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Prince of Outcasts : a Novel of the Change

by Stirling, S. M.

Prince of Outcasts : A Novel of the Change cover
  • ISBN: 9780451417374
  • ISBN10: 0451417372

Prince of Outcasts : a Novel of the Change

by Stirling, S. M.

  • Binding: Hardcover
  • Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
  • Publish date: 09/06/2016
  • ISBN: 9780451417374
  • ISBN10: 0451417372
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Description: Chapter One Participatory Democracy of Topanga (Formerly Topanga Canyon) 26th Change Year 46/Shohei 1/2044 AD Prince John Arminger Mackenzie stood and sweated in his suit of chrome-steel plate, glad of the shade of the raised visor that stuck out from his flared sallet helm like the bill of the ritual cap baseball players wore. The fierce southland sun glittered off the rocky ground and sank into the faded asphalt of the ancient roadway and blinked in endless sparkles from the surface of the Pacific to the southward. There was a familiar smell of hot horse, hot human, sweat-soaked leather and metal greased with canola oil that always went slightly rancid, a composite scent common to wherever warriors gathered, no matter how polished their appearance; it was fairly powerful since his sister, their men-at-arms and crossbowmen and Mackenzie archers and McClintock caterans, the Japanese contingent and several hundred local levies from Topanga and the Chatsworth Lancers were all standing and sweltering together. The score of robed bnei Yaakov from the Mojave were a little to one side-a people apart-but their mounts added hot camel to the mix, which was indescribable. Despite the tension of the moment as everyone stared out over the water towards the quartet of enemy ships, he smiled to himself, remembering his parents inspecting troops once. That had also been on a hot day, in the County Palatine of Walla-Walla far up the Columbia. There had been a rather sheltered town-based cleric with them and he''d asked what the smell was. His mother had considered gravely for a moment, and said: "Esprit de corps." She''d said it deadpan, but he''d noticed his father working hard at not bellowing with laughter. Today that familiar almost-stink went with the odd alien scents of fennel and sage that summer baked out of the chaparral here, harsh and spicy at once. We''re back in the stewpot just when we thought the adventure was over with , he thought. Though everything''s grist for the mill . He was a prince and warrior by birth-second child of the first High King and Queen of Montival-but a troubadour and bard by aspiration, and he could appreciate the irony of the situation from an artistic point of view. They''d dared the desert and the supernatural perils of the Valley of Death . . . Well, to be entirely fair, mostly Orrey and Reiko dared them in that last bit. Good ensemble cast, some comic relief from the heroic characters'' points of view, someone for the groundlings to identify with too . . . . . . they''d reclaimed the fabled Grass-Cutting Sword that their Nihonjin friends had crossed the sea to find, made unexpected allies of the desert-dwelling bnei Yaakov to bring it back through the desert and the just-barely-friendly lands of the Chatsworth Lancers and the Topangans . . . and now four enemy ships were sitting out there waiting for them, instead of the clear passage back to the northern heartlands of the realm that they''d expected. It would make an excellent startling reverse in the epical chanson he''d tentatively entitled The Desert and the Blade . A quiet interlude in the music, then a hint of doubt, minor key, crashing chords building to a crescendo- Artistically fine. In my all too mortal person, it''s a bloody menace. Not to mention those ugly-looking Eaters the Koreans have picked up from the Los Angeles ruins. The locals had a powerful pre-Change telescope set up. One look had been enough. The Korean vessels swarmed with the naked savages, scrawny and scarred and ferocious as great rats among the ordered, armored easterners. The diabolists could control them, somehow. This bunch look even worse than the ones we fought up on the Bay, and those were bad enough. He swallowed and blinked as the stink came back, and the screaming faces and the ugly feel of edged metal hammering into meat and bone vibrated up into his hand. And the taste, when a gout of blood landed on his face. He hadn''t had time to be frightened during the actual fighting, mostly that had been drilled reflex working. But the times in between the rushes waiting for the wild men to work themselves up to another attack and listening to their mad squealing brabble . . . that had been fairly bad. Having to keep up appearances had helped, and so had giving everyone some verses from La Chanson deu Roland . He found that a bravura gesture could convince one''s own mind just as thoroughly as it did an