Authors: Shannon Hale
“I wasn’t there for the kidnapping part. GT called me to
that warehouse this evening. He had a creepy video of my fa-
ther talking about me. Then I found my father and GT there,
and GT had Jacques cut off my father’s arm.” My voice cracked,
completely without my permission. But it probably aided the
bewildered teenager schtick. It wasn’t too hard to pretend.
One of the cops gave me a glass of water, which I gulped
down. My stomach growled.
“I’m real hungry,” I said. Yes indeed, just like a little lost
orphan child.
“Maisie, how did your father get from the warehouse to the
hospital?” the older one asked.
“I carried him.” There were witnesses. No fudging this one.
“Probably adrenaline helped? Like when people can suddenly
lift a van off a trapped child?”
The doctor came in to talk to me, so the cops started to leave.
“Hey, GT’s son, Jonathan Wilder?” I said. “He’s . . . abnor-
mally smart. And involved somehow. You should keep an eye
out for him.”
The Wild Card. Brutus said he’d killed Mi-sun. Jacques
confirmed it. And he was the thinker—wouldn’t he have known
that sinking Ruth would kill her? Maybe he designed GT’s
chamber himself and sent me there to get caught. Maybe the
tokens had messed him up as much as Ruth and Jacques and
he’d just been better at hiding it.
And where was Mom? There were too many worries bang-
ing together in my brain, but I tried to shake some extra space
for hearing what the doctor told me about Dad. I felt myself
sinking when he used words like “critical” and “blood loss” and
“shock.” It’s pretty sad when “viable limb” and “clean severing”
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are a conversation’s high points.
My body ached and shivered with hunger. I went to the
cafeteria. Since joining with Wilder, I always carried emergen-
cy cash in my pocket, and I spent a chunk of it on dinner. The
cashier seemed so alarmed by my piled-high tray, I had to offer
an explanation.
“I have a parasite,” I said.
She looked down as if my eye contact might be contagious.
The cafeteria was mostly dark and empty. I dialed Mom’s
number over and over. Mom was the one who used to put cool
cloths on my head when I had a fever and bring me cold soda
and soup. And sing me Spanish songs. And cuddle with me on
the couch.
O Mami, me siento tan sola.
By ten in the morning they had reattached Dad’s arm, and
I was asleep on the hard little couch in his recovery room.
I was dreaming. I was falling. Sleep was not rest.
“Maisie . . .”
I woke up fast. His eyes were barely slits.
“Yeah, Dad, it’s me.”
“Your mom?”
“Not answering her phone. Did GT have her?”
His eyelids lowered, but he swallowed and spoke. “I don’t
think so. They got me at the apartment. Your mom was at work.
If she went home and found me gone, she would run.”
“How do we find her?” I asked.
He grimaced with pain. “I don’t know.”
His eyes closed for a few seconds and opened again.
“My arm?”
“They’re both here.”
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“Did you . . .” He tried to swallow, his mouth dry. I swabbed
his lips and tongue with a sponge-tipped thing the nurse had left.
He squinted up at me, his voice a crackling whisper. “Did you
hear about the man who lost his left arm? He’s all right now.”
I smiled. “It was your right arm, Dad. Just like me.”
“Oh.” His eyes shut. I thought he’d fallen asleep until he
spoke again. “Did you hear about the guy who lost his right
arm? He’s left with the left.”
“Yeah, work on that one.”
“I will.”
His words were barely an exhale when he said, “Maisie, I
love you. And this isn’t . . . don’t worry . . .”
“I love you too, Dad.”
I watched him sleep, like maybe he used to watch me. I
imagined my infant self, unaware that anything was wrong, and
my parents, crying over their baby born without an arm.
Or maybe they really hadn’t minded. Maybe they were
surprised that first day of kindergarten to see the other kids
mocking me. And Mom—or Dad maybe—said, never mind
then. We’ll just keep her home.
