Uncharted Read online




  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Leave us a review

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  THE OFFICIAL MOVIE NOVELIZATION

  NOVELIZATION BY

  S.D. PERRY

  SCREENPLAY BY

  RAFE JUDKINS AND ART MARCUM & MATT

  HOLLOWAY

  SCREEN STORY BY

  RAFE JUDKINS

  BASED ON THE PLAYSTATION VIDEO GAME

  BY NAUGHTY DOG

  TITAN BOOKS

  LEAVE US A REVIEW

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  Uncharted: The Official Movie Novelization

  Print edition ISBN: 9781789097313

  E-book edition ISBN: 9781789097320

  Published by Titan Books

  A division of Titan Publishing Group Ltd

  144 Southwark Street, London SE1 0UP

  www.titanbooks.com

  First edition: February 2022

  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

  ™ & © 2022 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.

  “I know not all that may be coming, but be it

  what it will, I’ll go to it laughing.”

  —Herman Melville

  “Oh man, I’m so tired of climbing shit.”

  —Nathan Drake

  For Cyrus and Dexter, who are the coolest.

  PROLOGUE

  The sky was beautiful, a deep, dazzling blue. Nathan Drake opened his eyes and for half a second he saw only the wide empty void, only knew its cloudless beauty. A perfect day, the smell of salt on the breeze, the wind in his hair, Sam’s ring banging his forehead, his clothes flapping violently—

  Wait, what?

  He blinked, and the world spun. A thousand aches came to life as the wind blasted over him, as he turned his head and saw the endless sea, also blue, about 15,000 feet below wherever he was. Which appeared to be hanging upside down by one leg, whirling through the beautiful sky.

  “Oh, crap,” he said, abruptly wide awake. His right foot was caught under heavy netting wrapped around a big crate, which was connected to more crates by various chains and cables, the whole string of boxes hanging out of the back of a roaring cargo plane. Which meant he was hanging out of the back of a roaring cargo plane.

  The airdrop. Memory hit like a ton of bricks. The gold, the keys, the map! Sully was gone and—

  Nate’s foot started to slip out from beneath the netting, that precious web of nylon that was the only thing keeping him from a very, very long fall.

  “No no no no no—”

  He reached up for the thick netting just as his boot slipped free, and the wind whipped him off the crate like he was a feather. Nate bounced into the crate whistling along behind him and scrabbled to hold onto it, but the wind had other ideas. He clawed at the next heavy box he slammed into, padded with equipment bags and smaller boxes, then a third, his eyes wide, his fingers grasping. He was nearing the end of the clumsy, waving line of crates and equipment streaming from the plane, could see the last crate, big and square, sturdy-looking, wrapped in nylon straps and dragging a dead, tangled bundle of flopping parachute—and past that, nothing but empty air and the sparkling sea far below. Far, far below.

  He hit the box and his hands skittered across the thick netting, sliding over one of the bags strapped to the side. For a second he thought he was done for, but his grasping fingers caught the strappy net. He grabbed hold with a death grip and jerked to a halt, slammed down on top of the crate, immediately adding new aches to his battered body.

  Nate hunched against the wooden slats. He was glued to the crate. He looked up and back to the yawning cargo hold, counting the boxes and bags between him and safety. Four? Five? He could climb back, he had to climb back, and fast, before one or more of the villains on board decided to cut their losses and ditch their hazardous tail.

  He reached forward, keeping the death grip thing going with his left hand, grasping at the connecting cable with his right—

  —and a hand came down on his left calf, thick fingers squeezing like a vise.

  “Aaaah!”

  Nate jerked around, saw he wasn’t the only rider to catch the last crate. One of the bad guys was hanging off the back, his thick ugly face contorted with terror and fury. The man raised his left hand, which held a great big gun, and pointed it at Nate.

  Shocked, Nate kicked out, his work boot landing square in the man’s snarling face. The guy lost his grip on Nate’s leg and shrieked as he fell away, wheeling his arms and his useless weapon, plummeting to the sea far below.

  “Oh my god, that was purely reactive, I really didn’t mean to—”

  The man was already a flailing speck, too far away to hear Nate’s apology, the sound of his diminishing screams lost to the thunder of the plane’s engines and the blast of the wind. Nate shut up and turned back to face his climb, pulling himself across the top of the box, reaching again for the main connecting cable.

  He’d just touched it when the entire daisy chain of boxes lurched down six feet, as another crate jounced out of the cargo hold to lengthen the whipping equipment tail. How many more were connected? How much weight was still on board, keeping the clumsy line from falling? How much longer before everything was yanked out into the sky, or the ropes gave way?

  THINK LATER, GO NOW!

