Praise for
THE UNICORN QUEST
★“Fans of magic and fantasy, especially those who love Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time or … Neil Gaiman’s Coraline, can’t miss this debut.”
—Booklist, starred review
“Hand to readers who love Narnia.”
—School Library Journal
“Rich worldbuilding and high stakes make this a quest worth taking with a protagonist who grows by facing her fears.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Enter and be transported to a lush land full of intrigue, danger, and thrilling magic! Benko’s sharp storytelling will keep readers madly flipping the pages in this new, timeless adventure. Spectacular!”
—Jennifer Lynn Alvarez, author of the Guardian Herd and Riders of the Realm series
“An adventure-quest brimming with magic and heart. Benko reaches the child in all of us who secretly hopes that a door is never just a door. Mesmerizing.”
—Roshani Chokshi, New York Times bestselling author
“The Unicorn Quest draws you into a richly imagined alternate world, keeps you on edge with clever twists and turns, then leaves you breathless as it gallops to its sensational climax!”
—Bruce Coville, author of the Unicorn Chronicles series
“Filled with wondrous surprises, fascinating magic, and appealing characters, it hits all the right notes, and I loved every second of it!”
—Sarah Beth Durst, author of Journey Across the Hidden Islands and The Girl Who Could Not Dream
“Utterly delightful! Taps into the wonderful childhood fantasy of finding a secret door to another world.”
—Jessica Day George, New York Times bestselling author
“As dazzling and richly imagined as anything I’ve read in years. The Unicorn Quest promises to be a must-read.”
—Peter Lerangis, New York Times bestselling author
To Papa, who made me fairy wings, and to Mama, who read me the world
CONTENTS
The Queen and The Unicorn
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
THE QUEEN AND THE UNICORN
In the light of a lavender moon,
The queen of Arden—
The gracious queen,
The crying queen,
The last queen—
The queen of Arden stepped onto the plains.
Under the gaze of heartless stars,
The plains—
The blackened plains,
The sorrowful plains,
The blood-soaked plains—
The plains trembled at her step.
“O Queen,” they whispered,
“Turn away. Turn back.”
“I cannot,” said the queen.
“What I search for is here.”
“What do you seek?”
(The plains knew what she sought.)
“I seek,” said she,
“The quickflame spirit,
The swiftness of grace,
The edge of courage.”
“I seek,” said she,
“The star-forged horn,
The cloud-woven mane,
The moon-lit heart.”
“I seek,” the last queen said,
“The last unicorn.”
Excerpt from The Queen and The Unicorn,
written by Spinner Glen Green of Arden
in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary
of the end of the Guild War, 1049 Craft Era
CHAPTER
1
Claire had never seen a ladder in a fireplace before.
Of course, since moving to Great-Aunt Diana’s mansion two weeks ago, she had seen many strange things: a castle in a bottle, a chair made entirely of antlers, and even the disembodied hand of a statue holding paper clips in the third-floor library.
But this ladder was different, somehow, and as she moved through the gallery toward it, she felt a slight jolt between her shoulder blades, as if lightning had pinched her.
Late-afternoon sunlight streaked in from the edges of the curtains as Claire wove among the sheet-covered pillars and sculptures scattered throughout the room. She ignored as best she could the statues pressing against the dust cloths, looking like stationary ghosts.
Claire’s great-aunt Diana had been an art collector, and this, it seemed, was yet another gallery where she’d kept many of her treasures. She’d traveled all over the world seeking out strange and beautiful things, and because of that, Claire had only seen her great-aunt once, when she was a baby, which didn’t really count.
So a few months ago when her father had solemnly told her and her older sister, Sophie, that their great-aunt had disappeared on one of her treasure-hunting trips, Claire didn’t really know how to feel. She had given Dad a hug while Sophie remarked it was a spectacular way to die. And after that, Claire didn’t think much about it—until, that is, they received notice that Great-Aunt Diana’s house, Windemere Manor, and all its contents had been left to them. All those thousands of knickknacks and collectibles had to be sorted and cataloged for the estate sale scheduled at the end of August, right before school started again.
So now, all because of Great-Aunt Diana, Claire’s last summer before middle school—the summer that was supposed to be full of late-night sleepovers with her best friend, Catherine, and two weeks of summer camp—had been canceled.
Dad and Mom had thought that moving into the house for the summer would be a good break from the humidity of the city. Family bonding time, they had announced, with no distractions.
Claire knew exactly what they meant: distractions like Dad’s marketing meetings that ran into dinnertime because no one could agree which font was best, or the stack of essays waiting to be graded by Mom before next morning’s classes.
In any case, Claire had to admit she was looking forward to this summer, too. Being in the country might mean bug bites and no cell phone reception, but it also meant time to hang out with Sophie again—just like they used to before.
While most girls their ages collected bracelets or pens, Sophie had collected Experiences. Directing neighborhood plays. Searching for fossils in the park. Researching the disappearance of a masterpiece as she tried to solve the mystery. They were all moments of excitement, and Claire always came along.
