The tropic of serpents A memoir by Lady Trent

Marie Brennan

Book - 2014

"Attentive readers of Lady Trent's earlier memoir, A Natural History of Dragons, are already familiar with how a bookish and determined young woman named Isabella first set out on the historic course that would one day lead her to becoming the world's premier dragon naturalist. Now, in this remarkably candid second volume, Lady Trent looks back at the next stage of her illustrious (and occasionally scandalous) career. Three years after her fateful journeys through the forbidding mountains of Vystrana, in which she lost her husband, the widowed Mrs. Camherst defies family and convention to embark on an expedition to the savage, war-torn continent of Eriga, home of such exotic draconian species as the grass-dwelling snakes of t...he savannah, arboreal tree snakes, and, most elusive of all, the legendary swamp-wyrms of the tropics. The expedition is not an easy one. Accompanied by both an old associate and a runaway heiress, Isabella must brave oppressive heat, merciless fevers, palace intrigues, gossip, and other hazards in order to satisfy her boundless fascination with all things draconian, even if it means venturing deep into the forbidden jungle known as the Green Hell . . . where her courage, resourcefulness, and scientific curiosity will be tested as never before"--

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Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Published
New York : Tor 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Marie Brennan (-)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A Tom Doherty Associates book."
Physical Description
331 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780765331977
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

IN "ANNIHILATION," the first book of Jeff VanderMeer's Southern Reach trilogy, readers were introduced to Area X, a stretch of coastal wetland whose conspiracy-theory name is the icing atop a mille-feuille of layered, slow-building, deliciously creepy horror. Twelve teams of researchers, stripped of names to somehow protect them from the identity-warping effects of the danger zone, have traveled into Area X; "Annihilation" followed "the biologist" as she seemingly became the only survivor to actually understand what was happening. The second book, AUTHORITY (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, paper, $15), pulls the action back to the edge of Area X, where the government agency that oversees the phenomenon - the Southern Reach - is going through some changes in the wake of the 12th expedition. A new director has come aboard, and his decision to shed his name in favor of the nickname Control is the first hint that all is not as it seems in the halls of this outdated and underfunded government complex. Area X is an idea as well as a place, gradually colonizing everyone who has contact with it, and it's no accident that Control's gradual discovery of the agency's secrets parallels the journey of the biologist in the first book. The narrative is mundane in a way that lulls the reader into a false sense of complacency, as Control spends an inordinate amount of time attending meetings and worrying about personnel matters. Yet VanderMeer carefully inserts oddities at well-timed intervals to remind the reader of just what it is the Southern Reach is dealing with. While cleaning out the previous director's office, for example, Control finds an apparently unkillable plant in a desk drawer that has been closed and locked for months. Mysterious graffiti, familiar to readers of "Annihilation," appears on the office walls. The incidents pile up, building in tension and terror until it becomes very, very clear that Area X is in no way safely contained within its borders. As in the first book, VanderMeer also performs a careful character study of one of the few people strange enough to contend (debatably) with Area X. This elevates the whole exercise into something more than just a horror novel; there's something Poe-like in this tightening, increasingly paranoid focus. But where Poe kept his most vicious blows relatively oblique, VanderMeer drives them deep - albeit in a corkscrewing way that is no less cruel and exquisite. There's a slower buildup of tension in this book than the first, possibly because it's almost twice as long. The payoff is absolutely worth the patience. It's easy to get lost in the scenery Chris Beckett introduces in his third novel, DARK EDEN (Broadway, paper, $15), which won the Arthur C. Clarke Award in England last year. Eden, the sunless rogue planet on which a pair of stranded spacefarers played Adam and Eve (other biblical allusions are less obvious, thankfully), is the poetic if improbable setting. Here life has evolved to channel energy from the planet's interior to its surface in endless variety