Authors: Neal Shusterman
Dagmara gapes at him. He's joking. He must be. He wouldn't unwind his own nephew. What sort of monster would do such a thing?
“While I would love to continue this chat, Dagmara, I'm afraid we're out of time,” Divan says. “We've just crossed into Chinese airspace at an altitude of about 2,300 meters. We're no longer headed toward Burma, but west. Of course, at this low an altitude it will be a bumpy ride once you reach the Chinese mountain ranges, but not to worryâthe autopilot will steer you clear of the higher peaks.”
Dagmara struggles to grasp the things that Divan is telling her. Chinese mountains. 2,300 meters, Autopilot. And Malik. None of it seems real to her. It's all a hallucination brought on by the tranqs. Please let it be so. Please let it be so.
“I'll be leaving you now, dear sister. “Saying âsayonara,' as it were. You see, there are two parachutes on board. One for me and one for my valet.”
“Waitâyou're just going to leave me here?”
“I leave you with my prize possession: the Orgão Orgânico
.
As long as you keep playing, the plane will fly true. At least until it runs out of gas, but her tanks are massive. You've got at least twenty hours left, maybe more.”
Then Divan removes his finger from the key. The face stops wailing, closes its mouth, and the plane begins to drop.
“Better play, Dagmara.”
In a panic Dagmara looks at the keyboard and quickly launches into her go-to piece as she had when she first arrivedâBach's “Toccata and Fugue in D-minor.” The chorus of disembodied voices fills the space.
“Very good!” says Divan, as he strides away “Keep playing, Dagmara. Keep playing!”
“Divan!” she calls. “DIVAN!” But he's gone.
And so she plays for her life, buying herself the seconds and the minutes and the hours until there is nothing but soulless voices and fumes.
Being ejected out of the Sayonara Hatch is like being launched from a cannon into an ice-cold sky. He tumbles in an uncontrolled plummet. He has no experience or skill at skydiving. He's just happy he remembers to pull the rip cord to open the chute. At last Argent lands shivering in a patch of snow on a hillside and tumbles to a stop. Divan arrives a few moments later, twenty yards away, perfectly controlled and landing on his feet. He disconnects from his parachute and comes over to help Argent release himself from his.
“Well, that was exhilarating,” Divan says.
“Yeah right,” says Argent, a little too riled to be respectful. “Almost dying is always fun.”
Divan chuckles.
“So what now?” Argent asks.
“I have friends in China, and I've already alerted them. They'll zero in on our beacon. We won't have to wait here for long.”
Argent suspects Divan has friends everywhere. Except for maybe Southeast Asia. Then Divan pulls something out of his backpackâthe only object he salvaged from the planeâand hands it to Argent. It's a biological stasis cooler about the size of a lunch box.
“What's . . . inside?” Argent asks.
Divan sighs. “The only part of Malik I didn't sell. His best part, actually.”
Argent doesn't dare open it. He knows what it is. “And it's . . . for me?” Argent asks, scarcely willing to believe it.
“It's an elegant solution, don't you think?” Divan says. “It fulfills my promise to you, and allows me to see my nephew's handsome face once more, without having to suffer the rest of him.”
Argent holds the box closely. He feels awful, he feels grateful, he feels damned, and he feels blessed. How could something generate so many conflicting emotions? He decides to go with the positive ones, because the negative ones will surely drive him mad. “Thank you,” he says.
“I do believe Malik is better off living divided,” Divan says. “It's certainly better than the life path he was on.”
He tells Argent that he'll arrange a private procedure to graft his new face once they arrive in Beijing.
“And then you're free, Argent. I will have you taken to wherever you want to go.”
Argent looks at Divan, holding eye contactâsomething he never before had the courage to do. “What if I don't want to go? What if I want to keep working for you?”
“Well then, I'll pay you a wage worthy of your loyalty.” Divan looks up at
Lady Lucrezia
's vapor trail, slowly being torn apart by crosswinds. “When the plane finally does goes down, we'll all be taken for dead. I intend to take advantage of that. Leave my business. Retire under an assumed name. Of course, I'll always need a valet.”
They sit down and wait for the arrival of Divan's “friends,” who will most likely come by helicopter. And as Argent ponders the electrifying prospect of his new future, a question comes to mind.
“Where will we go?” he asks. “Where do you want to retire?”
“Well,” says Divan, “faking one's death does require a level of continued anonymity.” He feigns to consider the question, but clearly he's thought about it before. “Did you know that with all that I possess, I've never owned a yacht? It has been a long-standing dream of mine to own one, and sail the Mediterraneanâsticking only to the smaller, less traveled ports, of course.”
“Sounds like a plan,” says Argent, already settling in to the idea.
After all, what are the chances of running into someone they know?
NEAL SHUSTERMAN,
New York Times
bestselling author, has written more than thirty award-winning books for children, teens, and adults, including the Unwind Dystology (
Unwind, UnWholly, UnSouled,
and
UnDivided
), the Skinjacker Trilogy (
Everlost, Everwild,
and
Everfound), Full Tilt, Bruiser,
and
The Schwa Was Here,
which won the
Boston GlobeâHorn Book
Award for fiction. Several of his books are now in development as feature films. Neal lives in Southern California when he's not traveling the globe, and can be found online at
storyman.com
.
Simon & Schuster ⢠New York
Visit us at
simonandschuster.com/teen
Also by Neal Shusterman
NOVELS
Bruiser
Challenger Deep
Chasing Forgiveness
The Dark Side of Nowhere
Dissidents
Downsiders
The Eyes of Kid Midas
Full Tilt
The Shadow Club
The Shadow Club Rising
Speeding Bullet
THE ACCELERATI TRILOGY
(with Eric Elfman)
Tesla's Attic
Edison's Alley
Hawking's Hallway
THE ANTSY BONANO SERIES
The Schwa Was Here
Antsy Does Time
Ship Out of Luck
THE UNWIND DYSTOLOGY
Unwind
UnWholly
UnSouled
UnDivided
UnStrung (an original novella)
THE SKINJACKER TRILOGY
Everlost
Everwild
Everfound
THE STAR SHARDS CHRONICLES
Scorpion Shards
Thief of Souls
Shattered Sky
THE DARK FUSION SERIES
Dreadlocks
Red Rider's Hood
Duckling Ugly
STORY COLLECTIONS
Darkness Creeping
Kid Heroes
MindQuakes
MindStorms
MindTwisters
MindBenders
Visit the author at
storyman.com
and
facebook.com/nealshusterman
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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Unstrung
copyright © 2012 by Neal Shusterman
New stories copyright © 2015 by Neal Shusterman
Jacket photo-illustration copyright © 2015 by Luke Lucas
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