
- 320 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Skandar and the Unicorn Thief
About this book
A New York Times bestseller!
Soar into a breathtaking world of heroes and unicorns as you’ve never seen them before in this “unexpected, suspenseful, and heartwarming” (Kirkus Reviews) middle grade debut perfect for fans of the Percy Jackson and Eragon series!
Skandar Smith has always yearned to leave the Mainland and escape to the secretive Island, where wild unicorns roam free. He’s spent years studying for his Hatchery exam, the annual test that selects a handful of Mainlander thirteen-year-olds to train to become unicorn riders. But on the day of Skandar’s exam, things go horribly wrong, and his hopes are shattered…until a mysterious figure knocks on his door at midnight, bearing a message: the Island is in peril and Skandar must answer its call.
Skandar is thrust into a world of epic sky battles, dangerous clashes with wild unicorns, and rumors of a shadowy villain amassing a unicorn army. And the closer Skandar grows to his newfound friends and community of riders, the harder it becomes to keep his secrets—especially when he discovers their lives may all be in graver danger than he ever imagined.
Soar into a breathtaking world of heroes and unicorns as you’ve never seen them before in this “unexpected, suspenseful, and heartwarming” (Kirkus Reviews) middle grade debut perfect for fans of the Percy Jackson and Eragon series!
Skandar Smith has always yearned to leave the Mainland and escape to the secretive Island, where wild unicorns roam free. He’s spent years studying for his Hatchery exam, the annual test that selects a handful of Mainlander thirteen-year-olds to train to become unicorn riders. But on the day of Skandar’s exam, things go horribly wrong, and his hopes are shattered…until a mysterious figure knocks on his door at midnight, bearing a message: the Island is in peril and Skandar must answer its call.
Skandar is thrust into a world of epic sky battles, dangerous clashes with wild unicorns, and rumors of a shadowy villain amassing a unicorn army. And the closer Skandar grows to his newfound friends and community of riders, the harder it becomes to keep his secrets—especially when he discovers their lives may all be in graver danger than he ever imagined.
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Yes, you can access Skandar and the Unicorn Thief by A.F. Steadman in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Year
2022Print ISBN
9781665912747eBook ISBN
9781665912754
CHAPTER ONE The Thief
SKANDAR SMITH STARED AT THE unicorn poster opposite his bed. It was light enough outside now to see the unicornās wings outstretched mid-flight: shining silver armor covering most of his body, exposing only his wild red eyes, an enormous jaw, and a sharp gray horn. New-Age Frost had been Skandarās favorite unicorn ever since his rider, Aspen McGrath, had qualified for the Chaos Cup three years ago. And Skandar thought that todayāin this yearās raceāthey just might have a chance of winning.
Skandar had received the poster for his thirteenth birthday three months before. Heād gazed at it through the bookshop window, imagining that he was New-Age Frostās rider, standing just outside the poster frame ready to race. Skandar had felt really bad asking his dad for it. For as long as he could remember, theyād never had much moneyāhe didnāt usually ask for anything. But Skandar had wanted the poster so badly andā
A crash came from the kitchen. On any other day Skandar would have jumped out of bed, terrified there was a stranger in the flat. Usually he, or his sister, Kenna, asleep in the bed opposite, was in charge of making breakfast. Skandarās dad wasnāt lazyāit wasnāt thatāhe just found it hard to get up most days, especially when he didnāt have a job to go to. And he hadnāt had one of those in a while. But today was no ordinary day. Today was race day. And for Dad, the Chaos Cup was better than birthdays, better even than Christmas.
āAre you ever going to stop staring at that stupid poster?ā Kenna groaned.
āDadās making breakfast,ā Skandar said, hoping this would cheer his sister up.
