Authors: Shannon Hale
spare. If only I wasn’t the only fireteam member.
An hour passed as I worked, aware of Wilder beside me,
watching, tapping notes on a tablet.
“What will you wear when you attack?” he asked. “You can
withstand the cold of the upper atmosphere, I think, but prob-
ably not the decreased pressure.”
I nodded. “I don’t want to end up like Ruth. I’ll wear a
pressure suit.”
“And havoc armor too? It just seems wrong—risky—to de-
pend on our own technology somehow. I remember thinking
that, back when I could think better.”
“Yeah, I agree.”
I’d decided not to say what I’d been thinking when I sud-
denly changed my mind. The idea was too big, too stark and
sharp to stay inside me. I whispered it.
“Wilder, I don’t think I’m strong enough to do this alone.”
He didn’t say anything for a minute.
“A ship, Wilder. A massive, flying, city-sized ship. I couldn’t
even . . . Dragon had to . . . one guy in black clothes with a stu-
pid needle gun, and I couldn’t—”
“Maisie,” he said in such a way that I looked up. “I don’t
know if I mentioned it, but I’m pretty smart.”
A laugh surprised me in my throat.
“And I used to be even smarter, you know,” he said. “With
my brain plus a thinker token, my super-powered conclusion
was, Maisie Danger Brown is the best—the only—person who
can do this. You, Maisie, can do this.”
It was a nice pep talk. But I was the thinker now, and I knew
the odds of a one-person fireteam were frighteningly small.
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“Maybe I could take the drug you took to stop your heart
and dislodge the tokens,” I said. “And when the tokens leave me,
you could take one or two, and Luther too, and give a couple
back to me somehow after you’d revived me so there’d be three
fireteam members—”
His frown was as sad as his smile had been. He didn’t have
to say it wouldn’t work. It was a fantasy. All five tokens were
stuck together now. When Wilder’s two had come out into me,
there’d been no way to separate one from the other.
“I know,” I said.
“If you want me to, I’ll take them. I’ll be the fireteam for
you. But—” He shook his head. “What if we can’t revive you?”
“It’s okay, I’ll be the fireteam,” I said. “I just thought—”
“I know,” he said this time.
He did know. He was the only one in the world who could.
In silence I kept working, he kept watching. And I found
myself examining his story for holes, weighing his actions one
by one, still hesitant to trust him again.
When at last I thought I could sleep, I fell onto one of
the lab cots. Wilder was occupying another. He rolled over. He
looked at me. This boy who had been fairy tale, a figment, now
was next to me and almost real again. I wanted to lift my arm. I
wanted to touch his hand.
The idea was too much. I closed my eyes.
It seemed only moments later I woke up. Howell and the
PhDs were stumbling in. No one had slept much after laser
cannons and explosions. I sat up, saw Wilder beside me, and
couldn’t remember if I was supposed to scowl or smile.
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Wilder must have detected my uncertainty. “I’m pretty
sure you revoked my banishment last night.”
“Did I?”
“If you can’t remember, then my answer is yes, absolutely.
You begged me to stay and swore unfailing, eternal love.”
Dad and Luther came in, and I blushed, remembering
what Luther had said.
Promise me you won’t choose him
.
Howell was arguing with the whitecoats about whether or
not to abandon HAL.
“Think GT will give up after last night?” I asked.
“That little skirmish? He was just testing our defenses.”
“When will he be back?” I asked.
Howell and Wilder looked at each other.
“He needs time to regroup,” he said. “Less than a week,
I’d guess.”
“Then we end this first.” I was surprised by how confident I
sounded. My stomach felt like dry ice on water.
“You have a plan, oh great and terrible thinker?” Wilder
asked.
“I don’t know what you did to this thinker token, but it
hasn’t been magically implanting foolproof plans into my head.”
“Maisie.” Dragon was holding a cell phone. His expression
was cautious. “Our team in Florida. They found your mother.”
Dad sat upright. Luther put his hand on my shoulder, as if
to shield me from bad news.
Dragon held out the phone. I took it with my left hand. It
was noticeably shaking so I switched to my cyborg hand.
“Mom?”
“Hola, Maisie. ¿Dónde estás?”
Her voice! I bounced on my toes and smiled at Dad. Drag-
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on set the phone to speaker so everyone could hear. I glanced at
Howell, who I knew spoke Spanish as well as a dozen other lan-
guages, and she shook her head. I understood she didn’t want
me to reveal my location, just to be safe.
“I’m with Dad. Are you okay?”
“Yes, I am fine,” she said in English now. “I had dinner. I
had meat for dinner.”
What? Was she trying to speak to me in code or something,
afraid bad guys were listening?
“The people who found you are helping me out,” I said.
“You can trust them.”
“Do you still have that token? You’re still strong?”
“Yes...”
“Dígame dónde estás. Exactamente.”
She was asking again
where I was. Why wasn’t she asking about Dad? An idea began
seeping through me, cold.
“Um, what did you have for dinner?” I asked.
“Meat. It was tender. Very easy to chew.”
“Nothing like tender meat,” I said slowly. “Did you salt it?”
“Oh yes,” she said. “Plenty of salt to bring out the flavor.”
My cyborg hand was shaking too. I looked at Dad. His
frown touched his eyes, wrinkled his forehead. He was con-
fused. Wilder wasn’t. His look confirmed my fear.
I wished Jacques was alive to express in his ear-singeing
way exactly how I felt about the
bleepity-bleep
aliens who had
claimed my mom.
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“Are you hurt?” I asked Mom. “Are you sick or injured at
all?”
“No. Where are you, Maisie?”
“Mom, I’m going to come get you, okay?” I said, trying to
keep my voice neutral. I didn’t want to say anything that might
lead the alien inside her to figure out that I was at HAL.
