Skink No Surrender by Carl Hiassen
Skink No Surrender by Carl Hiassen
Skink No Surrender by Carl Hiassen
Includes
a Q&A
with Carl
Hiaasen!
FREE PREVIEW
Praise for
SkinkNo Surrender
I love Hiaasen for adults. I love Hiaasen for kids. But most of all,
I lovethisHiaasen, which brings the two writers together in one book.
Cory Doctorow
in a story that careens perfectly from one crazy situation to the next.
Reluctant readers (especially guys) will surrender themselves to this
page-turner. Cross your fingers that we havent seen the last of Skink!
Booklist, Starred
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are
the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance
to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Text copyright 2014 by Carl Hiaasen
Cover design by Matt Roeser
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Ember, an imprint of
Random House Childrens Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC,
New York. Originally published in hardcover in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf,
an imprint of Random House Childrens Books, New York, in 2014.
Ember and the E colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
Visit us on the Web! randomhouseteens.com
Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools,
visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com
The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition of this work as follows:
Hiaasen, Carl.
Skinkno surrender / Carl Hiaasen. First edition.
p. cm.
Summary: With the help of an eccentric ex-governor, a teenaged boy
searches for his missing cousin in the Florida wilds.
ISBN 978-0-375-87051-4 (trade) ISBN 978-0-375-97051-1 (lib. bdg.)
ISBN 978-0-307-97406-8 (ebook)
[1. Mystery and detective stories. 2. Missing childrenFiction.
3. Wilderness areasFiction. 4. FloridaFiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.H493Sk 2014 [Fic]dc23 2014006036
ISBN 978-0-307-93059-0 (pbk.)
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
First Ember Edition 2015
Random House Childrens Books supports the First Amendment
and celebrates the right to read.
ON E
I walked down to the beach and waited for Malley, but she
didnt show up.
The moon was full and the ocean breeze felt warm.
Two hours I sat there on the sandno Malley. In the beginning it was just annoying, but after a while I began to
worry that something was wrong.
My cousin, in spite of her issues, is a punctual person.
I kept calling her cell phone but it went straight to her
voice mail, which was Malley chortling in a British accent: Im in the loo. Ring you back later! I didnt leave a
message, and I didnt text, either.
In case somebody else had her phone.
Somebody like her dad, whos my uncle. He takes away
Malleys cell like twice a week as punishment for acting
up, acting out, whatever. Still, even when shes in trouble at home, she always finds a way to sneak out to the
beach.
A few turtle people were scouting the shoreline, waggling their flashlights. I walked north, as Malley and I usually did. Wed never seen a turtle actually laying her eggs,
1
but wed found several nests. The first thing you notice is
the flipper tracks leading up from the waters edge. Loggerheads, hawksbills and green turtles leave trenches like a
minidune buggy when they drag their heavy shells across
the sand.
After the mother turtle finishes depositing her eggs,
she covers them with a loose, churned mound. Every time
that Malley and I came across one, wed call the state
wildlife office and they would send an officer to mark it.
First, wooden stakes are tapped into the sand to create
a rectangular perimeter outside the mound; then hot-pink
ribbons are strung from one stake to the next. You can go
to jail for messing with a turtle nest, so the officers put up
a warning sign. Still, every so often some random idiot
gets caught stealing the eggs, which are sold as a romantic
ingredient in certain places.
Pathetic but true.
The phone chirped, but it wasnt a text from Malley; it
was my mom asking where the heck I was. I texted her that
I was still down by the water, and that no savage criminals
had tried to snatch me. Afterwards I tried Malleys number
once more, but she didnt pick up.
So I walked on alone until I came to a marked nest
that I didnt remember seeing the last time Malley and
I were there. The dig was new and soft. I picked a spot
outside the warning ribbon and sat down holding my baseball bat, which Mom makes me carry for protection whenever I go to the beach after dark. Its an Easton aluminum
2
Digs up turtle eggs and sells them on the black market for
two bucks a pop. One night hes gonna dig up me.
