Arabella of Mars
4/5
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About this ebook
Born on Mars, sixteen-year-old Arabella Ashby enjoys many more freedoms than most girls her age, tramping around the desert with her older brother. But that liberty is not to last. Finding Mars much too unladylike for her daughters, Arabella’s mother takes the girls back to London, where they’re sure to find suitable husbands among the ton.
Weighed down by Earth’s gravity—and her own unhappiness—Arabella dearly misses her father and their shared passion for automata. When she learns of his death, she also uncovers her cousin’s devious plot to travel to Mars, murder her brother, and claim the family inheritance for himself.
To foil his dastardly plans, Arabella disguises herself as a boy to gain employment on an airship to Mars. Though she is valued by the captain for her talent with the automaton navigator he invented, she must survive French privateers, mutiny, and her own unmasking, only to reach a Mars embroiled in rebellion . . .
“If Edgar Rice Burroughs, Jules Verne, and Patrick O’Brien had sat down together to compose a tale to amuse Jane Austen, the result might be Arabella of Mars. So. Much. Fun!” —Madeleine Robins, author of the Sarah Tolerance Regency mystery series
“A very clever and entertaining start to a memorable saga.” —Kim Stanley Robinson, New York Times–bestselling author
“Arabella, a human teenager born on Mars, is catapulted into adventure in a tale that cleverly combines some of the most intriguing elements of steampunk and classic science fiction.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
David D. Levine
David D. Levine is the author of novel Arabella of Mars and over fifty science fiction and fantasy stories. His story "Tk'Tk'Tk"won the Hugo Award, and he has been shortlisted for awards including the Hugo, Nebula, Campbell, and Sturgeon. His stories have appeared in Asimov's, Analog, F&SF, numerous Year's Best anthologies, and his award-winning collection Space Magic. He lives in a hundred-year-old bungalow in Portland, Oregon.
Read more from David D. Levine
Arabella the Traitor of Mars Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Arabella and the Battle of Venus Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Adventures of Arabella Ashby: Arabella of Mars, Arabella and the Battle of Venus, and Arabella the Traitor of Mars Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Reviews for Arabella of Mars
91 ratings14 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Dec 27, 2024
I'm not usually fond of steampunk, and this one did require regular suspension of disbelief, it was still a fun adventure. Georgette Heyer couldn't have imagined in her wildest dreams that someone would appropriate her character & make her a martian. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Apr 28, 2023
Fun, light steampunk. Think of how Jules Verne pictured Mars and the passage between. Arabella runs away from home after having been forced to leave Mars for Earth. She pretends to be a boy and gets a birth on a sailing ship headed to Mars. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Apr 14, 2022
This is a great, sweeping, Mars adventure, in the tradition of Burroughs, but also striding out imaginatively into uncharted territory. The airships between the stars remind me of Timlin's The Ship That Sailed to Mars, and the "science" explaining how this could be is a marvelous iteration of Victorian understandings.
The audio book is soundly read, and Arabella herself is a winning character. There are some areas of repetition and self-inflicted drama that I found mildly annoying, but on the whole, hurrah for an epic Victorian Mars adventure! Hurrah for our plucky heroine and dashing Captain Singh! Long may they sail, and swashbuckle between the stars. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Dec 4, 2020
This was highly enjoyable. I look forward to seeing where Levine takes the series, and if he cited Mary Robinette Kowal as an inspiration, then there us immense promise. If you like women-centered fantasy, Regency writing, and Jane Austen or Jules Verne, then you should read this book. 4.5 stars. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 2, 2020
This is set in a universe where there's atmosphere in space, and vessels that are a cross between airships and sailing ships ply the routes between the planets. We're told that Venus has swamps, in the good old tradition from before we knew what was under its clouds, but this story is about Mars.
This Mars is dry, but has a breathable atmosphere, and an intelligent native species that is crablike in appearance, but much larger, and upright. And, since this is 1813, and it was Isaac Newton watching bubbles rise that led to the airships and spacefaring sailing ships, Europeans have colonized Mars.
There's no real explanation of how this came about. But, despite what some readers will be thinking, it is a lot of fun.
Arabella Ashby, 16 years old, and her older brother, Michael, as well as their younger sisters, were all born on Mars. They live on their family's estate, which grows the woody plants that are the family's main source of income. It's their mother's opinion that Arabella has been learning entirely too much from her Martian nanny, and isn't at all learning to be a proper English lady. After one final outrage (Arabella is slightly injured playing a Martian strategy game with Michael and the Martian nanny), Mrs. Ashby announces she's taking the girls back to Earth.
This is boring, frustrating, too hot, and very heavy for Arabella, and she doesn't like any of the suitable young men her mother introduces her to, but it's survivable--until word arrives that Mr. Ashby has died. Then, Arabella visits her cousin, Simon Ashby, and his wife, and accidentally plants the idea that the unscrupulous Simon can eliminate Michael and essentially steal the inheritance, which is entailed on the male line.
Arabella starts running, planning to send a message to Michael to warn him that Simon is on the way, and after a series of delightfully improbable events, she has enlisted as "Boy, 2nd class" on the Marsman (think Indiaman, ships of the British East India Company) under the name Arthur Ashby. Her skill with automata, well established earlier in the story, is a major enticement for the Captain, Prakesh Singh, who has an automaton navigator. He'd like someone willing to learn to use and maintain it, and resistance in his existing crew is unhappily strong.
Soon she's learning to sail space, the rules of life among men on ships, with all the expected adventures--including a privateer attack, and a mutiny on board--as well as learning the finer points of navigation and the operations of the automaton. But all the events that make the trip more exciting, also delay this otherwise very fast ship, and the murderous Simon is going to get to Mars ahead of her.
