Shadows of Sherwood
By Kekla Magoon
4/5
()
About this ebook
For fans of Aru Shah and Tristan Strong comes an action-packed, modern retelling of the Robin Hood myth by award-winning author Kekla Magoon.
"A compelling reboot of the Robin Hood myth." --Rick Riordan, bestselling author of Percy Jackson & the Olympians
The night her parents disappear, twelve-year-old Robyn Loxley must learn to fend for herself. Her home, Nott City, has been taken over by a harsh governor, Ignomus Crown. After fleeing for her life, Robyn has no choice but to join a band of strangers--misfit kids, each with their own special talent for mischief.
Setting out to right the wrongs of Crown's merciless government, they take their outlaw status in stride. But Robyn can't rest until she finds her parents. As she pieces together clues from the night they disappeared, Robyn learns that her destiny is tied to the future of Nott City in ways she never expected.
Read all the books in the Robyn Hoodlum series:
Shadows of Sherwood
Rebellion of Thieves
Reign of Outlaws
Kekla Magoon
Kekla Magoon writes novels and nonfiction books for teens, including 37 Things I Love, The Rock and the River, How It Went Down, Light It Up, and Revolution in Our Time: The Black Panther Party’s Promise to the People, which was a National Book Award Finalist, LA Times Book Prize Finalist, and Michael L. Printz Honor book. Kekla received the 2021 Margaret A. Edwards Award for her significant and lasting contribution to young adult literature. Past recognitions include a Boston Globe/Horn Book Award, an NAACP Image Award, and four Coretta Scott King Honors. She holds a BA from Northwestern University and an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts. When she is not writing, Kekla can be found entertaining a pair of energetic orange cats or riding her bike through the hills of Vermont.
Read more from Kekla Magoon
The Rock and the River Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Camo Girl Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Fire in the Streets Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Reign of Outlaws Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Highest Tribute: Thurgood Marshall's Life, Leadership, and Legacy Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Shadows of Sherwood
9 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A great book appropriate for middle grade readers and older. I'm looking forward to reading the next one.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a re-telling of Robin Hood.Robyn likes to tinker with electronics with her dad. She’s also fearless, sneaking out and defying security to obtain parts she needs to build and tinker with her projects. She returns one night after sneaking out to discover a large pool of blood and her parents missing. They’ve been taken. Are they even alive? She runs before she can be caught only to be arrested shortly thereafter. Robyn is resourceful. After breaking out of jail with her cellmate Laurel and meeting Key with whom they share a hideout, Robyn begins to see how bad life is for other people. As she and her band of thieves steal and give away food, medicine, and hope to the crowds, Robyn discovers what’s truly going on. All of the leaders of government disappeared on the same night. Someone is completely taking over. Robyn needs to stop the pain being asserted on the people, find her parents, and overthrow the evil leaders. In this quest she finds others to help, and they become a thorn in the government’s side with Robyn as the number one wanted criminal. I liked Robyn and her crew. It’s truly a fun novel about taking from those in power to help those in need. Their abilities to thwart the enemy does require some suspension of disbelief because it sure does seem easy to embarrass the sheriff. There are still unanswered questions, so the next book should provide some more clues. I think it’s a lot of fun--it has flaws but not enough to take away from the novel.
Book preview
Shadows of Sherwood - Kekla Magoon
For Kerry
and in memory of E. T.
CONTENTS
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
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
Chapter Forty-Eight
Chapter Forty-Nine
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-One
Chapter Fifty-Two
Chapter Fifty-Three
Chapter Fifty-Four
Chapter Fifty-Five
Chapter Fifty-Six
Chapter Fifty-Seven
Chapter Fifty-Eight
Chapter Fifty-Nine
Chapter Sixty
Chapter Sixty-One
Chapter Sixty-Two
Chapter Sixty-Three
Chapter Sixty-Four
Chapter Sixty-Five
Chapter Sixty-Six
Chapter Sixty-Seven
Chapter Sixty-Eight
Chapter Sixty-Nine
Chapter Seventy
Chapter Seventy-One
Chapter Seventy-Two
Chapter Seventy-Three
Chapter Seventy-Four
Chapter Seventy-Five
Acknowledgments
Rebellion of Thieves teaser
About the Author
Praise for Shadows of Sherwood
Books by Kekla Magoon
Forty-Two Teeth
The sign on the fence said BEWARE OF DOGS. Robyn scaled it anyway.
