Escaping Ordinary

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Escaping Ordinary Page 1

by Scott Reintgen




  Also by Scott Reintgen

  Talespinners #1: Saving Fable

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2020 by Scott Reintgen

  Cover art copyright © 2020 by Maike Plenzke

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Crown Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  Crown and the colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Visit us on the Web! rhcbooks.com

  Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Reintgen, Scott, author.

  Title: Escaping Ordinary / Scott Reintgen.

  Description: First edition. | New York: Crown Books for Young Readers, 2020. | Series: Talespinners; book 2 | Audience: Ages 8–12. | Audience: Grades 4–6. | Summary: Rather than rest after saving Fable, Indira must begin a teamwork tutorial that leads to a quest filled with dragons, unlikely allies, and threats to all of Imaginary.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2019040424 | ISBN 978-0-525-64672-3 (hardcover) | ISBN 978-0-525-64674-7 (epub)

  Subjects: CYAC: Books and reading—Fiction. | Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. | Heroes—Fiction. | Cooperativeness—Fiction. | Fantasy.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.1.R4554 Esc 2020 | DDC [Fic]—dc23

  Ebook ISBN 9780525646747

  Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

  Penguin Random House LLC supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to publish books for every reader.

  ep_prh_5.6.0_c0_r0

  To Thomas,

  wake up, little one.

  There are worlds to conquer.

  Love, Dad

  Contents

  Cover

  Also by Scott Reintgen

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1: The Story House

  Chapter 2: Home

  Chapter 3: New Assignments

  Chapter 4: Reunion

  Chapter 5: The Cast

  Chapter 6: Off Course

  Chapter 7: The Hero’s Journey

  Chapter 8: The Ordinary World

  Chapter 9: Backstory

  Chapter 10: The Call to Adventure

  Chapter 11: Refusal of the Call

  Chapter 12: Supernatural Aid

  Chapter 13: Crossing the Threshold

  Chapter 14: Down the Road of Trials

  Chapter 15: The Foreshadow Forest

  Chapter 16: Out of Place

  Chapter 17: The Real Antagonist

  Chapter 18: An Unlikely Ally

  Chapter 19: Enemies to Friends

  Chapter 20: The Broken Journey

  Chapter 21: Different Kinds of Bravery

  Chapter 22: The Editor Hotline

  Chapter 23: The Plot Underground

  Chapter 24: The New Scenario

  Chapter 25: An Unexpected Rescue

  Chapter 26: Breaking Ordinary

  Chapter 27: Intel

  Chapter 28: Instincts

  Chapter 29: On the Run

  Chapter 30: Consequences

  Chapter 31: A New Plan

  Chapter 32: All in the Details

  Chapter 33: The Beginning of the End

  Chapter 34: Head-to-Head

  Chapter 35: The Perfect Plan

  Chapter 36: Back to Normal

  Chapter 37: Heroes?

  Chapter 38: Celebration and a Secret

  Chapter 39: The Sequel

  Chapter 40: Back in the Real World

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  “And for the first time in weeks, the sun began to rise.”

  It took several seconds for that booming voice to fade. Indira stood at the center of a bright living room. The light glanced off her one-handed war hammer as she extended it. The Axel twins—also known as the Thunder Brothers—stood on her right and left, holding out their own matching weapons. Indira kind of felt like they looked like a soccer team in the middle of a halftime huddle. The three of them held the pose for a few stretching seconds. Indira could feel heat creeping up her neck until another voice broke the silence.

  “Cut! That’s a wrap!”

  Indira sighed with relief. They’d been working on the final scene of her first story for weeks. Just offstage, she saw matching relief on the face of everyone who’d been working with them. David came grinning onto the set as the other workers started clearing out equipment.

  “Great job, everyone!” he called. “Seriously! What an accomplishment! Can you believe it? We’re really done. The Story House is finally finished!”

  Indira gave her brother a side hug. The Axel twins nodded their thanks. Indira knew David had been a little disappointed by his role. After hearing the title of the story—Indira Story and the Thunder Brothers—he had assumed that he would be one of the brothers in the book’s title. I mean, he was her brother, after all. But the Author had gone in a completely different direction. David had turned out to be a minor character in the story. Mostly there for comic relief. He’d put on a smile about it, but she knew him well enough to know that it hadn’t been easy on him.

  “What now?” Indira asked, looking around. “Do we start the sequel?”

  James Axel shrugged. “Are we even in the second book? I couldn’t tell from that ending.”

