Authors: Shannon Hale
and galaxies and massive expanses of endlessness. My brain
can’t think about it without having a heart attack.”
“Your brain has a heart?”
I laughed because I was sounding ridiculous, and for some
reason, I was loving it. “Sure, and it suffers a massive coronary
any time I try to comprehend the hugeness and possibilities of
space. I mean, just think about Jupiter’s moon Europa. With its
oxygen-based atmosphere and liquid ocean beneath a sea of ice,
it’s very likely a home to extraterrestrial life, which would be the
biggest discovery since . . . since . . .
ever
.”
“Someday we’ll spend trillions to get to Europa only to dis-
cover very expensive bacteria,” he said.
“By examining what’s different from us, we understand our-
selves better.” Why wouldn’t I shut up already? “Um, what lured
you to astronaut boot camp?”
“I have a crush on Cassiopeia.”
“Cassiopeia.”
Wilder nodded, eyes wide, eyebrows raised. “She is
stacked
.
Have you seen the size of her stars?”
“Right. And besides the bodacious and boastful Cassiopeia,
anything else drawing your attention to the big black yonder?”
Wilder’s teasing tone weakened. “I get bored easily. But
I can’t
know
space, so it keeps me wondering. Maybe there’s something worth finding out there, something that’s missing
down here. Life feels like half of itself.”
“‘A dream within a dream.’”
“And I want to wake up.”
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Shannon Hale
For the first time, I felt like Wilder was saying something
he really believed. But I couldn’t think of anything to say back
that wouldn’t sound nerdy.
“Maybe this is stupid, but do you ever feel like you’re
doomed?” He laughed. “Nevermind, anytime the word
doomed
is involved, it’s definitely stupid. But it’s like I’m chasing noth-
ing, and I can’t stop until . . .”
“Until what?” I said.
His gaze was up, almost as if he’s forgotten I was there.
“Till the stars run away, and the shadows eat the moon.”
I knew that line. He was quoting William Butler Yeats.
“‘Ah, penny, brown penny, brown penny,’” I finished the
poem, “‘One cannot begin it too soon.’”
He looked at me. His lips parted. Then he studied my face
as he quoted, “‘Oh, love is the crooked thing.’”
For the barest moment, I became aware of every part of my
body. Not only the pressure of my legs on the roof, the wishy
breeze tickling the hairs on my arm, the rise of my chest as I in-
haled, the click of my eyelids as I blinked. Not just those places
of touch and motion, but all of it. Everything. Everywhere. I
thrilled with life. And I looked at Wilder.
“I said I didn’t want you to woo me.” My voice sounded
foreign to my own ears.
“I wasn’t.”
“Oh. So . . . what does that mean, ‘love is the crooked
thing’?”
“I don’t know.” He was still looking at me. “I just like the
way it sounds.”
I looked down, twisting a loose thread on my T-shirt.
“Poetry kind of reminds me of looking at things through a
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Dangerous
microscope.” I didn’t know what I was saying—I just started to
talk. “I got a microscope when I turned six. You know, physi-
cist mom, biologist dad. I examined things I thought I knew—a
strand of my hair, a feather, an onion peel. Seeing them up
close, they changed. I started to guess how, you know, things are
more complicated than they seem, but that they have patterns,
and the patterns are beautiful. Space has all those patterns and
intricacies and mysteries, but not tiny under a microscope. So
big, so expansive, when I think about it, I feel like the solid parts
of me are dissolving and I’m out there in the blackness and light,
moving with the whole universe.”
I glanced up to see if he was bored. Instead I felt his hand
on my cheek and his lips on mine. Just a touch, a softness, a
greeting. One kiss that lasted seven rapid heartbeats. His other
hand lifted, both holding my face. A second kiss—one, two,
three, four, five beats. It was easy to count by my heart. I could
feel it thud through my whole body. My left hand clutched my
right arm, afraid to touch him or to not. His lips moved again
(how did mine know how to move with his?). A third kiss—one,
two, three, four. Only four beats before the fourth kiss. Either
the kisses were speeding up or my heart was. A fifth kiss, a sixth,
and I counted each beat. It seemed the only way to keep from
drowning. Numbers were solid things I could grip, a buoy in a
flood.