And then there's a native uprising on Mars.
This really is a lot of fun, improbable as it all sounds. Also, Levine doesn't hesitate to comment, deftly and effectively, on the sins of colonialism, and lack of respect and understanding of different and especially "primitive" cultures.
Definitely worth a read or a listen.
I bought this audiobook. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jul 20, 2018
Great fantasy and easy-to-access adventure. The characters are fun and the concept is "out of this world" (pun intended). The story moves at a good pace with plenty of action but balanced with enough character development to make you care about the outcomes. Give Arabella a shot, you won't regret it! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 24, 2018
Now this was wonderful! It had airships, mars colonies, aliens, a young woman masquerading as a man, pirats and so much adventure. It also had wonderful and creative worldbuilding. As always the regency era is an interesting backdrop and no less in this strange steampunky version. I really love how detailed it was and that we got quite a bit of day to day life in the story, without it ever being dull.
It did take a bit to get into gear but once it did I was hypnotized. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jan 20, 2018
This was such a fun book. The adventure was exciting, the old tropes seemed fresh, and the writing was excellent.
I really enjoyed Arabella and her character, the plot and her journey, and the setting. The time period and setting was super cool, I enjoyed the ships and how they space travelled. It was definitely a cool concept and something I haven't seen/ read before. The descriptions were vivid, and really helped paint a picture in my head of what Arabella was looking at and her surroundings. This book was so easy to read and I really enjoyed the writing - it was fast paced, and the writing flowed quite well to tell the story.
The plot was definitely not entirely original, but I did enjoy Levine's take on it and how he worked in the Martians, the ship voyage, and the time period.
The characters were quite well developed. I'm hoping to see more from the side characters in the next instalment, but I definitely felt like they had substance. Arabella felt very realistic, and I enjoyed how she took charge and made it to Mars, and how she used her knowledge to the best of her abilities.
I am excited to read more in this world with these characters! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 29, 2017
Rating: 3.5 stars
Succeeding Book: Arabella and the Battle of Venus (Adventures of Arabella Ashby #2)
“Here she could exercise her mind in a way her mother, indeed all of the English society, would never tolerate in a girl or even a grown woman. In these moments all shame at her continued deception fell away, replaced by anger at the opportunities denied her by her sex.”
It’s treasure planet but with a female lead. A coming of age story amidst 19th-century views of women and their place in society.
Arabella of Mars is set in the 19th-century steampunk world, with automata (robots), interplanetary travels and colonialism amidst the conflict between British Empire and France. Our heroine, born and raised in their estate, Woodtrush Woods Manor is in the eyes of her mother has grown unladylike. Arabella, aside from the required education of her sex at that time, has been, along with her older brother Michael tutored by her itkhalya (nanny) Khema,who also happens to be a respected warrior (I’m not sure how a respected warrior came to be a nanny but it may be tackled on the next book) on Martian history, geography and culture. She also has a passion for automata and learning which her mother frowns upon and worries that such trait makes her eccentric and lessens the chance of her finding a good husband.
After an unfortunate accident, her mother draws the line and takes Arabella and her two younger sisters back to Earth. When she gets there, Arabella dislikes it, to say the least, and soon after receiving an unfortunate letter from Mars. Depressed, she’s invited to stay at her cousin’s and at this point, this is where the adventure begins. I like the pacing the story, for me, it was just right, not too slow and not too fast. The world building was written well the book doesn’t stuff all the information in 1 or 2 chapters. With interesting characters especially Khema.
I don’t want to spoil anything, or further spoil it for you if I already have but if you’re for coming-of-age, steampunk, interplanetary sci-fi who can look over the colonialism and racism in the supposed time it was set in then it’s pretty decent read. The book doesn’t really address those issues and rather focuses on gender expectations as Arabella journeys to save her brother as a female of her time with its limiting expectations of women’s role and place in society. Maybe it’ll be addressed in the next book? I don’t really expect her to revolutionize the way European Imperialism’s way of thinking or end it but maybe? The second book is already out and the third one on 2018 and I’m looking forward to reading the Adventures of Arabella Ashby. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Sep 25, 2017
Arabella of Mars by David Levine is an adventure fantasy that combines the elements of steampunk and science fiction. Set in an alternative 1812, Arabella, who has grown up on Mars, is taken by her mother to England. Her mother is trying to turn Arabella into a proper English lady. Unfortunately the news arrives that her father as died and when Arabella learns that a cousin is off to Mars with the intent of killing her brother and thereby coming into the family fortune, she disguises herself as a boy and hires onto a merchant ship that sails between the planets of Earth and Mars with the intention of thwarting her nasty cousin’s plan.
With plenty of sailing adventures from inclement weather to fighting a French privateer, this is a very fast moving story. Once back upon Mars, Arabella helps to quell a rebellion, save her brother and propose marriage to her captain. Resourceful and courageous, Arabella is a delight to root for and I am looking forward to continuing with this swashbuckling adventure. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jul 8, 2017
This book checks a lot of boxes for me, so I assumed I was going to enjoy it (spoiler: I did!) We’ve got Regency England (check), steampunk (check), space travel (check) and one tough chick that can’t stand to be forced into societal and gender roles (check).
I can’t recall having read a book set in the 1800s where space travel is not only possible, but done via wooden ships much like the ones they use to sail across the ocean. This was a fun, fresh setting for me and what was especially unique is that the air in space is breathable! Yeah, this requires maybe more suspension of belief than usual, but I jumped right on board. Imagining being able to ride what’s essentially a cross between a zeppelin and a pirate ship straight into the sky, then beyond into space and floating around in zero gravity with air that’s breathable made me want to be a part of the book!