and sufficient quantity to make up for the lack of a sun. Beckett describes in exhaustive detail glowing forests of lantern trees and light-reflecting predators that sing to their prey. He renders the terror of the darkness beyond the forests with a riveting deftness that evokes all primordial fears of the unknown. So entrancing and fresh is Eden's beauty, in fact, that it might take a while for the reader to notice the tired devices playing out against its backdrop. The Family, as the 532 primitive descendants of the spacefarers call themselves, has dwelled for generations in one forest on Eden, never daring to venture into the lightless, frozen lands beyond. This is a problem because their growing population has taxed the forest to capacity, and something will have to give soon. Enter young John Redlantern, the stalwart visionary who dares to question the nonsensical traditions passed down from their Earthborn forebears. It takes a while for this part of the story to get going, but you can see it coming from nearly the first chapter: John, his devoted but forgettable cousin and his equally clichéd love interest eventually challenge enough of the Family's status quo to be kicked out of it, forcing them into the dark. The journey is exciting, and Beckett cleverly offers his characters additional threats to face as the dark becomes less of one, but it's all a bit predictable. What really dims Eden's glow, however, is the 1950s ethos underpinning the whole thing. The Family has developed into a relatively peaceful communal society that venerates its elders and has necessarily relaxed sexual norms; the society John seeks to create instead is monogamous, individualistic, rife with subtle bigotries and rooted in murder. Survival and progress, the story seems to suggest, require these things. John himself is that most threadbare of science fiction types: the impossibly handsome, impossibly forward-thinking young man who gets the prettiest girl with no particular effort, and saves the day through sheer bloody-mindedness. Beckett tells the story from the alternating viewpoints of John and his companions, but it's unclear why he bothers with the others; everything's about John anyway. Still, for the sort of readers who like their heroes retro and their world-building literally colorful, there's plenty here to intrigue and entrance. It quickly becomes clear over the course of Jo Walton's MY REAL CHILDREN (Tor, $25.99) that there's no overtly science fictional or fantastic element in this story of an English girl who comes of age in postwar Europe. As an old woman, Patricia tells her story through the haze of deepening dementia - perhaps. Her memories are oddly bifurcated: In one recollection, her younger self makes the fateful decision to enter a loveless marriage with her college sweetheart; in the other she turns down his proposal and gallivants off to an exciting life as a travel writer, eventually entering a long-term same-sex relationship. The result is two period dramas for the price of one, told through the science fictional conceit of alternate realities. But it does a disservice to this powerful novel to focus overmuch on its structure or categorization. Both versions of Patricia - the much-put-upon, traditional Trida and the avant-garde free spirit Pat - endure the trials of women of the time with admirable grace. Some of these are alien enough to jar a modern reader; it's excruciating to see Tricia suffer marital rape and reproductive coercion, though she hardly has the language or self-actualization to view this treatment as abusive. It's correspondingly exhilarating to see Pat experience a degree of freedom that few modern women can claim, as she breaks boundaries as an expatriate single woman and forges a nontraditional family. Between these highs and lows, both Patricias travel the usual middle ground of life: rebellious children, unexpected career opportunities, the decline of a partner's or parent's health. Both Patricias are the same woman, and in many ways they're living the same lives. The difference ultimately lies in feminism: at which point in her two lives Patricia embraces it, and to what degree. Pat lives the intersectionality of the third wave from the moment she leaves her parents' house, while Trida comes late to "The Feminine Mystique" and a second-waver's rejection of traditional marriage's inequalities. All of this is rendered with Walton's usual power and beauty, establishing firmly that both Patricias are valid, fully realized women with stories worth knowing. The alternate-history elements grow stronger as the stories progress, yet it's this haunting character complexity that ultimately holds the reader captive to the tale. Within the sphere of steampunk there seems to be a rapidly growing subsphere of gadgetless "neo-Victorian" novels, most of which attempt to recapture