Authors: Shannon Hale
“Understandable.”
“And I think she’s worth ten to the tenth power of you.”
“Aww, that’s sweet,” I say.
Luther’s glance switches from Jonathan to me and a mi-
serly smile takes his lips.
“I know how these things work. You take some sports team
to state and run for student body office and freshmen girls
swoon as you walk by. So follow through on that, publicly claim
me as a friend so your star power rubs off on the nerd boy, and
it’s a truce.”
Jonathan nods.
Luther shakes his hand. “Okay. But I’d better have a girl-
friend before winter break. And if you two ever,
ever
kiss in front of me, the truce is off. ”
I slug Luther in the shoulder with my Gidget hand. He
fakes like it hurt, and Jonathan moves in as if to protect Luther
from me. Luther cowers behind Jonathan, I say some old-timey
gangster lines like “Why I oughta...” and it’s all stilted as if we’re
following a movie script. But Luther’s laugh sounds real.
Jonathan walks me to world history. After, he’s waiting for
me in the hall, and my heart startles, as if I hadn’t been sure
yet that he was real. I think of the Keats line, “Nothing ever
becomes real till it is experienced.” I think it hard, taste its truth
like a peppermint on my tongue.
He’s wearing basketball shorts that hang past his knees. I
can see pink scars on the backs of his calves. Jet pack burns.
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On the way to English, he asks me on a date for Friday, but
I’m busy all weekend. It turns out I have an uncle and a couple
cousins. Now that Mom isn’t in hiding, I’m going to meet my
dad’s fam.
“Then . . . tonight?” he asks. “We could—what do normal
people do? Go to dinner and a movie?”
There was a time when, if someone had told me one day
I’d go on a date with Wilder, I would have flat-pellet-shot them
in the face. Generally speaking, if a guy breaks your jaw and
leg and cuts off your robotic arm, you file charges and get a
restraining order. The only exception is when subtle machina-
tions are needed to save the world from a massive, catastrophic
alien takeover. But in
no
other circumstance.
I think it’ll be my first real date.
After school Luther and Laelaps come over. We do home-
work. I love that the highest expectation I’m currently facing is
to write an essay.
Mom has office hours at the university all afternoon. Dad
hasn’t found work yet. He’s gone grocery shopping and brought
home five different kinds of cheese. When I insist my love of the
stuff was mysteriously knocked out of me somewhere between
the stratosphere and the troposphere, he makes endless puns
(“Cheddar is as gouda cheese as you can hope to try. But it’s na-
cho cheese, so leave my provolone.”). I laugh because I want to.
Mom and Dad nix the dinner—they want to eat as a family
and hear about my first day—but they okay the movie, so I text
Jonathan, and he responds immediately. I don’t think he gets
many calls. He’s lost his family, his old friends, his home. He’s
legally emancipated and living alone in a tiny apartment I plan
to call his lair.
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Dangerous
Later, Jonathan pulls up in a powder-blue Camaro that’s
seen some hard living. It’s not a convertible. Mom and Dad
watch me go from the front stoop.
“Nice wheels,” I say as he opens the passenger door for me.
Jonathan shrugs. “It was the right price.”
“So, I take it you’re no longer burdened with your daddy’s
obscene fortune?”
“All seized by the FBI. A judge allowed me a trust fund to
get me through college. After that . . . well, Howell offered me
CEO.”
I laugh. “Oh man, you and Howell are way too close to evil
genius to make that pairing comfortable.”
We’ve been driving in silence for a few minutes when he
asks, “Nightmares?”
“Yeah,” I say. “You?”
He nods. “Mi-sun mostly. Killing Ruth. Almost dying.”
“Usually Jacques,” I say. “But also Ruth. Pink ghosts stick-
ing to me till I suffocate. Lots of falling. Dragon waving to me
from a window when HAL vaporizes.”
Jonathan is looking forward, his voice a little shy. “At least
I’m not in your nightmares.”
“Oh yeah, I forgot you! I’m hiding in the dark up in the
rafters, and you’re shooting at me.”
He winces.
I rub his hair as if he were Laelaps. “It makes me feel a
little more chipper knowing you have nightmares too.”
“Schadenfreudist.”
“Neologist.”
“Gesundheit,” he says. “So, you have some left?”
I know what he means. I nod.
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We’re at a stoplight. He picks up a coin and shoots it from
his fingers. I catch it in my palm. The impact is so light, it
wouldn’t have hurt even if I wasn’t still a little bit tougher. I’m
surprised he can still do that without the shooter token acting as
a battery. Maybe his whole body is a battery now of sorts.
“The effects will probably fade with time, maybe disappear
entirely when our brains mature,” he says.
I’m not brute strong, but I can do a lot of pushups. And in
the notebook by my bed are plans of how to make an external
token. Most of the nanites must still be inside me, and remnants
still inside Jonathan too, all in standby mode since losing their
tokens. I think I could reactivate the nanites. If I needed to.
