87 pages • 2 hours read
Matt de la PeñaA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
When Shy wakes the next morning, William Henry is gone, having left his life jacket behind. Shy realizes that the hug and strange conversation the night before were William’s way of saying goodbye. To combat the wave of despair that rises up in the presence of yet another death, Shy becomes more determined than ever to catch a fish, telling Addison, “Even if I have to dive my ass in there and choke one out with my bare hands” (198).
A few hours go by before Shy notices something in his pocket: William’s seven-carat diamond ring. Shy realizes that William must have slipped it into his pocked when he hugged him. He considers dropping the ring into the ocean but changes his mind and puts it back in his pocket. A short while later, he finally feels a bite on the fishing line. He reels in the fish and clubs it to death with the oar, and then realizes he doesn’t know what to do with it. Then, Addison simply tears the fish apart with her bare hands, offering half to Shy.
As the sun sets, Addison and Shy discuss David Williamson’s suicide again, trying to figure out why Addison’s father would have been so focused on Shy’s involvement. They conclude that LasoTech must be doing something illegal that needed to be covered up, and Shy realizes that the idea of her father being a potential criminal must be difficult for Addison. Before he can comment, however, Addison notices another boat in the distance.
After firing several flares with no response from the other boat, they row toward it instead. When they get close, they find a large motorboat with no signs of life present; Shy elects to climb aboard while Addison stays on the lifeboat. On board, Shy finds the corpses of two scientists, both of whom appear to have been shot. He also finds a duffel bag full of syringes and pill bottles, a packet of folded papers, and a loaded gun with three bullets. The motorboat has no extra supplies and no fuel; Shy and Addison must remain on their raft and keep rowing toward the Hidden Islands.
Hope is a defining aspect of Shy’s outlook on life and has a powerful influence on his ability to carry on when survival seems impossible. It works as a driving force, as Shy’s hope of eventual rescue drives him to keep himself and Addison alive, and his hope of eventually reaching the Hidden Islands helps him comfort Addison after William’s death. Neither Addison or Shy give up, despite the fact that none of their rowing and fishing seems to be showing any results; when they finally catch their first small fish, Shy has hope for the first time in days that they might actually survive. The motorboat they find is another source of hope; although the boat itself is useless, it shows that they must be getting closer to land, and the bag of mysterious medicine Shy finds later becomes their only hope of preventing Romero Disease from destroying what remains of America.
The conspiracy surrounding Shy and Addison also takes center stage in this portion of the book. Although Shy isn’t yet able to piece things together, de la Peña has put enough of the working parts together to allow the reader to begin to see the bigger picture. We learn that Addison’s father owns LasoTech, the company that carries out secret research experiments on Jones Island, and that his security officer is the man who was stalking Shy on the cruise ship. David’s suicide and ramblings about guilt and betrayal now make more sense when paired with Bill’s questioning and Jim Miller’s special interest in Shy, and the two dead scientists Shy finds with a bag of medicine tie the LasoTech conspiracy to Romero Disease. With these pieces of information, it becomes clearer that Addison’s father, Romero Disease, and Shy are inexorably linked, although de la Peña does not give away everything too soon.
By Matt de la Peña