āIām not hungry.ā She turned and faced the wall, her brown hair poking out from underneath the duvet. āThereās no way Aspen and New-Age Frost will win today, by the way.ā
āI thought you werenāt interested.ā
āIām not, butā¦ā Kenna rolled back again, squinting at Skandar through the morning light. āYouāve got to look at the stats, Skar. Frostās wingbeats per minute are only about average for the twenty-five competing. Then thereās the problem of their allied element being water.ā
āWhat problem?ā Skandarās heart was singing, even though Kenna was insisting Aspen and Frost wouldnāt win. She hadnāt talked about unicorns for so long heād almost forgotten what it was like. When they were younger, theyād argued constantly about what their elements would be if they became unicorn riders. Kenna always said sheād be a fire wielder, but Skandar could never decide.
āHave you forgotten your Hatchery classes? Aspen and New-Age Frost are water-allied, right? And there are two air wielders among the favorites: Ema Templeton and Tom Nazari. We both know air has advantages over water!ā
Skandarās sister was leaning on one elbow now, her thin pale face alight with excitement, her hazel hair and eyes wild. Kenna was a year older than Skandar, but they looked so similar that theyād often been mistaken for twins.
āYouāll see,ā Skandar said, grinning. āAspenās learned from her other Chaos Cups. She wonāt just use water; sheās smarter than that. Last year she combined the elements. If I was riding New-Age Frost, Iād go for lightning bolts and whirlpool attacks.ā¦ā
Kennaās face changed at once. Her eyes dulled; the smile dropped from the corners of her mouth. Her elbow collapsed, and she turned to the wall again, gathering her coral duvet round her shoulders.
āKenn, Iām sorry, I didnāt meanā¦ā
The smell of bacon and burnt toast wafted under the door. Skandarās stomach rumbled into the silence.
āKenna?ā
āLeave me alone, Skar.ā
āArenāt you going to watch the Cup with me and Dad?ā
No answer again. Skandar dressed in the half-light of the morning, disappointment and guilt tightening his throat. He shouldnāt have said it: If I was riding. Theyād been talking like they used to, before Kenna took the Hatchery exam, before all her dreams came crashing down.
Skandar entered the kitchen to the sound of sizzling eggs and blaring early Cup coverage. Dad was humming, leaning over the pan. When he saw Skandar, he gave him an enormous grin. Skandar couldnāt remember the last time heād seen him smile.
Dadās face fell a little. āNo Kenna yet?ā
āStill sleeping,ā Skandar lied, not wanting to spoil his good mood.
āSheāll find this year hard, I expect. The first race sinceā¦ā
Skandar didnāt need him to finish the sentence. This was the first Chaos Cup since Kenna had failed the Hatchery exam last year and lost all chance of becoming a unicorn rider.
The trouble was, Dad had never acted like it was rare to pass the Hatchery exam. He loved unicorns so much, he was desperate for one of his children to become a rider. He said it would fix everythingātheir money problems, their future, their happiness, even the days he couldnāt get out of bed. Unicorns were magic, after all.
So for Kennaās whole life heād insisted that sheād pass the exam and go on to open the Hatchery door on the Island. That she was destined for a unicorn egg locked inside. That sheād make their mum proud. And it hadnāt helped that Kenna had always been top of her Hatchery class at Christchurch Secondary. If anyone was going to get to the Island, her teachers said, it was Kenna Smith. Then sheād failed.
And for months now Skandarās dad had been telling him the same. That it was possible, probable, even inevitable, that heād become a rider. And despite knowing how unusual it wasādespite seeing Kenna so disappointed last yearāSkandar wanted more than anything for it to be true.
āYour turn this year, though, eh?ā Dad ruffled Skandarās hair with a greasy hand. āNow, the best way to make fried breadā¦ā As Dad gave him instructions, Skandar nodded in all the right places, pretending he didnāt already know how. Other children might have found this annoying, but Skandar was just pleased when Dad gave him a high five for getting the bread the perfect amount of crispy.
Kenna didnāt come out for breakfast, though Dad didnāt seem to mind too much as he and Skandar munched on sausages, bacon, eggs, beans, and fried bread. Skandar stopped himself from asking where the money for this extra food had come from. It was race day. Dad clearly wanted to forget about all that, and Skandar did too. Just for today. So he grabbed the brand-new bottle of mayonnaise and squeezed it over everything, grinning as it made a satisfying squelch.
