Authors: Shannon Hale
“We won’t,” said Wilder. “That’s what a team is for.”
Ruth looked at Wilder, considering, then said, “Okay.”
Mi-sun put her hand out. Wilder put his hand on top of
hers and the rest of us followed, as if we were a Little League
team. It did make me feel safer somehow.
“Did you guys know that fireteam is a military term?” Mi-
sun’s voice was so trembly from her shaking I had to strain to
understand. “My mom’s military. A fireteam is the smallest unit
of s-s-soldiers.”
“Fitting, since we’re probably being reprogrammed into the
advance force of an alien invasion,” said Jacques.
66
Dangerous
“I highly doubt that,” Wilder said.
“Why would the tokens seize us and ignore the adults?”
asked Mi-sun.
“I don’t know.” Jacques stared at his hand. “Does my skin
look weird to you?”
“Your everything looks weird to me,” said Ruth, eating a
protein bar.
Jacques peered closer at his arm. “It feels weird . . .”
Mi-sun bumped into me, and I could feel how hard she
was shaking. She reminded me of Baron Harkonnen, Luther’s
pet bunny. The baron wasn’t exactly a calming influence. Every
time anyone held him, that rabbit literally vibrated with panic, his
pink eyes open wide, fuzzy white nose going like a jackhammer.
Mi-sun’s just a kid, I reminded myself, and I wished my
mom were there to take care of her.
“So is your dad military too?” I asked, hoping to distract her.
“No. He’s crazy,” said Mi-sun.
Wilder and Jacques looked up. Mi-sun’s gaze was full of
stars, but her mouth was serious.
“He hasn’t hurt anyone yet, so insurance won’t send him
to an institution. He just stays home and g-g-grumbles. After
school, when my mom’s at work, I take care of my little broth-
ers. Sometimes I have to take my dad food. When I open his
door, the grumbles turn into yells. Usually that’s all he does, but
sometimes—”
“Mi-sun,” I said, interrupting her in case she wanted to stop
talking.
“Sometimes he’s on top of the dresser or in the closet or—”
“Mi-sun,” Jacques said, as if afraid to hear any more.
“Or in the bathroom. One time I found him with our
67
Shannon Hale
stuffed animals. He must have sneaked out of his room when
we were asleep and taken them. He had them in the ba-bathtub,
pushing them under the water, and . . . and I don’t want to go
home.”
“What does he say?” Wilder asked. “When he grumbles.”
“
Herma, harma, herma
,” Mi-sun said in a scratchy low imi-
tation of her father. “
Herma arrgh toast soup. Toast soup crunchy
toast eat it.
”
Jacques and Ruth laughed. Mi-sun’s pale cheeks turned
bright with a pleased blush.
Wilder rubbed the back of his head.
“You’ve got a headache too,” I said.
“Feels like there’s a rat with steel claws trapped in there,” he
said, touching the top of his neck, “trying to dig free.”
That was exactly what it felt like, except the rat was clawing
at my forehead. I laughed a little, and Wilder smiled, then we
both laughed because what else are you supposed to do when
you’re orbiting the Earth and alien technology is making your
head feel like a cage for violent vermin?
I couldn’t keep laughing for long. By the time I climbed
back into the pod, I could barely see for the pain.
“Wait,” I said as Dragon harnessed me in. “What if we
are
the advance force of an alien army sent to destroy Earth—”
“You’re nobody’s puppet, Brown,” he said, patting my head.
“And if I’m wrong, I’ll take you out myself and save the world.”
I couldn’t focus on his expression through the pain, but I
was almost sure he was kidding.
We started the long descent, and I could feel force again
as my shoulders pressed against the harness. Jacques was say-
ing, “Oh
bleep
, oh
bleep
, oh
bleep
. . .” Apparently for his fear of
68
Dangerous
heights, going down was worse than going up. I barely registered
the planet enlarging outside my slit window. Pain screamed in
my brain.
