K. Weiland - Storming

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Storming: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In the high-flying, heady world of 1920s aviation, brash pilot Robert “Hitch” Hitchcock’s life does a barrel roll when a young woman in an old-fashioned ball gown falls from the clouds smack in front of his biplane. As fearless as she is peculiar, Jael immediately proves she’s game for just about anything, including wing-walking in his struggling airshow. In return for her help, she demands a ride back home… to the sky.
Hitch thinks she’s nuts—until he steers his plane into the midst of a bizarre storm and nearly crashes into a strange airship like none he’s ever run afoul of, an airship with the power to control the weather. Caught between a corrupt sheriff and dangerous new enemies from above, Hitch must take his last chance to gain forgiveness from his estranged family, deliver Jael safely home before she flies off with his freewheeling heart, and save his Nebraska hometown from storm-wielding sky pirates.
Cocky, funny, and full of heart,
is a jaunty historical/dieselpunk mash-up that combines rip-roaring adventure and small-town charm with the thrill of futuristic possibilities.

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“Can’t hurt nothing now,” Earl said.

That was surely true. And anyway, if they had to go out with their tails between their legs, then at least they could do it thumbing their noses at Livingstone one last time.

“She can stay in the cockpit,” Earl said. “Just fly around a little.”

Hitch dropped his hands from his hips. “All right. Let’s do it.”

Earl helped Jael into the front cockpit and hand-propped the Jenny once more. As it rolled forward, the crowd’s attention split away from the other pilot and swerved back to them. Hitch picked up speed down the field and saluted Livingstone as he passed.

Livingstone scowled. He could holler at them through his megaphone if he wanted to, but then the whole place would know he’d lost control.

At the field’s end, Hitch lifted the Jenny off the ground and pitched her toward the sky. They leveled out some eight hundred feet off the ground.

That was when Jael stood up in the front cockpit and started climbing onto the top wing.

Seventeen

“DON’T YOU DARE!” Hitch shouted.

But just like he’d promised her, Jael couldn’t hear a thing. She hauled herself up and over the top wing’s edge and crouched there, hanging onto the strut wires that looped up from beneath.

The pounding of his heart filled his whole chest. Walking on the bottom wing was one thing. Down there, you had all kinds of stuff to hang onto and brace yourself against. But the top wing was a whole ’nother horserace. You wouldn’t find anything but a wall of wind and a few small wires in which to wedge either your hands or your feet.

His stomach flipped. The cockpit was safe; it was solid ground. But up on top, there was nothing but a long, long fall.

He held the plane steady. He needed to turn around, get this heap back to level ground before Jael lost her balance. But he couldn’t turn without the wind shifting around her and maybe pulling her over anyway.

“Get back in the cockpit!” he hollered so loud the words scraped his throat.

Maybe she heard him. She shifted one of her legs. But she didn’t extend it back toward the cockpit. She raised it, bending the knee, until her foot was flat against the wing. She wiggled, squeezing her foot into the wire.

“No! Don’t stand up!”

Slowly, slowly, hand still flat on the wing, she brought her other foot up and wedged it too. Then she started to straighten.

His lungs stopped inflating. Over the years, he’d worked with dozens of wing walkers. He’d seen more than a few of them break too many bones to survive. And none of them had about got hit by lightning the day before.

He braced the stick in both hands, feet against the rudder pedals.

She made it all the way up, body tilted forward, leaning into a fifty-mile-an-hour wind. And then, just like a pro, she raised her face to the sun and spread her arms.

She was doing it. She was really doing it. Of course, she could stop doing it any second. But for now, she was as good as any of the best of them. Her head started to move. She tilted it around, inch by inch, until he could see the corner of her eye. And then she grinned: a wide, exultant grin. The kind you grinned when you were as happy as you’d ever been in your life, and you knew you weren’t likely to be that happy ever again.

Durned girl. He grinned back.

