What She Does Next Will Astound You Read online




  Don’t miss the other thrilling companion novels in the class series!

  Class: The Stone House

  Class: Joyride

  Dedication

  To my cat #InternetReasons

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  One: Read the Terrible Truth They Don’t Want You to Know Until Page 119

  Two: What We Can Learn from the Alien-Face-In-A-Box Emoji

  Three: When He Lost His Leg They Said He Would Never Play Football Again, But He Said No

  Four: Eight Things the Media Hasn’t Told You About Cup-A-Soup

  Five: Amazing, If True: Children Are Vanishing and You’ve Not Noticed

  Six: The One Weird Trick About Mothers That Everyone Should Know

  Seven: Is It Magic? We Need Your Help to Solve This Mystery

  Eight: Fifteen Cats That Look Shockingly like Miss Quill

  Nine: Train Drivers Slam Brakes on Truth or Dare

  Ten: This Chapter Will Prove You’ve Been Wrong About Young Men Your Whole Life

  Eleven: This Girl Wanted an Adventure Holiday. You Won’t Believe Where She Ended Up

  Twelve: Find out Why the Goats Do Not Get to Dance on the Tube

  Thirteen: The Letter Coal Hill School Doesn’t Want You to See

  Fourteen: How Toast Is like Lady Gaga

  Fifteen: You Wouldn’t Think a Text Could Make You Cry, but This Will

  Sixteen: Six Names for White You’ve Never Thought Of

  Seventeen: The Rise of Smart Women and How to Stop It

  Eighteen: Things You’ll Get Only If Your Home Planet Was Destroyed in the Nineties

  Nineteen: He Thought He Knew a Lot About Gravity. Find out If He Was Right

  Twenty: The Five Words That Broke Her Heart (Spoiler: One of Them Is ‘Want’)

  Twenty-One: She Thought She Knew What Was Going On. Then She Found out the Remarkable Truth and Turned Things Around

  Twenty-Two: Thought You Knew How to Lose Your Friends? Well, This Woman’s Thirteen Brilliant Reasons Will Change Your Mind

  Twenty-Three: She Was Ready to Give up and Then a Nurse Slayed Her with a Word

  Twenty-Four: If You Dropped Dead Tomorrow, Would Your Friends Miss You?

  Twenty-Five: She Thought She’d Seen It All and Then She Saw the Face of God

  Twenty-Six: This Teacher’s Inspirational Words Will Choke You Up

  Twenty-Seven: Someone’s Reimagined Disney Princesses as Alien Warriors And, Trust Us, It’s Awesome

  Twenty-Eight: This Hot Take on Smashed Avocado Toast Will Have You Reeling

  Twenty-Nine: Think of the Worst Job in the World? You’re Not Even Close

  Thirty: You Are Being Lied to About Voter Registration and This Short Chapter Tells You How

  Thirty-One: Advertisement: Your Book Will Continue in Twenty-Five Seconds

  Thirty-Two: The Ten Best Alien Deaths You’ll See Today. #6 Is a Killer

  Thirty-Three: Eight Ways in Which People Have Tried to Escape the Void

  Thirty-Four: At First She Thought She Knew Everything but Then She Found This Secret She Hadn’t Known She Needed to Know

  Thirty-Five: When She Met God She Forgot to Ask ‘Why?’

  Thirty-Six: This Is Your Chance to Wipe out Skandis Forever

  Thirty-Seven: After You Read This You’ll Want a Shower

  Thirty-Eight: You’ll Be Amazed at How Long It Took Him to Realise His Mistake

  Thirty-Nine: War Veterans Are Covering Their Heads in Glitter for Reasons That Will Stun You

  Forty: This Icelandic Penguin Village Is Probably the Cutest Place on Earth. But You Are Not There

  Forty-One: In the Time It Takes You to Read This, Skandis Will Have Claimed One Hundred More Lives

  Forty-Two: Many People Would Blame This on Marriage Equality. But Would You?

