The Lost Knight by Candy Atkins
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 of Earth. But I'm not. They grabbed the wrong girl. I just don’t know how to tell them.
Praise for the Book:
#2 on GoodReads Middle Grade Novels of 2016
5/5 Stars
“Like Harry Potter meets The Labyrinth.” -Author Adan Ramie
5/5 Stars “Candy Atkins takes us on an epic adventure reminiscent of the novels of C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien.” –GoodReads/Amazon Reviewer
5/5 Stars “Candy Atkins takes us on an epic adventure reminiscent of the novels of C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien.” –GoodReads/Amazon Reviewer
5/5 Stars
“For all you Potterheads or Harry Potter geeks, how can you not fall in love with this story and appreciate the fact that it is a female lead.” –Rising Indies United
Excerpts:
This is a partial excerpt from Chapter One:
I grab the box of midnight-purple
hair dye from my book bag and squeeze my way down the narrow,
overstuffed hall into the only bathroom in our apartment. The shower
hasn’t worked since it was turned into a storage closet, so I clear the
sink of the old cat food cans Auntie has stockpiled, turn on the cold
water, and dream about the day when I’ll have my own apartment with a
shower, hot water, and food.
“Agatha, are you
still pouting?” Auntie yells from her recliner. ”I told you, Uncle will
pick something up when he’s done with work.”
My
foster parents, I call them Auntie and Uncle, are not what I would
describe as parents, or even aunt and uncle, they’re more like
babysitters. Uncle hasn’t been home for three days, and I doubt she
believes he’ll be here tonight.
She just wants me to tell her that I’m okay with her not picking up
dinner. I’m not. Today is my thirteenth birthday. It’s not like I was
expecting a cake, but something to eat would’ve been nice.
After
I dye my hair, I take a shirt from the pile of laundry I’m standing on,
wrap it around my head, and carry the remaining hair dye back to my
bedroom. I love my tiny room, mostly because I’ve been sketching and
painting jumbled and disjointed art on these walls since I was old
enough to grip a pencil. Part of the reason I chose what the box calls
boysenberry for my hair is because the extra dye is the perfect hue for
the raven I’m painting on my ceiling.
Dipping
the number-three flat brush into my dye calms me and all is forgiven.
Auntie’s not a mean person, she’s just a bit off. Being angry with her
is like being mad at one of the cats—pointless.
I wrap a blanket around my shoulders and open the window. Queens is especially chatty tonight
with the noise of cars, people fighting, dogs barking, and the laughter
that only I can hear. I stand on the bed and fill in the gentle face of
my birdie while humming along with the chorus of voices outside.
Tonight,
the singing is boldly wafting through my window. I can’t understand the
words and don’t know the tune, but the music is sweet and peaceful.
It’s sad that I can only hear my songs some of the time, when I’m tired
and relaxed, and sadder still that no one else can listen with me.
My
dye runs out long before I’m satisfied with my raven so I give up and
climb into bed. The song I’m listening to now is particularly soothing, a
hymn or possibly an opera. Maybe one day I’ll be a great songwriter or
something.
A muffled thud near my window
startles me from a sound sleep. There’s an eerie red glow casting moving
shadows across my room. I blink a few times to make sure I’m not still
dreaming and follow the source of the light. Just to the side of the
foot of my bed kneels a tall, hooded figure with luminescent red eyes.
It’s stroking the long ears of a much smaller creature that looks
withered and dying.
I’m not scared, which is
weird, but it might be because I’m not sure I’m awake. I turn on the
lamp to make the dream disappear and end up blinding myself. When my
eyes adjust, I see the sickly green skin of a long-eared frog-boy lying
on the floor and the tall cloaked being that’s cradling it. The tall
black monster who closely resembles the Grim Reaper appears to be even
more stunned than I am. We stare at each other while my brain struggles
to figure out what I’m looking at. These things don’t exist, so how can I
be seeing them so clearly? The black-hooded creature never takes its
red eyes off me while it stands and lifts the small sickly frog-boy off
the floor.
“Agatha?” it whispers.
This
monster is actually in my room! My insides seize, trapping my scream.
What is this thing and how does it know my name? I want to run, but I
can’t move or look away. My fluttering heart stops when my door flies
open with a crash. A scream unseals my lips, amplifying my terror.
Auntie
charges in, wielding a large kitchen knife. She’s yelling in her nutty
made-up language, but it works. The creature jumps out my fifth-floor
window, taking the frog-boy with him.
She whips
around toward me, still holding the knife, and looking like she means
to use it. “What did you see! What was that? What were you doing!”
Auntie
has her kind moments, but she’s crazy. I mean, truly mental. Whatever
just happened, she mustn’t know that I saw it too. She probably suspects
I did, but if I confirm it, she’ll nail my window shut and my songs
will disappear forever. “I had a nightmare. Was I yelling in my sleep?
Did I wake you?” I’m trying to sound calm, but I’m failing.
She
takes a few deep breaths while she sizes me up. She pauses and tilts
her head to the side. “There was something here. I saw it. Did you see
it?”
“What was here? What did you see? And
what’s with the knife?” I want her to tell me if she saw the Grim Reaper
and a dead rabbit-frog-boy at the foot of my bed. If she saw them too,
then I’m not crazy. But then again, if I see the same thing as a crazy
person, we’re probably both insane.
Author Candy Atkins
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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