Seventh, eighth, one beat, two beats, three—
He pulled back (or I did?) but his right thumb stayed on
my cheek, his fingers on my jaw. His eyes were still closed.
“You’d better not talk about microscopes anymore,” he
whispered, “or I don’t know if I can control myself.”
I laughed. It was good to end a kiss (my first kiss—my first
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Shannon Hale
eight kisses) with a laugh, because I didn’t know what I was sup-
posed to say. Thanks for the kiss? Um, nice lips? Did you know
there are over seven hundred species of bacteria living in the
human mouth?
So I laughed again. “I’m pretty sure there are rules against
this sort of thing at astronaut boot camp.”
“I sure hope so,” said Wilder, “or it wouldn’t be nearly as
fun.”
He’s dangerous, I reminded myself. And this is not the
experience you left home for. You should run away.
I didn’t move.
36
C h a p t e r 6
Would he have kissed me again?
I lay in my bunk staring at the tiny black dents in the white
ceiling tiles, wondering how anyone can sleep after her first kiss.
Or first eight.
It might have been more, but we’d heard a noise (a security
guard?), and I hurried back to the dorm. Though once the risk
of capture was past, I wondered what wouldn’t be worth another
kiss. I rolled over, pressing my fingers against a smile, and that
was the kiss. My bare feet searching for cool, untouched spots
at the bottom of the bed, my hand full of blanket, the press of
my collarbone into the pillow. Every touch, every motion was a
reminder of Wilder’s kiss.
I didn’t want to fall asleep and miss a single hour of
remembering. But once I did, sleep was lively with dreams.
Wilder wasn’t at breakfast. I’m positive about that, since I
checked a few times. (Maybe forty-eight.) He came to the tail
end of calibration, looking sleepy, his hair wet. He winked at the
instructor and took the chair beside me.
“Hey,” he whispered to the guy sitting on my other side.
“Are you checking out my girl?”
“Wha . . . what?” the kid stuttered.
“Not that I blame you,” Wilder said, “but have some respect
for the lady.”
I hid my face with my hand.
When the bell rang for lunch, I hurried off so Wilder
wouldn’t think I expected to eat with him. But then he was
Shannon Hale
walking beside me.
“May I escort you to lunch, Danger Girl? I noticed you
have a penchant for cheese—”
Wilder stopped, staring at a man in the atrium wearing
flip-flops, long cargo shorts, and a washed-out Hawaiian shirt,
his hair a little long, his beard a little bushy. He was juxtaposed
by three large suited men, buds in their ears.
Dr. Howell approached the Hawaiian-shirt guy. “Hello,
GT. Shall we talk in my office?”
He nodded at Wilder before following Dr. Howell.
“Who was that?” I asked.
“My dad,” said Wilder.
Dr. Howell had called him GT. I remembered the name
George Theodore Wilder from Wilder’s papers.
“Does he always dress like that?” GT was not what I imag-
ined when I thought billionaire.
“Yeah, it’s a power play. Come on,” he whispered, taking
my hand.
Another first. It felt like a surrender to let someone take
charge of my one hand, but the surrender came with a thrill.
He walked quickly away from the cafeteria. “I need out of
all this for an hour, and I want you with me, okay?”
“Okay,” I said.
We ran into the parking lot. Wilder opened the driver’s
side door of an expensive-looking red convertible. He gestured
me in, and I scooted down the bench.
“And this car is . . .”
“Dad’s.” Wilder reached under the dash for a magnetic box,
pulled out a spare key, and started the engine.
“I don’t do stuff like this, you know.”
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Dangerous
“That’s what makes you so enticing. One of the things any-
way. There’s also your black magic eyes.”