the romance of the era without all the sociopolitical ugliness. In the same vein as Kay Kenyon's "A Thousand Perfect Things" and Gail Carriger's Parasol Protectorate series, here comes Marie Brennan's the tropic of serpents (Tor, $25.99), Book 2 of the fictional memoirs of Lady Isabella Trent, a well-born alterna-Englishwoman who braves war, nature and propriety in pursuit of her passion for naturalism. Though Lady Trent is prevented from joining the pre-eminent scientific societies of her era because of her gender, she's well on her way to achieving fame anyway, as the book's frame narration implies. (The older Trent describing these events notes that her memoirs are quite popular.) This is probably because she's chosen to focus her formidable intellect on cataloging and understanding the world's dragons. That alone wouldn't be enough to sustain a fantasy series, though, so in this second Lady Trent outing (after "A Natural History of Dragons"), we follow her to Eriga, Brennan's stand-in for the African continent. There she and her companions, including a young runaway heiress who also wants to devote her life to science, become embroiled in local politics. This portion of the story is a little slow, in part because the heroine is forced to isolate herself when she menstruates per local rules. This means that after a promising opening in which mysterious antagonists steal the formula for preserving dragon bones, there's a long lull in which Lady Trent meets with this or that important personage to gain support for her cause. Eventually, however, the action resumes as Lady Trent and her party are sent into dangerous territory on a quest for dragon eggs. A set of lovely illustrations, maybe meant to evoke Darwin's texts, accompanies this quest. Even when the action resumes, however, it's all surprisingly unengaging. This may be a flaw of the medium and not the work itself. The problem lies in the need to keep the era recognizably Victorian, when really, it shouldn't be. Actual Victorian mores and politics were a reaction to a specific series of historical events, technological and scientific developments, and ethical trends in which the commodification of people was de rigueur. In "The Tropic of Serpents" (as in similar neo-Victorian works), these ugly bits of real history are elided. There's little mention here of an international slave trade, no British Raj. There's some space allotted to a push by Western powers to get access to the iron of other lands, but this is relevant only in how it threatens the protagonist's goals : Properly treated, dragon bone is stronger than iron. She fears a speculative run that could wipe out the beasts. In a way, this illustrates the niggling problem with neo-Victorian fiction. That Isabella frets so obsessively about conservationism while the nation around her ratchets toward war is actually spot on as an example of a colonizer's patronizing attitude - but not enough actual colonialism exists in this world to support that attitude. And meanwhile the story's focus on the liberation of only wealthy, white and otherwise highly privileged women ignores the grassroots-driven, labor-movement-inflected struggle that actually took place in our own world's England. All of this actually serves to emphasize what's been left out of these idealized Victorian worlds, and trivialize the struggles and complexities that made the era fascinating in real life. Which is fine, for readers who aren't especially interested in engaging with those complexities. In that case, the story is exactly what it says on the tin: a rollicking adventure in which women wearing unnerving amounts of underwear tromp through jungles on dragon-hunting safaris. Really, that should be more than enough for just about everyone. The most praiseworthy thing that can be said about Daniel Price's novel the flight of the silvers (Blue Rider, $27.95) is that it borrows from the best. There's something admirably audacious in the way Price attempts to blend superhero comics, portal quest fantasies, science fictional "other Earths," thrillers and Hollywood summer tent-pole films. All of these things can be entertaining on their own, but any attempt to put them together stands a solid chance of turning into a jumbled mess even in the most skilled hands. Price's book could have been worse, but not by much. The problem starts from the prologue, in which Price lavishes detail on the parents of two children, Amanda and Hannah Given, in a movie-trailer opening that sees the family saved from a highway disaster by three inhumanly beautiful beings. These beings use awesome might-as-well-be-magical powers to stop time, then announce that the two little girls are special and theatrically vanish. None of this is necessary. The parents are dead by Chapter 1. The girls are young enough that they barely remember the incident, and