Read The Girl Who Could Fly Online
Authors: Victoria Forester
Sorry to ruin your night and all, Conrad, but its not every day you figure out that folks have got it in for you.
Yeah, well, get over it. Youre not in Kansas anymore, Dorothy.
What? My names Piper and Im from Lowland County.
Right, forget it. Can we go now? Conrad picked up his case for a second time.
So thats why you wont eat anything and youre stealing Jaspers food. Everything was suddenly falling into place in Pipers mind. You didnt want to eat the drugs and Jaspers drugs dont affect you cause theyre meant for him.
Right, right. Conrad nodded impatiently. Jaspers scheduled to graduate next and I was trying to prolong it as much as I could to give him a chance to remember his ability. Clearly, its not working.
Piper was glad she was sitting down. Not Jasper!
Afraid so. Theyve got you good and hopped up too. Obviously theyve hit on just the right chemical combination because youre walking slowly and youve got this dazed look in your eyes. If you stay it will only be a matter of time.
It will? Now that she thought about it, Piper had been feeling very sedated and slow. She had chalked it up to being relaxed, but now it was all clear to her. Youre right. So you were picking on me cause . . .
Because I needed to wake you up and the drug was slowing you down. I needed you to figure out the truth fast and I had to push you a little bit. Dr. Hellions taken a particular interest in you and its dangerous to your health. From the moment you arrived and I discovered that you were a flier, I knew there existed the possibility of escape. That changed everything.
But what about the others? Do they know? Piper had a million questions.
No. I tried telling them but it doesnt work. They wont believe you, or if theyre too firmly hooked into Hellions reality, the shock of the truth will drive them crazy. Like Bella.
Bella? Thats what happened to Bella?
I tried my best with her but she couldnt take it. Conrad hated defeat of any kind.
But cant we do something for her now? I mean, if she was to listen and understand, couldnt she get her ability back?
Conrad shook his head. She passed the point of no return. That point is different for everyone, but once they make you give it up, I mean really, truly give it up, you wont ever get your ability back. Bella gave it up. You could see it in her eyes.
The sheer tragedy of losing Bella and her extraordinary gift was almost more than Piper could bear. Bellas light had shone so brightly. Undoubtedly shed been destined to bring so much joy and beauty to the world. Instead she was now gray and lifeless, a fate the silver giraffe was being threatened with at that very moment. And what of all the other nameless, faceless children who suffered a similar fate? What was to become of them and what could be done about it?
Conrad didnt want to give Piper any more time to dwell on the news or to get lost in her thoughts. Alright, so now that thats sorted out, I need to know if youve ever carried anything or anyone when youve flown. Can you estimate a comfortable weight range? And Ill need an approximate flying distance before youll require rest.
But why? Why do they want to do this to us?
Conrad swallowed hard and reminded himself to be patient. Because they consider us dangerous and they cant control us. The Mustafa twins could start a tsunami in their spare time. Daisy can lift a tank without breaking a sweat and Myrtle can run so fast they dont even have instruments capable of clocking her. Unless were normal, theres no place for us in their world and thats why theyve got us locked up down here.
So we escape and get help. Is that the plan?
What help? No one will help us. If we ever tried to come back, theyd capture us and that would be the end of it. No, weve got to get out of here and hide where theyll never find us.
But the others? Whatll happen to em? Piper thought of Violet and her gentle kindness and Lilys mischievous pranks, not to mention the giraffe tied up in a darkened room on the fourth level.
Conrad shrugged, then sighed. There is nothing we can do. Theyll have to stay here. Its better that two get out than none. We cant do anything for them.
You mean just leave em here? Do nothing?
Listen, Ive done all the calculations and there are little to no statistically significant probabilities that we can get them out. More people generate more variables, which creates more risk. Its too dangerous. Conrad didnt even want to try and explain all the mathematical work hed done on organizing this escape. If Piper was having difficulty comprehending what, to him, was an obvious and plain situation, there was no way she was going to be able to absorb higher mathematical reasoning. This is the only way.
I dont believe you. Even if youre right, I dont care. I wont leave em behind. Piper was adamant. Theres gotta be another way.
There isnt. Conrads patience was at its end. He picked up his case for the last time. Now lets get out of here!
Before Conrad could reach Piper, she shot off of the floor and flew out of the window, hovering just out of his range. Conrad rushed forward.
What are you doing? Get out of sight before someone sees you!
