Authors: Shannon Hale
desk, but the screws burned holes straight through. I shielded
my eyes with my havocked arm, and just in time to feel the
pings of screws hit. The armor held.
I waited for him to reach into his bag for more ammo, then
I stood and threw two havoc knives, aiming for his legs. One
grazed his leg, the other stuck in a crate behind him.
He pulled it out, smiling. I’d just given him ammo that
could cut through my armor.
I started to run, but he shot the havoc knife. There was a
blinding streak of blue. The knife cut through the havoc armor
over Fido and stuck into the arm itself. In the second I paused
to look, Wilder must have scavenged my other knife, because
he shot again, slicing Fido clean off. The hand and forearm
that had felt like my own now dropped dead to the floor. Just a
few centimeters remained attached, looking like charred flesh.
Phantom pains pierced me.
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I dislodged the remainder of my arm and threw it back at
Wilder, too angry to think. Angry not just that Fido was broken,
but that
he’d
broken it. More than ever, I felt how every kiss had
made me vulnerable. I wasn’t a fierce warrior. I was a stupid girl
who let myself get duped.
He picked up the broken piece of Fido and shot it at me.
How fitting if it had torn right through my head and ended it
all, but his shot went wide. I couldn’t depend on the next one
missing me. I had to keep moving.
I switched my impact boots to hop, slammed my feet down,
and shot into the air.
“Whoa,” he said, and I knew he hadn’t been expecting
that. The Great and Powerful Thinker had never seen my
impact boots.
I grabbed a metal beam, grew a havoc hook over my right
arm, and using hand and hook swung from rafter to rafter. I
hefted myself up and quietly crawled through a few more raf-
ters, huddling in a recess of the ceiling. In his surprise, Wilder
had hesitated, so by the time he started to fire again, he’d lost
me. His thinker-tracking ability wasn’t exact, and the moonlight
of the windows didn’t reach this high. I prayed the lights were
off because the warehouse didn’t have power. If he could turn
them on, I’d be an easy target.
Blue streaks peppered the ceiling in sweeping arcs, lug
nuts and screws ripping through the metal roof. A couple hit
the back of my head with bruising power. On his next sweep,
something large struck my jaw. I swallowed a whimper of pain.
My blood tasted like a mouthful of quarters.
The blue shots slowed. Each strike thinned my armor, and
I had to layer new skin over the dents. I grew a blade in my
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havoc hook arm, turning it into a scythe—so sharp the edge was
made up of single molecules. It would cut off Wilder’s arm with
the gentlest nudge. It would slice through his ribs, right into his
heart. My arm trembled.
Wilder was almost under me now, walking as he peered
into the rafters to my right.
I switched my boots to impact and dropped ten meters
down behind him. Wilder started to turn. My blade arm was al-
ready lifted, my insides fiery with hatred. I could end Jonathan
Wilder. I brought my blade down—
And stopped, the blade millimeters from his neck.
I’m not
Jacques. I’m not Ruthless. I’m Maisie Danger Brown
. Instead, I
slapped him with the flat of the blade against his head.
He stumbled forward, turning to shoot at me as I ran away.
Something large struck me in my back, and I fell face-down. He
was shooting cut pipes now, the kind Mi-sun had put through
tank armor. My breath knocked out of me so hard, for a few sec-
onds I wasn’t sure I’d ever get it back. And when I did, I almost
wished I hadn’t. I
hurt
.
I ran again, growing more havoc skin over my back. He
struck again, this time in my right leg. I fell flat on my face as
another pipe flew just over my head.
Get up. Run, Maisie.
I switched my boots back to hop and scrambled to my feet.
The pain in my right leg was so bad my stomach twisted, want-
ing to retch. I slammed my left foot down and shot into the
air, pitching to one side. My armored head struck the roof as
I grabbed a rafter. I swung to a new position and clung there,
shaking. Whenever I lifted my arm, pain pierced my left side.
Broken ribs?
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Blue shot streaked around me, some hitting, but I stifled a
cry, holding my breath.
Attack, I told myself. Go attack.
Several of my bones were broken. My Fido arm was gone.
I felt cut in half, shattered, and defenseless. I’d had the chance
to kill him and I hadn’t.
“Come on, Maisie! This is a sorry game of hide-and-seek!”
The roof seemed to tilt, and I clung on, shutting my eyes,
too dizzy to see.
An image of Jacques hovered behind my lids, starved be-
neath his crumbling armor. Not gonna happen.
I’d come equipped with four camelbacks—those back-
packs made to carry water for long hikes, though mine were
filled with high-calorie energy drinks. I wore them against my
skin, under my armor.
I removed my mouth armor and put a straw in my mouth,
draining one of the camelbacks. My fingers and toes shivered.
Wilder was shooting the ceiling a few meters away. “Throw
some more of those homegrown knives, Maisie. That was a bril-
liant idea.”
I removed my scythe hook, hiding it up in the rafters out
of his reach. Apparently I couldn’t make myself use a lethal
weapon. Instead I grew an arm over Fido’s absence, ending in
a havoc fist.
I jumped down behind him and punched him in the head.
He turned to shoot, off-balance from my strike, and
missed as my boots shot me back in the air. My broken right leg
screamed at me, so I tucked it up, landing just on my left and
hitting Wilder again as I descended, a left-right punch. He shot,
but I was back in the air. I switched to impact while still arching
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over his head and then landed and stayed. He was expecting
another hop and aimed high. So while he shot over my shoulder,
I struck him in the face.
I’d hit Hairy a few times when he tutored me. Hairy could
take a punch. Wilder could not. He stumbled back.
