The Blade of Shattered Hope (The 13th Reality #3)

BOOK: The Blade of Shattered Hope (The 13th Reality #3)
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Text © 2010 James Dashner
Illustrations © 2010 Brandon Dorman

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the publisher, Shadow Mountain®. The views expressed herein are the responsibility of the author and do not necessarily represent the position of Shadow Mountain.

All characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Dashner, James, 1972–

The Blade of Shattered Hope / James Dashner.

p. cm. — (The 13th reality ; bk. 3)

Summary: Mistress Jane has tapped into the universe’s darkest secret to create the Blade of Shattered Hope, and in her quest to attain a utopian reality for the future of mankind she is ready to risk billions of lives to set her plan in motion.

ISBN 978-1-60641-239-8 (hardbound : alk. paper)

[1. Space and time—Fiction. 2. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. 3. Science fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.D2587Bl 2010

[Fic]—dc22 2009050165

Printed in the United States of America

R. R. Donnelley, Crawfordsville, IN

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

For Ben and the rest of the Egans.

So many memories—
most of them embarrassing,
all of them good.

Contents

Acknowledgments

Prologue: The Lake

Part1: The Dark Basement

Chapter 1: Two Very Different Missions

Chapter 2: The Kyoopy Quiz

Chapter 3: A Strange Guest

Chapter 4: Death by Water

Chapter 5: A Mother’s Love

Chapter 6: Finger on the Pulse

Chapter 7: Beneath

Chapter 8: Quite the Crowd

Chapter 9: Dead Ticks Everywhere

Chapter 10: Ribbons of Orange

Chapter 11: Latitude and Longitude

Part2: The Black Tree

Chapter 12: Sweet Digs

Chapter 13: Sleepless in the Dark

Chapter 14: Questions without Answers

Chapter 15: The Twelfth Blade

Chapter 16: A Diabolical Plan

Chapter 17: Tale of the Iron Poker

Chapter 18: Towers of Red

Chapter 19: The Black Tree

Chapter 20: Disturbances

Chapter 21: The Unleashing

Chapter 22: Lightning and Flame

Chapter 23: A Threat Reversed

Chapter 24: Colored Marble Tiles

Chapter 25: Silver-Blue Light

Chapter 26: Many Faces

Chapter 27: Soulikens

Chapter 28: Come Together

Chapter 29: The Only Hope

Part3: The Fifth Army

Chapter 30: A Bowl of Debris

Chapter 31: Making Plans

Chapter 32: Reunions

Chapter 33: Sending a Message

Chapter 34: The Way Station

Chapter 35: Darkness of the Way

Chapter 36: The Speech

Chapter 37: Shivers

Chapter 38: Smoky Embrace

Chapter 39: The Surge

Chapter 40: Frazier’s Good News

Chapter 41: An Interesting Gate

Chapter 42: Strips of Fire

Chapter 43: The Fifth Army

Part4: Chi’karda’s Power

Chapter 44: Talking with the Devil

Chapter 45: Splitting Up

Chapter 46: A Very Bad Smell

Chapter 47: Weapons of Mass Coolness

Chapter 48: The Factory

Chapter 49: The Miracle of Birth

Chapter 50: Holes in the Ground

Chapter 51: Flies in the Biscuits

Chapter 52: Creatures in the Dark

Chapter 53: Eternity

Chapter 54: Words on a Tree

Chapter 55: An Unearthly Shriek

Chapter 56: What Is Missing

Chapter 57: From Bad to Worse

Chapter 58: Family

Chapter 59: Fists of Chi’karda

Chapter 60: Ten Kids

Chapter 61: Collision

Chapter 62: The Detour

Epilogue: The Mission

A Glossary of People, Places, and All
Things Important

Discussion Questions

Acknowledgments

I’d like to thank the following people for being really awesome:

My wife, Lynette.

My agent, Michael Bourret.

My editor, Lisa Mangum.

Chris Schoebinger and everyone else at Shadow Mountain.

Emily Lawrence and all the good people at Simon & Schuster for believing in this series enough to publish the paperbacks.

My incredibly supportive author friends: J. Scott Savage, Julie Wright, Sara Zarr, Anne Bowen, Emily Wing Smith, Bree Despain, Brandon Sanderson, Aprilynne Pike, and everyone in the Rockcanyon and Storymaker groups.

Angie Wager, for believing in my potential from the very beginning.

The people behind
Lost.
Best. Show. Ever.

The geniuses who invented cheddar cheese, potato chips, iPods, movies, books, and really soft couches. Oh, and lamps. I really love lamps.

But most of all, I want to thank you—the reader. Thank you for being here.

Prologue

~

The Lake

Bryan Cannon looked at the catfish—its bone-like whiskers, its slimy skin, its dark, unblinking eyes—and he saw death. For the creature, of course, not himself. Dinner would be fine and tasty tonight.

The day was beautiful. A slight coolness crisped the air, balanced perfectly by the brilliant sun shining down on Bryan’s boat, sparkling off the waters that surrounded him, dancing like fairies of light. Too bad this fish wasn’t enjoying things as much as he was.