Dogs? As in plural? she thought, as she laced her fingers in the chain link, wedged the toes of her boots into the diamond-shaped spaces, and climbed. That could be a problem.
There were plenty of problems tonight. For starters, the bare lightbulbs that hung at intervals along the fence had been recently changed to a higher wattage. The conical swaths of light they cast were larger and brighter than Robyn had ever seen. She had also spotted six different guards patrolling the inside perimeter of the enclosed lot. That was three times the usual. And they were packing. Long automatic rifles draped over their shoulders or held loosely at their sides by the necks.
None of it made any sense. The guards at the 410 Compound were usually unarmed, bottom-of-the-barrel in the brains department, and easy to evade. The 410 was a simple refuse depository—a junkyard, basically—with no need for such high security. Unless something had changed. Robyn gulped at the thought.
An hour ago, as she slipped out her bedroom window and dashed off into the night, this supply run had seemed like it would be no big deal. Scale the fence, stuff a few new gadgets into her backpack—whatever she could find that appeared useful—and climb back out again. She’d done it dozens of times before.
Normally, staying unseen was easy and fun. Dodging the guards was all part of the adventure. Now, scaling the fence, Robyn felt a hint of trepidation. Things were not as they ought to be. Had she missed something?
Robyn kept on climbing, though her mind ticked around the problems at hand:
Guards.
Guns.
And how many dogs, exactly?
The guys patrolling the fence looked more like soldiers than civilian security guards. Those big guns . . . What could be within the 410 that was worth protecting with so much firepower? Really valuable trash?
Not likely. These changes could mean Governor Crown was up to something new. As if he hadn’t done enough damage in Nott City already, Dad would say. It was all he could talk about anymore. His government work took up all his time now, leaving no space for any of the things he and Robyn used to do together. He’d entirely stopped bringing home interesting items for them to tinker with, the way he used to, so Robyn was forced to find her own sources of scrap.
Tonight she hoped to end her weeks-long quest for a better voltage adapter for her favorite circuit board. She wanted to improve the elaborate system of intruder alarms in her bedroom suite. She’d been working on it for ages. Next time Dad visited her room, he would see that Robyn didn’t need his help to build something awesome. But he hadn’t so much as tapped on her door in weeks.
She crept higher. Twelve feet up, she paused to study the coil of barbed wire crowning the fence. Moment of truth. Robyn glanced down at the roof of the parked office trailer inside the fence—her landing surface—and drew a deep breath. She inverted her fingers’ grip on the links, sucked in her stomach, and, drawing on years of gymnastics training, kicked off the fence and vaulted her legs over, releasing her hands at what she hoped was the opportune moment.
Almost. The barbed wire slashed her just-bought thrift-store jeans. Dang it,
she murmured, fingering the long, jagged tear as she dropped into a crouch on the trailer top. The thick tail of her single braid coiled over her shoulder and fell against her arm. She flipped it out of the way.
Robyn balanced on the balls of her feet and the tips of her fingers, listening. Had the soft thump of her landing alerted the guards? From this vantage point, the entire lot looked perfectly still. And completely dark, apart from the glow from the bulbs at the fence and the high, pale moon. Still, Robyn could sense she wasn’t alone.
The compound occupied a gravel patch the size of a couple of superstore parking lots. Several small tin-walled huts were scattered around. Large tanks of fuel for the garbage trucks filled one section of the compound. There was a recycling station, where trucks deposited cans and bottles all through the day, and an industrial trash compactor, which pressed mounds of refuse into neat, tight bales.
Piles of junk and scrap metal towered over the sloped tin roofs. Mounds of boxes and cases and crates, overflowing with a mix of trash and trinkets. Ropes and gears and batteries and old electronics. Broken things, forgotten things, useful things sometimes. You never knew what you might find.
In a clearing at the far side of the lot, dozens of garbage trucks and box trucks, forklifts and backhoes stood parked in rows, ready for duty. Robyn couldn’t see them from here, but she knew—
The pale wash of a flashlight crossed the gravel somewhere in Robyn’s peripheral vision. She dropped to her stomach, pressing herself down and hopefully out of sight.
