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Railhead

Page 28

by Philip Reeve


  Human Unity League—

  A rebel group who believes human beings should free themselves from the rule of the Guardians, and that the Emperor should be replaced by a president elected by the peoples of the Network. Despite the best efforts of Railforce, they still hold out on some of the Network’s outermost worlds, and have been known to attack trains and damage rails.

  K-gate—

  A portal through which a train can pass from one point in space to another, often many hundreds or thousands of light-years distance. Their exact nature is known only to the Guardians. The transition from one world to another through a K-gate is usually instantaneous, although the gate from Galatava to Khoorsandi runs “slow”—a train going at the Galatava end takes 0.7 seconds to begin emerging on Khoorsandi—and the Nokomis/Luna Verde gate is rumored to occasionally run “fast,” with trains appearing on the Luna Verde side several seconds before they leave Nokomis.

  Khoorsandi—

  A moon on a minor line that branches from the I-Link at Galatava. Every four standard years Khoorsandi’s orbit brings it so close to its parent world, the gas giant Anahita, that tidal forces cause a massive increase in volcanic activity. This volcanic bloom, and the accompanying Fire Festival, is the basis of Khoorsandi’s tourist industry.

  Motorik—

  The Guardians have always carefully controlled research into artificial intelligence—perhaps for fear that human beings might invent something to rival themselves. But in 2560 they allowed the Parrakhan Cybernetics Corporation to develop the first humanoid robots. Nicknamed “Motorik,” the androids were initially used as shock troops in the Lee-Noon War, but gradually began to find more peaceful uses, taking over from human workers in dull or dangerous jobs, particularly on uninhabitable worlds in the first stages of terraforming.

  Network Empire—

  The Empire is a revival of an ancient form of government from Old Earth. A single human being is chosen to be the ruler of the Network. The Emperor or Empress has little real power, since they are watched over by the Guardians, who will intervene to stop them from doing anything that is likely to cause instability. Their purpose is to act as a symbolic link between the Guardians and humanity, and to ensure that the Corporate Families and the representatives of the different stations and cities of the Network meet to negotiate their differences in the Imperial Senate rather than fighting. However, the Guardians have never objected to an Emperor advancing his own power and interests, ensuring that the family of the current Emperor or Empress is usually the most powerful of the Corporate Families.

  Noon Family—

  One of the greatest of the Corporate Families, the Noons began as bankers, funding a variety of terraforming and rail companies during the First Expansion. Eventually they went into the terraforming business. Legend has it that their founder, Jatka Noon, did a deal with the Guardian known as Mordaunt 90 Network that allowed him to stake first claim to two newly linked junction worlds. Those worlds, one in the eastern Network and one in the west, became the Noons’ twin powerbases of Sundarban and Golden Junction. From there they expanded, gaining control of the Silver River Line and building vital stations on the O Link. Their visionary leader, Lady Rishi Noon, built a number of key stations that finally consolidated their power. Her son became Emperor of the Network, and the Noons have ruled the empire ever since.

  Old Earth—

  A planet in the western reaches of the galaxy, where the Guardians, humankind, and all known life on the Network originally evolved. Strangely, it does not have a K-gate, but visitors may reach it by spaceship from the K-gate on Mars, which was the first to be opened by the Guardians. Since space travel is boring and expensive, and Earth is now just a forest park not unlike Jangala or a dozen other worlds, most tourists are content to view the home planet from Mars, where it is visible as a blue star.

  O Link—

  The name for the line that links a halo of smaller hub-worlds around Grand Central, connecting the various lines that emerge from that great junction with each other, and with the wider Network. It gets its name from 2-D maps of the Network, on which it is shown as a circle.

  Orion Line—

  The oldest line on the Network. Many of the worlds it links are quiet backwaters or mined out industrial planets nowadays, and its farther reaches are mostly traveled by pilgrims or tourists who wish to visit the original K-gate on Mars.

  Prell Family—

  The Prells are one of the oldest of the Corporate Families. Pioneers who settled and terraformed some of the outlying industrial worlds that supplied the materials from which the station cities of more pleasant, central worlds are built. But their power was eclipsed by the growing power of the Noons and others. They are now mostly confined to their own holdings on the Trans-Chiba Branchlines, where their most important stations include Prell Plaza, Frostfall, and Broken Moon. Their rivalry with the Noons has several times led to trouble, most recently in the Spiral Line Rebellion of 2926-8. Many people believe the current head of the clan, Elom Prell, is the favorite of one of the Guardians. It is hard to see any other reason why the Guardians would overlook their disruptive behavior.

  Railforce—

  The Empire’s army, tasked with protecting the Emperor and keeping the peace. The headquarters of Railforce is on Grand Central, but it has outposts on most of the important worlds, and its wartrains constantly patrol the Great Network. Railforce is supposed to be independent of the Corporate Families, and its leader, the Rail Marshal, is traditionally an officer of low birth who has risen through the ranks. However, the leaders of Railforce have often thrown their weight behind one candidate or another at times when it was unclear whom the Guardians wished to see as Emperor.