“And my cunning mind and rapier wit, right?”
“Hey, baby,” he said, chucking my chin, “all the guys want
you for your mind. Isn’t it refreshing to be with someone who
only cares about your body?”
I laughed. It was becoming my default response. “You
know, I’m not going to be that girl who gets pulled in by your
cheap lines.”
“
My
lines? You’re the one who gets things steamy discuss-
ing microscopes.”
“Are you only capable of talking to me as if an audience
were listening?”
“Okay, Peligrosa. Okay.”
I felt him relax as he put his arm around my shoulder, look-
ing back as he reversed.
“So what do you usually do to escape?” he asked.
“Escape? I . . . I guess I ride my bike to Luther’s.” Man, that
sounded pathetic to me now.
“And Luther is?”
“A guy. A friend. My best friend.”
Wilder glared as we zipped out of the parking lot, and I
suspected he wasn’t just squinting against the sunlight.
The gate was open. I could see a guard in a turret. I low-
ered my head, gripping the seat. Wilder waved and drove on.
No one stopped us.
“Why’d you come with me?” he asked. The honesty of the
question startled me.
“I don’t know. You have a certain gravity about you.”
“You be Europa, and I’ll be your Jupiter.”
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Shannon Hale
“If you’re comfortable with that,” I said. “You know Jupiter
is one of the gas giants.”
“Now stop trying to woo me with all your sexy talk.”
We drove to the nearest town and found a drive-through,
filling the front seat with cheeseburgers, fried zucchini, onion
rings, sodas with straws, strawberry and chocolate shakes with
spoons. Wilder paid. Did this count as a date?
We drove and ate, music booming and the road going
straight, straight, straight, no signs, no stops, just fields and
hills forever. Sometimes he looked away from the road just to
smile at me. Maybe he was feeling like I was—that the day was
enough under the candy-blue sky, the wind swooping into the
car and taking parts of us away with it, swirling me and Wilder
into the whole big moving world.
I didn’t pretend to myself that someday I might drive
around my home-town in a convertible with Jonathan Ingalls
Wilder. He would get bored with me; summer camp would
end. This was a stolen moment, an impractical fantasy, candle
smoke that melts into the air as fast as you can blow.
I wiped mustard off his chin with my napkin.
“Thank you, darling,” he said, breaking the spell of silence.
“We should get back. They’re announcing the winners after
dinner, and I think my fireteam has a shot.”
Wilder frowned but sped back to the complex and eased us
into the spot we’d left. For a minute neither of us moved. The
day was fiery brown, the shrubs rattling with insects. It seemed
like everything was ticking toward an explosion.
“I’ve never done that with someone before,” said Wilder.
“The silence part. That it wasn’t awkward.”
He turned to look at me. My pulsed ticked to life in my
40
Dangerous
throat, and I wondered if he wanted to kiss me again. I didn’t
dare kiss him first in case I was wrong.
His glance caught in the rearview mirror. GT was standing
outside the building, watching us and chewing gum, his suited
goons flanking him. Wilder hopped out and tossed his father
the key. I scrambled out my own door.
“Jonathan . . .” GT’s voice was both inquiring and threatening.
“Everything’s under control,” Wilder said, holding his fa-
ther’s gaze as he sauntered into the building.
GT held out his hand, stopping me from following. “Hi
there. Who are you?”
“Me? I’m Maisie Danger Brown.” I don’t know why I used
my middle name—I wanted to be on the offensive, I guess.
“Brown . . .” He said the word as if tasting it for significance.
“What brought you to astronaut boot camp?”
“A box of cereal.”
His frown matched his son’s. “What’s your—” Then he
noticed Ms. Pincher. “Are you missing your arm?”
“Well, the separation was hard at first, but we’ve adjusted to
a long-distance relationship.”
His eyes flicked to the door where Wilder had gone. He
chewed, his gum clicking in his teeth, then he turned his back
and walked away.
I’m not an expert on manners, but I think he was rude.