Through her thin black T-shirt, the top of the trailer felt cool against her stomach. She could smell the cigarettes the guards were smoking in the yard. Pungent. And close. She suppressed the need to cough as the wind brought another cloud of the smoke her way. From her flat position, she strained for a glimpse of the guards or to hear the faint crunch of footsteps on gravel. Nothing. She hoped the men weren’t as close as they smelled.
Robyn scooted toward the edge of the trailer top and peered down. She could see no movement in the lot, just the cold, hunched shapes of the junk piles. A light had come on in one tin hut, so she hoped that meant some of the guards were taking a break from patrolling the fence.
Robyn slid off the roof and landed silently on the gravel. Well, almost silently. As she dropped into her ready crouch, she heard a rush of fleet footsteps and suddenly found herself staring into the business end of a bulldog. It might have occurred to her that both ends of a bulldog are capable of some pretty serious business, but right then she had other things to worry about. Namely, teeth. Forty-two of them, all sharp and drooly.
Junkyard Jumble
Whoa,
Robyn whispered.
The dog curled back its lips even further. A low growl started in the back of its throat, and Robyn could tell the dog was working itself up to bark, loud and hard.
But she was a low, dark shape, unmoving. Not tall and long limbed, flailing and running in fear, like a normal human. For a long second the dog growled and grunted in confusion. Its hesitation bought Robyn just enough time.
Good doggie,
she whispered in her most patient voice. She patted the air, then jacked back her elbow, reached into the side pouch of her jacket, and came up with a plastic bag.
The dog barked. Loudly. Robyn cringed.
I’ve got something for you, boy.
She unzipped the bag and extracted a fat strip of bacon. The dog sniffed and growled. She laid the bacon on the ground between them, a peace offering. She tossed a second strip a few yards to her left, into the pile of gravel casually mounded against the side of the trailer.
The dog froze, turning his nose between the near bacon, the far bacon, and the intruder.
Robyn held her breath, though she needn’t have. It worked. The dog slobbered up the near slice of bacon and trotted toward the far one, with part of the first still hanging from his teeth.
Robyn sighed, satisfied. It worked because Robyn was the sort of girl who knew not only how many teeth a bulldog had, but also exactly what to do to get a bulldog on her good side. She folded the remaining bacon into the bag, which she kept clutched in her hand, just in case.
The dog had already barked, and that meant trouble. Keeping low, she crept away from the trailer, away from the pools of light cast by the bulbs at the fence and toward the deeper dark surrounding the junk piles.
Robyn heard the faint scrabbling of boots on gravel. Not her own.
She took off running. Her boots crunched on the gravel. It sounded extra loud, but she hoped the guards might mistake her sounds for theirs. Staying quiet would’ve been too slow. Sooner or later, probably sooner, someone would come check on the dog to see why he’d started barking. So she ran the width of the lot and pressed her back up against the side of the hut with the lights on, where the people were.
She waited. Sure enough, a few moments later, the door around the corner lurched open.
Waldo?
A deep voice. Where are you, boy?
Across the lot, Waldo barked.
Footsteps. From the sound of them, it was one man, large. The pale wash of a flashlight swept the gravel. Robyn sucked herself skinny and pressed deeper into the shadows. The footsteps receded away from her, toward the dog.
Robyn glanced up at the night sky, at the faint ambient light from the city, hoping that Waldo was the sort of bulldog who ate fast.
She listened to the pace of the large man’s footsteps for a few beats, then took up a pace that matched it. He stepped, she stepped. When his foot crunched the stones, hers crunched at the same time. She moved along the tin walls, ducking past the door where the man had come out. She darted across the open lot.
Behind her, the staff-house door clattered open again. He don’t bark for no reason,
a second deep voice was saying. Something’s up.
Robyn slipped behind the high piles of rubble as two additional men moved out of the building, silhouetted by the light from inside. Fortunately, they moved away from her.
Robyn wove between the tall junk mountains. She knew her way around this maze, and the height of the piles alone offered some protection from the searchers. She felt safe enough, for now.
Adapters and circuits . . . Her thoughts drifted back to the reason she was here. They dumped the most metal and electronics in this section of the compound. She headed toward her favorite pile, to the now-distant sound track of the men calling after the dog.
Waldo, apparently, had other plans. Robyn recognized the rhythm of his paws on the gravel. He bounded around a corner and butted his head against her knee. Robyn laughed—nearly out loud!—at the hopeful, flop-tongued expression on his face. He growled low.
Shh.
