Authors: Shannon Hale
The warehouse was coffin dark. I put out a hand, feeling
my way up the stairs.
I knew I wasn’t alone.
I strained to hear movement. A scuffed foot, the rustle of
clothing. The clink of ammunition. Anything.
There was nothing. Just the sound of my own labored
breathing.
If I had known all that would happen these past months,
would I still have entered that stupid sweepstakes?
No, I thought. Never.
But my hand pressed against the tokens in my chest, protective.
I climbed faster.
Our team was shattered. Two of us left. Only one would
walk away from this encounter. But I didn’t want to kill
again. And I didn’t want to die.
Maisie Danger Brown just wanted to get away from
home for a bit, see something new. She never intended
to fall in love. And she never imagined stumbling into a
frightening plot that kills her friends and just might kill
her, too. A plot that is already changing life on Earth as
we know it. There’s no going back. She is the only thing
standing between danger and annihilation.
From
New York Times
bestselling author Shannon Hale
comes a novel for teens that asks, How far would you go
to save the ones you love? And how far would you go to
save everyone else?
SHANNON HALE is the
New York Times
bestselling
author of Newbery Honor book
Princess Academy
and its
sequel,
Palace of Stone
, as well as the Books of Bayern,
Book
of A Thousand Days
, two graphic novels,
Rapunzel’s Revenge
and
Calamity Jack
(co-authored with her husband, Dean
Hale), and three books for adults, including
Austenland
,
now a major motion picture. Shannon lives with her family
near Salt Lake City, Utah.
www.shannonhale.com
@haleshannon
Awards and praise for
Palace of Stone
A
New York Times
Bestseller
A Junior Library Guild Selection
A
VOYA
Perfect Ten
“Absolutely incredible . . . this is the book
we have all been waiting for.”
—Jennifer L. Holm, three-time Newbery Honoree and
New York Times
bestselling author of
Turtle in Paradise
“Shannon Hale is a master of fantasy. In
Palace of Stone
,
she raises her own stakes with a gorgeously-written sequel
about the heartbreaking complications of revolution,
friendship, romance, and returning home.”
—Stephanie Perkins,
New York Times
bestselling
author of
Anna and the French Kiss
“Hale’s skill as a storyteller will charm her audience . . .
nobody else has quite the same knack for seamlessly segueing
between the folksy, intimate charm of an extended fairy tale
and the larger canvas and more epic scope of high fantasy.”
—
Horn Book
“Miri may be just a young woman from Mt. Eskel, but in
Palace of Stone
she proves once again that with quick wit
and brave words, one person really can change the world.”
—
School Library Journal
“Powerful and deeply engaging . . . Miri’s clear voice keeps
the story hers and her people’s. There’s lovely . . . descriptions
and vivid warmth to Miri’s friendships, her longing for
home and her thirst to learn more and more.”
—
Kirkus Reviews
BLOOMSBURY PUBLISHING
TITLE: Dangerous
AUTHOR: Shannon Hale
ISBN: 978-1-59990-168-8
FORMAT: Hardcover teen novel
TRIM: 5 ½ x 8 ¼
PRICE: $17.99 U.S. / $21.00 Can
PUB DATE: April 2014
TENTATIVE PAGE COUNT: 400
AGES: 12 and up
GRADES: 7 and up
CONTACT: Katy Hershberger
(212) 419-5340
Please send us two copies of your review.
Bloomsbury Publishing • 1385 Broadway • New York, NY 10018
All specifications are provisional. This proof should not be quoted
without comparison to the final corrected text. It does not reflect
the quality, page size, or thickness of the finished book. This galley
was printed in the U.S.A.
DANGEROUS
BOOKS BY SHANNON HALE
~
Princess Academy
Princess Academy: Palace of Stone
~
THE BOOKS OF BAYERN
The Goose Girl
Enna Burning
River Secrets
Forest Born
~
GRAPHIC NOVELS
with Dean Hale, illustrations by Nathan Hale
Rapunzel’s Revenge
Calamity Jack
~
FOR ADULTS
Austenland
Midnight in Austenland
The Actor and the Housewife
DANGEROUS
S H A N N O N H A L E
Copyright © 2014 by Shannon Hale
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
First published in the United States of America in January 2014
by Bloomsbury Books for Young Readers
www.bloomsbury.com
For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Bloomsbury BFYR, 1385 Broadway, New York, New York 10018
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
available upon request
ISBN: 978-1-59990-168-8
All papers used by Bloomsbury Publishing, Inc., are natural, recyclable products made from wood grown in well-managed forests. The manufacturing processes
conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin.