“¿Dónde estás, mi hija? Dígame.
I’ll come to you.”
“That’s not safe. Stay with the guys who found you, and I’ll
be there soon.”
I ended the call. Dad was staring at me. I wished the na-
nites made me immune to sorrow. I didn’t want to cry, so I
clenched my jaw and stared hard at the wall, my chin vibrating
like a rabbit’s nose.
“Don’t say it,” Dad begged.
“I don’t know how to help her, Dad,” I whispered to keep
from crying. “I don’t know what to do.”
“Frakking flatscans,” Luther muttered.
Wilder cursed in Russian.
“Apparently, while fleeing GT, she’d gone into a quaran-
tined town a couple of hours from where you’d been staying in
Florida,” said Dragon. “Our team rescued her from the town,
but I told them to stay put with her for now.”
“She must have gambled that GT’s guys wouldn’t pursue
her into the quarantine,” I said, my voice dry. “She didn’t know
that the Jumper Virus was an alien infestation.”
Dragon stepped in front of me, his shoulders straight, his
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arms at his sides.
“Tell me what to do, Brown,” he said. “Give me an order.”
I knew—with a surety that felt like a thousand knives in my
stomach—that my mother was no longer controlling her own
body. I didn’t know if it was even possible to boot out the alien
and reclaim her. The thinker token didn’t just upload facts into
my head. I had to actively think something through and test out
its trueness.
“So Howell’s guys went into a quarantined town after your
mom and came out still ghost-free?” said Luther. “Sounds like
the ghostmen are trying to ferret you out. They want to find you
through her.”
I nodded. “Mom’s ghost-parasite has access to her mind.
We should assume the ghostmen now know everything she
knew, including that her daughter was a member of the fire-
team. If we bring her here, their ship can track her and then
master-blast us to a crater. They don’t seem to care about frying
host bodies. The ghosts inside just rejoin the ship.”
“Any way to move her without the ship knowing where she’s
gone?” Luther asked.
I shut my eyes and thought, demanding every kilowatt
from my nanites.
“Dragon?”
He nodded, eager for anything I would say.
“Tell your guys to sedate her. And capture and sedate as
many possessed people from the quarantined town as they can
manage—all at once, before any of them have a chance to re-
port back to the ship. Wilder might have some tips on gassing
a building. The ghosts inside become dependent on their hosts
for their senses. I think when their host bodies are unconscious,
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the ghosts can’t communicate with the ship or each other. Bring
Mom and the other sedated host people here.”
“I will.” Dragon smiled, his teeth startlingly white. “Brown,
I’d take a bullet for you.”
He pointed at me as he left. Wilder followed him out.
The lab was quiet for a time. We ate lunch. Dad and I held
hands. I bet the last time we’d held hands, my preferred fashion
style had been pigtails and pajama pants.
We talked about Mom. We used present tense verbs. I
was glad I’d never told him about the bodies I’d seen piled up,
gnawed by stray dogs.
Wilder returned to report that Dragon’s team was on their
way to Florida.
“We need to be ready by the time they get back,” I said.
“All I’m sure of is I need to destroy the ship. Odds are it wasn’t
near that diner when I went in, but the ghostmen must have
communicated with the ship and it arrived fast enough to blast
our helicopter. The only way to identify its location is to see an
escaping ghost get sucked into it. So we need to boot a lot of
ghosts, one after another, giving me a trail to follow.”
“So,” said one of the PhDs, “it’s looking likely we’ll need
to—quickly and humanely—kill several possessed humans.”
Everyone groaned.
The guy lifted his hands up innocently. “I don’t
want
to!
But is there another option?”
“My mom is one of those possessed humans,” I reminded
him.
“So not her,” said the guy. “Save her for last.”
More groans.
“Hey, don’t shoot the messenger!”
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“Seriously,” said Luther. “You need to shut your mouth.”
I was wincing. “Let me think . . . I need . . .”
“You need ideas to try out,” said Wilder, “see which one
feels right.”
I nodded.
“So . . .” The speed of Wilder’s pacing increased. “We could
expose the possessed humans to extreme temperatures—cold or
heat—or sound vibrations, loud or unique sound waves might
shake them loose. Or photons of light of varying shades and
intensity.”
I shook my head. None of those ideas clicked in my mind.
“They react differently to gravity, right?” said Luther. “How
about sending them to space? Shoot them up farther away from
earth’s gravity and see if they pop out.”
“A Beanstalk pod isn’t big enough for all the ghost-ridden
passengers we’d need,” I said.
“Yeah, and once they’re in space,” Luther said, “it would be
much more difficult for you to follow their trail.”
“Could you invent an antigravity chamber?” asked Howell.
“It’s about time the world had one.”
“That would be double-plus good,” Luther said wistfully.
I considered, the techno-tokened parts of my brain rolling
the idea around. “It’s too complicated, and it would take forever
to manufacture.”
“What about...pressure,” said Dad. “High pressure.”
“That would kill the human bodies too,” Howell said.
“A hyperbaric chamber?” said Wilder. “They use those for
treating scuba divers with decompression illness.”
I ran to a computer and looked up how hyperbaric cham-
bers worked. My thinker-nanites approved, my techno know-
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how perking up. I started to scribble notes. “If we modify them
. . . the pressure from the chamber would temporarily make the
body inhospitable to the ghosts. Dad, I think it might work.”
I smiled, trying to exude more confidence than I felt. He
gave me a thumb’s up-and I had the impression he was trying
to buoy me up in return.
By dinner we had two hyperbaric chambers in the lab. Cy-
lindrical, made of glass, they looked like high-tech coffins for
Snow White. I gave my gaggle of whitecoats instructions on
their adjustments and returned to my jet pack. If the ship was
in the upper atmosphere, the jet pack would have to be very