  Silver River Line—

  A line linking mostly Noon stations on the western side of the Network. It is famous for its sights—the Slow River on Tuva, the Naked Gate on Burj-al-Badr, the Mists of Adeli, the Noon park-world of Jangala, and the Spindlebridge, which links the line to Sundarban and connects it to Marapur and the O Link.

  Space Travel—

  Many of the Network’s worlds have thriving space industries, which maintain weather and communication satellites and mine nearby moons, planets, and asteroids. Many people believe that off-world industries will become more important in the future, as the original industrial worlds of the Network are gradually exhausted. For this reason, many of the great families seek alliances with spacer clans and aerospace engineering houses.

  There are also famous houses and hotels in the orbits of many worlds, and of course the Spindlebridge space station at Sundarban. No one has ever bothered trying to send a spaceship from one star system to another, since the journey is so much quicker and cheaper by train. However, the Guardians are believed to have dispatched probes to distant stars.

  Spiral Line Rebellion—

  A line running from Chiba to Vagh and linking a number of Noon-controlled industrial stations. In 2926 a number of Spiral Line stations announced that they were splitting away from the Noon family, angered by taxes and new timetables that the Noons had imposed. The situation grew worse in 2928 when the Prell family sided openly with the rebels (whom they had been supporting from the start). The brief, brutal war that followed seemed to threaten the stability of the entire Network, until the Prell wartrains were destroyed in a six day battle with Railforce and the Noon’s Corporate Marines at the Battle of Galaghast.

  Station Angels—

  A phenomenon seen at stations on the outer edges of the Network. Strange light-forms sometimes emerge from the K-gates along with trains, and survive for up to thirty minutes before they fade. Their exact nature is uncertain, but they are not dangerous. Theories that they are some form of alien life have been dismissed by the Guardians themselves, and various attempts to capture or communicate with them have failed. They appear to play some role in the religion of the Hive Monks, who sometimes swar
m in excitement when a Station Angel appears.

  Sundarban—

  The homeworld of the Noon Family, whose parks, farms, and garden cities cover most of its surface. Famous for its Sundarban Station City, and for the orbiting Spindlebridge, a highly unusual pair of orbiting K-gates that links Sundarban with the Silver River Line.

  Threedies—

  3-D entertainments, mostly taking the form of stories, which are usually immersive and interactive.

  3-D Printing—

  It is possible to print almost anything, either on small home printers or larger industrial ones. This should have put an end to much interplanetary trade, since all you really need to send from one world to another is instructions that the printers can download. In practice, however, people still like the personal touch. Shoppers on Grand Central, for instance, find that a headset or bangle crafted by the metal smiths of Ambersai and shipped half way across the Network is somehow much more chic and desirable than an identical one downloaded from a Datasea blueprint-shop and printed locally.

  Trains—

  Technically, of course, a train consists of a locomotive and a number of carriages or freight cars. In everyday, speech, however, it is often used to refer to the locomotive itself. The first intelligent locos were built by the Guardians, and their minds are still based on coding handed down from the Guardians. Many people believe that the great locomotives are more intelligent than human beings, but experts claim they are on a similar mental level as a bright human, although their intelligence is different from that of humans in several ways. Some never bother speaking to their passengers, others like to chat, or sing, and some have formed enduring friendships with individual humans. If properly maintained, they can function for several hundred years. The finest locomotives come from the great engine shops of the Foss and Helden families.

  Locomotives choose their names from the deep archives of the Datasea, sometimes borrowing the titles of forgotten songs, poems, or artworks.

  Railhead is first published in the United States in 2016

  by Switch Press

  a Capstone imprint

  1710 Roe Crest Drive

  North Mankato, Minnesota 56003

  www.switchpress.com

  Text copyright © Philip Reeve 2015

  “Railhead” was originally published in English in 2015. This edition is published by arrangement with Oxford University Press.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Reeve, Philip, author.

  Railhead / Philip Reeve.

  pages cm

  Summary: In a world of drones and androids Zen Starling is a human thief, but mostly he just likes to ride the Interstellar Express and the sentient trains that travel through the K-gates from planet to planet, something only the Guardians understand—but now the mysterious Raven wants him to steal the Pyxis, an object that could either open up a new gate, challenging the Guardians, or put the entire gate system, and the universe itself, in danger.

  ISBN 978-1-63079-048-6 (jacketed hardcover)

  ISBN 978-1-63079-049-3 (ebook pdf)

  ISBN 978-1-63079-064-6 (ebook)

  1. Interplanetary voyages—Juvenile fiction. 2. Thieves—Juvenile fiction. 3. Artificial intelligence—Juvenile fiction. 4. Androids—Juvenile fiction. 5. Science fiction. 6. Adventure stories. [1. Science fiction. 2. Interplanetary voyages—Fiction. 3. Robbers and outlaws—Fiction. 4. Artificial intelligence--Fiction. 5. Androids—Fiction. 6. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.R25576Rai 2016

  [Fic]—dc23

  2015031768

  Book design by Kay Fraser

  Photo credits: Shutterstock

  For Sarah Reeve, as always

 

 

 


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