“You know what’s amazing?” he asks.
I nod. I know lots of things that are amazing. But he
specifies.
“I’ve never gotten bored with you.”
“Thanks,” I say, the word a flat thud.
“Aren’t I a charmer? I mean, I get bored with everything.
But I’m not bored with you. And I don’t think I ever will be.”
“As far as compliments go, I give it a three.”
“I used to be better at this, didn’t I?” he says. “You know me
better than anyone in the world, and somehow you still like me.”
“Who says I like you?”
“You do. You say it with your
eyes
.” Stopped at a red light,
he looks at me, all mock-mystery, and presses his forehead to
mine. We stare at each other super close till I laugh first. The
light turns green.
I remind myself that teen brains haven’t developed the ar-
eas that are capable of lasting emotional commitment. But if I
don’t start forming all the connections I can now, didn’t Howell
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Dangerous
say it’d be too late? I’m alive. I don’t want to wait to start living.
We park across the street from the theater. He opens the
car door for me, and we stand on the curb. The traffic stirs up
wind.
“Ooh, you know what sounds good?” I say. “Licorice.”
“I pledge to search the world over and bring you back
licorice.”
“It’ll probably be at the snack bar.”
“We can try there first, before scouring the world over.”
“That’s thinker logic hard at work.”
“I prefer black licorice myself,” he says. “They’re wrong
somehow, an anomaly—”
“Like edible dark matter.”
“Exactly.”
Without thinking about it first, I put my arms around his
neck. His arms go around my waist, as if they belong there, and
he sighs a little. He is warm from the car ride, his skin and
clothes all summer and noon in the fall evening. He feels new.
“I do like you,” I say.
“I’m so glad you do.”
There were times when I thought I loved him. But I see
now that I didn’t really. Attraction, infatuation, and consterna-
tion do not love make. I don’t know if I love him now, but I like
him so much the joy is exquisitely painful. And this, too, is new.
I put both my hands up in his hair, my arms lifted. The
posture makes me feel vulnerable, exposed, but inviting too. I
stand on my toes, and I kiss him. He leans in, grateful, and
kisses me. I do not count the kisses. We are not spinning, not
flying or floating. Our feet are firmly on the Earth. My fingers
curl. His hand rises to my neck, exploring the ends of my short
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hair. His other hand presses against my back. I am a part of
something good.
There’s a break in traffic. He holds my Gidget hand. We are
running across the street toward the theater, headlights point-
ing at us, white against black like the sun in space. And I think
this is my favorite part. Not the part where I saw Earth from
above, or the weeks blissfully ignorant in the lair. Not the part
where I swam through the guts of a ghostman ship, or when
rocketeer Jonathan Wilder caught me.
This part. Jonathan and I holding hands and running with
nothing chasing us, the after-rain street shiny as Christmas or-
naments, the night behind us, the theater ahead. My right hand
is in his left, and Jonathan turns to look at me. Looks at me for
no other reason than he wants to.
And this is where I’ll end, before I know what happens
next.
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A c k n o w l e d g m e n t s
I would have floundered without the extraordinary help of
early reader feedback;
muchísimas gracias a
Dean Hale, Victo-
ria Wells Arms, Gabe Janke, Megan Whalen Turner, and Barry
Goldblatt. You guys are seriously cool. All the folks of Blooms-
bury gave a lot of hours to this book, including Michelle Nagler,
Hali Baumstein, Rachel Stark, and Kaitlin Mischner. Thanks
to Ava Cabey for inspiration.
Gracias a
Rebecca Allred Clyde.
¡
Rohayhú
Paraguay!
Super cheers to Kindra Johnson, without whose childcare
prowess I wouldn’t have finished a book since 2006. Extra awe-
some babysitting help courtesy of Kayla Huff and Maggie and
Amy Thatcher.
All the research was fascinating, but one standout title was
The Canon: A Whirligig Tour of the Beautiful Basics of Science
by Natalie Angier. I also appreciated Arthur C. Clarke’s
The
Fountains of Paradise
, the first novel featuring a space elevator.
Profound thanks to Dr. Bart J. Kowallis, Dr. J. Ward
Moody, Dr. Paul Evans, and Dr. Summer Rupper. I love scien-
tists! And I’m not as smart as they are, so any mistakes are mine.
Fist bumps to Heather Moody and Abigail and Eli Rupper, who
know what it’s like to have scientist parents.
I should also acknowledge my outstanding high school
English teachers who showed me how to love poetry: Kathryn
Romney, Paula Fowler, and Aisha Barnes. Hugs for high school
counselor Lori Hargraves, who taught me teen survival skills.
Works quoted include Edgar Allan Poe’s “A Dream Within
a Dream,” William Shakespeare’s
Macbeth
, the correspon-
dence of John Keats, W.B. Yeats’s “The Second Coming” and
“Brown Penny,” and Robert Frost’s “Desert Places.”
Thanks to my readers for being willing to go on this new
adventure with me.
Besos y abrazos
.