He dropped the right wing the barest of smidges and started a big circle. If she wouldn’t get back into the cockpit, then he’d have to land sooner or later. Might as well do it under Livingstone’s nose.

The other contestant’s plane was in the air now, headed in their direction. Hitch gave it a wide berth to avoid the turbulence. As they passed each other, he offered the pilot and his staring parachutist a jaunty salute. Then he pitched down, still going slow to minimize the pressure on Jael as much as possible. By the time they reached the field, the Jenny was a bare twenty feet off the ground.

He gave her the gun and buzzed the field. Hats and scarves blasted away in every direction. White faces turned sunward to stare.

Let the Jenny crash and burn right now. It’d still be a heck of a way to go out. He laughed aloud.

Jael lowered herself to one knee and inched back until her hands could anchor themselves in the wires. He swung the plane around and came in low for a landing. Even above the engine, the sound of the whooping and clapping was colossal.

This girl was born to be an aerialist.

The wheels bounced. Jael bobbled and nearly fell over sideways.

His heart jumped into his throat.

But she righted herself and straightened up on her knees to wave one hand at the crowd. She was a natural, no question.

The crowd ducked through the fence or clambered over. They swarmed the field, despite Livingstone’s megaphoned entreaties.

Wasn’t everyday you worked a crowd into this kind of frenzy, especially with a relatively simple stunt. Still, crowds on the field were never a good thing. Even if they managed not to mangle their faces in a propeller, some of them had the not-so-charming tendency to grab souvenirs off the plane.

He tugged at his helmet and goggles and jumped out.

“Stay there,” he told Jael.

Still kneeling, she braced her hands against the wing, looking like she’d topple if she didn’t. But beneath her goggles, her grin sparkled.

Earl ran up. “I don’t believe it!” He looked from Hitch to Jael and back again, then got a knowing gleam in his eye. He threw his head back and laughed.

Hitch slapped his shoulder. “Help me move the plane. Stand back, folks! Wouldn’t want you to get bumped over.”

Somewhere toward the back of the bustle, Rick stared. Even if he’d stuck around to do the parachute drop, they wouldn’t have gotten a reception like this. And Rick knew it.

Livingstone jostled through to stand at Hitch’s elbow. “Well.” He looked abashed. But his mustache was trying to twitch away the fact that what he really wanted to do was grin. Hitch had just given the show another big fat plug.

Livingstone squinted at Jael from beneath his hat brim, then looked Hitch up and down. “You cannot follow rules to save your life, now can you?”

Hitch shrugged. “I try. The rules just don’t follow back.”

“Hmp.”

“But we qualified, right?”

This time, the mustache twitch hid a scowl. “I could well disqualify you on any number of technicalities. But far be it from Bonney Livingstone to disappoint the expectant public.” He raised his megaphone and turned to the crowd. “I am pleased to announce Captain Hitchcock and his team have qualified—with much aplomb, I might add—for this weekend’s competition. I am certain you all will return to watch him and his fearless flying companion tempt death once more!”

Hitch motioned to Earl, and they eased the plane through the crowd and back to camp. Behind, Livingstone’s megaphone droned on, and another plane engine chattered to life.

As soon as they were parked, Earl ducked under the engine and clapped Hitch on both shoulders. “You sly son of a gun! You had even me fooled. I bet you knew this whole time Rick was going to up and quit. That’s showmanship for you, boy!” He made the OK sign with one hand. “Those folks don’t even know what hit them.” He gestured up at Jael. “They think they just watched a cripple wing walk!” He turned back to Hitch. “Why didn’t we think of this before? You’re a genius, you know that?”

“Yep, a genius.” He was a lucky idiot, but why mince words? He walked around to the back of the wing and waited for Jael to shimmy down into the front cockpit.

She caught his eye as she ducked her head under the top wing and swung first one leg, then the other over the edge of the cockpit. She moved slow and careful, but her whole face beamed.

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