  Forty-Three: People Are Tweeting Their Worst Battles and It Is Cringingly Hilarious

  Forty-Four: She Dropped a Truth Bomb but Wasn’t Expecting What Would Happen Next

  Forty-Five: This Young Footballer Has Something Surprising to Say About Racial Profiling

  Forty-Six: You Are Being Lied to About Dogs

  Forty-Seven: The Latest Advances in Virtual Reality Will Horrify You

  Forty-Eight: Do You Know Enough About Dimensional Compensators to Save This Boy’s Life? (Spoiler: You Don’t)

  Forty-Nine: He Chose the Wrong Day to Beg for His Life

  Fifty: The Skandis War as You’ve Never Seen It Before

  Fifty-One: They Thought They’d Won Until They Found out They’d Lost

  Fifty-Two: To Get Your Free Confession Just Follow These Simple Steps

  Fifty-Three: Happy Endings Don’t Kill People—Guns Do

  Excerpt from “For Tonight We Might Die”

  About the Authors

  Books by Patrick Ness and James Goss

  Back Ad

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  ONE

  READ THE TERRIBLE TRUTH THEY DON’T WANT YOU TO KNOW UNTIL PAGE 119

  Are you coming to get me?

  Please tell me you’re coming to get me.

  ’Cos I really thought I was doing the right thing. Okay, some of my friends said I went too far. Actually, fine, I lost a few friends because of what I did. But it was all jokes and bants. That was all it was.

  Well, that was all it was when it started. There’s a site—truthordare.com. They wanted us to post stuff to it. And really, if I’ve got to spell that out then really, eyeroll.gif. You get the picture—stuff about yourself you don’t want people to know; stuff about your friends they’d hate the world finding out, or, you know, risky things—riding a hoverboard in traffic, playing Pokémon Go underwater, or what I did—that old thing of putting your hand on a table and stabbing a knife between the fingers up and down, down and up, faster and faster.

  Guess what? Good news, I can still play the recorder. Turns out, I’m really good at it. I’m also really good at betraying my friends—given a choice between my secrets and theirs? No contest. Phone peeping out of your bag, Gmail left unattended? Give it to me, I shall be the master of it. And the world shall laugh at you.

  But, right, I was doing it for a good cause. We were trying to stop the spread of Skandis—they said it was a disease. I guess, you know, strictly speaking, yeah, fine, that’s sort of right.

  But now I know what Skandis really is. And it’s worse than a disease. And I’m doing all I can to stop it. Because I’ve got to. We all have to. Or the Earth will be destroyed.

  I’ll tell you what happened to me, okay? I played the game, only I didn’t realise it was just a training level for something else. I didn’t know what I was heading for as I climbed up the leaderboard. I just thought—I dunno, maybe a free holiday or a T-shirt or something. Not . . . not that I’d vanish. Kidnapped right out of this world. Wake up somewhere else.

  And then I’d find out what Skandis really is.

  Now that I know? I’m doing all I can to stop Skandis.

  But what I really want? When I’m not screaming, when I’m not so scared? When I’m not doing the most daring stuff I’ve ever done?

  Okay, then, here’s a truth about me, the terrible truth that I don’t dare tell anyone: what I really want is for someone to come and get me and take me home. I want my mum.

  So.

  Can I come home now?

  TWO

  WHAT WE CAN LEARN FROM THE ALIEN-FACE-IN-A-BOX EMOJI

  Question: What will YOU do to stop Skandis?

  Hi.

  I’m not a doctor.

  Well, obviously. What doctor wears board shorts and bunny ears?

 
But I’m taking some time out from my busy schedule of being YouTube famous to tell you all about Skandis. Skandis is spreading. And we need to get together and stop it.

  I know you’re probably like ‘yeah, right,’ but Skandis is real. And it’s not like Brexit or Donald Trump or Nicki Minaj. Skandis can be stopped.

  Together, we can cure Skandis. Now, come on, lean closer, and I’m going to tell you how . . .

  THREE

  WHEN HE LOST HIS LEG THEY SAID HE WOULD NEVER PLAY FOOTBALL AGAIN, BUT HE SAID NO

  It started with the ice, and Ram was fine with the ice. It struck him as a lot of effort. It wasn’t that he didn’t like effort. Whatever his dad would have told you, Ram wasn’t lazy. He liked doing things, he was simply selective about what he actually did.