But after the diagnosis, Experiences stopped being fun. Sophie seemed more interested in stories about graveyards and doctors and other scary stuff that Claire hated.
Thankfully, now all that was in the past, along with the worry lines around Mom’s mouth and the long hours in waiting rooms. Sophie was well again. Things were back to normal. Well, almost normal.
Sophie kept disappearing into the mansion’s rooms, leaving Claire in a constant search. It was almost as if all her time away from Claire had marked her for places that Claire couldn’t follow. In fact, she had been trying to find Sophie when she opened the d
oor to this particular gallery.
Now, standing in the hearth’s dusty mouth, Claire coughed as she studied the ladder. Of the many strange sights in Windemere Manor, this one stood out to her. Something about the ladder felt like an invitation. She looked up into the dizzying darkness. What was up there—spiders? Bats? Something else?
Claire heard a creak behind her.
She stiffened. This old house, with its dark corners and constant hisses and pops, had made her nervous since the very first time she’d stepped into the dimly lit foyer and seen the peeling wallpaper and crumbling trim.
Another groan, this time from the ceiling. Claire pulled her pencil out from behind her ear and lightly pressed her thumb against it. Its tip was sharp, and it made her feel slightly better. Sophie always said pencils were Claire’s wooden thumb—that after she’d finally stopped sucking on her thumb, she’d replaced it with the equally annoying habit of nibbling her pencils. But it was much more than that. Pencils were what Claire used to draw and document the world around her; it was a way to understand.
Claire thought she heard someone exhale. A flicker of white caught her eye. She turned—
Hands suddenly gripped Claire’s shoulders, and her scream drowned out the clatter of her pencil as it hit the floor.
“You should have seen your face,” Sophie said, laughing as she brushed dark hair out of her eyes.
“Don’t do that!” Claire said, crouching to her knees, partly to hide her burning face and partly to find her pencil, which seemed to have instantaneously disappeared. She felt around the marble floor beside the fireplace. The hard, cold rock stung her knees, but she didn’t care. It was her best drawing pencil, and it had finally worn down to the perfect length. The next time she sharpened it, it would be too short.
“Sorry, Clairina, it was just too good to pass up!”
Claire kept her eyes on the floor. She was glad that Sophie, always fearless, couldn’t hear her still-racing heartbeat. There. Her hand found her pencil, and she instantly felt better.
“Wow,” she heard her sister say. Claire stood back up to see that Sophie had lifted the corner of a yellowing linen sheet and was peering under it. “Look at this!” She tugged the fabric, and it slipped loose from the display pedestal.
A beautiful ivory unicorn, slightly bigger than Claire’s forearm, was revealed. Rearing, the unicorn arched its neck forward, its spiral horn ending in a perfect point. The sculptor must have been a master because the ivory mane seemed to ripple in a phantom wind. But though the unicorn was undoubtedly magnificent, somehow it looked sad, and the feeling pierced Claire’s heart, sharp and certain. She tucked her pencil behind her ear and reached out to touch the flowing tail. One day, she wanted to draw something as wonderful as this.
But Sophie had already lost interest and was moving through the gallery, lifting the linens off more pedestals and inspecting the other pieces. Claire noticed she had pulled her hair back with the purple ribbon she always kept around her wrist.
When Sophie wore her hair in a high ponytail, she reminded Claire of a postcard they had received from Great-Aunt Diana. It had a bust of an Egyptian queen on it, and Sophie had the same pointed features as the royal’s profile, though the freckles on her cheeks were all her own. When Claire put her curly hair in a ponytail, she just looked like a squirrel had attached itself to the back of her head.
“Have you ever seen such a big fireplace?” Sophie asked, bored with sculptures, apparently, and returning to the hearth. Her voice echoed slightly as she looked up the chimney. “You could roast a moose in here.”
“Or a sister,” Claire said drily.
Sophie smiled her wild smile, showing all her teeth. Then she put a foot on the bottom rung.
“What are you doing?” Claire asked. “You can’t climb that thing.” She heard the waver in her voice and hated it, but there was something about the enormous dark fireplace, and the old ladder, and this whole room, that gave her a bad feeling.
“Don’t be like that,” Sophie said, putting her foot on the next rung. “Come on. Have a little fun.”
There was really no choice. If Claire didn’t climb, Sophie would never let her forget it, just like the time four years ago when Claire had stood frozen in fear at the top of the tallest waterslide, waiting for Dad to come get her, the sun umbrellas just candy-colored dots far below.
What her sister had never understood was that it wasn’t the height she’d been afraid of, or the rush of water. It was the dark tunnel she had to pass through first, before the slide burst into sunlight. She had never liked the dark. As an artist, she understood the world by what it looked like. The dark was unknowable. And Claire hated not knowing things.
But there was one other thing she was beginning to hate more: Being left behind. Left alone.
“Let’s go,” Sophie said as Claire hesitated. “It’ll be an Experience!”