And
that
was why I lived a tight little life with nothing
much beyond our front yard. Not what GT said, not because my
mother was somebody else.
Dad always called Mom
cariña
, which meant sweetheart.
He never called her by her name, I realized. He never called
her Inocencia.
I lightly touched his bandaged arm. The tips of his fingers
were a pale, grayish color and corpse cold. The doctor had said
it would take time to see if the reattachment worked.
I dialed Mom again. And again.
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Luther.
I woke with his name on my tongue and drool from my
open mouth wetting my cheek.
A nurse was coming in to check Dad’s blood pressure, so I
went into his bathroom. Luther’s phone number had sat behind
my eyes every day, a forbidden string of numbers. I dialed them
now. One of his sisters answered. I tried to disguise my voice
when I asked for Luther.
“Hello?”
Luther. My heart buzzed.
“Luthe, don’t—”
“Maisie! What the frak—”
“Shut up! Questions later. Listen now. Stuff a backpack
with some changes of clothing and as much money as you can—
quarters, bills, whatever, but try to get a few hundred dollars.
Leave your parents a standard ‘don’t worry and I’ll come home
when I can’ note with no mention of me and ride your bike to
that one pay phone. I’ll call you there.”
“Okay,” he said.
No argument? No demands? Luther rocked!
“Hurry,” I said and hung up.
GT hadn’t taken Luther yet. Maybe that meant he didn’t
know what Luther meant to me. But Wilder did. I’d been vague
about the pay phone just in case his phone was bugged. We
used to ride our bikes to the corner market to buy Laffy Taffys
and would check that pay phone for spare coins.
Shannon Hale
Seven minutes later I called the pay phone and he answered.
“Maisie?”
“Oh man, Luthe, it’s so great to hear your voice.”
“What’s going on?”
“Bad guys got my dad and maybe my mom, and I don’t
want them to get you.”
I told him to ride his bike to the downtown bus station,
take a bus to Philadelphia and meet me at the hospital.
“Okay,” he said again.
“You’re taking this very well,” I said.
“Naturally I’d been expecting this sort of a thing ever since
you left. Sudden disappearance is the price I pay for being a
superhero’s best friend.”
Best friend. He’d said it. I pinched the top of my nose to
keep from crying.
“Be careful, okay? I really don’t want you to die.”
“Affirmative.”
“I missed you, Luthe.”
“Yeah, me too.”
When I came out of the bathroom, the nurse was gone.
Dad was awake.
“Mom?” he asked.
I shook my head. Her phone no longer rang when I called.
No way to contact her, and she wouldn’t know where to contact
us. I only just stopped myself from punching through the wall.
“What is the Yellow Flag?” I asked.
He sighed. “
La Bandera Amarilla
. A militant group. They
live in
el Gran Chaco
, a desert wilderness between Paraguay
and Bolivia. Your mom grew up with them. Her parents . . .”
“Were soldiers?” I asked.
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“In a way.” He adjusted in bed, wincing. “Paraguay was
controlled by a dictator for a long time. Your grandfather saw
his brother tortured. Your grandmother’s farm was seized by the
government, much of her family shot. They joined an opposi-
tion group. That’s where your mother was born. Her parents
were killed trying to raid an armory when your mom was eigh-
teen. She was wanted too, so she had to leave.”
“She’d . . . she’d killed?”
Dad winced. “I don’t think so. But whatever she did, she
was just a kid.”
Like me, I thought.
Did that mean I was innocent of Ruth’s and Mi-sun’s
blood? If I, oh I don’t know, murdered Wilder, in twenty years
would people say, “Sure she killed the guy, but hey, she was just
a kid!”
Dad was saying, “After her parents’ death, her community
managed to get her falsified papers and into a university in New
Mexico. That was where we met. But she was wanted. After
we had you, she became even more cautious. She worked from
home, made no friends, did nothing to draw notice. She lived in
fear of being taken from us and dying in a Paraguayan prison.”