the omniscient narrative informs us it has no real impact on their lives. The story reintroduces Hannah and Amanda in their 20s, by which point both have grown into tiresome clichés. Amanda is a successful, no-nonsense career woman, while Hannah has become a flighty mediocre actress whose most significant work is being attractive to men. (Her breasts are mentioned several times.) The reader then learns almost nothing more about these sisters for roughly 300 pages. Oh, there are lots of scenes of both women reacting to another mysterious disaster (this one literally world-ending), but they develop only minimally beyond the stereotypes they represent. Even after the sisters are transported to an alternate universe in which flying cars and time travel are the norm, it takes 150 pages to figure out what makes them so special - namely, that they and a few others have their own might-as-well-be-magical time powers. They were all given silver bracelets, and thus are referred to as "the Silvers" for the duration. You know, like "the Avengers." The whole book - a whopping 600 pages - is structured like this: a portentous action scene depicted via a clunky, head-hopping narrative informing the reader something special has just occurred, followed by a grueling wait before the specialness is only partially explained. Since the book is the first of a proposed series, full explanations will be a long time coming. There are some mitigating elements amid the morass. The novel's alternate America, diverging from our world thanks to a disaster that rewrites the history of science, is genuinely fascinating; descriptions of the transformed New York City are some of the most eloquent in the book. As the Silvers come together, learn to wield their uncanny powers and promptly go on the run from people mysteriously trying to kill them, the story does get more interesting. Price devotes a lot of time to fleshing out his ensemble of young, attractive, white people through character quirks like alcoholism and Whedonesque witty banter. You can practically smell the Hollywood bait. In fact, Hollywood is likely to compress the cast and plot into a more manageable package. Maybe wait for the film version on this one. N.K. JEMISIN is the author of the Inheritance trilogy and, most recently, "The Shadowed Sun." Her new novel, "The Fifth Season," will be published next year.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 1, 2014]
Review by Booklist Review

In this sequel to A Natural History of Dragons (2013), Lady Trent, the book's narrator, is preparing to embark on another scientific expedition, this one to the continent of Eriga (a fictional stand-in, it appears, for Africa), in search of an edgier life. The author, who has studied folklore, anthropology, and archaeology, sets the story in an alternate Victorian era, which gives her the freedom to keep the historical elements she wants, but also to jettison others (or, more important, to add in some nonhistorical elements, like dinosaurs, which in this world are even rarer than iron). Structuring the story like a Victorian memoir is a nice touch, too, allowing Brennan to give us a good, long look at our narrator (a thoroughly likable and spunky woman), while also allowing her to filter the events through the perceptions of the heroine. Gaslamp fantasy is a relatively new subgenre the term was coined to separate certain fantasy stories from the more familiar and techno-oriented steampunk and this is a shining example of it.--Pitt, David Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Brennan's sequel to A Natural History of Dragons is more of the same-a literate account of a woman's fieldwork on dragons, which in this imagined 19th-century world are natural creatures. Isabella, Lady Trent, has even determined the six criteria for classifying an animal as a dragon, which include "wings capable of flight," "a ruff or fan behind the skull," and "extraordinary breath." Lady Trent makes for an intrepid and pleasingly independent protagonist, mastering challenges both emotional and physical. Apart from the existence of the incredible beasts (there are multiple species, such as swamp-wyrms and savannah snakes), the differences from our own world are almost too subtle. Brennan suggests that Judaism is the dominant religion, but there's not much reason to believe that the narrative would have unfolded much differently in our own Victorian England, rather than Lady Trent's homeland of Scirland. Agent: Eddie Schneider, J.A. Bberwocky Literary Agency. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The second adventure (A Natural History of Dragons, 2013) for the doughty Isabella Camherst, a dragon-obsessed young lady of Scirland determined to pursue her research in an age when educating girls in science and philosophy is frowned upon. Previously, Isabella accompanied naturalist and explorer Lord Hilford to chilly, mountainous Vystrana in search of rock-wyrms, during which time she lost her husband and subsequently gave birth to a son. Now, Hilford is organizing an expedition to the tropical continent of Eriga, where several new species of dragon await study. Rejecting stay-at-home motherhood, Isabella eagerly agrees to join the expedition. Too old and frail to travel himself, Hilford will be represented by his assistant, Thomas Wilker, who, as a commoner, faces obstacles similar to those Isabella confronts as a woman. Natalie, Hilford's granddaughter, causes additional complications; refusing to be married off by her father, Natalie takes refuge with Isabella, who arranges to smuggle the girl along on the expedition. But Eriga, so they find, presents a whole new set of problems. Bayembe, their destination, is threatened by its warlike neighbor, Ikwunde, with only the jungle swamps of Mouleen, known as the Green Hell, between. So before her dragon research can proceed, scholarly yet iron-willed Isabella must negotiate male hostility and prejudice, political infighting, the commercial and imperial ambitions of the Scirlings, heat, disease, arrogant big-game hunters and the cultural imperatives of the Erigan people. And during her adventures in the Green Hellthe book's finest sectionIsabella will find sociology as important as natural history and the key to preventing a brutal war. This, the second of Isabella's retrospective memoirs, is as uncompromisingly honest and forthright as the first, narrated in Brennan's usual crisp, vivid style, with a heroine at once admirable, formidable and captivating. Reader, lose no time in making Isabella's acquaintance.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

ONE My life of solitude--My sister-in-law and my mother--An unexpected visitor--Trouble at Kemble's Not long before I embarked on my journey to Eriga, I girded my loins and set out for a destination I considered much more dangerous: Falchester. The capital was not, in the ordinary way of things, a terribly adventurous place, except insofar as I might be rained upon there. I made the trip from Pasterway on a regular basis, as I had affairs to monitor in the city. Those trips, however, were not well-publicized--by which I mean I mentioned them to only a handful of people, all of them discreet. So far as most of Scirland knew (those few who cared to know), I was a recluse, and had been so since my return from Vystrana. I was permitted reclusiveness on account of my personal troubles, though in reality I spent more of my time on work: first the publication of our Vystrani research, and then preparation for this Erigan expedition, which had been delayed and delayed again, by forces far beyond our control. On that Graminis morning, however, I could no longer escape the social obligations I assiduously buried beneath those other tasks. The best I could do was to discharge them both in quick succession: to visit first my blood relations, and then those bound to me by marriage. My house in Pasterway was only a short drive from the fashionable district of Havistow, where my eldest brother Paul had settled the prior year. I usually escaped the necessity of visiting his house by the double gift of his frequent absence and his wife's utter disinterest in me, but on this occasion I had been invited, and it would have been more trouble to refuse. Please understand, it is not that I disliked my family. Most of us got on cordially enough, and I was on quite good terms with Andrew, the brother most immediately senior to me. But the rest of my brothers found me baffling, to say the least, and my mother's censure of my behaviour had nudged their opinions toward disapproval. What Paul wanted with me that day I did not know--but on the whole, I would have preferred to face a disgruntled Vystrani rock-wyrm. Alas, those were all quite far away, while my brother was too near to avoid. With a sensation of girding for battle, I lifted my skirt in ladylike delicacy, climbed the front steps, and rang the bell. My sister-in-law was in the morning room when the footman escorted me in. Judith was a paragon of upper-class Scirling wifehood, in all the ways I was not: beautifully dressed, without crossing the line into gyver excess; a gracious hostess, facilitating her husband's work by social means; and a dedicated mother, with three children already, and no doubt more to come. We had precisely one thing in common, which was Paul. "Have I called at the wrong time?" I inquired, after accepting a cup of tea. "Not at all," Judith answered. "He is not at home just now--a meeting with Lord Melst--but you are welcome to stay until he returns." Lord Melst? Paul was moving up in the world. "I presume this is Synedrion business," I said. Judith nodded. "We had a short respite after he won his chair, but