Robyn dangled the bacon bag from her hand. I know what you want.
Waldo nosed the bag, then turned soft puppy eyes on her.
All right, Bacon Breath.
She leaned over to scratch his stubby ears. Just don’t give me away, okay?
Waldo whimpered in apparent agreement as he scarfed two fresh slices of bacon.
I hope you got some more where that came from.
The words drifted out of the gray air, seemingly from within the nearest mound of sheet metal.
Trouble
Robyn spun toward the voice, propping her hands on her hips. Sneaking up on a girl in the dark? That’s not very gentlemanly.
A ratchety, rattling laugh filled the darkness. Got no choice but to sneak,
he said. With all what’s going on here tonight.
Robyn peered at the cluster of sheet metal, trying to spot the craggy old face amid the rubble. Even with the near-full moon overhead, she couldn’t see him. Where are you?
Hiding,
he said. Like you better do, ’fore they come round again.
Robyn crept closer and knelt on the gravel. A small sheet of metal shifted, and a man’s thin, wrinkled face poked through the gap. He still had a bruised-looking gash on his cheek. It had been there for weeks, with no sign of healing, but Robyn made no comment.
You give that mutt my supper?
he said.
Only part of it,
Robyn said. Sorry, Barclay.
She handed him the bacon bag, empty but for a few crumbs, then unzipped her backpack and took out a foil-wrapped parcel.
Barclay parted the silver wings and sniffed the contents: two thick biscuits, a pile of carrot rounds, and a few strips of cold chicken. The bacon had been an afterthought. A lucky one, Robyn thought now.
I’d hoped not to see you tonight,
Barclay said around a mouthful.
Yeah?
Robyn thought the way he was chowing into the biscuits told a different story. Why?
Shadows on the moon.
Barclay tipped back his head and stared up at the high white oval, looming large in the sky. Wisps of darkness drifted over and around it, filtering its light. It’s not normal.
What do you have for me?
Robyn asked. Did more of my circuits turn up? Any sign of a voltage adapter yet?
Barclay pushed a small pouch through the gap. The grubby, folded canvas fit in her cupped hands. It unfolded to reveal a small black box with wires sticking out of it, and several squarish ports along one edge. One thick gray cord wrapped around it.
What is it?
Robyn asked. It looked like a whole bunch of nothing. But she knew sometimes those were the best finds of all.
You don’t see modems like these so much anymore,
Barclay said. You ask your father, eh?
Right. Why don’t you tell me?
Barclay grunted. Get on home now. Stop coming around here like this.
You always say that.
I mean it this time.
Robyn rolled her eyes. You always mean it. But you don’t stop collecting cool things for me.
She rewrapped the odd wiry object and stuffed it into her backpack.
Got nothing better to do,
he answered. You, with all this rummaging and tinkering. It ain’t healthy. Ain’t you got some friends to play with?
The comment stung. Robyn spent most of her days alone.
You’re my friend.
"Pfft. Friends your own age."
Everyone my age is asleep right now.
Wonder why that is?
No idea,
Robyn said. Everything interesting happens after dark.
As if on cue, dogs started barking. Multiple dogs. Waldo pricked his ears and joined them. He jumped up and dashed away through the junkyard.
Look what you done,
Barclay grumbled. They’ll come a-searching for you and find me.
I’ll go now,
Robyn said.
You get down,
Barclay said. Under that there cardboard. The big sheet.
Eww.
Robyn groaned. It smelled like very dead fish under there.
Barclay chuckled. Welcome to my world. That’ll keep the dogs from scenting you.
Robyn pinched her nose and rolled under the cardboard. Then she let go of her nose immediately—breathing that stench through her mouth was almost worse. Like tasting it.
They waited in silence.
But the men did not come. The dogs’ barking died down, and in the wake of it rose the sound of engines idling. Then many tires crunching on gravel.
Robyn rolled out from under cover. She was too curious not to.
Girl,
Barclay protested, but Robyn was already climbing. She scaled the precarious pile of rubble and poked her head over the lip.
Across the lot, the vehicle gate churned open. A row of large trucks drove out through the gate. Not normal trucks or even garbage trucks. These vehicles were dark canvas-covered things. A whole stream of them, more than a dozen perhaps, each with a driver, a passenger, and four dark-dressed men standing on the runners and clinging to the handrails along each side.