Then what? I asked.
He and I will have a chat.
Why dont you just call the law?
Olneys been arrested three times for robbing loggerhead nests, the man explained. The jailhouse experience
has failed to rehabilitate him. Ill be taking a different approach.
There was no anger in his voice, but the slow way he
said the words made me seriously glad not to be Mr. Olney.
Tell me this, Richard. What are you doing out here?
I dont have much experience with homeless persons,
so I was sort of sketched out. But he was an old dude, probably the same age as my grandpa, and I decided there was
no way he could catch me if I ran.
Looking up and down the shore, I saw that I was on
my own. The nearest flashlight beams were a couple hundred yards awaymore turtle people. There was a row of
private houses on the other side of the dunes, so I figured
I could take off in that direction, if necessary. Pound on
somebodys door and yell for help.
Ive gotta get going, I said to the stranger.
Excellent idea.
If you see a girl out here about my age? Thats my
cousin. I wanted him to know, in case he got any crazy
ideas. He was aware that in the moonlight I had a good
look at his face, those weird eyeballs that didnt match.
6
behind the oak tree in her front yard, watching her window. The room had been completely dark, which meant
that Malley wasnt home.
Which meant she couldnt be grounded.
From my bed I texted back: R u ok?
Fine. Call u 2morrow.
Of course I couldnt sleep after that, so I went out to
the living room, where Trent was watching television
a cage-fighting match on pay-per-view. Im serious.
Your moms snoring like a buffalo, he said.
They snore, too? I thought they just snorted.
Hey, champ, before you sit down? Grab me a cold one
from the fridge.
Trent drinks more Mountain Dew than any mortal human on the planet. Its hard to watch, because he slurps
the stuff so fast that it drips off his chin like green drool.
Were talking gallons of sugary caffeine, every day.
I brought him a bottle anyway. Trent is my stepfather,
and were cool. He treats me like a kid brother, and I treat
him the same way. Hes harmless and good-natured, and
dumb as a box of rocks.
Is that ice cream? he asked me.
No, Trent, its a cheese ball with chocolate sauce.
Want some? I said.
Maybe later, champ. You believe these two beasts?
Trent was addicted to cage fights. Yo, see that? Its real
blood, he said.
Wow. That was the best I could do. The truth is
9
11
T WO
My uncle looked surprised to see me. He had on his work
clothes. His names Dan, and he runs a bucket truck for
Florida Power & Light.
Is Malley around? I asked.
No, Richard, she left yesterday.
For where?
School. She didnt tell you?
I thought her classes didnt start for a couple weeks.
Come on in, Uncle Dan said. I just got home from
work. Hurricane season he works a night shift because
the pay is better, and hes got seniority. You want some
breakfast? Sandys still asleep.
He poured me a bowl of cornflakes and on top he sliced
a banana that was so old and mushy that, honestly, a starving chimpanzee wouldnt have touched it.
Yeah, Malley flew up for early orientation, he said.
I just nodded while I chewed my cereal, avoiding the
funky brown slices.
She forgot all about it, Uncle Dan said, until two
days ago when her dorm adviser called. But thats Malley.
12
Classic, I said.
Uncle Dan and Aunt Sandy were sending Malley to
an all-girls boarding school called the Twigg Academy.
Basically, they didnt want to deal with her on a daily basis
anymore. Shes a handful, no question.
Malley had told me the tuition at Twigg is thirty-nine
grand a year, not including the meal plan. Add the cost of
winter clothes plus airplane tickets back and forth to New
Hampshire, and who knows how her parents planned to
pay for that kind of an education. Malley suspected they
were taking a second mortgage on their house, meaning
they mustve been semi-desperate.
Its weird she didnt tell you she was leaving, Uncle
Dan remarked, so you guys could say goodbye.
No big deal, I said, a total lie.