Arabella is possibly your clichéd tough girl with a heart of gold and determination of steel, but I liked her. I’ve always liked the whole girl-dresses-up-as-boy-to-gain-access-to-something-she-never-could-as-a-girl element and Arabella fit right into that role. She does struggle at her new job aboard a ship and has to navigate testosterone flooded waters and initiation into the manly world of interplanetary travel. I do think hiding her ladyness was explained away with the ease of one sentence and then not really addressed again. I would have liked to see her struggle a bit more with keeping her identity a secret, but it wasn’t essential to the plot, so whatever.
The only other stand-out character is the incredibly lifelike (and possibly sentient?!) automaton navigator, Aadim. He doesn’t play a big part, but I was interested in how he worked and his silent influence on other characters. In fact, I wanted more automata! Give me all the robots, please.
I did struggle with imagining some of what took place on the ship when it came to daily routine and ship maintenance. I’m not at all familiar with nautical terms and adding no gravity into the mix left me constantly wondering why everyone didn’t just bounce away from the ship and never come back. I also wondered how their…uh…business…stayed in the head (toilet) when everything else seemed to float around the ship. Again, this is not essential and probably I shouldn’t have spent so much time wondering this. Anyway, some of the action scenes played out murkily in my head.
I don’t want to shout about this book from the rooftops, but it was excellent. I’m hoping this will be a series – I actually thought it already was one with multiple books in it and I’m not sure what series I confused it with. If you’re looking for a Regency romp through space, pick up this book (and then we can talk about the logistics of Regency era bathroom use in zero gravity together!) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Mar 19, 2017
I read this as part of the Norton finalist packet.
What a fantastic read! Levine's book combines Victorian sensibilities with space-faring airships, all seen through the viewpoint of the courageous and smart Arabella who masquerades as a cabin boy to get a freighter ride back home to Mars before her cousin can commit dastardly acts. Levine utilizes many tropes of steampunk and 19th century literature, such as a mutiny aboard ship and the inevitable exposure of Arabella's true gender, but twists everything in surprising, satisfying ways. I'd love to read onward in this series. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Nov 27, 2016
Take what you know of the science of outer space and forget it while you read this book. This is an alternate history set during the Regency era where space travel is possible and Mars has been colonized. Once you find yourself accepting this premise you are in for a rollicking fun ride.
This book is a fun, fun throwback to the adventure stories of old where teenage girls have to pretend to be boys to have adventures and save their families from ruin.
Considering this is a throwback to the old adventure stories, the plot does feel a bit contrived at times, the ending especially and yet it works quite well and I feel trying to tell a more “realistic” story under these circumstances would have unraveled the whole thing.
The characters are on a whole engaging, Arabella herself is a classic plucky heroine who I found easy to identify with and care about, and the ships crew felt...mostly fleshed out, at least the ones we were meant like and care about and the villains were properly villainous and despicable.
I did have a few concerns with the native Mars culture that was introduced but this also felt somewhat appropriate with the style of old school adventure stories, and we didn't get that much time to really explore them so it's possible future stories will balance out my concerns.
This was a fun book to read and I am looking forward to more in this series and more by this author. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Sep 25, 2016
Review courtesy of Dark Faerie Tales
Quick & Dirty: A fun, imaginative story where I had to set back everything I know about space travel for a distinctly strange steampunk style world.
Opening Sentence: Arabella Ashby lay prone atop a dune, her whole length pressed tight upon the cool red sands of Mars.
The Review:
Arabella of Mars is an intriguing take on space travel and colonialization. Be prepared for a complete re-write of space travel with a heavy dose of steampunk. Space travel and exploration would be spectacular if the rules of this universe actually ruled this universe. Travelers can go through space without worrying about how to breathe since it is made of the air that we breathe but gravity still is an issue. Read this article on how the author developed the world and technology that was needed to traverse to different planets. I should also note that vegetation is much more prevalent on planets and asteroids unlike the barren landscapes that we’ve learned about in school.
Arabella was born and raised on Mars. Her father owns a tree plantation that grows the wood needed to make the ships that travel through space. Arabella is a tom boy in spirit, she has learned everything she can from her Martian nanny (itkhalya) about strategy and Martian history. One day Arabella is hurt from playing around and her mother insists that the family (Arabella and her two sisters) return to Earth. Her mother uses this as an opportunity for the females of the family to move back and hopefully find husbands.
Arabella does not enjoy her time on Earth. She knows that her mannerisms and speech are foreign to the upper class with which her family associates. Then one day, Arabella learns terrible news which just gets even worse when she finds out that someone is out to murder her brother who is still on Mars. Arabella takes off immediately for an adventure to get back to Mars. She cannot wait for conventional means so she disguises herself as a boy and is able to gain employment on a ship to Mars with her knowledge of automata.
The trip to Mars starts off a bit slow detailing the jobs put to Arabella while also explaining ship terms and how space works in this world. Then things start picking up when one bad thing after another being to happen. Arabella needs to get to Mars quickly and it just seems the universe is conspiring to get her there late.
When I read the synopsis for Arabella of Mars I really thought it felt like a young adult book. I really wasn’t too far off the mark. The book does censor itself, so there are no bad words within. Although I will say that I did get lost in some of the boat and space travel terminology. I do like to learn when I read, I don’t think I’ll retain much of this information since I’m never around boats and the space travel is completely different from reality.