  Learning how to make his new leg work? Worth it. Tipping a bucket of ice over your head? He’d get back to you.

  That morning he was running and thinking about the ice. It helped take his mind off how very slightly wrong his leg was. It just wouldn’t do leg correctly. He’d been assured that the artificial limb contained lots of smart technology. Intuitive gimbals. Actuated flesh. Nano-level balancing.

  Simulated hair. But, for all that, Ram and his leg still didn’t quite trust each other.

  You’re asking a lot of a leg. You’re asking it to be there for you. It’s constantly helping out with really amazing things, like keeping you standing upright, letting you walk, and climbing stairs; stairs really are such a leap of faith that it’s amazing we didn’t invent the lift before the wheel.

  Ram’s old leg did all that he asked of it without getting in the way, without even reminding him that it was there. Now that it was gone, he really, really missed it. Because he and his new leg were constantly second-guessing each other. It was like having a butler for a limb. Ram would make that little bit of extra effort when stepping with his false leg, just to make sure he landed really firmly, and his artificial limb would push back, just the tiniest twitch, as if clearing its throat and saying, ‘Forgive me, I’m not sure you quite meant me to do that.’ It did it, every single time. His leg kept reminding him that it was there. Little pulses racing up his thigh. ‘Just got you to the pavement’, ‘Just stepped around that dog turd’, ‘Avoided stumbling over that rut on the pitch, no, don’t thank me’.

  Ram had never really understood what the phrase ‘passive-aggressive’ had meant before. Everyone used it, about teachers, mean kids, or crisps, but Ram knew, absolutely knew, that he had a passive-aggressive leg. It was so judgmental too. It made it quite clear that it was a precision instrument and that kicking a ball in a certain direction just seemed to be inflicting unnecessary damage on it for no apparent purpose. Every time he tried to kick a ball his foot flinched, which isn’t really the body language that makes for a successful career in football.

  Hence the morning runs. When he’d suggested taking up jogging, his dad had been keen. Overkeen. Really ‘waiting for him in the hall in sweatpants and with him 100 percent of the way’ keen. Luckily that had passed, and now Ram got to go running on his own—down the road, over the footbridge, round the scrubby park and back, all the time hoping that instinct would kick in. It didn’t. His leg kept telling him ‘down and safe’ every step of the way. So he distracted himself with thinking about the ice.

  The videos had started cropping up online a week ago. People tipping a bucket of ice over their heads for charity. It was all a bit 2014. But the practicalities of it all kept Ram occupied while his leg kept telling him it was there, and it was fine.

  It was the ice that troubled him. There were a couple of trays in the freezer—maybe about two dozen ice cubes. So that wasn’t going to fill a bucket. You’d need to go to the supermarket, buy a bag. But supermarkets only ever seemed to keep a couple of bags in stock—not enough to cope with a barbecue, let alone a charity craze. And EVERYONE was doing it. Even the Third Years. Where did they get the ice? From a pub? Did they stockpile it?

  Today Ram was working on the Stockpiling Theory with a dedication that would have startled his maths teacher. If he could make three batches of ice a day, and got an extra tray, he could maybe knock up a hundred cubes a day. How many ice cubes would it take to make a bucket of water ice-cold? Perhaps three days of planning and he’d have enough.

  Three days. Making it Wednesday.

  Ram stopped considering it for a moment as his ankle had just proudly informed him that it had failed to twist over some gravel.

  Could he hold out till Wednesday?

  The problem with tipping a bucket of ice over his head was that Ram didn’t want to do it. Pretty much the rest of the football team had, one by one, posting videos of themselves shrieking, ‘I’m doing the ice bucket for Skandis!’ and then dousing themselves. Recently someone had finished by crying, ‘And now it’s your turn, Ram.’

  Which had seemed a bit provocative. He’d kind of considered doing it, just to get it out of the way, but then April had said, completely casually, ‘You’d only be doing it to get the attention from posting a topless video of yourself.’

  That had stopped him. For one thing, she was wrong. Completely wrong. Totally wrong. Colchester wrong. Yes, some of the guys had got A LOT of attention from their videos but that really, absolutely wasn’t his motive. For one thing, he’d wear a T-shirt. A tight one with the sleeves hacked off.

