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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Aunt Aurelia tried to pull away, but Jael tugged again and made Aunt Aurelia look her in the face.

Jael smiled. “It will be right. Come.” She nodded toward the door and pulled again.

Aunt Aurelia kept screaming, but she was looking at Jael—actually looking at her, not just staring off into space. She let Jael hang onto her hand, and then she started to follow her. She slid right off the bench and, still bawling, let Jael lead her onto the porch.

For a second, Mama Nan stared. Then she let her chin fall to her chest. “God be thanked for that.”

This was Walter’s chance too. He eased up from his stool and ran out the door after Jael and Aunt Aurelia.

They were halfway across the dusty yard.

Jael had let go of Aunt Aurelia, but was still leading her, walking backwards, her hand outstretched. “Come.” She smiled big, like she had an honest-to-goodness secret to show them. Buried treasure or something.

Walter jumped off the porch.

At the hayfield’s open gate, Jael turned around and started running. Her bones must not be hurting her like they had been this morning when she’d left.

Walter lengthened his strides and passed Aunt Aurelia. For a few steps, he ran backwards, gesturing with both hands for her to follow.

She’d stopped screaming. Tears glistened against her face, but she stared after Jael, eyes wide open and curious.

“Follow behind me!” Jael shouted. “You must be running!”

Walter gestured to Aunt Aurelia again.

She gurgled a shriek that sounded mostly happy and started running. She ran so fast she passed him, her skirt flapping around her knees. Her pale red-blonde hair fluttered. She wasn’t a very good runner—she waved her arms around too much. But she was laughing, really laughing, all the way.

A laugh started building in his own throat, but he kept it sitting on his tongue, where he could savor it. The uncut Timothy grass wisped against his legs and pricked his bare feet. He stretched out his hands and caught handfuls of seeds. Papa Byron wouldn’t like them running through his field, but he wouldn’t get too mad once he heard Jael had stopped Aunt Aurelia’s tantrum.

Halfway across the field, Jael threw herself down and disappeared in the sea of green.

Aunt Aurelia kept running. “Where are you now?” She laughed. “Where did you go?” Then with another happy shriek, she disappeared too.

Walter pumped his legs harder.

And then—there they were. They rolled in the tall grass, giggling.

Jael saw him. “Come!”

He plopped down and joined them. The grass was tall and prickly, but it bent under his body as he rolled. The broken stalks smelled sweet and… deep somehow, if deep could be a smell.

Finally, they rolled themselves still and just lay there, breathing. He turned his head sideways, so he could see Jael. She was awful swell. She wasn’t a girl exactly, not like Molly and the twins. But she wasn’t like grown-ups either. She wasn’t like anybody.

She rolled onto her elbow and hung her head back in a sigh. “It is all so very beautiful.”

Aunt Aurelia sat up, grass and leaves sticking out of her hair. “What is?”

“This, all things. Ground, plants—dirt.” Jael grabbed a handful of the dark soil. She rubbed it between her hands, then held her palms to her nose and inhaled. “It is, how do you say it? Otlichno . It is like nothing I have ever had knowledge for.” She extended her arm, gesturing to the whole field. “You are having these of such size to grow things. Where I am coming from, we are having only little rooms that are being made of glass. Not like this. It is very beautiful.”

“But you like flying best.” Aunt Aurelia straightened her skirt. She sat with her legs out in front of her and clapped her feet together. “You are flying with Hitch?”

“Yes, and that is beautiful too.” Jael glanced at Walter. Maybe she knew he cared more about these things than Aunt Aurelia did. “He is giving me this job. I will go up on his plane, and I will walk on his wings.”

It did sound beautiful. His heart pounded, a little painfully. If only he could go up. There had to be a way.

Nan doesn’t like Hitch anymore,” Aunt Aurelia announced.

Jael shook her head, slightly. “I think he is… giving her fear. He is not bad man, and she must have knowledge for this. He is having much bravery. Maybe he is having—how do you say more than much?”

Aunt Aurelia shrugged, uninterested.

“Well. He is also giving to people, despite he has no things to keep for himself.”

“And he knows how to fly,” Aunt Aurelia added.

“Yes. His flying is like my home.” Jael stared at the sky. “Only… with more excitement.”

“If you have a home, why do you live with us?”

Because she was an angel, and God had sent her down to help them. But of course, that didn’t make any sort of sense. Walter shook his head. If she was really an angel, she should’ve been able to say words right. And the first time he’d seen her, she wouldn’t have been all dirty and her clothes all burnt.

He cocked his head, encouraging her to tell them.

She traced her forefinger through the dirt. “Oh, it is hard to say words about. It is secret, yes?”

Aunt Aurelia applauded. “I adore secrets!”

“For all my life, I wanted to visit your world, down here, on ground. I read about it, in many books we have.”

“Storybooks.” Aunt Aurelia nodded her head in encouragement. “What do they say?”

“I am now thinking they are stories.” Jael hesitated. “They are saying Groundsmen take very little care for their families. That is why people are saying not to come down here. Because it will be bad for next children.” She doodled some more in the dirt. “But I was never having family, so I do not know about that.” She raised her head and smiled. “Our books are not right in what they are saying about you. Your families are good. Your sister, the way she gives care to you, it is good.”

“And is this the first time you’ve been to our world?” Aunt Aurelia asked it primly, as if they were at one of those tea parties for ladies.

“Yes.” Jael looked at Walter. “I am already having seen most of it from above. But this is first time I have ever been on ground. Hitch says I am his wing walker. This is truth. I am walking in sky all my life.”

What did that mean? Walter looked up at the mountains of white clouds scudding through the blue sky. That she was a pilot too? That she lived in a plane?

In town yesterday, everyone had been sure something had caused the big storm to happen. He shivered. It was a very bad storm. He was shopping with Mama Nan when the wind started ripping through town. It gusted right through the open door of Mr. Fallon’s store and scattered clothes and papers all over the place. It felt like being right in the middle of a twister.

Mama Nan had grabbed him and Aunt Aurelia and hustled them right over to the cafe, since it was built on top of a cellar where they could hide. While they were still on the street, the hail started hammering down. A stone the size of a strawberry had thunked his big toe.

Already, the nail was starting to turn black. He looked down at the bare toe and scooped up a handful of cool dirt to cover the bruise.

At least, he hadn’t almost gotten hit by lightning, like Jael had. He looked at her sideways. If the people from her home had caused the storm, did that mean they had made the lightning that hit her?

“You don’t want to go home?” Aunt Aurelia asked.

Jael shrugged. “What I want does not have so much importance. I must be going… to give help before Zlo is doing much damage to many places.”

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