  Nate grabbed the primary cable between his crate and the next, and pulled himself into a crouch. The crates were spaced just close enough for him to reach up and grab the netting on the one above, but he had to steel himself for the attempt, fully aware of his extremely precarious position. Up on the plane, someone was shooting. A lot. A couple of random lone crates flew out of th
e hold and plunged past him, disappearing into the blue void.

  Nate stood, grabbed the net overhead, and jerked himself up, swinging his legs up after him. He shoved his feet into the nylon net of the penultimate box and threw himself at it, muscles clenched against the unyielding blast of wind that sought to peel him away and drop him into the sea like that poor jerk with the gun.

  He edged forward to the top of the crate, making the next jump the same way he had the first, thankful for the millions of crunches he’d endured in his short life. Nothing like core strength to fight wind shear. He’d be at the top in no time and—

  Ahead of him, near the top of the jostling chain, another mercenary leaned out from his own precarious perch and opened fire with a semi.

  “Hey, whoa!” Nate shouted. “No need to shoot—I—”

  Bullets slammed into the bulky equipment bags strapped to the box, dug divots into the thick gray plastic of the container. One of the rounds shredded the stabilizing line that kept Nate’s crate from being spun like a top, the inevitable result a dizzying spin through the open air, out of the shooter’s line of sight. Nate didn’t wait to swing back, he’d be a sitting duck—he launched himself at the crate overhead and clambered up the side facing away from the gunman. He could see the shooter’s boots sticking over the edge of the flapping net above, and threw himself upward again, deliberately not thinking of how easy it would be to plunge to his death, praying that the guy would blame the sudden shift of weight on the screaming wind.

  Nate scaled the netting, coming to the crate’s top as the gunman rose into a crouch, his back to Nate as he stared down the line of spinning boxes. There was now only one crate between them and the cargo hold. The man started to turn, scowling through a bushy beard, his gun swinging around—

  —and Nate threw himself forward, hitting the guy low, knocking him into the open air while he grabbed the netting, hanging tight to the bucking crate.

  The gunman let out a cry and fell—onto the box right below. He clung to the crate’s side, padded with duffels and packs of equipment, and immediately started climbing.

  Cut the cable!

  Great idea, but no knife!

  Nate squinted against the buffeting wind, taking in the straps twined through the netting of his crate, connecting it to the others. Amid the fluttering ropes was a flat buckle flush against the plastic, right along the primary cable. Nate flipped the connector and was immediately rewarded—the cable slid free of the netting, all the crates beneath his suddenly dropping away, the plane’s engines roaring.

  Easy-peasy, only one more to go and I’ll be—

  Beard-guy launched himself off the falling chain and snatched one of the flapping straps now hanging off Nate’s crate. He swung wildly, rocking what was left of the equipment train. Nate held on tight, stomach lurching.

  The cargo hold was so close, only one crate above. He heard more shots on board, and shouting, but figured he’d rather take a bullet than fall to his doom with Beardo, who was already panting up the side of the heavy crate at his feet. At least he’d lost his gun.

  Nate stood and launched himself at the top crate, grabbing the netting under a bulging zippered duffel roped to the side. He brought his feet up and dug them into the nylon on the bottom, pushing himself over the duffel bag. His clawing hands found the top edge of the crate and he hooked his fingers into the net, dragging his head level to the top, just in time to see one of the cable’s smaller connecting straps go zing, and disappear.

  The box lurched to the right, suddenly unsteady in its cradle of net. Better, the primary cable, the line holding it all together, was sawing itself in half against the steel lip of the open cargo hold, and—

  Ahh!

  Nate’s body was jerked down by Beardo’s weight, the henchman suddenly hanging from his left ankle, gripping with both meaty hands. Nate flailed, left arm swinging out, nearly losing his grip.

  “You are an asshole!” Nate screamed. “If we would just help each other, this would—Jesus!”

  Beardo was trying to climb his leg, kicking off against his own crate, jerking Nate further off balance. Nate heard another high-pitched zing from whatever system of straps still connected them to the plane. He couldn’t kick the guy—he’d be hanging by his hands—and the weight was too much to lift and shake off. He hugged the wall of bags and boxes, hooking his right arm through the net, the answer right in front of his face: the zipper of the duffel bag.

  He ripped it open, unleashing a small flood of random equipment—flashlights and hand radios, a shovel blade. The stuff smashed into Beardo, who clung ever tighter, ducking his head against the onslaught.

  Nate fumbled deeper into the bag, grabbed what felt like a baseball bat, and jerked it out. A long black stick, maybe the shovel’s handle? Scaffolding? Who cared. He swung it at Beardo’s head, connecting with a solid whap. Instead of letting go, Beardo leaned back, still hanging on, pulling Nate’s body away from the diminishing safety of the crate’s netting and putting his noggin out of whapping range. Nate swung again and got air, the crate shifting along with another tiny, zipping snap.