I cant do it, Conrad. I just cant leave without em. Violets my friend and all those animals and things I saw on the fourth levelthey nearly broke my heart. Where am I going to hide that I wont remember them?
Conrad didnt have an answer. Piper knew that she might not be as smart as Conrad, and she even knew that she was probably in shock and wasnt thinking straight. But even so, she knew that she couldnt live out the rest of her days knowing that shed left the others behind.
Either we all leave together or we dont leave at all. And thats the end of it. If youre such a genius, youll just have to figure out a plan that works.
Im telling you I cant. Nothing will work. Piper, were not some comic book characters with happy endings all mapped out for us. Half these kids have got abilities that are all but useless for the purposes of mounting an escapeor for anything else, for that matter.
All the same, I reckon youll find a way to make it all work out. Piper floated back and forth.
I knew you were going to be a problem.
Im not aiming to cause you problems, Conrad. The way I see it, weve got no one but each other right now and so wed best figure a way to get along. Piper started to fly back to her room. Over her shoulder she said, Youll think up a real good plan. And dont you worry yourself, Im gonna help out too.
Piper
help
him
think up a plan? If Conrad wasnt worried before, he was now.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
C
ONRAD WAS desperate.
His desperation meant he needed Piper McCloud, and Conrad Harrington III had never needed anyone. Its certainly safe to say that no one had ever needed him, let alone cared about him. Both his father and mother saw to it that he had absolutely anything and everything except their time, attention, and affection. A child was a necessary accessory in a politically motivated power couple, and they were overjoyed when Conrad III arrived. He was exactly what he should have been, only more. Unfortunately, much more. His acute intelligence was something neither of them wanted, and initially the only use they could find for it was as a dinner party diversion.
Thank you, Nanny. Do put Connie on my lap. Abigail Churchill-Harrington accepted the boy outfitted in a spotless silk sailor suit and held him as one slightly afraid, like he was a wild chinchilla or an exotic snake. Dinner guests instantly cooed on cue, their dessert forks pausing en route to their lips, dripping with zabaglione and balsamic-roasted strawberries.
What a lovely child.
He looks just like his father.
You must be so proud!
Yes, yes, thank you. Abigail smiled, turning to the guest seated at her right. You know, Mr. Vice President, our little Connie has already memorized all the presidents and states too. Such a wonder for a two-year-old, dont you think? Of course, both Galileo and Newton are in my family tree, but that is neither here nor there. All the same, you simply cant get away from good breeding. Nanny, why are Connies eyes closed? NANNY? Oh, theyre open again. Connie, dear, recite the states and their capitals for our nice guests. Abigail proudly held her child until he had finished his recitation and the guests applauded, whereupon Nanny whisked the child out of sight, not to be seen or thought about again until he was required at the next dinner party, or tea party, or photo opportunity.
At the age of six, darling little Connies performance schedule was cut short when he questioned his father on a matter of foreign policy in front of the Chinese ambassador at the annual Thanksgiving cocktail party.
What had begun as a lovely diversion was proving to be an embarrassment and liability to the family. Conrads intelligence was so extraordinary that no teacher could surpass it, let alone match it, and no other school would accept him, particularly the best ones. Not long afterward, Conrad started toin the words of the best child psychologist in Washington D.C., at a rate of five hundred dollars an houract out. At seven years old, little Connies acting out culminated in a foray into the national Defense Department mainframe, where he remotely reprogrammed an orbiting satellite armed with nuclear missiles. When the CIA notified the Oval Office, the president found he was not well disposed toward a seven-year-old having his finger on the red button. Rather than deal with the embarrassment, Abigail and Conrad Harrington willingly handed little Connie over to Dr. Hellion when she came knocking on their door, no questions asked, thus neatly avoiding any political fallout from the debacle.
Incidentally, the satellite that caused the kerfuffle in the first place had a new trajectory, thanks to Conrad, which prevented a collision with an aging Russian space station that had slipped from its orbit. No one, least of all the president, bothered to attach any significance or thanks to this factoid.
Conrads ability was at once a blessing and a curse. With relative ease, he immediately saw through Dr. Hellions lies and understood the true nature of I.N.S.A.N.E. Unfortunately, that same intelligence informed him that there was nothing he could do about it. Conrad and Dr. Hellion were equally matched opponents; Conrads intelligence versus Dr. Hellions security systems, agents, research, and drugs. While Conrad couldnt escape, he took effective countermeasures that made him immune to Dr. Hellions tactics. Had Conrads parents not been such political powerhouses, Dr. Hellion would have eagerly employed the more drastic rehabilitation means at her disposal, but in Conrads case the Harrington name bound her hands.
