Animorphs
The Change
Converted to E-Book by:
Kamal Raniga
My name is Tobias.
The other Animorphs can't tell you very much about themselves, but I can. See, I don't have an address. I can't be found. I live in an area of forest by a meadow. That's my territory.
My territory includes the meadow, which is maybe a hundred yards across in one direction, and half that in the other direction. My territory also includes the trees around the meadow, and the woods heading north for about another hundred yards.
Of course, my territory is also the territory of other animals. Owls, jays, foxes, raccoons, on down to ants and spiders. But no red-tailed hawks.
Except me.
My name is Tobias, and I am human. Partly. Most of my mind is human. At least I think it is. I mean, I remember human things. I can read and use language. Most of my close friends are human. And I was born a human, in a human body with arms and legs and hair and a mouth.
Now, though, I have wings and talons and feathers. And instead of a mouth I have a hooked beak.
I can make sounds with my beak. But nothing that sounds human. To speak with regular humans I use thought-speak.
But there were no people nearby right then in the early morning, as I waited patiently in the branch of a dying elm tree.
I kept my eyes focused sharply on the meadow. I knew the pathways and homes of the mice and rats and rabbits who lived there. And I knew what it meant when the tall, dry grass twitched just the smallest bit.
With my hawk's eyes I could see what no human could hope to see. I could see the individual stalks of grass barely tremble as a mouse brushed between them.
And with my hawk's ears I heard the faint sound of mouse teeth, chewing on a seed.
The mouse was seventy or eighty feet away. An easy target.
I opened my wings slowly, not wanting to make a sound. I released the grip of my talons on the branch and fell forward. My wings caught the cushion of air and I swooped, almost silent, toward my prey.
The grass twitched.
Through the grass I saw a flash of brown. The mouse was running.
Too slowly.
I raked my talons forward. I swept my wings forward to cancel my speed, dropped one wing to turn, and fell the last foot like a rock.
It was all over very quickly.
But this time as I dragged the mouse away to a safer spot, I stumbled on a faded magazine someone had thrown away. The wind whipped the pages by, one at a time. Advertisements. Graphs. Pictures of the president with some foreign leader.
And then one page stayed open. A photograph of a classroom. Kids my age.
Some of the kids were goofing off in the back of the class. Some looked bored. Most looked more or less interested, and three were practically leaping from their seats, waving their hands for the teacher. All that, frozen in a photograph.
A classroom like any classroom. Like the classrooms I used to attend. I would have been one of the kids paying attention, but too shy to
volunteer. I was never very bold or aggressive. I was a bully-magnet, to tell you the truth. The kid most likely to get pounded. The kid from the home so screwed up that I ended up being shuttled back and forth between aunts and uncles who didn't even remember my name half the time.
But that wasn't me anymore.
his is my life now. I accept it. And there are some very nice things about being a bird.
Some very nice things.
Well-fed and full of energy, I flapped across the meadow, gaining altitude the hard way - with sheer muscle power.
I swept above the trees and fought my way higher still. Out beyond my own territory. Higher and higher. And then I felt the air billowing up beneath me.
A beautiful thermal. A pillar of warm air that rose up from the ground as it was heated by the sun. I swept into that warm air and it lifted me up like an elevator.
I turned and turned within that warm current,
twisting higher and higher, till I was nothing but a speck to the tiny humans on the ground. Up and up, till the only sound was the wind ruffling across my feathers.
I caught a glimpse back down behind me. A glimpse of a strange creature that looked like a blue deer at first. Until you saw the head with its extra stalk eyes mounted on top. And the slashing, scorpion tail.
Aximili-Esgarrouth-lsthill. The only Andalite alive on Earth. My friend.
Or as much of a friend as you can be, when one of you is a Bird-boy and the other is an alien.
"Ax-man!" I called down. He kept running. That's how he eats. He runs across grass and leaves, and the crushed vegetation is absorbed up through his hooves.
"Tobias! Out hunting?"
"Nope. I had breakfast. See you later." I flapped and glided and soared till I was over houses. They were just little squares of gray and orange and brown roofs. Tiny swimming pools glittered an unnatural blue. I saw trimmed green lawns and parked rectangles of cars and roads with dotted white lines down the middle.
I flew on, across the homes, across the roads, to the school. Maybe it was because of the picture in the magazine. Maybe that's why I wanted to go there.
It was late morning now. The light was sharp and clean. I could see through the windows of the classrooms.
There was Jake, unofficial leader of the Ani-morphs, looking like any normal guy. He was lounging at his desk, feet stuck out in front. He was sleepy and trying to keep his eyes open.
More than any other person alive, Jake held the future of the human race in his hands. Strange to think, huh? That some big, sleepy kid in sneakers and a jacket was the leader of the only resistance to the Yeerk invasion of Earth?