The Lost Knight
(The Lost Knight Series, #1)
Author: Candy Atkins
Publication Date: May 20th, 2016
Genres: Fantasy, Young Adult
Book Description:
How am I supposed to save the world when I’m not strong, not brave, not smart, and not particularly good at most things? I ran away from home the day after my thirteenth birthday when Auntie and her weird friend attacked me. Now I’m on the run with the Grim Reaper and a scary soldier. And I’m no longer on Earth. They were expecting me to be a Knight. The savior that’s supposed to stop a war and prevent the invasion to Earth. But I’m not. They grabbed the wrong girl. I just don’t know how to tell them.
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EXCERPT
There’s
no furniture except for a naked table and chairs standing alone in the
family room. I remember the table being a lot bigger, so I must have
been about five the last time I saw it. We have a fireplace? A sad sigh
escapes my lips. It would’ve been so nice to sit by a fire on cold
nights.
I
numbly inspect the apartment and try to fathom how this happened. It’s
impossible to remove everything from this place in the few hours I’ve
been gone. Even with a crew of twenty and heavy equipment, it should’ve
taken at least a week.
Auntie steps out of the kitchen and greets me with a ridiculously wide grin. “Oh, there you are, dear.”
The
dear at the end of Auntie’s statement must mean she wants to impress
the tall man standing next to her. Just looking at the guy, it’s obvious
he’s important. His perfectly tailored wool suit is an expensive shade
of charcoal, and his black shoes are very shiny. Lawyer, obviously.
Auntie’s
treasures are the most important things in the world to her. They’re
gone, and she’s delighted. She should be bawling her eyes out or, more
accurately, screaming her head off. She’s definitely enthralled with the
stranger beside her. Maybe she’s just happy she was able to keep her
cats, which are sitting in a row against the wall, staring at her. I’ve
never seen cats line up like that: twenty cats, each sitting an equal
distance apart.
I’m
still dreaming. I bet I never woke up. This is part of my nightmare. At
least, I hope it is. “Well, say hello!” Auntie demands.
I drop my gaze to the floor. “Hello.”
Auntie’s
visitor nods as he walks past me, closes the door and ushers me in to
sit at the table. His long braid falls over his shoulder when he sits in
the other chair. He gives me a selfconscious smile when he flings it
back over his shoulder.
I
shiver when he slides Auntie’s beautiful carved chest with the crystal
ball in it over to me. Maybe it is valuable if a lawyer is involved. “Do
you know who I am, Agatha?”
“No, sir,” I whisper.
“This is Grand Wiz—” Auntie begins, but he silences her with a wave.
“My name is Duradin. I’m a friend of your foster mother, and I knew your parents.”
This
information is supposed to give us a connection, but I don’t want to
talk about my parents. I want to know why he’s here. He’s expecting a
reaction, but I just sit there and wait for him to tell me whatever it
is he wants me to know. We stare at each other for an uncomfortable
amount of time until he gives up and nudges the chest. “Do you know what
this is?”
“It’s Auntie’s box.”
Duradin smiles. “No. It’s your box. More precisely, it’s your Orb.”
By
the way he says it, he’s trying to impress me, but it’s just the
crystal ball that Auntie always makes me look at. This man is crazy.
Auntie is crazy, and it’s becoming quite clear that I’m crazy, too.
Duradin
lifts the box, opens it carefully, and formally presents it to me. I
grab the marble and he places his hands over mine, closing my fingers
around the orb. The contact causes waves of revulsion to travel up my
arms, but I don’t know how to yank my hands back without making Auntie
mad.
He
leans in and puts his face close to mine. I can smell the mint on his
breath as he stares into my eyes. “This Orb has special powers, and I’m
here to help you use them.”
The
marble slides around my sweaty palm as I fight the urge to stand. I put
my head down to break his stare, and glare at the hands holding mine
captive. I just want to get this over with so this man will leave and I
can ask Auntie what happened to her stuff.
“I need you to relax,” he instructs as he shakes my arms. “Take a few deep breaths. Close your eyes.”
I
do as he orders, but I’m not relaxed. My heartbeat is matching pace
with my anxiety. Mr. Duradin starts chanting in the weird language
Auntie always uses when she makes me do the birthday ritual. His chant
is longer than Auntie’s and more powerful, if that’s possible.
“Now, open your eyes and peer into the Orb,” he whispers.
I
do what he wants, but as always, it’s just a ball. I want to lie to him
and tell him I see something, but then he’ll ask questions, and I won’t
answer them correctly, and then everyone will be mad at me. So I look
at the ball and wait for the question I dread.
“This isn’t an ordinary orb, Agatha. Look at it. See through it. How deep does it go?”
I
figure it goes about an inch, maybe an inch and a half. I’ve never
measured Auntie’s ball—I mean, Orb. However, I can’t answer because he’s
chanting again. If everyone around you loses their mind, does that mean
you’re really the one who’s insane?
“Look into the eyes of the Orb,” he whispers. “Look into it.”
I
do my best to appear as if I’m trying. I would laugh at this man if he
weren’t so scary. I want to throw the ball in his face and inform him
it’s just a glass marble—so no eyes. I gaze down at the distorted
reflection of my hand while Duradin chants louder and Auntie joins in. I
focus on keeping my trembling hands still and my breathing even. I
don’t want them to know how badly they’re scaring me.
