Authors: Shannon Hale
Wilder was waiting just inside.
“What is your dad doing here?”
“He’s a control freak. He stops by once a week to make sure
the security is vigilant in protecting an important man’s son.”
Wilder traced my lower lip with his finger. “I like your mouth.”
“I’m not that girl,” I reminded him, but I wondered if may-
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Shannon Hale
be I was.
So much knowledge gained in the past two weeks, I
couldn’t contain it all. I started to organize it into a tidy list:
1. Turbulence is characterized by chaotic, random prop-
erty changes in air flow.
2. The most dangerous part of scuba is the buildup of ni-
trogen molecules in your body and those gases expanding if you
rise up through the water too quickly.
3. You can like a person’s mouth.
4. You can feel your heart beat not just in your chest, but
everywhere at once.
“Let’s skip the next session,” he whispered, his hand finding
my lower back. “We could find an empty room and talk about
microscopes.”
I shook my head. “No. No way.”
“You’re a good girl.” He frowned. “Your middle name lies.”
I didn’t want to be rude like his father. So I took his hand
and said, “Jonathan Ingalls Wilder, you have become one of my
top five favorite people in the world. Now come on.”
We found seats and watched a documentary about the build-
ing of the Beanstalk . . . sort of. Wilder kept holding my hand,
rubbing the backs of my fingernails over his lip. I was field testing
a theory that a person’s skin emits a scent, and if you’re attracted
to that person, his scent enters you and releases hormones in your
brain that make you disoriented and apt to grin.
After the movie, Bonnie Howell hopped onto stage, dressed
in florals and stripes. She pulled three green balls out of a bag
and juggled. The uncomfortable silence became twitchy.
Howell caught all three balls, pulled the podium’s mi-
crophone lower with a grating squeak, and spoke with her lips
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Dangerous
touching it. “I learned how to juggle this year so I could be
more entertaining.”
She didn’t seem to have any other reason for being on
stage. Dragon nudged her away from the podium.
“We have the fireteam results,” he said.
My stomach made friends with my shoes.
“Congratulations to Fireteam 36. Jacques Ames, Maisie
Brown, Mi-sun Hwang, and Ruth Koelsch.”
I had never known before that you can smile so hard your
cheeks hurt. But I couldn’t stop. It was like my body was on hap-
py mode. My first ever trip out of the country would be jetting
to the equator and getting a front-row seat to a Beanstalk launch.
“In addition, the student with the highest individual rating
is invited to join Fireteam 36 as its fifth member. Congratula-
tions to Jonathan Wilder.”
Could this moment get any better? Dragon dismissed us,
but I couldn’t seem to move.
“We’re both going.” Wilder’s words were as heavy as bricks.
“I know it, but I can’t get myself to believe it!”
“But . . .” He didn’t look at me. “I wasn’t expecting this.”
Wilder’s eyes seemed darker, his whole mood blacker. His
gaze slid off me as if I were too lowly to contemplate, and he got
up and walked away.
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C h a p t e r 7
I hurried after Wilder, running into Jacques, Ruth, and
Mi-sun in the hall. Wilder stood apart from us, his gaze locked
on the ceiling. Ruth and Jacques were celebrating by shoving
each other.
“Jacques, you’re the man!” I said. Our last couple of victo-
ries had been thanks to his awesome strategies.
“Yeah, I know,” he said, fake-buffing his nails on his shirt.
“You’re not half bad yourself, tiger.”
“I’m very proud of all of us,” said Mi-sun, smiling with lips
stained blue.
“That slush can’t have enough nutrients for you,” I said.
She had it for every meal.
“At home I only eat saltines and pickles,” she said, “and I’m
fine.”
She started to talk about the meals she made for her broth-
ers, but my attention kept clicking back to someone and his si-
lence. I walked closer.
“Wilder,” I whispered, “what’s wrong?”
His expression was blank, yet it affected me like a force.
How had I made myself so fragile?