  Anyway, April. Recently stuff she’d said carried a bit more weight. Like it was in a slightly different font. Odd. But he definitely wasn’t not doing it just because April was against it.

  Ram paused at the park gate and told his leg to shut up for a moment. Why had sentences suddenly got so complicated?

  The answer was actually pretty simple. Aliens. Aliens had invaded his school. Before they’d gone, there’d been consequences. ‘Consequences’ wasn’t the right word. The nearest thing to the right word was just one long, howling scream in a very dark room.

  But fine, let’s go with aliens had invaded the school and there’d been consequences. They’d killed his girlfriend. They’d cut off his leg. They’d massacred a load of people (which no one was talking about). That weird kid in class? An alien prince. His football coach? Bit alien. The teacher who hated him? An alien. And, for complicated reasons, April’s heart was now alien.

  About the only person Ram knew who could describe it clearly would be Tanya. He didn’t like Tanya, not as such, but he understood the point of her. Tanya looked at the world through slightly narrowed eyes and called it as she saw it. Also, she never handed in homework late, so the world seemed to be forever on her side. Even if she was, like, twelve or something.

  Ram had been watching one of the ice bucket videos yesterday. Tanya had appeared over his shoulder. She somehow did this, despite being smaller than him. She was asking him a question. Frowning with annoyance, he made an elaborate pantomime of pausing the video and pulling off his headphones, and then looked at her.

  ‘What?’ he’d said, annoyed.

  She’d carried on looking at the ice frozen over the screaming footballer.

  ‘Don’t you think that’s odd?’ she said.

  ‘Wouldn’t know. Not done it.’ He wondered why he sounded so defensive.

  ‘Didn’t say you had.’ She was just staring at him, not blinking. ‘But it’s interesting. I mean, statistically, I can understand why one person would tip ice over their head. But two, I’m not so sure. Especially when everyone’s been there, done that before.’

  ‘Well, it’s for Skandis,’ muttered Ram. ‘Some kind of charity. An American one, I guess.’

  ‘Right.’ Tanya chewed the word. ‘Nearly the whole football team’s done it now. You haven’t. Has there been any peer pressure? You know, people asking you why you haven’t?’

  ‘Apart from you?’ Ram asked. ‘Not really.’ He put his headphones back on and watched the end of the video.

  ‘And now it’s your turn, Ram.’

  He looked up. Tanya had gone.

  Ram finished his run and we
nt to training. His school clothes were in his backpack. He would shower afterwards then go to class and that would all be fine.

  He pulled off his hoodie, stuffed it in a locker, changed into his football boots, and tried not to notice how silent the changing room was.

  The rest of his team was there. But they weren’t talking. They weren’t talking to him. He just knew it. It was all very subtle. It wasn’t like someone had come up to him and said anything. There was just that vague sense that he was in the room but he didn’t belong to it anymore. He knew better than to ask. There was nothing worse than asking. Confronting the problem. No.

  To be fair, it wasn’t anything new. When he’d been the team’s star player, that distance had already been there in the air. Even while they hugged him and cheered him on, there was still that slight whiff of ‘why him?’. They all knew how good he was. How naturally talented. How it was only a matter of time before he got the dream life that definitely included sports cars.

  That weird atmosphere had only increased ever since he’d lost his leg. He’d not been able to tell anyone. Not say, ‘Look, my leg got chopped off and this is the best they could do. Pretty neat, but don’t worry, I’ll get the hang of it’. He couldn’t say anything. Couldn’t do the wounded hero act. Couldn’t scream about how unfair it was. He got lots of sympathy for the death of his girlfriend, Rachel, but as far as they were concerned, he’d suddenly gone from star player to someone who really shouldn’t be on the team anymore.

  Now, the fact that he wasn’t throwing cold water over himself gave them the perfect opportunity to vent their frustrations. He was no longer the star player, he was no longer the ex-star player having a bad patch, and he was no longer one of them.

  He hung back, letting the rest of the team filter out towards the pitch. Neil, the only other guy who’d not done the challenge, was still tying his shoes and making a meal out of it. Ram suspected he really didn’t fancy being there either.

  Ram sat down on the bench next to him as casually as really awkward could be.