Arabella speaks of the injustice of women in this world a lot. Martian teachings and Earthling teachings vary in how they see women. As much as she tries to conform to Earthly rules, she can’t stand it. She often speaks her mind much to the chagrin of the males surrounding her, although only one actually listens to her. Arabella is smart and cunning but she still has a lot of learning to do which she does on the ship. The ending was a bit of a surprise. I was 100% sure the ending was something else that I don’t want to spoil so I was surprised when that didn’t actually happen.
The story follows Arabella in third person point of view. I found the writing style a bit funny because of the censorship, it made the parts of the book where Arabella is being told her female sensibilities are too delicate for certain matters and subjects translate that the reader was also too sensitive for those words. The writing is also extremely scientific. If you have no qualms about scientific terms and theories than you should love this book.
My favorite “character” has to be Aadim, the automata navigator, who may or may not be cognizant. He helped supply some spookiness and humor to the story.
Overall, Arabella of Mars is a fun, imaginative story where I had to set back everything I know about space travel for a distinctly strange steampunk style world. I am intrigued by where the story would go from here. I know I would really like to learn more about the Venus of this world. Plus, the war with France is still on-going. I recommend this story for readers who really like unique space adventures.
Notable Scene:
She did notice that a lock of his hair had dislodged itself from under his bandage and now rested against his closed eyelid. Perhaps it tickled, causing at least some of his restless motion. Tenderly she brushed the lock aside and tucked it back under the bandage.
And then came a sound—a brief whirring of gears, somewhat reminiscent of the clearing of a throat—that made her look up.
The sound had come from Aadim, the navigator. His head had turned to face her, so that the green glass eyes sparkled in the sunlight slanting in through the unbroken panes of the cabin’s great window.
Dismayed by the automaton’s apparent attention, Arabella quickly drew back her hand from the captain’s forehead.
For a moment longer the shining green eyes seemed to lock with hers. Then, with a sound of gears, the head swiveled back to its previous position.
Heart pounding, Arabella cast her gaze about the cabin. Amidst the clutter and damage, the automaton’s lenses still glittered intact in their brass fittings. Surely the turn of the navigator’s head was only a reaction to her own rather sudden motion, a purely mechanical response.
Surely.
FTC Advisory: Tor/Macmillan provided me with a copy of Arabella of Mars. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.
Book preview
Arabella of Mars - David D. Levine
Arabella of Mars
The Adventures of Arabella Ashby
David D. Levine
To Kate—my wife, my love, my snookie, my Flying Partner. Forever and always.
Prologue
MARS, 1812
THE LAST STRAW
Arabella Ashby lay prone atop a dune, her whole length pressed tight upon the cool red sands of Mars. The silence of the night lay unbroken save for the distant cry of a hunting khulekh, and a wind off the desert brought a familiar potpourri to her nose: khoresh-sap, and the cinnamon smell of Martians, and the sharp, distinctive fragrance of the sand itself. She glanced up at Phobos—still some fingers’ span short of Arcturus—then back down to the darkness of the valley floor where Michael would, she knew, soon appear.
Beneath the fur-trimmed leather of her thukhong, her heart beat a fast tattoo, racing not only from the exertion of her rush to the top of this dune but from the exhilaration of delicious anticipation. For this, she was certain, was the night she would finally defeat her brother in the game of shorosh khe kushura, or Hound and Hare.
The game was simple enough. To-night Michael played the part of the kushura, a nimble runner of the plains, while Arabella took the role of the shorosh, a fierce and cunning predator. His assignment this night was to race from the stone outcrop they called Old Broken Nose to the drying-sheds on the south side of the manor house, a distance of some two miles; hers was to stop him. But though Khema had said the youngest Martian children would play this game as soon as their shells hardened, it was also a sophisticated strategic exercise … one that Michael, three years her elder, had nearly always won in the weeks they’d been playing it.
But to-night the victory would be Arabella’s. For she had been observing Michael assiduously for the last few nights, and she had noted that despite Khema’s constant injunctions against predictability, he nearly always traversed this valley when he wished to evade detection. Its sides were steep, its shadows deep at every time of night, and the soft sands of the valley floor hushed every footfall—but that would avail him little if his pursuer reached the valley before he did and prepared an ambush. Which was exactly what she had done.
Again she cast her eyes upward. At Michael’s usual pace he would arrive just as Phobos in his passage through the sky reached the bright star Arcturus—about half past two in the morning. But as she looked up, her eye was drawn by another point of light, brighter than Arcturus and moving still faster than Phobos: an airship, cruising so high above the planet that her sails caught the sun’s light long before dawn. From the size and brightness of the moving light she must be a Marsman—one of the great Mars Company ships, the aristocrats of the air,
that plied the interplanetary atmosphere between Mars and Earth. Perhaps some of her masts or spars or planks had even originated here, on this very plantation, as one of the great khoresh-trees that towered in patient, soldierly rows north and east of the manor house.
Some day, Arabella thought, perhaps she might take passage on such a ship. To sail the air, and see the asteroids, and visit the swamps of Venus would be a grand adventure indeed. But to be sure, no matter how far she traveled she would always return to her beloved Woodthrush Woods.
Suddenly a shuff of boots on sand snatched her awareness from the interplanetary atmosphere back to the valley floor. Michael!
She had been careless. While her attention had been occupied by the ship, Michael had drawn nearly abreast of her position. Now she had mere moments in which to act.
Scrambling to her feet in the dune’s soft sand, she hurled herself down into the shadowed canyon, a tolerable twelve-foot drop that would give her the momentum she needed to overcome her brother’s advantages in size and weight.
But in her haste she misjudged her leap, landing instead in a thorny gorosh-shrub halfway up the canyon’s far wall and earning a painful scratch on her head. She cursed enthusiastically in English and Martian as she struggled to free herself from the shrub’s thorns and sticky, acrid-smelling sap.