“This,” he said, gesturing between the two of us, “was a
mistake. I wasn’t planning on flying off into the sunset with you
or anything, so let’s not get tacky about it, okay?”
What?
The troupe of blond girls bobbed up to tell him “Con-
grats!” Wilder put his arm around the nearest and pulled her
Dangerous
closer, whispering something. His lips brushed her earlobe. She
blushed and giggled.
For the rest of the day I felt like I’d been hit by a train, car-
toon birds twittering around my head. I’d just gotten the best
news of my life, but I was wasting it moping after an asinine boy.
We rushed from the medic to supplies to suit fitting. At din-
nertime we ate the cafeteria food on leather sofas in Dr. Howell’s
office—malibu chicken, green beans, mashed potatoes, peach
cobbler. Wilder was a dead space in my periphery. Did all boys
turn weirdo-zombie after kissing a girl? Had I done something
wrong? I should have stuck to my plan—work toward becoming
an astronaut, eschew emotions, become Maisie Robot.
When Bonnie Howell asked if we had any questions, I
jumped in.
“How did you get the Speetle to work on liquid hydro-
gen?” I asked, referring to the spacecraft Howell Aerospace had
launched years before the Beanstalk.
“Speetle?”
“The...uh, the Space Beetle. I’ve been calling it the Speetle
in my head. By the way, I’m surprised you don’t shorten Howell
Aeronautics Lab to HAL.”
She sniffed. “I will now. Anyhow, you wouldn’t understand
if I told you.”
“I might,” I said.
She obliged me with an explanation that had me lost by
the first sentence. Howell had hazel eyes, neither warm nor
cold, but they pierced me.
She’s not just a crazy old bat, I thought. She’s scary-smart.
“We should wrap this up, Dragon. I want the fireteam back
here at 0500.” And she bounced out of the room.
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Shannon Hale
“Good night, um, Dr. Howell,” I said.
“Everyone just calls her Howell,” said Dragon.
“Like she’s some cool teenage boy?” I said. I glanced at
Wilder and wished I hadn’t said “cool.”
Dragon escorted us to small private bedrooms, mine next
to Wilder’s. I locked my door and fell into bed. I could hear
Wilder moving around for a long time, so I didn’t move at all. I
wanted to be soundless, invisible.
I woke with a jolt, terrified I’d overslept, but the clock read
3:14 a.m. My heart was pounding. No chance I was getting back
to sleep.
The luxury of having my own shower made everything
feel hopeful, the heat scraping the lack of sleep from my skin,
yelling at my muscles to wake up. I was an hour early, but I
headed to Howell’s office. It felt closer to midnight than dawn.
My nerves danced on dagger shoes.
Someone was singing. I stopped, peeking in the door.
Dragon, his back to me, was doing paperwork and singing opera
in a faux soprano. I couldn’t believe that squeaky voice came
from such a massive, muscular body. And most surprisingly, he
wasn’t horrible.
He saw me and stopped. “Busted,” he said, laughing a
bouncy, high laugh. “Don’t tell anyone and spoil my formidable
image?”
I zipped my lips. “Dr. Barnes, can I borrow a phone? I
want to let my parents know about the trip.”
“It’s too early to call, but they signed a release form with
your initial registration, so everything’s set.”
When the others arrived, we took a van to Howell’s private
airstrip. Wilder claimed one of the comfy leather seats in the
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Dangerous
back of the jet, so I sat in front.
Jacques leaped aboard, shouting, “Cry havoc!”“Why do
you always say that?” asked Mi-sun.
“It’s an old military command, instructing soldiers to pil-
lage and generally make chaos,” he said. “Besides, it sounds
kicky.”
Ruth snorted.
Two days ago, I couldn’t have imagined regretting those
eight kisses. The first one that lasted seven heartbeats, and that
second one lasting five. The third when his knee touched mine,
the fourth, when his thumb twitched on my cheek. The fifth
when he breathed in through his nose, the sixth when a whisper
of a moan escaped his throat. The seventh and eighth that had
slowed, lingering.
