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Instinctively, I reach out and grab Nine and Marina, turning the three of us invisible. A boat of

Mogadorians is one thing. I don’t think we’re ready for something this big. The warship above us

doesn’t care, though. It doesn’t notice us. To a ship that size, we’re as insignificant as the mosquitoes.

As it passes, gliding above the swampland and gradually allowing light to re-enter, I feel like I’ve

shrunk, like I’m small again.

Like I’m a child.

And then I remember that last day on Lorien. The nine of us and our Cêpans running for the ship that

would take us to Earth. The screams all around us, the heat of fire from the city, blaster fire hissing through the air. I remember looking up into the night sky and seeing ships just like the one passing

over us, blotting out the stars, their turrets blazing, their cargo doors falling open to let loose hordes of blood-hungry Piken. Above us, I realize, is a Mogadorian warship. It’s what they will use to take

Earth once and for all.

‘They’re here,’ I say, the breath nearly sucked out of me. ‘It’s starting.’

7

Gradually, the suburbs outside Washington, D.C. start to change. The houses become bigger and

farther apart, until eventually they aren’t visible from the road at all. Outside the van windows are

immaculately maintained meadows or miniature parks where the trees are spaced at obsessively

equal intervals, designed to keep the houses behind them hidden from prying eyes. The side streets

branching off from the main road all have prestigious-sounding names like Oaken Crest Way or

Goldtree Boulevard, all of them protected by severe PRIVATE PROPERTY signs.

In the backseat, Sam whistles. ‘I can’t believe they live out here. Like rich people.’

‘No kidding,’ I reply, my hands sweating on the steering wheel. I was thinking the same thing as

Sam but don’t really feel like talking about it, worried that I won’t be able to keep the jealousy out of my voice. I’ve spent my entire life on the run, dreaming about living in places like this – stable, quiet places. And here are the Mogs, carving out a normal life for their trueborn upper class, living the high life on a planet they’re only looking to exploit and destroy.

‘The grass is always greener,’ Malcolm says.

‘They do not appreciate it, if that’s any consolation,’ Adam says quietly, the first words he’s

spoken since we started on these last few miles to Ashwood Estates, his former home. ‘They are

taught not to enjoy something unless they can possess it.’

‘What’s that mean, exactly?’ Sam asks. ‘Like, if a Mogadorian went to the park …?’

‘ “One takes no satisfaction from that which one cannot hold,” ’ Adam recites, suppressing a sneer

when he finishes the quotation. ‘That is from Setrákus Ra’s Great Book. A Mogadorian wouldn’t care

about your park, Sam, not unless the trees were his to chop down.’

‘Sounds like a great book,’ I say dryly.

I glance over at Adam, next to me in the passenger seat. He’s staring out the window, a distant look

on his face. I wonder if this is strange for him – it’s basically a homecoming, even though he’s not

actually from Earth. Adam turns his head, notices me looking at him and seems almost embarrassed.

His expression quickly changes to one I’m familiar with – cold Mogadorian composure.

‘Pull over here,’ he instructs. ‘It’s only a mile farther on.’

I pull the van over to the side of the road and kill the engine. Without the noise from the van, the

constant chirping from behind me seems even louder.

‘Jeez, guys, calm down,’ Sam says to the box of excited Chimærae sitting on the bench between

him and Malcolm.

I turn around to look down at the Chimærae, all of them in bird form. Regal, whose resting form is

a stately hawk, perches next to a trio of more common birds – a pigeon, a dove and a robin. Then

there’s a sleek gray falcon that must be Dust and an overweight owl that has to be Stanley. All of them have lightweight leather collars strapped gently around their necks.

This is step one of our plan.

‘Is everything working?’ I ask Sam, who looks up from the laptop resting on his legs and grins at

me.

‘Check it out,’ Sam says proudly, turning the laptop to face me. Using the Chimærae in this way

was his idea.

Tiled on the laptop screen are half a dozen grainy video feeds, each of them showing my face from

a slightly different angle. The cameras are working.

On our way from Baltimore to Washington we stopped at a dark little storefront called SpyGuys

that specializes in cameras and home-security gear. The clerk didn’t ask Malcolm why he needed to

purchase more than a dozen of their smallest wireless cameras; he seemed grateful for the business

and even showed us how to install the necessary software on one of our laptops. After that, we picked

up the collars at a pet store. The others carefully attached the cameras to them while I drove south

towards Washington.

The Mogadorians have spent so much effort running surveillance on us, stalking us. Now we’re

going to turn the tables.

‘Spread out around Ashwood Estates,’ I tell the Chimærae, punctuating my command with a mental

picture of the satellite photos of Ashwood that I’ve been studying since yesterday and sending that on to the flock telepathically. ‘Try to cover every angle. Focus especially on where the Mogadorians

are.’

The Chimærae respond with enthusiastic cawing and a fluttering of wings.

I nod to Sam and he throws open the van’s side door. What follows is a wild flurry of activity, our

half dozen shape-shifting spy birds taking off all at once, a funnel of squawking and flapping wings as they fly out of the van. As serious as our situation is, there’s something awesome about the sight; Sam is grinning and even Adam allows himself a small smile.

‘This is going to work,’ Malcolm says, patting Sam on the back. Sam’s smile increases just a little

bit more.

The view on the laptop screen is disorienting, the Chimærae all swooping and gliding in different

directions. The first to settle into some trees position themselves right above the wrought-iron gates of Ashwood Estates. A gate is built into a brick wall there; the wall stretches for a few yards and

then, presumably once it’s no longer visible from the road, turns into a more sinister-looking barbed-

wire fence.

‘Guards,’ I say, pointing out the trio of Mogadorians, two of them sitting in the gatehouse, one of

them pacing in front of the gate itself.

‘That’s it?’ Sam asks. ‘Only three of them? That’s nothing.’

‘They do not expect a frontal attack. Or any attack, really,’ Adam explains. ‘Their purpose is

mainly to scare off any drivers who might make a wrong turn.’

As the remaining Chimærae settle on to rooftops and tree branches, the video feeds snapping into

focus, I start to get a clearer idea of Ashwood Estates’ layout. Beyond the front gate is a short but

winding entrance road with very little cover. That road leads to what is essentially a very large cul-

de-sac, about twenty well-appointed houses arranged around a central recreation area. Apparently,

the Mogadorians have picnic tables, basketball hoops and a pool. All in all, it’s an idyllic swath of

suburbia, except there’s no one around.

‘Seems quiet,’ I say, scanning the feeds. ‘Is it always like this?’

‘No,’ Adam admits. ‘Something isn’t right.’

One of the Chimærae takes flight and repositions itself, getting an angle on one of the houses that

we couldn’t see before. A trash truck is parked at the curb, its engine off.