  Shit! Unless an act of God came along, he was in trouble. Beardo was strong and heavy and he wasn’t letting go.

  A flash of movement over Nate’s head, a heavy scrape across the open ramp, and something big was barreling through the hold. Nate ducked and hung tight as a lone crate was sucked off the ramp and into the air, missing him by inches—before it smashed into Beardo’s upturned, grimacing face.

  The iron grip fell away from Nate’s ankle, the crate and the henchman suddenly dwindling against the sparkling blue below. Nate felt like he’d lost a couple of hundred pounds.

  Go go go!

  He clambered up the sagging net, bent his knees, and jumped. He could feel the top crate’s surface drop away just as his feet left the surface, but his hands touched shuddering cold metal, gripped the rubber strip of insulation at the ramp’s edge.

  Got it! The ramp felt shockingly stable after his wild climb. He shot a look down, saw the clumsy chain of boxes spinning into the distance, speeding away, then hauled himself up and out of the sky, gasping, with arms that felt like rubber. Air was somehow blasting from inside the plane, but it was mostly going past him, shuttling around an upended storage locker. Nate tucked his boot under a steel bar on the ramp and stood up. He’d made it, he was finally—

  From the hold of the plane, a car revved its engine. Nate braced against the relentless push of the wind, and peered, blinking, into the shadowy hold. Guns were fired, flashes in the dark.

  He saw it coming and felt the blood rush out of his face.

  “This is just not my day.”

  The red 1955 Mercedes Gullwing sped toward the open ramp, toward him, and there wasn’t time to get out of the way.

  Nate jumped straight up and threw himself forward, some idea of shoulder-rolling over the hood his only play, but there wasn’t time for that either, the car was suddenly in his face, cherry-red and flying. He crashed flat across the hood—

  —and then he was back outside, still thousands of feet above the sea, the Benz’s wheels spinning pointlessly as the car rocketed downward and the plane flew away.

  BOSTON, ELEVEN YEARS AGO

  Sam made the jump look easy. He leapt from the gnarled old tree branch to the museum’s open second-floor window and was through in a single motion, disappearing into the darkness inside.

  Easy. Sam was already adult-sized, but Nate could hold his own against his big brother. He was fast and strong, too. Nate took a deep breath, the tree’s old bark rough against his hands, the night air cool and secret in the rustling leaves, and then kicked off from the heavy branch, hurtling for the open window. I’m a bullet, a rocket, I’m an arrow fired straight and—

  AAH!

  The window had moved away somehow, and gravity was real. Nate lunged and stretched, but only his fingers hit the painted sill. He scrabbled for a hold, his vision of landing in a cool pose next to Sam flush
ed away by the bright reality of plunging to his death.

  “I got you!” Sam grabbed Nate’s right hand, warm fingers closing over his sweaty ones. Nate’s sneakers scuffed at the brick, his whole weight suspended by one arm. He looked down, saw the manicured grounds a million miles below, dark and bone-breakingly flat.

  “Help! I’m gonna fall!”

  “I said I got you, be cool,” Sam said, and grabbed his other hand. Sam’s grip was like steel.

  Nate’s heart was hammering but he looked up into his brother’s face, tight with the strain, and forced his panic into submission. Sam had him. He leaned over to pull Nate in, the ring he always wore on a cord around his neck bonking Nate’s forehead lightly.

  Sam held on until Nate was safely inside, both of them standing at the end of a shadowy corridor. The air was silent and infused with museum smell: age and dust and floor polish.

  “What part of ‘wait for me in the tree’ did you not get?” Sam whispered.

  “I said I’m coming with you,” Nate whispered back. He heard the quiver in his own voice and wished it wasn’t there. He was twelve, not a little kid anymore.

  “Okay, okay,” Sam said. He pulled a slightly smooshed cube of gum out of his pocket, held it out. “Bubble Yum?”

  Nate quickly unwrapped the gum, eager for something to take the sour taste of terror out of his mouth.

  “It’s my last piece, so let’s split it,” Sam said.

  Nate was already defiantly chewing. Sam gave him a look, but Nate could tell he wasn’t really mad… and he realized that his heart was finally slowing down. The familiar sweet pink taste of Yum made him feel better. Not breaking his neck was good, too.

  Sam led them down the hall, past dozens of big oil paintings and a few small glass cases full of pottery and the like. All the little spotlights were turned off, but the light by the stairs was enough for Nate to see some of the stuff—a hand-thrown pot decorated with birds, a tattered piece of blue cloth, a painting of flowers along a forest trail… All of it had been created by people who’d probably been dead for hundreds of years. The idea was somehow awesome to Nate, and to Sam, too; they’d talked about it lots of times. The world was old and full of interesting things. Valuable things.