My mom said that my mind is a scanning machine that
makes a copy of everything I see or read or hear. I wished I
could delete those kiss files. But the memory sat over me, mock-
ing, like that mouthy raven in Poe’s poem.
Nevermore
.
Stupid bird.
We watched a couple of movies before landing on a little
island off the coast of Ecuador. The scenery was scrubby and
bare, the sun relentlessly hot. But we only stayed long enough to
put on astronaut suits. I felt kind of dorky, like a teenager still go-
ing trick-or-treating. But Howell wanted us to have an astronaut
experience. We even had to wear astronaut diapers.
“This is a stupid place to build something expensive,” Ruth
said, looking over the sea. “I’m from Louisiana, yo. I’ve seen
what hurricanes can do.”
“Actually this is the safest place,” I said. “Due to the Corio-
lis force, hurricanes don’t develop on the equator.”
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Shannon Hale
Ruth smacked me on the shoulder—for correcting her, I
guessed.
“Back off, Ruthless,” I said, rubbing my arm.
Jacques snorted at the nickname.
“How’s about I call you One-Arm?” she said.
I shrugged. “If it’s a good name, it’ll stick.”
“Let’s call her One-Arm,” Ruth whispered to Jacques.
“That’s stale,
Ruthless
,” he said.
So she hit Jacques.
“Ruth, keep your hands to yourself,” Mi-sun said in a per-
fect gentle-but-firm tone. “I won’t tell you again.”
Ruth snorted but stopped hitting.
From the island we took a helicopter out to sea. The sun
was high—a hot brand melting through the blue. The helicop-
ter was silent under the deafening stutter of the blades. Every
face pressed to a window. Slowly the Beanstalk’s base came into
view.
The ocean platform resembled an oil rig with an Eiffel-
like tower. Invisible from this distance was the six-centimeter-
wide ribbon made of carbon nanotubes—lightweight and stron-
ger than steel, the only known substance that could support the
tension and pressure of climbing into space. The Earth end ran
through the tower and attached to the ocean platform. The
space end was attached to an orbiting asteroid thousands of ki-
lometers away.
We landed, and I was the first out. At the top of the tower
waited the elevator car—a silver pod with wings of solar panels.
I could make out the glint of the ribbon. I looked up, following
the line into the sky, and got vertigo.
“Hello, gorgeous,” I said.
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Dangerous
Wilder’s face swung toward me. I smiled.
“I wasn’t talking to you.”
“I didn’t think—” He shook his head and walked on.
“Howell, can we get a peek inside the elevator?” I asked.
Howell considered. “Well, since you’re here . . .”
Jacques gave me the thumb’s-up.
A metal cage elevator took us to the top of the tower where
the pod rested, looking as dangerous as a boulder on a cliff.
Howell and Dragon went into the pod first, and the rest of us
followed. From the outside, the solar panels had made it look
deceptively large, like long legs on a small-bodied spider. Inside
it felt downright cozy. If the interior of a metal ball can be cozy.
Six seats with harnesses were bolted to the floor around
one half of the pod. Each faced a small window—just a slit, real-
ly, like the ones on old castles that archers would shoot through.
The cargo area took up the other half of the pod. In the center
was a hollow metal pillar. The ribbon ran through it, and the
pod used robotic lifters to climb the ribbon.
“Companies pay us to transport their satellites,” Dragon
was saying, “which in turn pays for the expense of building and
running the Beanstalk. This trip we’re only carrying food and
supplies for the Beanstalk’s two space stations: Midway Station
and the Asteroid Station.”
“So you don’t have a lot of cargo this trip,” Wilder said, rest-
ing his arm on one of the chairs. “You’re not overweight. You
could take, say, five passengers on a quick jaunt?”
For a few seconds, no one spoke. Then Howell said, “Well . . .”
My legs turned cold.
“Howell,” said Dragon in a warning tone.
“We’re
not
overweight,” she said.
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Shannon Hale
“Howell,” said Dragon again.