Book Read Free

The Towering Sky

Page 39

by Katharine McGee


  EPILOGUE

  A GIRL STOOD in the Budapest airport, wearing jeans and a shapeless sweatshirt, a tattered red bag slung over one shoulder. She was trying to decide where to go next—luxuriating in the pleasant anticipation of it, wherever it would be.

  Like all public spaces, the airport was a world of abbreviated anonymous encounters, of strangers thrust together in temporary forced intimacy. The girl kept her head down, avoiding eye contact, trying to escape notice; and to her continued surprise, it worked. No one paid any attention to her.

  Her stomach surprised her with a growl of hunger. Okay, a snack first, she thought, and then a destination.

  Every choice had become a sort of game with her. She would tilt her head a little to the side, her brows drawn together, to internally debate whether she wanted limeade or beet juice. One might have safely assumed that the girl didn’t know her own preferences, and perhaps she didn’t. Maybe she wasn’t sure whether her preferences were actually hers, or whether they had been handed to her, like everything else in her life thus far.

  She paused near one of the flexiglass windows, to look out at the planes landing and taking off. She loved watching the various steps of its choreography: the sloshing water tanks that fueled the jets, the individual transport pods that moved like strings of beads, picking up each individual person and driving them toward the drop-off point.

  She reached absentmindedly up to her jet-black hair, recently and crudely cropped in a boyish cut. Her head felt curiously light without the heavy tresses that normally spilled over her shoulders. It was a wonderful sensation.

  The girl tilted her head against the glass and let her eyes flutter shut. They still burned from the lightning-fast retina-replacement surgery she’d had in an unmarked but surprisingly clean “doctor’s office” down in the Sprawl. What a strange, reckless few days it had been.

  “I need to disappear,” she’d said to Watt when she pinged him that night. “You can do that, can’t you?”

  “You’re running away?” Watt paused as if collecting his thoughts. “Is this about the article? Because I can find out who submitted that picture, and then—”

  “You’ve been spending too much time with Leda,” she chided gently. “I’m not looking for revenge, Watt. I’m looking to escape.”

  To her surprise, Watt resisted her. Part of her was oddly grateful for it, as if he knew that he had to speak out, because he was the only person she planned on sharing this with. The only person fighting for her. “I know this whole situation seems impossible right now,” he’d said, “but you can’t just walk away from your life because of it.”

  “What if I told you that I’ve wanted to walk away from my life for a while?”

  She had collapsed back onto her bed and stared up at her ceiling, one hand resting on her forehead, the other over her heart, the way she did in yoga. Trying to center herself on something, anything. How long had this sensation been building—the feeling that she was trapped, her true self suffocating under the weight of everyone else’s expectations, her parents’ and Max’s and the entire world’s?

  She struggled to explain. “You wouldn’t understand, but it’s like I have all these voices in my head, telling me who they think I should be. And now there are even more voices, a whole clamoring city of them, and I just want to walk away from it all.”

  “I know more than you think about voices in your head,” Watt had told her, with an unreadable laugh. “Okay. Let’s start talking logistics.”

  Looking back, she still couldn’t believe they had pulled it off.

  She could never have done it without Watt, whose hacking abilities had surpassed even her wildest expectations. He’d managed to steal an out-of-use military drone equipped with Teflon cloaking panels. The drone picked her up right there on the roof, after she set fire to the apartment using the high-grade spark-sticks Watt had obtained. She didn’t ask where he found them.

  She barely fit into the drone, even sitting with her knees pulled up to her chest, but it didn’t matter. She’d flown the twenty minutes to Boston inside it, practically invisible, nothing but a shimmer in the air.

  She winced a little, remembering the destruction she’d wrought on her childhood home. But she hadn’t had a choice. She and Watt had discussed it from all angles, and they couldn’t think of a way for her to get out through the Tower, not without being caught by the retinal scanners. Her only option was to leave from the roof. Which meant that she needed the fire, to explain the absence of a body.

  Because if her parents hadn’t thought her dead—if they realized that she had just run away—they would have thrown their inexhaustible resources into finding her. And she didn’t want to live the rest of her life looking over her shoulder in fear.

  The hardest part had been not telling Leda. But she knew that if she let Leda in on her plans, Leda would have fought her every step of the way. She’d made Watt promise to tell Leda as soon as he felt it was all clear. Still, it pained her to think that she had caused her friend even an hour of false grief.

  She was glad she’d done it. It freed the rest of them from suspicion, it freed Leda from her guilt, and most of all, it set her free. She hadn’t realized how much her identity was trapping her until she crawled out from beneath it.

  She turned back toward the departures holo, where tiny destination icons all glowed tantalizingly before her eyes, like items on a menu. Saint Petersburg, Nairobi, Beirut. Where was Atlas in all these countless places? She wished yet again that she could have warned him about her plan, but not even Watt had been able to find him. Wherever her parents had taken him, they’d done a damn good job making him vanish.

  Already she kept seeing him everywhere. In every café, in every train, at every street corner. Someone’s walk or voice or hair color would look like his, and she would do a double take, just to make sure. It was like being surrounded by infinite echoes of him. She wondered if he felt the same about her.

