Space Dragons
64 pages
English

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64 pages
English

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Description

If Stan Pollux had known he would be spending his summer holidays in the outer reaches of our solar system, he would have put on different underpants.But when he gets kidnapped by the Planet Dragon Mercury, most things suddenly seem small and insignificant. Stan finds himself in a universe of dragons who had once ruled the skies as gods: Mars, Venus, Saturn and even Uranus way out back. This is shaping up to be the best summer holiday in the history of the cosmos until Stan discovers his stupid sister is missing and that Pluto (AKA Hades) is trying to use her to destroy the Solar System. And it will be all Stan's fault if he doesn't get Poppy back.So, all Stan has to do is learn how to fight like a hero in space armour, defeat the dragon god of the Underworld, Hades, rescue his sister and save the world. All before his parents realise she is missing.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 21 juin 2021
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781999884437
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0000€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Space Dragons
by
Robin Bennett




First published by
Monster Books
The Old Smithy, Hart St
Henley-on-Thames
OXON RG92AR
Digital edition converted and distributed by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
Copyright © 2021 Robin Bennett
The right of Robin Bennett to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without express prior written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted except with express prior written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1956 (as amended). Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damage.
All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.



Chapter I
The whole universe: every planet, star, black hole and life form started with a single atom exploding into a great void of nothing. Right after that, came the Dragons.
If Stan Pollux had known he would be spending the rest of his summer holidays in the outer reaches of our solar system, he would have put on different underpants.
The ones he wore the morning when it all began were too tight and had a faded picture of Ben Ten on the back, which made them look like the child superhero had been specially assigned by the Pants People to guard his butt.
Right now, however, he had more important things on his mind. He looked at the pieces of his broken telescope and thought angrily about his little sister.
‘You’re so stupid! You broke it and even after you were told not to go in my room, or touch my stuff!’ he’d shouted. She was the one who had smashed his telescope but he was the one who got into trouble for making her cry, when it wasn’t her fault, according to their mother—although of course it was! She’d knocked the telescope over. It was obviously all her fault.
It was also pretty annoying that Stan hadn’t been given any time to sort out the mess until the evening. First it was lunch, then he’d been made to clean up the early fallen apples at the bottom of the garden. Once in a while, he had looked up from what he was doing and saw Poppy peering at him from behind the bushes. He’d scowl and she’d dart off.
Stan knew she was sorry, and what’s more he knew she hadn’t meant to smash the telescope.
‘It’s really not nice to be horrible to your little sister all the time, she adores you.’ His mother had said. A small, guilty part of him knew that, too. ‘You used to play so well together.’ And that.
Then they’d been taken food shopping in town, which was almost worse than doing chores and it wasn’t until after supper that Stan was allowed to go upstairs and check out the damage properly.
Stan lived with his parents (Mr and Mrs Pollux), his sister, Poppy (short for Penelope—or, Small Annoying Person), and their dog, Boris. They lived in a really old and, therefore, slightly falling down house on the edge of the village. His dad had told him the kitchen and two of the bedrooms upstairs dated from the Middle Ages, when the village had been famous for having a witch who had been hanged. Some people even said that the witch had grown up in their house: Guy Murphy, the school bully, had given Stan nightmares in Year 5 by telling him her ghost crept about in the woods close by at night, looking for a way into their house. To get revenge.
As he climbed the back stairs, Stan remembered the story and shivered. He was in Year 7 now, but he still avoided looking out of his bedroom window at the dark trees crowding the end of their garden, like waiting figures in ragged shrouds.
When he got into his room it was ablaze in a blood-red glow from the setting Sun. He got into his pyjamas, watching as the skies had darkened at the top of the window frame and one or two stars winked into view: tiny silver dots millions and millions of miles away.
Stan shivered once more, in spite of the summer evening, closed the curtains quickly and turned on the electric light. It was one of those nights when everything felt weird and a bit spooky.
By the time Stan had got his telescope back on its stand, properly screwed in, and had checked it carefully for dents, the sunset had receded to a fiery fringe on the horizon and the skies were as bottomless and black as infinity itself.