Heavens, dear sister!
Michael laughed, breathing hard from his run. Such language!
He doubled back in order to aid her in extricating herself.
But Arabella had not given up on the game. She held out her hand as though for assistance … and as soon as he grasped it, she pulled him down into the shrub with her. The thorny branch that had trapped her snapped as he fell upon it, and the two of them rolled together down the canyon wall, tussling and laughing in the sand like a pair of tureth pups.
Then they rolled into a patch of moonlight, and though Michael had the upper hand he suddenly ceased his attempts to pin her to the ground. What is the matter, dear brother?
Arabella gasped, even as she prepared to hurl him over her head with her legs. But in this place there was light enough to see his face clearly, and his expression was so grave she checked herself.
You are injured,
he said, disentangling himself from her.
’Tis only a scratch,
she replied. But the pain when she touched her injured scalp was sharp, and her hand when she brought it away and examined it beneath Phobos’s dim light was black with blood.
Michael brought his handkerchief from his thukhong pocket and pressed it against the wound, causing Arabella to draw in a hissing breath through her teeth. Lie still,
he said, his voice quite serious.
Is it very bad, then?
He made no reply, but as she lay on the cool sand, her breath fogging the air and the perspiration chilling on her face, she felt something seeping through her hair and dripping steadily from the lower edge of her ear, and the iron smell of blood was strong in the air. Michael’s jaw tightened, and he pressed harder with the handkerchief; Arabella’s breath came shallow, and she determined not to cry out from the pain.
And then Khema appeared, slipping silently from the shadows, the subtle facets of her eyes reflecting in the starlight. She had, of course, been watching them all along, unobserved; her capabilities of tracking and concealment were far beyond any thing Arabella or Michael could even begin to approach. "You leapt too late, tutukha," she said. A tutukha was a small inoffensive herbivore, and Khema often called her this as a pet name.
"I will do better next time, itkhalya," Arabella replied through gritted teeth.
I am certain you will.
Michael looked up at Khema, his eyes shining. It’s not stopping.
Without a word Khema knelt and inspected the wound, her eye-stalks bending close and the hard cool carapace of her pointed fingertips delicately teasing the matted hair aside. Arabella bit her lip hard; she would not cry.
This is beyond my skills,
Khema said at last, sitting back on her haunches. You require a human physician.
At that Arabella did cry out. No!
she exclaimed, clutching at her itkhalya’s sleeve. We cannot! Mother will be furious!
We will endeavor to keep this from her.
The pain of Dr. Fellowes’s needle as it stitched the wound shut was no worse than the humiliation Arabella felt as she lay on a cot in her father’s office. From the shelf above Father’s desk, his collection of small automata looked down in judgement: the scribe, the glockenspiel player, and especially the dancer, still given pride of place though it no longer functioned, all seemed to regard her with disappointment in their painted eyes.
Her father too, she knew, must be horribly disappointed in her, though his face with its high forehead and shock of gray hair showed more concern than dissatisfaction. Though no tears had fallen, his eyes glimmered in the flickering lamplight, and when she considered how she had let him down Arabella felt a hot sting of shame in her own eyes.
Even the crude little drummer she herself had built, a simple clockwork with just one motion, seemed let down by its creator. She had been so proud when she had presented it to Father on his birthday last year and he had placed it on the shelf with his most treasured possessions; now, she felt sure, he would surely retire it to some dark corner.
Again and again the needle stabbed Arabella’s scalp; the repeated tug and soft hiss of the thread passing through her skin seemed to go on and on. A little more light, please,
the doctor said, and Khema adjusted the wick on the lamp. Not much longer.
The doctor’s clothing smelled of dust and leather, and the sweat of the huresh on which Michael had fetched him from his home. Michael himself looked on from behind him, his sandy hair and heart-shaped face so very like her own, his blue eyes filled with worry.
There now,
said the doctor, clipping off the thread. All finished.
Khema brought him a washbasin, and as he cleaned the blood from his hands he said, Scalp wounds do bleed quite frightfully, but the actual danger is slight; if you keep the wound clean it should heal up nicely. And even if there should be a scar, it will be hidden by your hair.
Thank you, Doctor,
Arabella said, sitting up and examining his work in the window-glass—the sun would rise soon, but the sky was still dark enough to give a good reflection. Her appearance, she was forced to acknowledge, was quite shocking, with dried blood everywhere, but she thought that once she had cleaned herself she might be able to arrange her hair so as to hide the stitches from her mother.
But that opportunity was denied her, for just at that moment the office door burst open and Mother charged in, still in her night-dress. Arabella!
she cried. What has happened to you?
She is quite well, Mother,
Michael said. She only fell and hit her head.
She is not ‘well.’
Mother sat on the edge of the cot and held Arabella’s head in her hands. "She is covered in blood, and what on earth is this horrific garment you are wearing? It exposes your limbs quite shamefully."
Arabella had been dreading this discovery. "It is called a thukhong, Mother, and it keeps me far warmer than any English-made dress."
An ugly Martian word for an ugly Martian garment, one entirely unsuitable for a proper English lady.
She glowered at Arabella’s father. "I thought we agreed when she turned twelve that there would be no more of … this." She waved a disgusted hand, taking in the thukhong, the blood, the desert outside, and the planet Mars in general. Dr. Fellowes seemed to be trying to disappear into the wainscoting.
Father dropped his eyes from Mother’s withering gaze. "She is still only sixteen, dear, and she is a very … active girl. Surely she may be allowed a few more years of freedom before being compelled to settle down? She has kept up with her studies.…"
But even as he spoke, Mother’s lips went quite white from being pressed together, and finally she burst out, I will have no more of your rationalizations!