Conrad couldnt escape. Dr. Hellion couldnt make him normal. Thus they remained in a deadlock year after year with no end in sight. Escape was all Conrad thought about. It was the only thing that mattered. And escape was absolutely impossible.
For four long years, Conrad remained buried alive on the thirteenth level in a state of unspeakable agony. His brain activity was relentlessly in motion, analyzing, creating, problem-solving, calculating, its capacity exponentially growing in staggering leaps and bounds. Day and night it worked nonstop, yet Conrad had no vent for any of it (Dr. Hellion made sure of that), no way to turn it off, and it gushed inside hima raging river of intellectual power battering against the feeble dam of his body, demanding an outlet. Year after year, he existed like a half-starved dog chained in a dirt yard under a burning sun without shade or water, and the pain and pressure turned Conrad mean and mad.
If he didnt get out soon, Conrad Harrington knew that he was going to go insane. And escape was absolutely impossible.
Until there was Piper McCloud.
The probability of a flier is so rare, so completely out of the ordinary, and it was the very thing Conrad needed to make an escape plan work. The minute he saw that Piper could fly, he knew hope. He carefully plotted and prepared for every eventuality except onePipers refusal to leave without the others.
How can she be so colossally stupid??!! Didnt she understand?
To make matters worse, Piper had somehow developed the mistaken impression that they were now friends. Each night when Nurse Tolle finished night check and Conrad sat down to plan the escape, Piper made a habit of flying through his window and chattering nonstop about anything and everything that was going on inside her head. (Some information, even a genius like Conrad dreaded to know.)
I saw Violet eating that chocolate brownie at dinner, and I nearly split, I wanted to warn her so badly. You reckon well be able to tell em soon? Piper sat on Conrads bed, holding Sebastian and gently stroking him. The little black cricket was fully recovered and liked to hop between Pipers fingers.
Mmmmm, Conrad mumbled, not really listening.
I know Ive been down here a good long stretch already but Ive got to admit, its like I wasnt here at all. Like my eyes were taken right out of their sockets and I was walking round as blind as a bat. Its as plain as day to me now that this whole place is crazy. Like how all we do is weave baskets and memorize the same names and dates over and over again. Sure were busy but were not learning or doing anything useful. It just doesnt sit right with me. I gotta tell you that when I saw what I saw and you told me what you did, I felt awful in here. Piper pointed to her heart. A person wants to believe in folks and trust in things, and when you cant, life doesnt seem worth living anymore. Thats exactly how I felt. Like it was hopeless. But the more I got to pondering it, the more I just figured that even if some folks are bad, theres others who arent. So I reckon I just wont ever give up my flying for anyone ever again. I dont care what they tell me. Theres just some things you gotta keep for yourself, no matter who asks you or how nice theyre being. Then it doesnt make any difference if folks are good or bad cause they cant do anything to me if I wont let em. Know what I mean?
Mmmm.
You sure are working hard, Conrad. Im fixing to help you too, if you tell me what to do. Conrad didnt respond. Im real useful if you give me half a chance. Even my ma says I can husk a corn faster then anyone and shes stingy in the praise department.
Conrad not only doubted that Piper could help but, except for her flying, it was clear to him she was a terrible liability. So when the very next night Piper landed in his room in a state of great excitement and grandly announced that shed figured out exactly how to help, he braced for the worst.
I got to thinking how you explained about Dr. Hellion and her way of getting us not to use our gifts. How she explained things in such a way that wed think we didnt want to do it anymore. And we wouldnt. Well, it makes sense then that if we wanted to use our gifts again then we would, right? So then I got to wondering how Id get the others to want to and it came to me right off. Just like that. They need to
dream
! You know, think up what they would do with their talents, and get them real excited about it, and then they might get a hankering to follow that dream.
Ahh, Conrad said out loud.
That is absolutely ridiculous and wont work,
Conrad said inwardly.
All the same, Conrad knew that if Pipers time and attention were occupied, she was less likely to get in his way, or otherwise screw up an already difficult situation, and so he let the matter go.