audience. And the Koreans may not be savages, but they''re outright diabolists. Or at least their rulers and lords are. His eyes narrowed. It had been servants of the Korean ruler who killed his father the High King only a few months ago, a spillover of their long war with Dai-Nippon, and a chess-move in the game Heaven and the Malevolence were playing in the Changed world. There was a blood-debt yet unpaid. That would be part of the song too. "Reiko, can I borrow your Captain Ishikawa, and his men?" Crown Princess rlaith said. John''s ears perked; when his older sister . . . . . . three years older. I''m almost twenty and it''s not as if we were children anymore . . . . . . adopted that crisp tone, things were about to happen. She sounded like their father when she used it, allowing for her being a woman of twentyone and not a man in his forties. The Empress of Dai-Nippon nodded decisively, and spoke a word of command to her followers. She was actually a little older than rlaith, though her almost-delicate features made some layer of his mind see her as closer to his own nineteen summers. He''d been half in love with her since they met at Montinore Manor in June, when his sister had brought him into the conspiracy. It was more or less required of a young knight when confronted with a beautiful, absolutely unobtainable foreign princess. The romaunts made that clear enough. And of course her father had died in the same skirmish as his, just too late for rescue. He hadn''t been there, she had, and somehow that made her a link to that tremendous absence, the loss that still broke through the shell of his life at times with a jarring suddenness that he never expected. In actual fact as opposed to aesthetic theory he found her very capable, and very likeable on the rare occasions when she relaxed . . . and more than a little intimidating. "Johnnie," rlaith went on in a clipped tone. Her chiseled face was utterly intent as she weighed the situation. The cooler sea-breeze cuffed at the little wisps of sun-faded yellow hair that escaped her tightly-clubbed fighting braid; she took more after their father''s side of the family, while he had the hazel eyes and brown hair and blunter features of the Armingers. She was also an inch taller that he was, but since that made him a very respectable five-ten he didn''t mind. Come to think about it, she''s getting very focused too. Granted this is a good time for it. They''d always been fairly close, and the gap in their ages mattered less now. He gave her the Associate salute, a martial clank of gauntlet against breastplate. "Take Ishikawa and the Nihonjin sailors, and go there." She pointed westward and downslope from the low ridge that bore the old coast road. "There are some longboats at the Topangans'' saltworks. Take them, and . . . the crossbowmen from the Protector''s Guard, and a few others, say four, pick them yourself. Feldman''s short-handed; you reinforce him. And tell him to be cooperating fully with the Stormrider ." He shot her a swift look of surprise; for weeks now they''d been dodging the Royal Montivallan Navy warship their mother had sent to drag them back as if they were naughty toddlers to be hauled in by one ear. And there it was, to seaward of Captain Feldman''s Tarshish Queen , their own hired ship, which in turn was slowly cruising back and forth south of the four Korean ships at anchor just offshore. rlaith stepped closer and spoke softly; there was no need to broadcast the facts about their little disagreement with their mother, High Queen Regnant Mathilda. "Johnnie, Reiko has her Sacred Treasure the now. We''ve done what we set out to do. Now we clear this up, go back to Mother, roll on our backs, wave our paws in the air and whimper for forgiveness. We''ll get it, too. Eventually." He didn''t let the jolt of raw fear that image brought show on his face. I knew we''d have to confront Mother eventually. Ah, well, better to seek forgiveness than ask permission! And we did bring it off. Success has a thousand fathers and failure''s an orphan. "She''ll recognize a magic sword when she sees one!" his sister said, echoing his thought. Her hand rested on the moon-crystal pommel of the Sword of the Lady, the heirloom of their House that their father and mother had won on the Quest. "So will anyone with the least bit of the Sight, without Reiko having to do anything too . . . dramatic." John gave the not-really-a-katana-anymore at Reiko''s side a glance and suppressed an impulse to cross himself. The Sword of the Lady was disturbing enough, but his Church officially regarded it as the gift of the Lady, Mary Queen of Heaven and Mother of God, which pagans like his father and sister unfortunately conflated with their mythology. Coming from a mixed family could be awkward at times; his mother was a devout Catholic, and he was too or tried to be, b
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