Malley and I were born only nine days apart. Except
for vacations, both of us have spent our whole lives in
Loggerhead. I couldnt picture her at a boarding school in
a place so cold that car engines froze. Truthfully, I couldnt
picture her at a boarding school, period. Malley wearing a
uniform to class? No way.
Did she talk much to you about this move to Twigg?
Uncle Dan asked. Because we got the impression she
was sort of looking forward to it. I think all of us need a
break.
She seemed okay with it, I told him, which was true.
Malley had been incredibly calm and low-key when
she told me the news. Where, if it had been me who was
13
But still I almost didnt make it because airport security found a bottle of vitaminwater in my backpack. Seriously! One of the TSA guys pulled me out of line and
made me dump everything out
Vitaminwater? I had to laugh. Malley was on a roll.
Whats so funny, Richard? Vitaminwater is the bomb.
Whatever. Whyd you text me that you were grounded
at home? I tried to keep my voice low because I was standing on the sidewalk in front of the surf shop, customers going in and out the door.
I couldnt call you at the time, my cousin said, and I
didnt want you to be mad that I left without saying goodbye.
So now youre really up in New Hampshire?
Yeah. And this place? The armpit of all armpits,
Richard.
Very calmly I said: Malley, theres no such thing as
early orientation at the Twigg Academy. I called and
checked.
What? You. Did. Not!
Youre so busted, I said. Tell me where you really
are.
And she hung up, not exactly an earth-shattering surprise. Malley is legendary for hanging up on people. Usually she calls back in five minutes, ten max, but this time
she didnt.
A text popped up as I was heading to the beach: If
you go to my parents, Ill never speak to you again!
21
22
T HREE
Talbo Chock completed almost one full tour with the U.S.
Marine Corps in Afghanistan. Hed been born in New Orleans and lived there until he was eleven, when his family
moved to Fort Walton Beach, Florida. There, Talbo played
first-string guard on his high school basketball team. His
dad worked at a boatyard; his mother was a bookkeeper
and secretary for an Episcopal church.
Talbo had just turned nineteen when the supply truck
he was driving got blown to pieces by a roadside bomb in a
place called Salim Aka, which Skink said was in the dangerous province of Kandahar. Two other Marines in the
vehicle survived their injuries, but Talbo died three weeks
later at a military hospital in Germany.
And now somebody had stolen his name, somebody
whod tricked my cousin Malley into running away with
him.
Howd you find out all this? I asked Skink.
Reliable source, he said. The Pensacola paper ran a
short story about Corporal Chocks death. It would have
been a bigger storyshould have beenexcept a hurricane
23
Trent was playing golf, and Mom wasnt home from work
yet. Our front door sticks in the humidity, so sometimes you
have to give it a shoulder. I grabbed a cold Gatorade from
the refrigerator and went to my room and pounded on the
mattress with the baseball bat. What was my cousin thinking when she said yes to this jerk? Had she lost her mind?
I got a chance to ask her, because at that moment
she called.
25
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A Q&A with
Carl Hiaasen
m
Chap
Tim
by
an
4
01
c re
dit
Skink is a recurring character who has, until now, only ever appeared
in your grown-up books. SkinkNo Surrender marks the first time
he will appear in one of your books for younger readers. What made
you choose Skink to be the star of your YA novel?
Skink has always been one of my favorite characters. I decided to take
a chance and introduce him to readers who maybe started with Hoot or
Flush when they were younger. I knew Skink was the kind of freewheeling
crusader that teens would find appealing, but hes also an unpredictable,
intimidating presence. Because I have a hard time controlling him,
I wasnt sure how the book would turn out.
Fortunately, Richard, the young man who narrates the story, does an
excellent job of editing Skinks colorful vocabulary and putting his antics
into a thoughtful perspective. At the end of the day, the characters that
readers remember best are those who live by a clear moral code, and
thats what Skink does, for better or worse. Personally Id say were on
the same side.
new in
paperback!
SKINK
NO SURRENDER
by CARL
HIAASEN