now the affairs of government have moved in to occupy his time. I hardly expect to see him between now and Gelis." Which meant I might be cooling my heels here for a very long time. "If it is not too much trouble," I said, putting down my teacup and rising from my seat, "I think it might be better for me to leave and come back. I have promised to pay a visit to my brother-in-law Matthew today as well." To my surprise, Judith put out her hand to stop me. "No, please stay. We have a guest right now, who was hoping to see you--" I never had the chance to ask who the guest was, though I had my suspicions the moment Judith began to speak. The door to the sitting room opened, and my mother came in. Now it all made sense. I had ceased to answer my mother's letters some time before, for my own peace of mind. She would not, even when asked, leave off criticizing my every move, and implying that my bad judgment had caused me to lose my husband in Vystrana. It was not courteous to ignore her, but the alternative would be worse. For her to see me, therefore, she must either show up unannounced at my house ... or lure me to another's. Such logic did little to sweeten my reaction. Unless my mother was there to offer reconciliation--which I doubted--this was a trap. I had rather pull my own teeth out than endure more of her recriminations. (And lest you think that a mere figure of speech, I should note that I did once pull my own tooth out, so I do not make the comparison lightly.) As it transpired, though, her recriminations were at least drawing on fresh material. My mother said, "Isabella. What is this nonsense I hear about you going to Eriga?" I have been known to bypass the niceties of small talk, and ordinarily I am grateful for it in others. In this instance, however, it had the effect of an arrow shot from cover, straight into my brain. "What?" I said, quite stupidly--not because I failed to understand her, but because I had no idea how she had come to hear of it. "You know perfectly well what I mean," she went on, relentlessly. "It is absurd, Isabella. You cannot go abroad again, and certainly not to any part of Eriga. They are at war there!" I sought my chair once more, using the delay to regain my composure. "That is an exaggeration, Mama, and you know it. Bayembe is not at war. The mansa of Talu dares not invade, not with Scirling soldiers helping to defend the borders." My mother sniffed. "I imagine the man who drove the Akhians out of Elerqa--after two hundred years!--dares a great deal indeed. And even if he does not attack, what of those dreadful Ikwunde?" "The entire jungle of Mouleen lies between them and Bayembe," I said, irritated. "Save at the rivers, of course, and Scirland stands guard there as well. Mama, the whole point of our military presence is to make the place safe." The look she gave me was dire. "Soldiers do not make a place safe, Isabella. They only make it less dangerous." What skill I have in rhetoric, I inherited from my mother. I was in no mood to admire her phrasing that day, though. Nor to be pleased at her political awareness, which was quite startling. Most Scirling women of her class, and a great many men, too, could barely name the two Erigan powers that had forced Bayembe to seek foreign--which is to say Scirling--aid. Gentlemen back then were interested only in the lopsided "trade agreement" that sent Bayembe iron to Scirland, along with other valuable resources, in exchange for them allowing us to station our soldiers all over their country, and build a colony in Nsebu. Ladies were not interested much at all. Was this something she had attended to before, or had she educated herself upon hearing of my plans? Either way, this was not how I had intended to break the news to her. Just how I had intended to do it, I had not yet decided; I kept putting off the issue, out of what I now recognized as rank cowardice. And this was the consequence: an unpleasant confrontation in front of my sister-in-law, whose stiffly polite expression told me that she had known this was coming. (A sudden worm of suspicion told me that Paul, too, had known. Meeting with Lord Melst, indeed. Such a shame he was out when I arrived.) It meant, at least, that I only had to face my mother, without allies to support her in censure. I was not fool enough to think I would have had allies of my own. I said, "The Foreign Office would not allow people to travel there, let alone settle, if it were so dangerous as all that. And they have been allowing it, so there you are." She did not need to know that one of the recurrent delays in this expedition had involved trying to persuade the Foreign Office to grant us visas. "Truly, Mama, I shall be at far more risk from malaria than from any army." What possessed me to say that, I do not know, but it was sheer idiocy on my part. My mother's glare sharpened. "Indeed," she