āAspen McGrath and New-Age Frost still favorites for you, then?ā Dad asked through a mouthful. āI forgot to say, if you want to invite any friends over for the race thatās fine with me. Lots of kids do that, donāt they? Donāt want you to miss out.ā
Skandar stared down at his plate. How could he even begin to explain that he didnāt have any friends to invite? And, worse, that it was sort of Dadās fault?
The trouble was that looking after Dad when he wasnāt wellānot so happyāmeant that Skandar missed out on a lot of the ānormalā stuff you were supposed to do to make friends. He could never stay after school to mess about in the park; he didnāt have pocket money to go to the amusement arcade or sneak off for fish and chips on Margate beach. Skandar hadnāt realized to begin with, but those were the times people actually made friends, not in English class or over a stale custard cream at morning break. And looking after Dad meant that Skandar sometimes didnāt have clean clothes or hadnāt had time to brush his teeth. And people noticed. They always noticedāand remembered.
Somehow for Kenna it hadnāt been as bad. Skandar thought it helped that she was more confident than him. Whenever Skandar tried to think of something clever or funny to say, his brain jammed. Itād come to him a few minutes later, but face-to-face with a classmate, thereād just be a weird buzzing in his head, a blankness. Kenna didnāt have that problem; heād once heard her confront a group of girls whispering about how weird Dad was. āMy dad, my business,ā sheād said very calmly. āStay out of it or youāll be sorry.ā
āTheyāre busy with their own families, Dad,ā Skandar mumbled eventually, feeling himself blush, which always happened when he didnāt tell the whole truth. Dad didnāt notice, thoughāheād started stacking the plates, which was such a rare sight that Skandar blinked twice to make sure it was real.
āWhat about Owen? Heās a good mate of yours, isnāt he?ā
Owen was the worst. Dad thought he was a friend because heād once seen hundreds of notifications from him on Skandarās phone. Skandar hadnāt mentioned that the messages were far from friendly.
āOh yeah, he loves the Chaos Cup.ā Skandar got up to help. āHeās watching it with his grandparents, though, and they live miles away.ā Skandar wasnāt even making this up; heād overheard Owen complaining to his crew about it. Right before heād torn three pages out of Skandarās Math textbook, screwed them up, and thrown them in his face.
āKENNA!ā Dad shouted suddenly. āItās starting any minute!ā When there was no answer, he disappeared into their bedroom and Skandar sat down on the sofa, the TV coverage in full swing.
A reporter was interviewing a past Chaos Cup rider in the main arena, just in front of the starting bar. Skandar turned up the volume.
āāand do you think weāll see some fierce elemental battles today?ā The reporterās face was flushed with excitement.
āFor sure,ā the rider replied, nodding confidently. āThereās a real mix of abilities among the competitors, Tim. People are fixating on the fire strength of Federico Jones and Sunsetās Blood, but what about Ema Templeton and Mountainās Fear? They might be air-allied, but theyāre multitalented. People forget that the best Chaos Cup riders excel in all four elementsānot just the one theyāre allied to.ā
The four elements. They were the core of the Hatchery exam. Skandar had spent hours learning which famous unicorns and riders were allied to fire, water, earth, or air; which attacks and defenses they would favor in sky battles. Nerves swooped into Skandarās stomach; he couldnāt believe the exam was the day after tomorrow.
Dad returned, a troubled look on his face. āSheāll be out in a bit,ā he said, sitting next to Skandar on the battered old sofa.
āItās hard for you kids to understand, really.ā He sighed, staring at the screen. āThirteen years ago, when my generation first watched the Chaos Cup, it was enough just knowing the Island existed. I was far too old to be a rider. But the race, the unicorns, the elements⦠it was magic for usāfor me, for your mum.ā
Skandar stayed very still, not daring to turn his head away from the screen as the unicorns entered the arena. Dad only talked about Skandar and Kennaās mum on Chaos Cup day. By his seventh birthday, Skandar had given up asking about her at any other timeālearning it made Dad angry and upset, learning it made him disappear into his room for days.
