mostly. But he has the body of a hawk. He lives as a hawk. "Hi, Tobias," Rachel said. "I thought maybe you'd stop by last night." Tobias sometimes hangs out with Rachel. He flies into her upstairs room and watches TV, or reads. Things he can't do in the wild. Human things. less-than Um, well, I was going toeagreater-than he said in thought-speak. less-than But there was this thing with Ax . . . greater-than Ax is AximiIi-Esgarrouth-Isthill. He's the sixth person in our group. He's even less human than Tobias. Ax is an Andalite. "Speaking of which, is Ax coming?" Jake asked. less-than No. He's still out keeping an eye on things. Or four eyes, actually. greater-than "What things?" Marco asked, beginning to sound impatient. Tobias swooped down to be closer. He landed on the top edge of a stall door. He checked out the many cages. At the moment we had, in addition to the raccoon, a fox, two wolves, a handful of various bats, a really cool porcupine, a pair of jackrabbits, a deer that had been mauled by a bear, several doves, a goose, a swan cygnet, a whole group of assorted gulls, a beautiful red-winged blackbird, and a bam owl. less-than What happened to the golden eagle8greater-than Tobias asked. "He's all better so we released him," I admitted. See, golden eagles occasionally kill and eat hawks. "We released him way back in the hills, though. Nowhere near your territory, Tobias." Tobias didn't look too happy. But then, Tobias has a hawk's face, so he never looks anything but fierce. Once he was a very sweet, slightly dopey kid. Jake and he met when Jake stopped some bullies from sticking Tobias's head in the toilet. less-than Anyway. I have something to report. It looks like someone is getting ready to start logging in the forest. greater-than "Noway!" I cried. The others were less upset. "So what?" Marco asked. "So habitat will be destroyed! So animals will be made homeless! So old-growth trees will be chopped down to make plywood!" I cried. "That's so what." Marco frowned. "And I care about this . . . why?" I started to answer, but Tobias cut me off. less-than You don't care, Marco. But you might care about who is doing the logging. greater-than "I'm guessing a logging company," Marco suggested. less-than Yeah. You're righteagreater-than Tobias said. less-than Only this logging company has built a command center deep in the forest. A log building, actually, like you'd expect. Except for one little thing. greater-than "What one little thing?" Jake asked. less-than The building is protected by a force field. A force field that seems to stop anything that gets near. I tried to fly closer, and it was like hitting a wall. Also, there are armed guards walking the perimeter around the building, and patrolling up and down the access road. greater-than "Oh," Jake said. less-than Guards armed with automatic rifles. greater-than "Yeerks?" Rachel wondered. "But why would the Yeerks want to be logging in the forest?" I knew the answer to that question. The Yeerks" plan was all too obvious. "They want to destroy habitat," I said. "What? Now the Yeerks are out to destroy the deer and the owls?" Marco said with a dismissive laugh. "No," I said. "It's not owl habitat they want to destroy. They're after a different species." less-than Yeaheagreater-than Tobias agreed. less-than They're going to wipe out the habitat of the very, very endangered Animorph. greater-than CHAPTE
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taJo. The Yeerks are right there in our forest. Fi ne," Rachel said with her usual enthusiasm for anything dangerous. "Let's go take a look." "If this is a Yeerk operation, we have to be careful," Marco said. "They're expecting us." less-than Expecting u8greater-than Tobias said. Marco nodded. "Look, the Yeerks believe we're a band of Andalites, right? They think only Andalites can morph. They've figured out that the forest is the only place a group of Andalites could be hiding. Let's face it -- if we were Andalites, we wouldn't exactly be able to rent an apartment." "So we'd be in the forest. Just like Ax is right now." Jake nodded. "They want to use the logging operation as a way to go Andalite-hunting." "Right. Which means they think we're out in the forest. So they have to be prepared for an attack. They are going to be totally ready for any strange group of animals that show up." I agreed with Marco. But there was another question that was bothering me. "How did they ever