Suddenly space was gone, and we were in a barely blue sky,
early in the morning. The pod stopped with a sigh followed by
a snap. The door hushed open, and warm, humid air gushed in.
I climbed onto the ocean platform, gravity a giant’s hand
pushing down. My arms were like logs, my neck felt too weak
to hold my head.
Ruth shoved past me, announcing to all of Earth that she
was starving.
A breeze tickled the hairs on my face and hand and seemed
to tie the world together—rough morning sun, swishing air, salty
scent, and huge spaces of quiet. I gazed at the sliding color of the
sky while my feet pressed hard against the ground and almost said,
“Where do I belong?” Aloud, the question would have sounded
cheesy and immature. But quiet in my head, it was small and
hard and perfect, like a seashell.
Where do I belong
?
Ruth sat on the pocked metal floor and ripped open a bag
of potato chips.
As soon as we were back in Texas on the shuttle van to
HAL, I asked to borrow Howell’s phone.
“Flapping mouths will prove dangerous,” she said. “You’ll
be able to contact your parents shortly, but first, let’s figure out
as much as we can.”
I hugged my chest and stared out the window. The world
pulsed with pain.
We spent the rest of the day in a large lab examined by
Howell’s MDs and PhDs. Pain meds did nothing. One bonus of
the crippling headache was that I barely noticed the spinal tap.
69
Shannon Hale
When the doctors sent us to bed, I flailed through sleep,
the headache riding with me into dreams and out again. It was
easier to just give up trying.
All my stuff had been moved into my cozy room, so I
tossed aside the boot camp jumpsuit and dressed in my Normal
Maisie uniform: hightop sneakers, jeans, peach cotton blouse, a
clay bead necklace and silver hoop earrings. I brushed my hair
back into my usual ponytail.
I had a sudden conviction that Wilder was leaving his
room. I squeaked open my door, and there he was, just shutting
his own.
He glanced at me. He took a double take. “You changed.”
I touched my face. “Is the alien worm rewriting my DNA?”
“No, I mean . . .” he gestured to my clothing.
I couldn’t read his expression. “So are you still going to be
zombie-weird or are you normal-weird again?”
He frowned. “Sorry. Kinda. I don’t know. Can we just start
over?” He stuck out his left hand. “Hi, I’m Jonathan Ingalls
Wilder. And you are?”
“Being eaten from the inside out by a rabid hamster.”
He didn’t respond.
“Maisie Brown,” I said and shook his hand. And that was it.
He’d chosen to erase everything that had happened between us.
“Nice to meet you,” he said, businesslike.
I didn’t answer—the words on my tongue were borrowed
from Jacques’s lexicon.
I followed Wilder to the lab, where the whitecoats were
pleased to subject us to more tests. In between my duties as a
lab rat, I started to take apart an electron microscope. No one
stopped me.
70
Dangerous
A crash startled me to my feet. Ruth stood beside the metal
ruins of an examination table, her face redder than her hair.
“I didn’t mean to.” She stared at her hands. “This morning I
tore off the faucet in my sink. I feel so weird, as if . . .” Her gaze
wandered to the food table in the adjoining conference room.
“Ooh, ham!”
Jacques and Mi-sun had arrived too. Jacques wasn’t wear-
ing his black geek glasses, and his face seemed smaller, younger.
Mi-sun was shaking away.
“Have the rest of you noticed increased strength?” Wilder
asked.
Mi-sun and I shook our heads.
“No, but . . .” Jacques scooted in closer and whispered. “I
clogged the shower drain.”
“Gross!” Ruth said.
“It wasn’t me! I mean . . .” Jacques held out his hand, palm
down. “Watch.”
The back of his hand seemed a little shinier than before,
and then his knuckles smoothed over as if being airbrushed.
Something the color of his skin was growing over his hand. He
removed a perfect mold and handed it to Wilder.
“Jacques is molting,” Mi-sun said.
“It’s not skin,” said Wilder.
There was another crash. Ruth stood over a broken confer-
ence table, a sandwich in each hand.
“Oops,” Ruth mumbled, her mouth full.