I’m
fixated on keeping an appearance of concentration on my face when a dim
orange pinlight appears in the center of the Orb. I glance around the
room, trying to find what the ball is reflecting.
“You saw something! What do you see?” Duradin grabs me by the hair and forces me to look down at the ball.
Tears
spring to my eyes, blurring my vision. Why does he need to hurt me if
I’m doing what he wants? I try to lift my head, but he pulls my hair
again. The ball is glowing brighter, but I won’t say anything. After
he’s gone, I’ll tell Auntie what I saw, and maybe she can explain what’s
happening. Until then, I open my hands and let the ball drop to the
floor.
Auntie
yelps and dives for the ball. Her bulky body bounces me out of my
chair. A shriek bursts from my lungs, more from surprise than from the
actual fall. I land with a thud and hit my head on the now uncushioned
floor.
Duradin’s
fingers bruise my skin when he grabs me and drags me to the Orb. “Pick
it up.” His tone is quiet and more terrifying than Auntie’s ranting. I
do, and he forcibly sits me back down in the chair. He grips the back of
my head and demands, “Look at the Orb. What do you see?”
My
head hurts, my stuff is gone, and this vile man is forcing me to stare
at a marble. I refuse to tell him anything until Auntie explains what’s
happening.
“Tell me what you see!”
There’s
a hiss, and the man hollers. I snap my head up. Oberon, one of Auntie’s
cats, is wrapped around Duradin’s head, sending him to the floor. I
launch myself out of the chair toward the door, but Auntie tackles me. I
crash to the bare subfloor and slam the air from my body.
“You’re not going anywhere!” she screams, trying to pin me to the ground.
“Let
me go!” I try to wiggle out of her grasp. I’ve never been in a fight in
my life, and I never in a million years thought Auntie would attack me.
She’s never been a violent person. Who is this man, and why do they
care so much about a stupid marble?
The
other cats join the fray, and the scary guy gets caught in the middle.
Auntie’s tiring, so I’m able to squirm free. I only take one step when
the man seizes me by the ankle and knocks me down, smashing my face
against the floor, and jarring the ball loose. The cats rush after it.
“What did you see?” Duradin demands as he picks me up and shakes me.
My
body shuts down and my brain follows. I go limp and close my eyes
tightly. They fly open when he drops me. My elbow connects with the wood
floor and sends an electrical shock up my body. I flip onto my stomach,
ready to run, but freeze when I see what made him let me go.
The
large black monster that came through my window last night is in my
family room, brutally striking Duradin in the stomach with a long white
staff. It follows that hit with a blow to his face that sends him
tumbling backward. Then the hooded creature turns toward me.
Auntie
leaps onto its back. She’s only there for a second before the monster
shrinks into nothingness. She hits the floor with a loud smack and a
groan. It’s only gone for a second before it’s back and lunging at the
man.
Duradin
shouts, and ten soldiers appear from thin air. They’re in red armor
with raised gold swords, crowding our tiny apartment, and charging the
monster. They end up crashing into each other when the hooded creature
vanishes and reappears again a few feet away. It swings its staff and
bashes the soldier in front of it. Then it thrusts the staff back,
taking out two behind him.
That buys it some time. The glowing eyes search the room and find me.
Maybe if I play dead, the monster won’t come after me. I lie still so it can tell I’m not a threat to it. “Run!” it screams.
I
spring to my feet, but only make it a few steps when I trip over one of
the cats and hit the floor again. It’s Oberon, the small black and
white tabby that attacked Duradin. The cat trots to the side of the room
where the glass ball rolled and bats it to me. I capture the marble
without thinking and sprint out of the apartment.
Candy Atkins is a full‐time writer who lives with her husband and two kids in Orlando, Florida. She’s an avid reader and lover of all things fantasy and sci‐fi. Her debut novel, The Lost Knight, is volume one of the six‐part Lost Knight Series.
Her life’s journey has taken her from dining with the President to being on food stamps to running her own company. And since all author bios end by naming and quantifying pets...she also enjoys spending time with her boxer, Butler, and Wynona the cat.
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The book description and excerpt sounds intriguing. Thanks for sharing. Love the cover too.
ReplyDeleteThe Lost Night sounds like a great adventure ♡ Thank you
ReplyDeletei like that the heroine has self-doubt like the rest of us
ReplyDeleteSounds like she doesn't know yet that shes the right girl, I'm sure but I'll have to read to find out. Like the premise.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed learning about the book. Thank you so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThe synopsis was interesting but I definitely did not expect the extract to be how it was after reading it. This book sounds fantastic! Definitely sounds like a YA book I would like.
ReplyDeleteBased on the excerpt it looks like a very well written story!
ReplyDeleteSounds great,thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThat cover is positively gorgeous! :)
ReplyDeleteI love the cover and the book sounds intriguing cant wait to read it :)
ReplyDeleteThe cover looks mystic, I love it!
ReplyDeleteI'm hypnotized by that book cover!!! Absolutely fantastic. :)
ReplyDeleteEveryone is a nobody at some point in life.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much everyone for your interest, and thank you so much for sharing my book, CBY Book Club!
ReplyDelete