She stood and paced briskly back and forth in front of Father’s broad khoresh-wood desk, her fury building still further as she warmed to her subject. "For years now I have struggled to bring Arabella up properly, despite the primitive conditions on this horrible planet, and now I find that she is risking her life traipsing around the trackless desert by night, wearing leather trousers no less! She rounded on Arabella.
How long have you been engaging in this disgraceful behavior?"
Arabella glanced to Michael, her father, and Khema for support, but in the face of her mother’s wrath they were as defenseless as she. Only a few weeks,
she muttered, eyes downcast, referring only to the game of shorosh khe kushura. She and Michael had actually been exploring the desert under Khema’s tutelage—learning of Mars’s flora, fauna, and cultures and engaging in games of strategy and combat—since they were both quite small.
Only a few weeks,
Mother repeated, jaw clenched and nostrils flaring. Then perhaps it is not too late.
She stared hard at Arabella a moment longer, then gave a firm nod and turned to Father. I am taking the children back home. And this time I will brook no argument.
Arabella felt as though the floor had dropped from under her. No!
she cried.
Without facing Arabella, Mother raised a finger to silence her. You see what she has become!
she continued to Father. Willful, disobedient, disrespectful. And Fanny and Chloë are already beginning to follow in her filthy footsteps.
Now her tone changed, and despite Arabella’s anguish at the prospect of being torn from her home she could not deny the genuine sadness and fear in her mother’s eyes. "Please, dear. Please. You must agree. You must consider our posterity! If Arabella is allowed to continue on this path, and her sisters, too … what decent man would have them? They will be left as spinsters, doomed to a lonely old age on a barbarous planet."
Arabella bit her lip and hugged herself tightly, feeling lost and helpless as she watched her father’s face. Taking Arabella, Michael, and the two little girls to England—a place to which Mother always referred as back home,
though all of the children had been born on Mars and had never known any other home—was something she had often spoken of, though never so definitively or immediately. But with this incident something had changed, something deep and fundamental, and plainly Father was seriously considering the question.
He pursed his lips and furrowed his brow. He stroked his chin and looked to Mother, to Michael, to Arabella—his eyes beneath the gray brows looking very stern—and then out the window, at the sun just beginning to peep above the rows of khoresh-trees.
Finally he sighed deeply and turned back to Mother. You may have the girls,
he said in a resigned tone. But Michael will remain here, to help me with the business of the plantation.
But Father…,
Arabella began, until a minute shake of his head stopped her words. The look in his eyes showed clearly that he did not desire this outcome, but it was plain to all that this time Mother would not be appeased.
Arabella looked to Michael for support, but though his eyes brimmed with tears his shoulders slumped and his hands, still stained with Arabella’s blood, hung ineffectually at his sides. I am sorry,
he whispered.
Khema, too, stood silently in the corner, hands folded and eye-stalks downcast. Bold, swift, and powerful she might be in the desert, but within the manor house she was only a servant and must submit to Mother’s wishes.
Very well,
said Mother, after a long considering pause. Michael may remain. But the Ashby women … are going home.
And she smiled.
That smile, to Arabella, was like a judge’s gavel pronouncing sentence of death.
1
ENGLAND, 1813
1
AN UNEXPECTED LETTER
Arabella eased her bedroom door open and crept into the dark hallway. All about her the house lay silent, servants and masters alike tucked safe in their beds. Only the gentle tick of the tall clock in the parlor disturbed the night.
Shielding the candle with one hand, Arabella slipped down the hallway, her bare feet making no sound on the cool boards. She kept close to the walls, where the floor was best supported and the boards did not creak, but now and again she took a long, slow step to avoid a spot she had learned was likely to squeak.
Down the stairs and across the width of the house she crept, until she reached the drawing-room. In the corner farthest from the fireplace stood the harpsichord, and the silent figure that sat at its keyboard.
Brenchley’s Automaton Harpsichord Player.
Nearly life-sized and dressed in the height of fashion from eight years ago, when it had originally been manufactured, the automaton sat with jointed ivory fingers poised over the instrument’s keys. Its face was finely crafted of smooth, polished birch for a lifelike appearance, the eyes with their painted lashes demurely downcast. A little dust had accumulated in its décolletage, but in the shifting light of Arabella’s little candle it almost seemed to be breathing.
Arabella had always been the only person in the family who shared her father’s passion for automata. The many hours they had spent together in the drawing-room of the manor house at Woodthrush Woods, winding and oiling and polishing his collection, were among her most treasured memories. He had even shared with her his knowledge of the machines’ workings, though Mother had heartily disapproved of such an unladylike pursuit.
The harpsichord player had arrived at Marlowe Hall, their residence in England, not long after they had emigrated—or, as Arabella considered it, been exiled—from Mars. It had been accompanied by a note from Father, reminding them that it was one of his most beloved possessions and saying that he hoped it would provide pleasant entertainment. But Arabella, knowing that Father understood as well as she did how little interest the rest of the family had in automata, had taken it as a sort of peace offering, or apology, from him specifically to her—a moving, nearly living representative and reminder that, although unimaginably distant, he still loved her.
But, alas, all his great expense and careful packing had gone for naught, for when it had been uncrated it refused to play a note. Mother, never well-disposed toward her husband’s expensive pastime, had been none too secretly relieved.