“Ruth, are your clothes pinching on you?” Wilder asked.
“What? No! I’m not gaining weight. I’m just . . . really hungry.”
But one of the doctors put Ruth on a scale and reported
she’d gained thirty pounds since before our space trip.
71
Shannon Hale
“She looks the same to me,” I said.
“And thirty pounds can’t explain all that strength . . .” Wild-
er glanced at me as if I’d know why.
“Maybe she’s denser,” I said.
“Maybe
you’re
denser,” said Ruth.
So I shut up. But I was thinking about how everything is
mostly empty space. If you compacted all the atoms in the plan-
et, Earth would be the size of a golf ball and yet still weigh the
same and have the same gravitational pull. What if the atoms of
Ruth’s skin, muscles, and bones were compacting, even a little?
With less space between the protons and electrons, her atoms
would weigh the same but be so much denser. The repulsion
between the protons and electrons would have to be masked
somehow, and scientifically, that was
impossible
, but that word
was rapidly losing meaning to me.
My headache was easier to bear when I was busy, so I
kept fiddling with the electron microscope while Wilder talked
with Mi-sun. She was gripping her hands together, but when he
pulled them apart and touched her hand to his, he said he felt
a prickling.
It was too hard to follow the conversation from under my
cloud of pain. I put the microscope back together. Sometime
later I heard a scream.
There was a small hole in the conference room wall, and
on the other side Ruth was laid flat. She jumped back up, pluck-
ing a metal tack out of her shirt.
“Are you guys mental?” she said, hurling it back at the floor.
“I have a feeling,” Wilder said quietly, “that tack would have
gone straight through anyone besides Ruth. Let’s try something
less lethal.”
72
Dangerous
Mi-sun pinched Cheerios between her thumb and forefin-
ger and aimed at the wall. The cereal shot from her fingers in
an electric-blue streak, hit the wall, and shattered.
This was getting too bizarre. I started taking apart a defibril-
lator. I knew Wilder was standing next to me before I looked up.
“What are you up to?” Wilder asked me.
“Just . . . you know . . . preparing a defibrillator in case
someone gets heart failure from Code Blue over there,” I said,
nodding at Mi-sun.
One of the whitecoats returned with a piece of Jacques’s
shedding and spoke to Howell. “I couldn’t cut through it with
anything we have here. My best guess? It’s a polymer—”
“Of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen,” said another whitecoat,
swaying side-to-side, too excited to stand still. “Or maybe nitrogen!”
“What is it?” Mi-sun asked.
“Plastic,” I said.
Strong plastic, grown like armor. These changes weren’t dis-
ease symptoms. These were very specific alterations to our bodies.
Or to Ruth, Mi-sun, and Jacques anyway. What about me
and Wilder, the headache twins?
“Are we dying?” I asked Dragon.
“Your vitals are good.” He showed me scans of my brain,
and I could see the color blobs were different prespace and
postspace. “That red streak is usually a dormant area, but
yours is hot.”
I was trying to read Dragon’s notes when a loud
clang
knocked my headache. Howell was shaking a brass bell like an
old-time town crier.
“Time for talking, my chickadees,” said Howell. “Time for
deciding.”
73
C h a p t e r 1 1
Dragon led the five of us to Howell’s office, plush with
carpet, garish wallpaper, and floral-patterned sofas.
Wilder’s dad, GT, was leaning against Howell’s desk at the
head of the room. His hair was combed back under a baseball
cap, and he wore a plain T-shirt and cutoff jeans, but his eyes
were all Wilder—blue and cunning. Wilder hesitated before
standing at his shoulder.
Howell sat on the coffee table, her back to GT. She rooted
in a bag and pulled out three red balls.
No way is she going to juggle, I thought.
She juggled.
There was a disbelieving kind of silence. At the end she
threw one ball high and caught it behind her back. Mi-sun
clapped politely.
“Thank you!” said Howell. “So, I can’t let you go home.”
“What?” said Ruth. “We’re, like, prisoners?”