said, and the word could have frosted glass. "Yet you propose to go to a place teeming with tropical diseases, without a single thought for your son." Her accusation was both fair and not. It was true that I did not think as much of my son as one might expect. I gave very little milk after his birth and had to hire a wet-nurse, which suited me all too well; infant Jacob reminded me far too much of his late namesake. Now he was more than two years old, weaned, and in the care of a nanny. My marriage settlement had provided quite generously for me, but much of that money I had poured into scientific research, and the books of our Vystrani expedition--the scholarly work under my husband's name, and my own inane bit of travel writing--were not bringing in as much as one might hope. Out of what remained, however, I paid handsomely for someone to care for my son, and not because the widow of a baronet's second son ought not to stoop to such work herself. I simply did not know what to do with Jacob otherwise. People often suppose that maternal wisdom is wholly instinctual: that however ignorant a woman may be of child rearing prior to giving birth, the mere fact of her sex will afterward endow her with perfect capability. This is not true even on the grossest biological level, as the failure of my milk had proved, and it is even less true in social terms. In later years I have come to understand children from the perspective of a natural historian; I know their development, and have some appreciation for its marvellous progress. But at that point in time, little Jacob made less sense to me than a dragon. Is the rearing of a child best performed by a woman who has done it before, who has honed her skills over the years and enjoys her work, or by a woman with no skill and scant enjoyment, whose sole qualification is a direct biological connection? My opinion fell decidedly on the former, and so I saw very little practical reason why I should not go to Eriga. In that respect, I had given a great deal of thought to the matter of my son. Saying such things to my mother was, however, out of the question. Instead I temporized. "Matthew Camherst and his wife have offered to take him in while I am gone. Bess has one of her own, very near the same age; it will be good for Jacob to have a companion." "And if you die?" The question dropped like a cleaver onto the conversation, severing it short. I felt my cheeks burning: with anger, or with shame--likely both. I was outraged that my mother should say such a thing so bluntly ... and yet my husband had died in Vystrana. It was not impossible that I should do the same in Eriga. Into this dead and bleeding silence came a knock on the door, followed shortly by the butler, salver in hand, bowing to present a card to Judith, who lifted it, mechanically, as if she were a puppet and someone had pulled the string on her arm. Confusion carved a small line between her brows. "Who is Thomas Wilker?" The name had the effect of a low, unnoticed kerb at the edge of a street, catching my mental foot and nearly causing me to fall on my face. "Thomas Wil--what is he doing here?" Comprehension followed, tardily, lifting me from my stumble. Judith did not know him, and neither did my mother, which left only one answer. "Ah. I think he must be here to see me." Judith's posture snapped to a rigid, upright line, for this was not how social calls were conducted. A man should not inquire after a widow in a house that wasn't hers. I spared a moment to notice that the card, which Judith dropped back on the salver, was not a proper calling card; it appeared to be a piece of paper with Mr. Wilker's name written in by hand. Worse and worse. Mr. Wilker was not, properly speaking, a gentleman, and certainly not the sort of person who would call here in the normal course of things. I did what I could to retrieve the moment. "I do apologize. Mr. Wilker is an assistant to the earl of Hilford--you recall him, of course; he is the one who arranged the Vystrani expedition." And was arranging the Erigan one, too, though his health precluded him from accompanying us. But what business of that could be so urgent that Lord Hilford would send Mr. Wilker after me at my brother's house? "I should speak with him, but there's no need to trouble you. I will take my leave." My mother's outstretched hand stopped me before I could stand. "Not at all. I think we're all eager to hear what this Mr. Wilker has to say." "Indeed," Judith said faintly, obeying the unspoken order woven through my mother's words. "Send him in, Londwin." The butler bowed and retired. By the alacrity with which Mr. Wilker appeared, he must have sprang forward the instant he was welcomed in; agitation still showed in his movements. But he had long since taken pains to cultivate better manners than those he had grown up with, and so he