The familiar word lit a match in Claire’s heart, singeing—if not burning away—some of the strangeness of being in Great-Aunt Diana’s house. Sophie was finally acting like herself again. She wanted Claire to come with her.
And so Claire took a deep breath and wrapped her hand around a wooden rung. Putting one foot on the ladder, she tested its strength. When it didn’t snap, she took another step up. Then another.
One by one, she climbed, following the bright turquoise soles of Sophie’s sneakers. Soon the darkness reached down around Claire’s shoulders.
“Sophieee! Claaaire!”
Claire paused, her skin prickling as their names whispered up through the shaft as though from a great distance. A ghost?
“Sophieee! Claaaire!”
A rush of relief hit her. “Sophie!” she called. “I think Dad’s looking for us!”
“Gah!” Sophie’s sneakers were already so high above her, Claire could barely make them out. “Why does he always have to ruin everything?”
“Come on, Sophie,” she said, scuttling down the ladder. Reluctantly, it seemed, Sophie began to follow.
Claire jumped the last several feet and landed just as the double doors swung open and Dad’s head peeked around the corner. Above her, she heard the ladder creak as Sophie froze.
“There you are! It’s time for dinner.” Dad adjusted his glasses. “What are you doing in here?”
“I … um … I was exploring.” Claire tried to keep her eyes fixed on him and not let them slide to the fireplace.
He nodded. “I don’t blame you. Your great-aunt had a lot of cool stuff, huh?” He waited for her to nod obediently, then asked, “Do you know where Sophie is?”
There was a scuffling above, and Claire flinched. “Yeah. I can get her.”
“Great.” Dad smiled as he stepped back into the hallway. “Tell her to hurry!”
Claire counted to five before she called, “All clear!” She waited for the squeak of rubber sole against rung, but the chimney was oddly silent. “Sophie?”
Claire sucked her breath in tight. It was obvious what was happening. Sophie was going to scare her again. But this time, Claire was ready for it.
A few more seconds ticked by. Nothing.
Maybe Sophie had run into a family of raccoons. Maybe she’d gotten stuck, or—Claire suddenly felt as though she’d been kicked in the stomach—maybe she was about to collapse again. Like before.
Then she heard Sophie’s voice, made tinny with the echo: “Claire?”
“Sophie!” Claire was so relieved she didn’t know whether to cry or hug the ladder. Instead, she crossed her arms. “What were you thinking!? You’re going to get us in trouble!”
“Calm down, I’m coming!” A second later Sophie’s thin frame descended. “Sorry,” she said, not looking sorry at all. “I climbed up a few more rungs to make sure Dad didn’t see, but then I couldn’t hear anything.”
The ash had tinted Sophie’s skin gray and left odd smudge marks all over her arms. For a second, Claire was reminded of how she’d looked in the hospital. Suddenly, she wanted to be as far
away from sheet-draped statues as possible.
“Come on,” Claire said. She took a few steps toward the double doors and glanced back. Sophie was still staring at the fireplace. For a moment, Claire thought Sophie would climb up again, but instead, her sister turned, her sundress swishing around her knees as she jogged to the door.
“I’m going to go wash my hands,” she said. “Tell them I’ll be there in a second.” Claire was about to follow, but for some reason, she took one last look at the gallery behind her. The unicorn statuette looked like a snowflake against the black mouth of the fireplace, and again, sadness tinged her heart. She felt bad that something so pretty should have to stay hidden away in the cold, vast room.
Claire stepped into the hallway and carefully shut the doors behind her, then flicked the lock left. She checked the handle. The doors stayed shut. She jiggled the knob a second time, and then a third. For good luck.
Mostly, the Martinsons ate together in the kitchen. But tonight they had set up in the dining room, which was the grandest room Claire had ever seen. The crystal chandelier looked like something that belonged in Cinderella’s ballroom, and the tapestries hugging the walls added a hominess that was lacking in the rest of the manor. In the tide of arguments over which ice cream flavor was best and a funny story about one of Mom’s students, Claire felt the long reach of the gallery unhook itself and burrow away.
As dinner neared its end, Claire watched Dad carefully, waiting for his signal. Finally, he looked at her across the table and pulled his ear.
Claire stood up, keeping her head down to hide her smile. Sophie always said Claire’s smile was a billboard for I Have a Secret, and she didn’t want Sophie to know until the last possible moment. Quickly, she gathered up some of the dirty dishes and followed her father to the kitchen.
Dad pulled a frosted cake out of a cupboard. “Do you have the presents ready?” he asked.
“Yes,” she said, showing him the tote bag filled with gifts she had stuffed under the kitchen sink.
“Great,” he said. “Now we just have to find where Auntie hid the candles …”
He began to open the pantry doors. Claire dutifully pulled out a drawer, but instead of candles, she found a geode the size of a dinosaur egg. She closed the drawer carefully. Great-Aunt Diana either had a complex organizational system, or she had been the messiest person in the world.
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