I punched him again, getting him in the mouth. It felt re-
ally good. He fumbled for his bag of metal ammo, but I grew a
short blade and sliced the bag from his side, throwing it as far
as I could.
He faked left then dove right for a loose pipe. I kneed him
in the gut. It hurt my broken leg, but not as much as it hurt Wilder. He coughed and fell over, and I held his wrists together,
growing havoc handcuffs over them and sealing in his danger-
ous fingers. I kneed him again to slow him down so I could call
Howell—wait, he’d killed my phone.
How was I going to get him outside? I was hobbled, and
he was stronger. His weapon hands were encased in havoc, but
could he simply shoot them off? I grabbed his ankles, cuffing
those as well.
“Don’t you dare truss me up,” he said, still coughing from
my kick. “Cut me loose and let’s end this!”
“No.” I bounced on my left foot, my broken leg keeping me
from pacing. Could I risk leaving him alone while I went for
help? Could I drag him out on my own?
He muttered something in Russian.
“Translation?” I said.
He didn’t reply. He was rubbing his chin against his shoul-
der as if to scratch an itch, but he must have had a little pouch
there, because there was a rip and then he was holding some-
thing white in his teeth. I leaped for him, but he kicked me
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back, closed his lips over whatever it was, and chewed. His smile
was so wicked it made my knees shake.
“Never mess with the thinker,” he said. “I always have a
backup plan.”
Had his thinker-self found some drug that would increase
the power of his shooter-self? Any second the bands over his
hands might crack in an electric-blue burst. I took a step back
and grew a blade.
He lifted his cuffed hands, still smiling. I hopped behind a
pile of crates. I waited. No sound.
I peeked. Wilder was lying down. His hands were still
shielded. His eyes were closed.
“Wilder?”
He didn’t move. I stepped out.
“Wilder, are you playing possum?”
Blade forward, I walked to him and nudged his foot with
my armored boot. Really scientific, Maisie. Might as well poke
him with a stick.
“Wilder?” I said again. I knelt over him, releasing the ar-
mor from my fingers so I could search for a pulse at his neck, a
breath from his nose, any sign of life. Nothing.
Wilder was dead.
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My head felt thick, my body so buried in armor I seemed
to be falling into it, deep into nothing, away from life and move-
ment and toward numbness.
Wilder had gambled on some trick pill to make him more
powerful, but it had backfired and stopped his heart. My own
heart was going rapid fire.
I felt in his mouth to make sure his tongue wasn’t block-
ing his throat. But I was more robot than flesh, so I released the
havoc skin from my upper body. It clattered to the floor.
Maybe the trick was the pill made him seem dead. He’d
wake now that I was unarmored and vulnerable. I stood back.
He didn’t wake.
“Not like Ruthless,” I said and started chest compressions
with my one hand. If I could keep his heart pumping, his tokens
would stay put. I wouldn’t have to choose between losing them
and claiming them. I started to cry—a crazy-girl, bewildered
sobbing.
I winced with every press, afraid to feel his tokens rising,
angry that he would really die and put me through this, and
then laughing like a
loca
because I was in this nightmare again,
killing someone and trying to save him at the same time.
“Wilder!” I slapped him across the face. “Breathe!”
He didn’t breathe. I held my hand to his chest, about to
do more compressions, but stopped short. The skin of my hand
tingled. Was I was feeling the electricity of his tokens, nanites
zooming in, ready to abandon his body? If they came out, I
Shannon Hale
would have to fight that nanite-inspired urge to keep the tokens
safe. Last time I had lost that fight. I couldn’t bear the agony
again.
The pain of that decision seemed to throb in my crushed
leg, my broken ribs, building and tightening in my chest. I
leaned over him and gave him mouth-to-mouth. It was pointless.
Without compressions his heart would never restart. I wouldn’t
take his tokens, but I didn’t want them lost to outer space ei-
ther. And I didn’t want to let someone else die. I couldn’t face
Wilder’s ghost in my nightmares.
I breathed into his mouth. I breathed and breathed and
breathed—
Ow. OW! Fierce pain in my chest. I tried to push away
from Wilder, but it had already begun—his tokens, twisting to-
gether, white as light, rising from his chest and sinking directly
into mine. They were supposed to go through hands! No fair!
I grabbed the ends as they dug into me. That made the pain
even more brilliant, like reaching into my own gut and trying to
pull out my organs. The freezing heat ripped through my ster-
num and slammed against my heart with a force that knocked
me back and made me briefly blind and deaf to the world. My
whole chest was fiercely hot, then ice cold, then numb right be-
fore the explosion of pain. The other times seemed gentle to me
now. Wilder’s tokens burned, as if someone stuck his hand right
into my chest, like a bully might grab your shirt, and twisted my
heart and lungs in his fist. I wanted to die. I wanted to die, die,
die . . .
My broken ribs snapped back into place, my jaw straight-
ened, my left leg flamed, nanites fixing up their host body, heal-
ing my injuries while my chest was ravaged.
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Dangerous
No. I would not be responsible for another death. Wilder
did
not
get to haunt me alongside Ruth, Mi-sun, and Jacques.
Clawing my way free from the torture, seizing back my strength,
I put my hand on his chest and restarted compressions.
Strength roared through my muscles as the brute token lit
up inside me. I became more aware of Wilder’s body, the give
of his ribs beneath the heels of my hand. The ease with which
I could crack them, even push my hand straight through his
chest.
A heartbeat.
Maybe I just sensed my own heartbeat in my hand. I lay
my ear against his chest.
Two heartbeats, stuttered and unsure. A raised chest. A
breath.
First-aid training at boot camp had neglected to tell us
what to do once the CPR actually worked. Did I stop compres-