āNever seen your mum so full of emotion as she was on the day of the first Chaos Cup,ā Dad continued. āShe sat right where you are now, smiling and crying, and holding you in her arms. Only a couple of months old, you were.ā
Skandar had heard this before, but he didnāt mind one bit. He and Kenna were always desperate to hear about their mum. GrandmaāDadās mumāused to tell them about her, but they liked it best when the stories came from Dad, whoād loved her most. And sometimes, when he repeated them, there were new details, like how Rosemary Smith always called him Bertie, never Robert. Or the way she had liked to sing in the bath, or her favorite type of flowerāpansiesāor the element sheād liked watching bestāwaterāin the first and last Chaos Cup sheād ever seen.
āIāll always remember,ā Dad continued, looking straight at Skandar, āwhen that first Chaos Cup finished, your mum took your tiny hand, traced a pattern on your palm, and whispered, quiet as a prayer, āI promise you a unicorn, little one.ā ā
Skandar swallowed hard. Dad had never told him that story before. Maybe heād saved it until the year of his Hatchery exam. Maybe it wasnāt even true. Skandar would never know whether Rosemary Smith had really promised him a unicorn, becauseāwithout warning, three days after the Mainland had watched unicorns race for the first timeāSkandarās mum had died.
Skandar would never have said it to Dad, or even Kenna, but part of the reason he liked the Chaos Cup so much was because it made him feel close to his mum. He imagined her watching the unicorns, the excitement building in her chestājust like it was in hisāand it was as though she was there with him.
Kenna stomped into the room with a bowl of cereal balanced on her palm.
āReally, Skar? Mayonnaise at breakfast?ā She pointed at Skandarās smeared plate on top of the stack. āI keep telling you: itās not an acceptable favorite food, little bro.ā
Skandar shrugged, and Kenna laughed as she squeezed onto the sofa next to him.
āLook at you both taking up so much room. Iāll be on the floor next year!ā Dad said, laughing.
Skandarās heart clenched. If his exam went well, he wouldnāt be here next year. Heād be watching the Chaos Cup in person, on the Island, and heād have his very own unicorn.
āKenna, cards on the table! Favorite?ā Dad asked her, leaning round Skandar.
She stared at the television, munching moodily.
āEarlier she said Aspen and New-Age Frost wonāt win,ā Skandar piped up, looking for a reaction.
It worked. āMaybe another year Aspen will do it, but this isnāt a good race for a water wielder.ā Kenna tucked a stray strand of hair behind her ear, a gesture so familiar to Skandar that it made him feel safe. Like Kenna was going to be okay, even if Skandar did leave her alone with Dad on the sofa next year.
Skandar shook his head. āI told you, Aspen isnāt just going to rely on the water element. Sheās cleverer than thatāsheāll use air, fire, and earth attacks too, for sure.ā
āA rider is always best at their allied element, though, Skar. Thatās why itās called alliedāduh! Say Aspen did use a fire attack; itās not going to compare with anything an actual fire wielder can do, is it?ā
āAll right then, who do you thinkās going to win?ā Skandar sat up as Dad turned the volume higher, the commentary reaching fever pitch as the armored competitors jo...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Map of The Island
- Dedication
- Prologue
- Chapter One: The Thief
- Chapter Two: Locked Out
- Chapter Three: The Hatchery Exam
- Chapter Four: The Mirror Cliffs
- Chapter Five: The Tunnel of the Living
- Chapter Six: Scoundrelās Luck
- Chapter Seven: The Death Element
- Chapter Eight: The Eyrie
- Chapter Nine: The Fault Lines
- Chapter Ten: Silver Trouble
- Chapter Eleven: Island Secrets
- Chapter Twelve: Mutation
- Chapter Thirteen: Chocolate Custard
- Chapter Fourteen: The Fire Festival
- Chapter Fifteen: Stampede
- Chapter Sixteen: Sky Battles
- Chapter Seventeen: The Spirit Den
- Chapter Eighteen: The Triumph Tree
- Chapter Nineteen: The Graveyard
- Chapter Twenty: The Training Trial
- Chapter Twenty-One: The Weaver
- Chapter Twenty-Two: Home
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- Copyright