So I got right to it and I started with Violet and you know what she told me? She said that if she was to get out shed be an archeyan archeyolo-something. Its when folks go to far-off lands and dig up stuff from way, way long ago. Like tombs and crypts and the like. Violet explained the whole thing to me. She says when they get to digging, they find things all sealed up and so she figures she could shrink down really small and go inside before the others. She reckons shed be the first one in places that no ones been near in hundreds, maybe thousands of years, and see stuff painted on the walls and look at old King Tut. Soon as she gets herself an eyeful, shell come right out and tell the others what was what and how to get in without hurting anything. Isnt that something? I told Violet that she had herself a real good plan. Piper looked to Conrad but he didnt turn around or acknowledge her presence in any way.
That Conrad sure dont say much, she whispered to Sebastian later on as she settled into sleep. Piper chalked his silence up to all of the hard work hed been putting into planning the escape, and the next morning approached her day with a renewed vim and vigor, excitedly reporting her findings to Conrad that night.
You ask folks a question and theyll tell you the most amazing things. Things youve never heard of or wouldve thought up, even if you lived to be a hundred. Like Smittys got everything all worked out. Hes gonna be a detective and solve all the real hard crimes because he can see stuff other people cant. Isnt that something? I told him hed be really good at it and Id hire him, and his chest swelled up like hed got a balloon in it.
And then Lily, shes all small and dainty, but I can tell you right now that her insides are as strong as steel. Lilys gonna join NASA and be an astronaut. You know why? Conrad didnt answer and Piper didnt notice. Cause she says that when they go up in space, its real troublesome moving stuff outside the spaceship and Lily figures she can do that easy as pie. Dont that just take the cake? I can see it too. Lily, all fine in her space, outfit, looking out the window of some ship, picking up space rocks or fixing a broken engine. Shed be a real credit to us all and itd be a shame if she didnt get to go up to the moon and I told her so straight out. She told me that when youre on the moon and you look down on Earth, its real pretty and promised that shell take a picture to show me. Think of that!
Once Piper got started, she learned everything about her classmates. She learned that Myrtle Grabtrash, a tall, thin, gawky girl, whose dark hair somehow managed to completely conceal her face, was her mamas twelfth child. Myrtle was born in a one-room shack on a piece of real estate shared by the railroad tracks of the Georgia Amtrak, and at the moment of her birth, a train crashed right through their tiny shack. The train, which had been mistakenly rerouted onto the abandoned tracks, didnt bother to stop, and so it took a whole week before Myrtle was finally apprehended at the Peachtree, Georgia, station. Her mama liked to say that it was the first time Myrtle ran away. It wasnt to be the last.
Myrtles best friend was Daisy, and Piper discovered that Dr. Hellion apprehended Daisy after she picked up a whole bulldozer and threw it upside down to prevent the construction of a hazardous waste dump. Only after persistent questioning and great patience was Piper able to extract from Daisy the information that the dump was going to destroy a family of pygmy rabbits burrowing in the soil of the proposed land.
Small, Daisy told Piper in her slow way, and then held out her large hand and cupped it in the approximate size to show Piper exactly how tiny the fluffy gray-and-brown rabbits were. Extinct. Too small, not strong enough. Daisy didnt exactly have a way with words.
After Daisy tossed about a few more large pieces of heavy equipment, including a crane and an asphalt machine, the developer got a little antsy, and Daisy earned herself a one-way helicopter trip to I.N.S.A.N.E., leaving behind a family of pygmy bunnies to wage their own battle against a multinational construction company. Every day, Daisy worried about her miniature bunny family, wondering if they had managed to escape and find themselves a new home.
I told Daisy that them tiny rabbits got out, no problem. They might be small but I bet they can run, I told her. So you know what Daisy and Myrtle would do if they got out? They figure theyll work together and make homes for things that dont have homes anymore. They dont have it all worked out yet exactly but Myrtles gonna do the legwork and Daisyll handle the heavy lifting and theyve got a mind to get a piece of land and just collect up plants and animals and people thats looking for a place where folks will let them be.
Conrad snorted. Without a doubt, that was the most ridiculous idea hed ever heard, until, of course, the following evening when Piper related how Nalen and Ahmeds grand plans were so detailed that they had already selected a name for their company,
Mustafa Weather Solutions
, and had a business plan that included a bread-and-butter base of helping farmers get rain, as well as dabbling in government contracts to reverse global warming. All of that work would support their main passionhurricane wrangling, tsunami interception, and possibly even some covert operations in counter-weather terrorism (that last part was, of course, very hush-hush). Hearing this, Conrad just about threw up his hands in disgust at the craziness of it all.