  All of them looked around. It took a few seconds for one of the bookmark stagehands to come bustling forward. “Casting announcements to come! Indira, you’re headed back to Fable. It’s standard in-between-books protocol for protagonists. There’s a dragoneye waiting outside.”

  The Axel twins nodded in unison before heading back through the nearest hallway. Some of the other characters involved in the final scene followed them. Indira wasn’t sure she was ready to go. It felt like they’d arrived just a few weeks ago to start working on the story.

  “Can I walk around the Story House? One more time?”

  The Mark smiled. “Of course, dear. It’s your house, after all.”

  “I’ll meet you out front,” David whispered. “You did great, baby sister.”

  When Indira and the rest of the cast had arrived six months ago, their Story House had been a single-level, one-room building. She had learned that each room represented a new scene or chapter in the story the Author was telling. After they’d performed the first scene, another door had appeared. Inside? A second room that represented the next scene.

  Every new idea the Author came up with made their Story House bigger. Now Indira walked back through the mansion their crew had created together. She ran a hand along the banister before peeking through a door on her left. It was
one of the bigger rooms.

  Sensing her presence, the room activated. The boring wallpaper vanished, replaced by a clearing in a forest. Indira watched an image of herself running forward, the Axel twins close behind her, all of them ready to face their nemesis in the story’s climactic fight scene.

  Indira made her patient way back through each room, watching highlights as she did. So much of her time at Protagonist Preparatory had been spent in fear that she’d never make it into a story at all. But here she was, walking through one that had been written just for her.

  It still didn’t feel real sometimes.

  She’d learned a lot since then. Her Author—Darby Martin—had made plenty of tweaks along the way. A part of being a protagonist was learning to adjust. Being quick on your feet. Indira had slowly started to trust her Author to write the very best possible story. Not that she didn’t put in the occasional suggestion or two.

  As she made her way back through the house, she watched happy moments and sad scenes and hilarious misunderstandings. She couldn’t help feeling proud. They’d done their job and they’d done it well. The story was complete now. Indira arrived back in the very first room.

  It was called the Seed, dear reader.

  Writers have them every day. Little seeds of ideas that—given light and water and room to grow—can blossom into something more. Indira paused there to watch.

  A slightly younger version of herself fell through a huge hole in the ground. She landed in a dark and forgotten cavern. It was there that she discovered her hammer for the first time.

  “Thanks for believing in me,” she whispered to the walls.

  No one knew if the Authors could actually hear them, but Indira felt grateful all the same. It was such a joy to be chosen. She walked out the front door and closed it carefully behind her.

  A small, circular park waited. It was surrounded by other Story Houses that were still in progress. Characters from those stories were taking their breaks between scenes, chatting excitedly. Most of the houses on this block were still under construction. Some were no bigger than shacks. Others were even larger than her own house, and nowhere close to being done.

  David strode forward. “Take a look at that Story House. It’s all yours, baby sister.”

  She looked back. There were three levels, a pair of balconies, all covered in storm-gray bricks. Above the house, a huge cable extended up from the chimney and ran up into the clouds, out of sight. Indira had been told that that cable represented the house’s connection to the Author’s imagination. It was a source of power that fueled the story forever.

  “Remember at the beginning?” she asked. “The connection was just a thin little thread.”

  David nodded. “And look at it now. Pretty healthy-looking to me.”

  The thicker the cable, the deeper the Author’s connection to the characters. Their link had only grown since the beginning. Everyone kept saying it was a great sign.

  “And now…,” Indira whispered. “The readers.”

  Both of them looked farther up the road. Their Story House sat in a section of the neighborhood reserved for new stories. Around the block, though, were other, more established tales. Some were actually quite famous. In the air above those houses, she saw thousands of little strings attached to the roofs. Each one represented a connection to a reader.

  It was hard not to look a little longingly in their direction.

  “Readers will come,” David said calmly. “Let’s focus on what we can control.”

  She allowed her brother to sling an arm around her shoulder and lead her off in the other direction. The dragoneye portals were waiting at the far end of the little park. Indira snuck one more glance back over her shoulder. Every cage has a key. Her First Words whispered into the air. She’d been through so much since she’d first heard them. Looking at her Story House, she smiled one more time. It was hard to imagine that she and the other characters had actually built it together. As she turned, though, she set her eyes firmly on what was next.

  Fable was waiting.

  Indira’s feet set down with a familiar whoosh.

  The dragoneye had delivered them to the outskirts of Fable, and in that moment there was nowhere else she’d rather be. There was something about seeing the city from a distance that felt right. She led David down a row of particularly nice houses until Fable burst into view.

