The Revenge of Seven

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Authors: Pittacus Lore
him through the eye with his own blade.
    Just like that, it’s over. The whole fight lasted less than a minute. Even as dysfunctional as we seem right now, we can still kill the hell out of some Mogs.
    ‘Now that was refreshing!’ Nine yells, grinning at me from the other boat.
    I hear splashing from over my shoulder and turn around just in time to see Dale swimming frantically through the swamp water. He must have jumped overboard, and now he’s dog-paddling away from us as fast as his scrawny arms and drunkenness will allow.
    ‘Where are you going, idiot?’ I shout after him.
    Dale reaches a muddy outcropping of roots and pulls himself on to it, gasping for breath. He stares at me and the others with wide, wild eyes.
    ‘You people are freaks!’ he screams.
    ‘That’s not very nice,’ Nine says, laughing, as he carefully makes his way back on to Dale’s boat, theice floe Marina created already beginning to melt in the Florida heat.
    ‘What about your boat?’ I shout to Dale. ‘You gonna swim back to Trapper’s?’
    He squints at me. ‘I’ll figure something out that don’t involve mutant powers, thank you very much.’
    I sigh and raise my hand, intending to telekinetically drag Dale’s stupid ass back on to his boat, but Marina touches my shoulder and stops me.
    ‘Let him go,’ she says.
    ‘But we need him to find the base,’ I reply.
    ‘We’re close enough,’ Marina says, shaking her head. ‘And besides –’
    ‘Uh, holy shit,’ Nine interrupts, shielding his eyes and staring up at the sky.
    ‘I think we can just follow that thing,’ Marina finishes.
    The day suddenly gets very dark. I look up as a shadow passes overhead, cutting off the limited light that was squeezing through the swamp’s canopy. Through the leaves, all I can see is the armor-plated hide of a Mogadorian ship as it begins to descend. It’s nothing like the dinky saucer-style crafts that I was able to knock out of the sky with a few well-placed lightning bolts. This ship is enormous, the size of an aircraft carrier, ferocious gun turrets protruding from its belly. The local birds squawk and take flight, darting away from this terrifying giant.
    Instinctively, I reach out and grab Nine and Marina, turning the three of us invisible. A boat ofMogadorians 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

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