get permission to cut trees in a national forest?" Marco rolled his eyes, like I was being an idiot. "Who cares? The fact is, they did." "If we're going to take a look at this place, we can't show up there in a big group," Jake said. "We split up, go in two groups. In different morphs. We see what we see, but we do nothing. Agreed?" Everyone nodded. "S. If it's okay with everyone, I'll go in with Rachel. I'll morph the peregrine falcon. Rachel, you can morph your bald eagle. Tobias will show us the way. That's a lot of excellent eyes to look things over. Cassie, you go in with Marco. Get a different perspective." "Why can't I go with Rachel?" I asked. It's not that I don't like Marco. He just grinds my nerves sometimes. "Because you and Rachel just egg each other on," Jake said. He knew about the rat thing. He definitely knew. Still, it kind of bothered me. "Oh, you mean like you and Marco egg each other on?" Jake nodded and gave me a wink. "You could say that. Yep. Exactly." Ten minutes later, Marco and I were walking across the far fields of my farm, wading through tall grass toward the edge of the forest. The forest is huge. It reaches all the way back up into the mountains. Thousands, maybe millions of square miles of pines and oaks and a scattering of birch tr
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LJJ-OLVES can run. Wolves can run all through the night, without stopping or slowing or taking a break. We ran, Marco and I, jumping fallen logs, swerving through trees, and skirting patches of thorns. Across sunset-lit meadows, and through dark stands of tall pines. We splashed happily through streams and skittered across rocks. We were running on sensation, our heads swimming with smell and sound and sight. There was nothing within a thousand yards that we didn't know about. We were plugged into the data stream of nature itself. We smelled the logging camp long before we reached it. Then we heard the sounds of ma- chines. And we heard the murmurs of conversation. Human voices. Then we got a reminder that we were not the only hyper-alert predators in the forest. less-than ls that you guys8greater-than a thought-speak voice asked. Jake's voice. less-than Yes. Where are y8greater-than I asked. less-than Way up above yeagreater-than Jake said with a laugh. I stopped running and craned my head back like I was going to howl at the moon. Through a break in the trees I saw a patch of sky. And way, way up in that sky, I saw three tiny black dots. Tobias and Jake, floating a quarter-mile up. Even in the weakening light they had seen us from clear up in the bellies of the clouds. less-than The place is just ahead. Lots of heavy equipment. Guards. But go take a look. Just be careful. greater-than less-than We'd hang out, but the sun's going down and we won't be able to see much more anywayeagreater -than Tobias remarked. less-than You saw ueagreater-than I said, a bit grumpily. Tobias laughed. less-than Yeah, but you're a pair of great big wolves. That's not much of a challenge. Now, that flea crawling by your ear. . . greater-than less-than You can't see a fleaeagreater-than I said. less-than Heh, heh, heheagreater-than Tobias answered. less-than Can't l8greater-than Marco and I started moving forward again, but slower than before. More cautiously. Through the trees we began to see light. Artificial light. We crept slowly nearer, shoulders hunched, heads low, ears aimed forward, sniffing the wind for clues. The command center building was bigger than it had looked at first. It was made of logs, like some kind of rustic ranger station. It was two stories tall, with a porch on the front. On the back-and-side ground levels there were no windows. None at all. There were windows on the upper level, but they were dark. Too dark for me to see into. There were blindingly bright spotlights mounted atop the building. The forest had been cut back a hundred feet or so on all sides of the building, and the bare, scarred earth all around was lit as bright as the sunniest day. A dozen or so huge pieces of equipment were parked neatly side by side. Earthmovers, oddly shaped cranes, trucks, and some monstrous thing that looked like a huge kid's toy. I guessed that it was used to cut trees. My heightened wolf senses noticed several men walking around the perimeter of the clearing. They were spaced about fifty yards apart and seemed very ale
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