  Once again, the city wore a new costume. And this costume was sleek.

  “Whoa,” David said. “Looks like a science-fiction setup!”

  Indira found herself grinning. The city looked as if it had leaped five hundred years into the future. She stared up at towering skyscrapers, each infused with bright light. Flying vehicles darted in and out of view, leaving little blue streaks behind them. The entire side of one building flashed massive advertisements. Like moths to a flame, Indira and David were drawn into the electric city.

  “I missed this place,” Indira whispered.

  The city walls winked back at her. As the two of them entered, more surprises waited. The city’s usual populace swirled in the streets, and it took Indira a few seconds to realize the Marks had all transformed into robots. Most of them were still tall and thin—able to slip between pages at a moment’s notice—but many now sported spinning wheels, while others had silver antennae or brightly painted buttons. The dying sunlight reflected off their metal bodies like sparks.

  Indira looked toward where she knew the Talespin coffee shop was located. Her heart beat a little faster. It was the first place she’d seen her Author, but also where her standoff with Brainstorm Ketty had happened last semester. The city’s new costume had temporarily relocated the coffee shop, though. Indira’s eyes scanned upward.

  “Check it out, D. A flying coffeehouse!”

  The entire building hovered in the air above them. Indira saw engine burners glowing blue beneath the structure, each one working hard to keep it afloat. A girl sitting along the outdoor patio noticed the two of them looking up and waved. Indira smiled back.

  “Let’s head to Protagonist Prep,” she said. “We can explore the city after we check in.”

  It took a lot of effort to keep walking and to ignore all the distractions. Bright lights flashing here, loud voices booming there. The streets felt more packed than ever, but Indira walked confidently forward. It was just one of the many spells that Protagonist Preparatory cast. Any character who’d attended the school had a knack for finding their way back to the front doors again.

  Rounding a corner, Indira found the building waiting in the distance. Her first thought was that the school now looked like a grounded alien aircraft. The upper section was shaped like the top of a gigantic mushroom. The lower sections tightened into more structurally sound cylinders, and the exterior was lined with perfectly even glass windows that ran the entire length of the building. One detail remained the same, however: the front doors of the school stood open. They were massive blast doors now, but they still stood as open as they had when Indira first arrived.

  Have you ever gone on a long trip, dear reader? Maybe you took a car ride down the coast, or a plane across the country. Other places can be so exciting. Almost like trying on a pair of new shoes for a time and walking around to see how they suit you. But there’s no feeling quite like returning to the place you know best, the place where everything began. There’s a word we use for such places, and it never quite captures our love for them. Indira said that word anyway.

  “Home.”

  The interior of Protagonist Preparatory had transformed to fit Fable’s science-fiction theme. Industrial lighting filled the halls. It pumped through the floors and ceilings like blue veins. Indira maneuvered through little pockets of students. She saw a mix of golden jackets and blue ones. The sight had her stomach turning.

  Golden jackets for protagonists. Blue jackets for side characters. />
  The school hadn’t fully done away with its old classification policies. Brainstorm Underglass and Brainstorm Vesulias had agreed to eliminate classes that were just for one group or the other, though. It was a nice first step.

  Indira led David down a familiar hallway and was struck once more by dueling emotions. This was where she’d first learned that she’d be in a story of her very own. It was also where Brainstorm Ketty had started her efforts to sabotage Indira’s career. The door into Ketty’s old office was open. Indira glanced inside and saw a red-haired woman with her back to them.

  She hadn’t met the newest brainstorm, but rumor was that the woman was a big-time advocate for every character. Indira thought that was another step in the right direction.

  A quick knock at Brainstorm Underglass’s door was followed by an even quicker call to enter. Indira and David walked in together. The brainstorm looked busy, but the second her eyes landed on Indira, a smile surfaced.

  “As I live and breathe! Indira Story has returned. It is so wonderful to see you, dear.”

  Underglass glided across the room. The woman surprised Indira with a hug instead of a handshake. She smiled once again before shifting back into her more typical business mode. The effect was complemented by the woman’s crisp suit and the fact that every single item in the office was set precisely in its proper place.

  She took her seat and raised a single eyebrow. “I want a full report.”

  Indira felt like a soldier relaying news back to a general. It didn’t take long to walk through the whole experience. How quickly their Story House had grown. How some of the rooms had taken much longer than other rooms. Underglass asked a few questions, but mostly listened. When Indira arrived at the end, the brainstorm nodded and pressed a button on her desk.

 

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