“You knew this all along?” I asked.
He nodded. “But I loved her so much.” His voice cracked.
“I
love
her . . .”
I climbed onto his bed, curling up on his left side, as may-
be I used to when I was little. He put his left hand on my cheek,
pressing my head to his, and I could feel the wet of his tears.
“We’ll find her,” I said.
I could feel him nod but he didn’t speak. We lay there for
a time.
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“What’s her real name?” I whispered.
“Let’s wait until she’s back, okay? Let her explain.” He shift-
ed in his pillow and groaned with pain. “It can wait.”
I hated the word “wait.”
I could go to Florida, but how would I find her if she was
hiding? Every time I left just to go to the cafeteria, I worried
GT’s guys would take Dad again, or Jacques would come claim
another limb. And who knew what Wilder’s plans were? At night
I barely slept on my cot, footsteps in the hall bolting me upright.
But at least one knot of worry relaxed when, two days later,
Luther stepped into Dad’s room.
Late-afternoon sunlight slanted through the window, slic-
ing dust motes in the air. The dust animated with the motion
of his entry, dancing around his shoulders, and I imagined they
were giddy-happy he was here too.
Personified dust motes, Maisie? I was more tired than I
realized.
“Miss,” the police sentry started.
“He’s okay,” I said. “He’s family.”
The officer shut the door.
Luther was wearing sunglasses. He had Laelaps. I dropped
to my knees to pet him. Pet the dog, that is. Not Luther.
“Pretending to be blind so you can bring a dog into a hos-
pital?” I asked.
“And onto a bus. Surprisingly effective.”
Dad was asleep. Luther took off his sunglasses, and we
stared at each other. I wondered if he thought I looked changed.
Luther seemed the same. He wore his puffy orange parka and
green knit cap, and with his cheeks ruddy from the cold outside,
he looked like an alarmed pumpkin.
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He said, “You think I look like a pumpkin.”
“No I don’t.”
“You do. You always make fun of this coat.”
I laughed without meaning to.
“Maybe I
want
to look like a pumpkin, did you ever think
of that?”
I play punched him on the shoulder. “I’m glad you’re here.”
“My parental units are probably freaked out.”
“They’d better be.”
Luther’s mom once told me that even as a baby Luther
didn’t like to be hugged or kissed. I gathered that once she had
some snuggly little girls, she just kind of gave up on her son. He
was smart enough to do his homeschool work on his own, and
she let him. His dad kept long hours at work, his mom took her
girls shopping, and Luther just hung out with me.
My mom wasn’t thrilled with Luther’s parents. Every time
Mom saw Luther, she kissed him on each cheek. She called
him
mi hijo
. She stocked our kitchen with his favorite foods.
Thinking about Mom hurt my throat. I blinked rapidly
and looked up.
“So tell me what in the frak is going on.”
That conversation took us through dinner. We were eating
nachos in the back booth of the cafeteria, and I found myself
smiling. Despite my dad’s arm, my missing mom, my general
dead-or-alive status, Luther was here.
The newspaper certainly wasn’t giggle-inspiring. A full-
color photo of Jacques in a havoc helmet graced the front page
under the headline: “BLADE RUNNER” ROBS SECOND BANK. The
reporter described a young man in a shiny bodysuit who carried
two swords. Jacques must have been on his own. GT would
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never let him be so sloppy.
“Blade Runner,” Luther said. “Clever.”
“I called him Jack Havoc.”
Luther shrugged. “I like Blade Runner better. It’s the name
of that old sci-fi movie, and you know, Jacques has blades and
he’s on the run.”
“Whatever.”
“If we’re seeing this then Wilder is too.”
“If Wilder gets to Jacques, he’ll either kill him for his token
or convince him to help take me out. I wouldn’t have a chance
against both of them.”
“But cutting off your dad’s arm? It seems extreme.”
I shivered. “I keep thinking about how Jacques was unbeat-