  The girl lifted her head. Her eyes might be new, but the stubborn defiance flashing in them was the same as ever.

  He could be anywhere, really. There was so much world out there, filled with so many unexpected corners: small towns and sprawling cities and towers that traced the sky; oceans and lakes and mountains; and all those billions of people. And she had no clue where he was, in all that vast imminent everything. It might take weeks to find him, or years, or an entire lifetime.

  But looking would be half the fun, wouldn’t it? If it was going to take a lifetime, she thought wryly, she might as well get started.

  Avery Fuller was dead, and the girl who’d been living her life for eighteen years couldn’t wait to learn who she really was, underneath it all.

  She turned her profile toward the airline counters and walked boldly into her future.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  AS THIS TRILOGY draws to a close, I feel overwhelmed with gratitude. An enormous thank-you is due to all the people who have made these books possible:

  To my editor, the inimitable Emilia Rhodes: There is no one I would rather have had in my corner for my first series. Jen Klonsky, your unflagging enthusiasm never fails to bring a smile to my face. Alice Jerman, I am constantly grateful for your editorial support. Jenna Stempel-Lobell, I am always in awe of your cover designs, and yet this time you truly outdid yourself. Thanks also to Gina Rizzo, Bess Braswell, Sabrina Abballe, and Ebony LaDelle for their marketing and publicity brilliance.

  As always, a massive thank-you to the entire team at Alloy Entertainment. Joelle Hobeika, Josh Bank, and Sara Shandler, this series has benefited from your mad collective genius in more ways than I could ever count. Thank you for your outstanding creative guidance, and your faith in this project. Thanks also to Les Morgenstein, Gina Girolamo, Romy Golan, and Laura Barbiea.

  To the team at Rights People—Alexandra Devlin, Allison Hellegers, Caroline Hill-Trevor, Rachel Richardson, Alex Webb, Harim Yim, and Charles Nettleton—thank you for helping to bring The Thousandth Floor to
so many languages throughout the world. It still feels like a dream come true.

  Thanks also to Oka Tai-Lee and Zachary Fetters for building a breathtaking website, and to Mackie Bushong for your design talents.

  I don’t know what I would do without my parents, who remain my most enthusiastic salespeople and fiercest cheerleaders. Lizzy and John Ed, thank you for being my early sounding boards, and for all the dialogue suggestions (some of them actually made it into the book!). And to Alex: Thank you for innumerable homemade tacos, for your wise counsel, and for the countless hours you spent patiently discussing the lives of fictional teenagers. Without you, nothing at all would ever get written.

  Most of all, thank you to the readers who have been on this journey with me. I believe that books are still the strongest magic that exists—but only in the hands of readers does that magic come to life.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Photo credit Chris Bailey Photography, Houston, Texas

  KATHARINE MCGEE is from Houston, Texas. She studied English and French literature at Princeton and has an MBA from Stanford. It was during her years living in a second-floor apartment in New York City that she kept daydreaming about skyscrapers . . . and then she started writing.

  Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at hc.com.

  BOOKS BY KATHARINE McGEE

  The Thousandth Floor

  The Dazzling Heights

  The Towering Sky

  BACK AD

  DISCOVER

  your next favorite read

  MEET

  new authors to love

  WIN

  free books

  SHARE

  infographics, playlists, quizzes, and more

  WATCH

  the latest videos

  www.epicreads.com

  COPYRIGHT

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

  THE TOWERING SKY. Copyright © 2018 by Alloy Entertainment and Katharine McGee. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books. www.epicreads.com

  Cover art by Craig Shields

  Cover design by Jenna Stempel-Lobell

  Produced by Alloy Entertainment

  1325 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10019

  www.alloyentertainment.com

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2018942092

  Digital Edition AUGUST 2018 ISBN: 978-0-06-241867-8

  Print ISBN: 978-0-06-241865-4

  ISBN 978-0-06-241865-4 (trade bdg.) — ISBN 978-0-06-284248-0 (int. ed.)

  1819202122PC/LSCH10987654321

  FIRST EDITION

  ABOUT THE PUBLISHER

  Australia

  HarperCollins Publishers Australia Pty. Ltd.

  Level 13, 201 Elizabeth Street

  Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

  www.harpercollins.com.au

  Canada

  HarperCollins Publishers Ltd

  Bay Adelaide Centre, East Tower

  22 Adelaide Street West, 41st Floor

  Toronto, Ontario, Canada

  M5H 4E3

  www.harpercollins.ca

  India

  HarperCollins India

  A 75, Sector 57

  Noida

  Uttar Pradesh 201 301

  www.harpercollins.co.in

  New Zealand

  HarperCollins Publishers New Zealand

  Unit D1, 63 Apollo Drive

  Rosedale 0632

  Auckland, New Zealand

  www.harpercollins.co.nz

  United Kingdom

  HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF, UK

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  United States

  HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

  195 Broadway

  New York, NY 10007

  www.harpercollins.com

 

 

 


‹ Prev