That had been nearly eight months ago. Eight months of frilly dresses and stultifying conversation, and unceasing oppressive damp, and more than any thing else the constant inescapable heaviness. Upon first arriving on Earth, to her shame Arabella had found herself so unaccustomed to the planet’s gravity that she had no alternative but to be carried from the ship in a sedan-chair. She had barely been able to stand for weeks, and even now she felt heavy, awkward, and clumsy, distrustful of her body and of her instincts. Plates and pitchers seemed always to crash to the floor in her vicinity, and even the simple act of throwing and catching a ball was beyond her.
Not that she was allowed to perform any sort of bodily activity whatsoever, other than walking and occasionally dancing. Every one on Earth, it seemed, shared Mother’s attitudes concerning the proper behavior of an English lady, and the slightest display of audacity, curiosity, adventure, or initiative was met with severe disapproval. So she had been reduced, even as she had on Mars, to skulking about by night—but here she lacked the companionship of Michael and Khema.
On Mars, Michael, her only brother, had been her constant companion, studying with her by day and racing her across the dunes by night. And Khema, their Martian nanny or itkhalya, had been to the two of them nurse, protector, and tutor in all things Martian. How she missed them both.
Setting her candle down, Arabella seated herself on the floor behind the automaton and lifted its skirts, in a fashion that would have been most improper if it were human. Beneath the suffocating layers of muslin and linen the automaton’s ingenious mechanisms gleamed in the candlelight, brass and ivory and mahogany each adding their own colors to a silent symphony of light and shadow. Here was the mainspring, there the escapement, there the drum. The drum was the key to the whole mechanism; its pins and flanges told the device where to place its fingers, when to nod, when to appear to breathe. From the drum, dozens of brass fingers transmitted instructions to the rest of the device through a series of levers, rods, springs, and wires.
Arabella breathed in the familiar scents of metal, whale-oil, and beeswax before proceeding. She had begun attempting to repair the device about two months ago, carefully concealing her work from her mother, the servants, and even her sisters. She had investigated its mysteries, puzzled out its workings, and finally found the displaced cog that had stilled the mechanism. But having solved that puzzle, Arabella had continued working with the machine, and in the last few weeks she had even begun making a few cautious modifications. The pins in the drum could be unscrewed, she had learned, and placed in new locations to change the automaton’s behavior.
At the moment her project was to teach it to play God Save the King,
as the poor mad fellow could certainly use the Lord’s help. She had the first few measures working nearly to her satisfaction and was just about to start on Send him victorious.
Laying the folded hearth-rug atop the harpsichord’s strings to muffle the sound, she wound the automaton’s mainspring and began to work, using a nail-file, cuticle-knife, and tweezers to reposition the delicate pins.
She was not concerned that her modifications might be discovered between her working sessions. It was only out of deference to Mr. Ashby, the absent paterfamilias, that her mother even allowed it to remain in the drawing-room. The servants found the device disquieting and refused to do more than dust it occasionally. And as for Fanny and Chloë, Arabella’s sisters were both too young to be allowed to touch the delicate mechanism.
For many pleasant hours Arabella worked, repeatedly making small changes, rolling the drum back with her hand, then letting it play. She would not be satisfied with a mere music-box rendition of the tune; she wanted a performance, with all the life and spirit of a human player. And so she adjusted the movements of the automaton’s body, the tilt of its head, and the subtle motions of its pretended breath as well as the precise timing and rhythm of its notes.
She would pay for her indulgence on the morrow, when her French tutor would stamp his cane each time she yawned—though even when well-slept, she gave him less heed than he felt he deserved. Why bother studying French? England had been at war with Bonaparte since Arabella was a little girl, and showed no sign of ever ceasing to be so.
But for now none of that was of any consequence.
When she worked on the automaton, she felt close to her father.
The sky was already lightening in the east, and a few birds were beginning to greet the sun with their chirruping song, as Arabella heaved the hearth-rug out of the harpsichord and spread it back in its accustomed place. Perhaps some day she would have an opportunity to hear the automaton perform without its heavy, muting encumbrance.
She looked around, inspecting the drawing-room with a critical eye. Had she left any thing out of place? No, she had not. With a satisfied nod she turned and began to make her way back to her bedroom.
But before she even reached the stairs, her ear was caught by a drumming sound from without.
Hoofbeats. The sound of a single horse, running hard. Approaching rapidly.
Who could possibly be out riding at this hour?
Quickly extinguishing the candle, Arabella scurried up the stairs in the dawn light and hid herself in the shadows at the top of the steps. Shortly thereafter, a fist hammered on the front door. Arabella peered down through the banister at the front door, consumed with curiosity.
Only a few moments passed before Cole, the butler, came to open the door. He, too, must have heard the rider’s hoofbeats.
The man at the door was a post-rider, red-eyed and filthy with dust. From his leather satchel he drew out a thin letter, a single sheet, much travel-worn and bearing numerous post-marks.
It was heavily bordered in black. Arabella suppressed a gasp.
A black-bordered letter meant death, and was sadly familiar. Even in the comparatively short space of time since her arrival on Earth, no fewer than five such letters had arrived in this small community, each bearing news of the loss of a brother or father or uncle to Bonaparte’s monstrous greed. But Arabella had no relatives in the army or navy, and had no expectation of her family receiving such a letter.
Three pounds five shillings sixpence,
the post-rider said, dipping his head in acknowledgement of the outrageousness of the postage. It’s an express, all the way from Mars.
At that Arabella was forced to bite her knuckle to prevent herself from crying aloud.
Shaking his head, Cole placed the letter on a silver tray and directed the rider to the servants’ quarters, where he would receive his payment and some refreshment before being sent on his way. As Cole began to climb the stairs Arabella scurried back to her room, her heart pounding.
Arabella paced in her bedroom, sick with worry. Her hands worked at her handkerchief as she went, twisting and straining the delicate fabric until it threatened to tear asunder.