He was so wrapped up in inspecting his telescope, that he didn’t notice the open display box on the floor which housed his crystal collection. If he had, he would have seen that there was a gap in the neat rows of polished stones, meaning one was missing. The crystal was one given to him by his grandmother. It was his largest piece and, strangest of all, warm to the touch—even on a cold day. Stan had tried looking it up online but nothing on any of the collectors’ sites seemed to match the orange glow that came from within its core. He’d asked his granny where she’d got it from, but she had looked shifty, and dismissed his questions with a wave of her bony hand. Anyway, if Stan had glanced down he would have seen it was gone. But he didn’t.
This is important.
Instead, Stan opened the curtains again and peered at the skies. For as long as he could remember, Stan was fascinated with anything to do with Space.
‘So what is it you like so much about other planets and solar systems?’ His teacher, Miss Quinn, had asked him more than once. Questions like this from adults always made Stan deeply uncomfortable. In his experience adults always wanted the right answer to questions and this was one of those where a right answer was impossible. Usually you could sort of guess what an adult needed to know. For example: Did you brush your teeth? Answer: Yes (whether you had or not); Did you hit your sister? Answer: No, she just fell over. There were rules to yes/no questions. Stan knew where you were with rules and he liked to stick to them. But this one was harder. And pointless because no one was saying anything useful: it was just chatting.
‘Well…?’ Miss Quinn could be impatient.
‘Dunno,’ he had mumbled. He wished adults, teachers and parents, in particular, could give more clues when they asked things. If Miss Quinn had said, ‘Do you like Space because it’s this great big mystery, like a huge open door that could lead anywhere and we’ve only just peeked in,’ then he could have said ‘yes’ and then he could go and get on with other things. Other things than talking.
And Space was a mystery. More than that. Space was unfathomable . Stan had read that in a magazine and he liked the word. It had interesting syllables and it was good for describing depth: as if Space was like a huge deep sea with no bottom, and spacecraft were more like powerful submarines than ships. It was all out there for the looking and imagining: aliens, fireballs, black holes, wormholes and supernovas…
His dad had an app on his phone that you could point at the sky and move around, tilting it this way and that, like a mirror catching the Sun, spotting the different constellations of stars, the planets—depending on the time of night—and even satellites. The younger Stan had loved the patterns of stars that made pictures of warriors, lions and weapons. As he got older and stayed up later he would stand in the garden identifying the planets. He had been amazed to discover that Mars really was red when you looked at it and that you could see Venus even before it got dark.
The telescope had been his mother’s idea, who just loved the thought of anything educational, but Stan had gone for it immediately. It had cost so much it had been a combined birthday and Christmas present and, even then, Mum and Dad put some extra money in so he could get the one all the websites raved about. It was called a Vision4000 and it could magnify objects 180 times, so the Moon basically looked 180 times bigger than when you looked at it normally.
Just about anything, 180 times bigger, was going to look pretty cool.
Stan took hold of the eyepiece.
As he was setting it back up, the scope had seemed fine, no dents on the shiny black tube and the stand wasn’t bent from where Poppy had knocked it over when she had gone into his room. However, as he moved it, he felt something rattle in the cylinder. He gave the scope a gentle shake and it rattled again, like a loose screw was inside.
Stan’s palms were sweaty as he handled the cool tube and it was then that he finally admitted to himself that he felt nervous. But was it just the telescope? Everything felt creepy tonight. He took a deep breath, removed the lens cap and peered down the eyepiece.
Nothing. And, yet, there was something about the deep blackness at first glance that didn’t look like right: it almost felt as if he was staring into a hole in Space, and as if, from the end of this long, dark tunnel, something was hiding. And waiting.
Stan shook his head. He was just imagining things. He glanced up… nope, the Moon was bright in the sky between two large oaks at the end of the garden. Stan checked he was pointing it in the right direction for him to see its reassuring silvery light and looked again.
Nothing. Just a deep, flat blackness. OK, so his telescope was broken! Stan felt his fear driven away by anger. Resisting the urge to rush downstairs yelling, or straight into his sister’s room, Stan swung the scope around…
An evil-looking eye, from the depths of Space, sprung open and stared back.



Chapter II
Space thinks big: the Sun, our nearest star, is 11,000 times larger than the Earth. Canis Majoris, a star in a system near ou

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