For Wren, for many reasons, but mostly because she’s awesome
DANGEROUS
P r o l o g u e
The warehouse was coffin dark. I put out a hand, feeling
my way up the stairs.
I knew I wasn’t alone.
I strained to hear movement. A scuffed foot, the rustle of
clothing. The clink of ammunition. Anything.
There was nothing. Just the sound of my own labored
breathing.
If I had known all that would happen these past months,
would I still have entered that stupid sweepstakes?
No, I thought. Never.
But my hand pressed against the tokens in my chest, pro-
tective.
I climbed faster.
Our team was shattered. Two of us left. Only one would
walk away from this encounter. But I didn’t want to kill again.
And I didn’t want to die.
C h a p t e r 1
Every superhero has an origin story. Mine began with a
box of cereal.
“Mom?” I said, pulling a box of Blueberry Bonanza out of
a grocery sack. “Really?”
I’d like to say I was helping her unload the groceries be-
cause I’m that wonderful. Really it was an excuse to escape.
When she’d returned from the store, I’d been working on Ac-
cursed Geometry.
“They were on sale,” Mom said. “I thought you’d like to try
something different.”
I opened the box and poured some “Fruitish Nuggets and
Marshmallow Fun” into my hand to show her.
“Oh!” she said. “I didn’t realize they were so blue.”
“
Guácala
,” I said. The Spanish word for gross sounded so
perfectly gross.
“
Guácala
,” she agreed.
I was going to put the cereal to solitary confinement on a
high shelf when I noticed the words “Astronaut Boot Camp” on
the back of the box: SWEEPSTAKES OPEN TO US RESIDENTS AGES
12-18. GRAND PRIZE INCLUDES THREE WEEKS AT HOWELL ASTRONAUT
BOOT CAMP.
“Thanks for the spontaneous help,” Mom was saying as she
put away the fridge items. “Am I correct in assuming I’m saving
you from geometry?”
“Now Mom, you know I find nothing so thrilling as calcu-
lating the area of a triangle.”
Dangerous
I shelved the box, too ashamed to show Mom the sweep-
stakes. Since I was five I wanted to be an astronaut. But little
kids always dream of being astronauts, princesses, or spies and
then grow up to realize that’s impossible. I should have out-
grown my space fantasy by now.
“Hey, Maisie,” Dad said, coming in from the garage. “Did
you hear about the dog that gave birth to puppies in the park?
She was arrested for littering.”
“Heard it,” I said. “Can you really not remember which
puns you’ve tried on me?”
“I have a photographic memory, but it was never developed.”
“Heard that one too.”
Newly motivated, I hurried through math so I could get on
the Astronaut Boot Camp website.
In order to enter the sweepstakes online, I had to fill out a
survey. It was crazy long.
“Wow, there’s something shockingly unnatural about
bright-blue food, isn’t there?” Dad called from the kitchen.
How had he even found the cereal? “Did you know there’s no
FDA-approved natural source for blue food dye?”
“Yep.”
“The color blue is an appetite suppressant, our body’s pri-
mal instinct to warn us away from poisonous things,” he went
on, in full lecture mode. “Blueberries are actually purple skin
around green pulp. And red foods like maraschino cherries owe
their color to the ground-up bodies of female cochineal insects.”
“Mom bought the cereal,” I called back. I started to feel
guilty, as if I were lying to my parents, so I added, “Um, read
the back of the box.”
“Oh!” Dad leaned around the kitchen wall. “Maisie, you
5
Shannon Hale
know the odds of winning the sweepstakes must be astronomi-
cal, no pun intended. For once.”
“I know. I just thought, why not enter, right?”
“Okay then. When you grow up to be a famous astronaut,
don’t forget your humble roots. Those who get too big for their
britches will be exposed in the end.”
“Enough already!”
And the survey went on and on.
“This is weird . . .”
“What?” Dad was sitting on the couch now, reading a sci-
ence journal and absently rubbing his bald spot. These past few
years, the spot had degraded into more of a bald territory. He
only had a rim of puffy hair left. I was afraid I’d hurt his feelings
if I suggested he just shave it all off.