Bryan had caught the fish in the little body of water in which he floated—called, quite pretentiously,
Lake
Norman. But if that tiny spit of rain-washed sludge was classified as a lake, then Bryan’s toilet at home constituted a big pond. He chuckled to himself, as he often did at his own jokes, and spiked another squirmy worm onto his hook. Bryan shifted to get comfortable then he cast the line.

His small canoe rocked at the movement, sending gentle waves rippling across the lake’s surface. He watched the
outermost wrinkle, enjoying how it traveled along like it didn’t have a care in the world. Bryan always loved it when he could keep his eyes trained on the tiny wave until it actually hit the shore. It wasn’t as easy as it sounded, and his eyes watered with the effort.

There it goes, he thought, getting smaller and smaller, smaller and smaller . . . there! It hit right over by that sandy—

Splash!

A disturbance in the water, right where the lake met the shore. Then another splash, a huge one, that sprayed droplets all over the small beach. Bryan had been staring right at the spot, so he knew no one had jumped in.

Yet another splash. Then another. It looked like some kid thrashing about with his arms, trying to douse all of his friends in the face. Bryan used to love doing that when he’d been a kid.

There was only one problem. There wasn’t a kid anywhere in sight. Or an adult, for that matter. Nobody.

The disturbance continued. Curious, Bryan laid his fishing pole along the length of the canoe and reached for his paddle. Never taking his eyes off the white-water display, he lowered the tip down into the lake and began paddling his way over to check things out. He figured only one of three things was possible.

One, they had themselves a ghost right here in Lake Norman.

Two, some vicious sea monster had found itself a way to the lake from the ocean.

Or three, Bryan Cannon had finally flipped his lid and gone bonkers.

The closer he approached, the worse the splashing. Great cascades of water shot up everywhere—five, ten feet in the air. A curtain of spray unfurled next to him as he rowed along, the water soaking him and sluicing down the sides of the boat. For the first time, terror crept through Bryan’s innards, and he realized it might not have been the smartest thing in the world to come so close to whatever
thing
was under the water.

He stopped paddling, slowing to a drift. As he did so, the splashing abruptly ceased. In a matter of seconds, the surface of the lake grew relatively calm, the small waves lapping against his canoe the only evidence anything had happened at all. If anything, the sudden stillness only scared Bryan more. He stared at the spot.

Something started rising out of the water.

Bryan shrieked as he saw what looked like an upside-down glass bowl break the surface of the lake like a bubble, shimmering like wet crystal. The bubble formed into the rough shape of a head, although there were no eyes or nose or mouth. Rising higher, the thing had a neck, and then shoulders, all made out of water. Up and up it rose,
forming
itself, growing out of the lake’s surface like a demon rising from its grave. Before long, a human-shaped creature of water stood in front of Bryan, floating on clear feet, the sun casting spectrum-colored glimmers of light as it shone through the apparition.

Bryan sucked in a huge gulp of air, ready to let out the biggest scream of his life. But before he could do it, the watery ghost held up its arms and a sudden wave of water exploded from under its feet, crashing forward and down toward the canoe. Hundreds, maybe thousands of gallons of water, slammed on top of Bryan like a deluge from ancient and angry gods.

Bryan Cannon would never eat a catfish again.

~

If the waterkelt had a brain, it might’ve been impressed with its display of power. If the creature had a heart, it might’ve felt ashamed for causing the death of an innocent person. It had neither, so it simply walked its way to the shore and up into the surrounding trees, leaving behind a wet and muddy trail.

It knew where to go and what to do when it got there. So did its companion, which had been created on the other side of the lake. Their bodies sparkled and flashed in the sunlight like glistening quicksilver as they marched toward their duty.

Only their creator, Mistress Jane, understood the irony of the situation as she observed from a place very far away. Water, the basic element which sustains all human life, was about to be used for quite the opposite.

First stop, the Higginbottom house.

And then—revenge.

Part 1

The Dark Basement

Chapter
1

~

Two Very Different Missions

Sato shivered, then grimaced. His rain-soaked clothes felt icky against his skin; it felt as if an army of leeches clung to him for dear life. He’d stood in the open for barely a minute, trying to figure out where he’d arrived exactly. Drenched already, he looked about, confused.

The air had the feel of twilight, though he knew it was almost noon in this Reality. The reason for the darkness floated above him—massive, heavy clouds of gray-black that were emptying their contents on his sopping-wet head. The clouds seemed close enough to touch. George had warned him that this Reality was a dreary, dreadful place where it rained constantly. Sato couldn’t have agreed more.

But he saw no tombstones, no plaques planted in the ground to mark graves. He stood on concrete—or something like it. Hard and flat, the ground was dotted with regularly-spaced holes to drain away the water as quickly as it fell. Sato was glad for that. He didn’t relish the idea of standing in a deep pool of water.

Why do I always get stuck with these jobs?
Sato thought to himself. If it wasn’t a windy, snow-swept mountaintop insane asylum, it was a rainy parking lot supposedly full of dead people. Fun stuff.

He noticed a small, square building about forty feet away, a scarce shadow in the wet darkness. No lights shone from any windows or outdoor fixtures. Seeing nothing else in any direction except the flat expanse of hole-dotted pavement, Sato walked toward the dark building.

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