presented himself first to Judith. "Good morning, Mrs. Hendemore. My name is Thomas Wilker. I'm sorry to trouble you, but I have a message for Mrs. Camherst. We must have passed one another on the road; I only just missed her at her house. And I'm afraid the news is unfortunate enough that it could not wait. I was told she would be visiting here." The curt, disjointed way in which he delivered these words made my hands tighten in apprehension. Mr. Wilker was, quite rightly, looking only at Judith, save a brief nod when he spoke my name; with no hint forthcoming from him, I found myself exchanging a glance instead with my mother. What I saw there startled me. We're all eager to hear what this Mr. Wilker has to say --she thought he was my lover! An overstatement, perhaps, but she had the expression of a woman looking for signs of inappropriate attachment, and coming up empty-handed. As well she should. Mr. Wilker and I might no longer be at loggerheads the way we had been in Vystrana, but I felt no romantic affection for him, nor he for me. Our relationship was purely one of business. I wanted to set my mother down in no uncertain terms for harboring such thoughts, but forbore. Not so much because of the sheer inappropriateness of having that conversation in public, but because it occurred to me that Mr. Wilker and I were engaged in two matters of business, of which the Erigan expedition was only one. Judith, fortunately, waved Mr. Wilker on before I could burst out with my questions unbidden. "By all means, Mr. Wilker. Or is your message private?" I would not have taken the message privately for a hundred sovereigns, not with such suspicions in my mother's mind. "Please," I said. "What has happened?" Mr. Wilker blew out a long breath, and the urgency drained from him in a sudden rush, leaving him sagging and defeated. "There's been a break-in at Kemble's." "Kemble's ... oh, no." My own shoulders sagged, a mirror to his. "What did they destroy? Or--" He nodded, grimly. "Took. His notes." Theft, not destruction. Someone knew what Kemble was working on, and was determined to steal it for their own. I slumped back in my chair, ladylike dignity the furthest thing from my mind. Frederick Kemble was the chemist Mr. Wilker had hired--or rather I had hired; the money was mine, although the choice of recipient was his--to continue the research we ourselves had stolen in the mountains of Vystrana, three years ago. Research that documented a method for preserving dragonbone: an amazing substance, strong and light, but one that decayed quickly outside a living body. The Chiavoran who developed that method was not the first one to try. What had begun as a mere challenge of taxidermy--born from the desire of hunters to preserve trophies from the dragons they killed, and the desire of natural historians to preserve specimens for study--had become a great point of curiosity for chemists. Several were racing to be the first (or so they thought) to solve that puzzle. Despite our best efforts to maintain secrecy around Kemble's work, it seemed someone had learned of it. "When?" I asked, then waved the question away as foolish. "Last night, and I doubt we'll get any time more specific than that." Mr. Wilker shook his head. He lived in the city, and visited Kemble first thing in the morning every Selemer. This news was as fresh as it could be, short of Kemble having heard the intruder and come downstairs in his nightclothes to see. I wondered, suddenly cold, what would have happened if he had. Would the intruder have fled? Or would Mr. Wilker have found our chemist dead this morning? Such thoughts were unnecessarily dramatic--or so I chided myself. Whether they were or not, I did not have the leisure to dwell on them, for my mother's sharp voice roused me from my thoughts. "Isabella. What in heaven is this man talking about?" I took a measure of comfort in the irreverent thought that at least she could not read any hint of personal indiscretion in the message Mr. Wilker had brought. "Research, Mama," I said, pulling myself straight in my chair, and thence to my feet. "Nothing that need concern you. But I'm afraid I must cut this visit short; it is vital that I speak to Mr. Kemble at once. If you will excuse me--" My mother, too, rose to her feet, one hand outstretched. "Please, Isabella. I'm dreadfully concerned for you. This expedition you intend..." She must be concerned indeed, to broach such a personal matter before a stranger like Mr. Wilker. "We will speak of it later, Mama," I said, intending no such thing. "This truly is a pressing matter. I've invested a great deal of money in Mr. Kemble's work, and must find out how much I have lost." Copyright © 2014 by Bryn Neuenschwander Excerpted from The Tropic of Serpents: A Memoir by Lady Trent by Marie Brennan All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.