Mister Impossible Maggie Stiefvater (inspirational books for students .txt) đ
- Author: Maggie Stiefvater
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After nearly a minute, when Ronan wasnât sure if Declan was really still there but refused to say You still there? Declan finally said, âHeâs dangerous, Ronan. Theyâre not wrong about him. I know youâre not like that. I know you wouldnât kill people. I know you care about your future. About Matthew. About Adam. Aboutââ
Ronan hung up on him.
For several long minutes the car was silent. Ronanâs mind turned over the rose garden again. Not the beginning, this time, but the end. When he and Bryde had run, and Hennessy hadnât.
âAre you going to do it or not?â Bryde asked softly. âMake a decision.â
Ronan wasnât sure how he knew exactly what heâd been thinking, but he wasnât wrong. He rubbed his finger on his ear by the phone, thinking, deciding, and then he told the dreamt phone to dial another number.
It was time.
âRonan?â Adam asked, surprised. He had picked up immediately, even though the display name would have just looked like nonsense.
âWhy didnât you text back?â
âText ⊠back? You didnât call. Itâs been weeks.â
âBut why didnât you text back?â
There was quiet. Almost quiet. Wherever he was, Adam was moving locations; there was the sound of a door closing. âI was on a motorcycle. Then I was taking an exam. Then I was probably, I donât know, sleeping. I donât remember. I came to see you, I was making time best I could. It wasnât that long. I did text back. How could I know that you were going to ditch your phone? Ronan, you didnât call.â
His accent was gone. It was like talking to a stranger. Ronan had thought this would feel different. Or maybe he didnât. He didnât know. His chest was still burning. Fire roared through him, right to the ends of his hands and toes. âIâm calling now.â
âI didnât know what was happening,â Adam said. âI didnât know what you were doing, if you were even alive. I didnât know if we were ⊠if it ⊠what âŠâ
Ronan repeated, âIâm calling now. I need to see you.â
âYouâre here?â Adam said, even more surprised than he had been when he first picked up. âOh.â
There was something about that Oh that Ronan didnât like the shape of. It seemed sad. Not as if Adam was sad when he said it. But more like something about that Oh was going to make Ronan sad. But he plunged ahead anyway. âCan you let us lie low for a few hours while we figure out whatâs going on with Hennessy?â
Adam didnât reply right away. Then he said, âWhoâs âusâ?â
âMe and Bryde. They haveâthey have Hennessy, I think.â Ronan knew this was a lie. Or at least a partial truth. Bryde hadnât seen it, but Ronan had. Heâd seen Hennessy turn around. Heâd let her. God, everything was going to shit.
Adam said, very precisely, âYou can come lie low.â Then, in case Ronan hadnât understood him, he repeated, âYou.â
âHow big of a douche do you think I am?â
âThe Lace is afraid of him, Ronan. I am, too. Let him take this heat.â
And then Ronan understood why the Oh had made him so sad. Heâd known it subconsciously before, but now he knew it clearly: Adam had known Declan was betraying the dreamers. He had known the Moderators would be waiting in the rose garden.
Theyâd all been in on it.
Part of Ronan was here in this invisible car racing away from his family, but part of Ronan was also in that memory of being curled in Ilidorin as he nearly lost himself to nightwash for good. Bryde had tried to warn them about the others when he first introduced them to Ilidorin, and Ronan and Hennessy had blown him off. Theyâd been so offended by his contempt for the dreamt phones, but now Ronan understood it exactly. Only, the truth was worse than what Bryde had warned. It wasnât simply that Declan and Adam didnât want to leave their own lives to come fight his battle with him. They actively wanted to stop the battle altogether.
They wanted the world to change just enough to keep Ronan alive. Alive, but not living. That was good enough for them.
It wasnât good enough for him.
âRonan, you know what Iâm sayingâs true,â Adam said. âYou know whatâs going on here. If you think about it, you have toââ
Ronan hung up on him, too.
He plucked the dreamt phone from his ear, rolled down the window, and threw it out as hard as he could.
Then he leaned his head back against the seat as they drove out of the city with one less dreamer than theyâd arrived with.
Twenty minutes.
Alarm.
Twenty minutes.
Alarm.
Twenty minutes.
Alarm.
Twenty minutes.
Alarm.
That was how Hennessy had been living at the beginning of all this, and thatâs how she had been living since she left the house with the young dreamers.
She set the timer on her dreamt phone, and twenty minutes later, when it went off, she set it again. She had to wake up enough between each alarm to make sure she didnât fall back into a deep sleep. It could not be an eight-hour sleep interrupted dozens of times. It had to be dozens of sleeps for eight hours.
âBut thatâs not survivable,â Carmen Farooq-Lane said. âOr fair.â
Farooq-Lane was a very put together sort of young woman, so put together it was difficult to discern her true age. When she said it, it seemed obvious. Like it made sense. Like the situation had been stripped of emotion, taken down to the studs, and revealed as unsound. Of course it was not survivable. Of course it was not fair.
âThey shouldnât have made so light of the Lace,â Liliana said in her sweet old-lady voice. âIt was never going to be as easy as simply asking it to go away.â
Liliana the Visionary was a very put together sort of old woman, so put together it was difficult to discern her true age, too. When she said
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