Robyn climbed down from her perch and stared through the path in the rubble as they rumbled past the outer fence. Chills coursed over her.
In the distance, the Hightower Clock struck midnight, its deep brass tones echoing out over the city. Black clouds bunched in the sky, obscuring the moon.
You best get on home, girl.
Barclay said. That’s big trouble right there.
Knives in the Nighttime
Robyn raced home to Loxley Manor with her heart pounding and her skin sweat-slick. Before tonight, she had never been truly scared while visiting the 410 Compound or venturing around the Castle District alone. But those men—the sheer number of them and the quiet threat they exuded—frightened her. The danger of being caught sneaking around seemed real now.
Robyn had always been the sort of girl who enjoyed breaking the rules. She was almost never where she was supposed to be. One slim, quick person could go just about anywhere unnoticed, even in the daylight. Robyn especially liked climbing walls—simply to see what was behind them—and the Castle District was full of excellent walls. Not to mention gates and hedges and fences. She may have also leaped the occasional moat.
She would have preferred having a friend to join her from time to time, but she found it hard to interest the other girls in even the most harmless sorts of mischief. It stood to reason, since Robyn always, always got into a little bit of trouble when she didn’t follow the rules.
Her mother chided her for her impatience.
Her father described her as restless, but he usually smiled with secret pride over it.
Her teachers all thought she was trouble, but her grades were decent and more often than not she did her homework, though she didn’t always show up for class.
At night, she loved exploring the woods behind her house, or visiting the 410. She was never the least bit tired at bedtime. The manor house was quite large, with more than a dozen rooms, but as it happened her parents’ bedroom was right across the hall. And right next to the closet that housed the alarm system controls. Robyn would tiptoe in and flip the second-floor switch off. Hearing nothing but Dad’s soft snores, Robyn would return to her room, close the door, and dash to the half-open window. The night breeze always welcomed her.
The sheer two-story drop never worried her a bit. Scaling down the rough white stones was easy enough. Her feet and fingers naturally found the correct toeholds in the mortar. A thirty-second descent. She’d done it many times and had never been caught. But never before had Robyn’s restless, reckless nature actually saved her life.
It would soon become known as the Night of Shadows.
As the Hightower Clock struck midnight in the center of Notting Square, as Robyn raced home seeking the safety of Loxley Manor, a great evil spread through the streets of Nott City. This evil came in the form of dark-dressed men carrying the sort of sharp knives that are perfect for slicing throats.
The leader of the dark-dressed men was, in fact, not a man at all. An elegant, birdlike woman sat calmly in the passenger side of the first truck in the convoy, studying the small screen resting in her palm. She wouldn’t dirty her own hands tonight, of course, but a precision operation like this one required firsthand oversight.
The fourteen trucks steamed through the Castle District, where all the members of Parliament lived, each headed to one of the fourteen addresses on the list they had been given. The task was to take out everyone in those houses, a total of thirty-nine people, including spouses and children. Governor Crown had been clear about that. Tonight was not a night for the squeamish, and the guys in the trucks were not afraid of a little mess.
They parked their trucks and approached on foot, snaking toward Loxley Manor—among others—like tentacles through the pitch-black night.
Few saw them coming. Many would die.
But not Robyn. Because on the night in question, Robyn herself was a shadow.
It took a total of eighteen minutes. At eighteen past midnight, the fourteenth and final truck reported to the leader with a single number, representing the total they had captured or killed.
The leader frowned as she scrolled her PalmTab screen, reconciling the number of bodies in the trucks against the list she had in hand. Things didn’t add up. Thirty-nine names, thirty-eight accounted for.
At twenty minutes past, each truck received a blinking message on its dashboard screen: COUNT AGAIN.
By twenty-five minutes past, things still didn’t add up, but the leader had figured out who was missing.
Her name was Robyn. A girl. Age twelve.
Things were not in order upon Robyn’s return to the manor house. A faint light glowed from the kitchen, where no light had been on when she’d left. She didn’t want to get caught. So she climbed the white stones stealthily and pulled herself through her window, holding her breath. The sound of a large vehicle driving off down the street caused her to duck her head low. Instinct.
She crouched beneath her window, feeling the wrongness in the air. She found her bedroom door standing open, which it hadn’t been when she’d left. The red lightbulb beside her bed was blinking. Her intruder alarm had been triggered—someone had been in her room.