A black-bordered letter. An express. No one would send such dire news by such an expensive means unless it concerned a member of the family. She forced herself to hope that it might be an error, or news of some distant relative of whose existence she had not even been aware … but as the silence went on and on, that hope diminished swiftly.
Who was it who had passed? Father, or Michael? Which would be worse? She loved them both so dearly. Michael and she were practically twins, and he had many more years ahead of him, so his loss would surely be the greater tragedy. But Father … the man who had shared with her his love of automata, who had sat her on his knee and taught her the names of the stars, who had quietly encouraged her to dare, to try, to risk, despite Mother’s objections … to lose him would be terrible, terrible indeed.
Every fiber of her being insisted that she run to her mother’s room, burst through the door, and demand an answer. But that would be unladylike, and, as Mother had repeatedly admonished, unladylike behavior was entirely unacceptable under even the most pressing circumstances. And so she paced, and pulled her handkerchief to shreds, and tried not to cry.
And then, startling though not a surprise, a knock came on the door. It was Nellie, her mother’s handmaid. Mrs. Ashby requests your presence, Miss Ashby.
Thank you, Nellie.
Trembling, Arabella followed Nellie to her mother’s dressing-room, where Fanny and Chloë, already present, were gathered in a miserable huddle with their mother. The black-bordered letter lay open on her mother’s writing-desk, surrounded by the scattered fragments of the seal, which was of black wax.
Arabella stood rooted, just inside the door, her eyes darting from the letter to her mother and sisters. It was as though it were a lukhosh, or some other dreadful poisonous creature, that had already struck them down and was now lying in wait for her. She wondered whether she was expected to pick it up and read it.
She ached to know what the letter contained. She wanted nothing more than to flee the room.
Nellie cleared her throat. Ma’am?
Mother raised her head, her eyes flowing with tears. Noticing Arabella, she gently patted the settee by her side. The girls shifted to make room for her.
Arabella sat. Each of her sisters clutched one of her hands, offering comfort despite their own misery.
The news is … it is … it is Mr. Ashby,
Mother said. She held her head up straight, though her chin trembled. Your father has passed on.
Father…?
Arabella whispered.
And even though the distance between planets was so unimaginably vast … even though the news must be months old … even though it had been more than eight months since she had seen him with her own eyes … somehow, some intangible connection had still remained between her and her father, and at that moment she felt that connection part, tearing like rotted silk.
And she too collapsed in sobs.
2
AN UNCOMFORTABLE DINNER
Five weeks later, Arabella arrived at Chester Cottage, the home of her cousin Simon Ashby in Oxfordshire. She stepped from her carriage, handed down by William the footman, and was greeted by Simon and his wife Beatrice.
Simon, a barrister, was a nervous man, thin and pale, with watery eyes and light brown hair worn a bit longer than the current fashion, but as he was her only living relative on her father’s side of the family she felt quite tenderly toward him. We were so very sorry to hear of your loss,
he said.
He was a very good man,
Arabella replied, and I miss him dearly.
She blinked away tears.
The last five weeks had been very hard. Even though Father’s passing, so distant in time as well as space, had not affected the family in any immediate or practical sense, the loss had affected Arabella greatly. Inconsolable, she had taken to her bed for days at a time, refusing food, water, and solace.
Beatrice, a plump girl with tiny hands, offered Arabella a handkerchief. When your mother wrote to us of the depth of your grief,
she said, offering our humble home for a brief respite was the least we could do.
I thank you for your kindness, and I extend my mother’s thanks as well.
Arabella took a deep breath and looked about herself. Chester Cottage was, indeed, quite humble, and rather far removed from town, but it was at least a fresh locale lacking any memories for Arabella.
Every thing at Marlowe Hall reminded her of her loss. Whenever she managed to forget for a moment that her father had passed away, she would immediately catch a glimpse of Fanny all in black, or the shrouded mirrors, or the black mourning wreath that hung over the front door, and grief would come flooding back.
Even the automaton harpsichord player, the one thing that had kept her sane in the last few months, now served only to remind her of her father. The very sight of it brought tears to her eyes.
Arabella shook her head, dispelling the memory. I suppose I should also extend my condolences to you,
she said. He was, after all, your uncle.
You are too kind,
Simon said, and bowed his head. But his expression, Arabella thought, was rather sour, and she wondered at this.
They led Arabella into the cottage and introduced her to infant Sophie, their firstborn, who was not yet two months old. Then they showed Arabella the room which would be hers during her stay. It was small and rather shabbily furnished, in keeping with the rest of the house, and as her things were brought in from the carriage Arabella could not help but notice that the Ashbys of Chester Cottage had only a single servant, an elderly maid-of-all-work called Jane.
But, despite the meanness of her cousins’ circumstances, they had offered her hospitality, and there was nothing here to remind her of her father. Arabella determined to be grateful for the opportunity to rest her battered spirit.
If you don’t mind, Miss Ashby,
William said to Arabella once she was settled, I’d best be returning home straight away.
It had been a lengthy journey, and even with the long summer days he would need to set off immediately in order to return to Marlowe Hall in time for Sunday supper.
By all means, William. I wish you a safe journey home, and look forward to seeing you again in two weeks.
At dinner that afternoon, after Jane had taken away the bowls from the rather thin and unsatisfactory soup, Beatrice said, I believe we shall go berry-picking upon the morrow. Would you care to join us? It will be little Sophie’s first such occasion.
At the mention of his infant daughter, to Arabella’s surprise, Simon’s face clouded. Surely this reminder of the recent addition to his family should raise his spirits, not lower them?
Is berry-picking a suitable activity for small children?
Arabella asked,