The Indigo Pheasant: Volume Two of Longing for Yount: 2

BOOK: The Indigo Pheasant: Volume Two of Longing for Yount: 2
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PRAISE FOR DANIEL A. RABUZZI’S
The Choir Boats: Volume 1 of Longing for Yount


The Choir Boats
is
Gulliver’s Travels
crossed with
The Golden Compass
and a dollop of
Pride and Prejudice
. . . An instant classic of fantasy . . .”

—John Ottinger,
Grasping for the Wind
blog

“(A)n auspicious debut . . . a muscular, Napoleonic-era fantasy that, like Philip Pullman’s Dark Materials series, will appeal to both adult and young adult readers.”

—Paul Witcover,
Realms of Fantasy

“(A) fantastic and deeply entertaining debut novel . . . Part steampunk adventure, part classic fantasy,
The Choir Boats
might be earmarked for young adults, but anyone to whom this sounds like a rich ride will be surprised and delighted.”

—Lincoln Cho,
January Magazine

“With full flanks ahead,
The Choir Boats
charts a magical course of verve and wit through a richly detailed nineteenth-century world, spinning off little arabesques of wonderment with every turn of the page.”

—Matt Kressel,
host of
KGB reading series
,
founder of Senses Five Press


The Choir Boats
is the most underrated young adult title of 2009, although it’s by no means limited to young readers. It’s a gorgeous and light-hearted story, chock-full of clever words, characters, surprises, and one truly spectacular twist at the end. If you’re seeking an engrossing and entirely unique world to sweep you off your feet, look no further.”


The Ranting Dragon
blog

DANIEL A. RABUZZI
THE INDIGO PHEASANT
Volume Two of Longing for Yount
Illustrated by Deborah A. Mills

ChiZine Publications

Copyright

The Indigo Pheasant
© 2012 by Daniel A. Rabuzzi
Interior illustrations and front cover woodcarving © 2012 by Deborah A. Mills
Woodcarving photograph © 2012 by Shira Weinberger
Cover artwork © 2012 by Erik Mohr
Cover design © 2012 by Samantha Beiko
Interior design and Hippocampus graphic © 2012 by Danny Evarts

All rights reserved.

Published by ChiZine Publications

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either a product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

EPub Edition SEPTEMBER 2012 ISBN: 978-1-92746-917-0

All rights reserved under all applicable International Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen.

No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in reviews.

CHIZINE PUBLICATIONS
Toronto, Canada
www.chizinepub.com
[email protected]

Edited by Samantha Beiko
Copyedited and proofread by Kate Moore

We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, which last year invested $20.1 million in writing and publishing throughout Canada.

Published with the generous assistance of the Ontario Arts Council.

Dedicated to my wife, best friend, and creative partner: the artist Deborah A. Mills. She knows Yount in the crook of the osprey’s wing, in the grain of the wood, in the flower-glow of twilight.

Continuing the story started in
The Choir Boats (Volume I of Longing for Yount)
, by Daniel A. Rabuzzi (Toronto: Chizine Publications, 2009). For notes to the text and more information about Maggie, the McDoons and Yount, see:
www.danielarabuzzi.com
.

Table of Contents

Prologue

Chapter 1: Many Plans, or,

The Most Superbly Ludicrous Project Ever Devised

Interlude: Disjecta Membra

Chapter 2: Many Meetings, or,

A Long, Exact, and Serious Comedy

Interlude: Videnda

Chapter 3: Many Perils, or,

The Profoundest Dangers of Air and Time

Interlude: Qualia

Chapter 4: More Perils, or,

A Thousand Strokes of Mean Invention

Interlude: Fontes

Chapter 5: A Delayed Beginning, or,

Brisk Entanglements of Wisdom and Folly

Interlude: Indicia

Chapter 6: An Awakening, or,

The Publication of a Marred Peace

Interlude: Cartulae

Chapter 7: Battles Big and Small, or,

Malicious Affections Roused

Interlude: Vestigia

Chapter 8: A Great Singing, or,

The Fluid Signature of Joy

Interlude: Farrigine

Epilogue

Index of Illustrations

Acknowledgements

About the Author

Also by Daniel A. Rabuzzi

Also Available from ChiZine Publications

Prologue

“Thou, who didst put to flight

Primeval Silence, when the morning stars,

Exulting, shouted o’er the rising ball;

O Thou, whose word from solid darkness struck

That spark, the sun; strike wisdom from my soul . . .”

—Edward Young,
The Complaint: or, Night Thoughts On Life, Death & Immortality,
First Night
, lines 35-39 (published 1742)

“The fowl digs out the blade that kills it.”

—Traditional Igbo proverb

“The mother that bare them saith unto them, Go your way, ye children; for I am a widow and forsaken. / I brought you up with gladness; but with sorrow and heaviness have I lost you for ye have sinned . . .”


4 Ezra 2, 2-3

“B
lood,” said Maggie. “I can see no other way, Mama—it needs blood. Blood to make it work properly.”

Maggie emptied the afternoon ashes in the bin at the bottom of the garden behind the Sedgewicks’s house on Archer Street by Pineapple Court. She listened to the bells tolling the end of the Lesser Feast of the Vicissitudes on a chilly day in May of 1816.

“Mama,” she said to the growing shadows on the wall. For over a year, ever since the great singing with the white girl and the brown girl that brought the ship out of Silence, Maggie had been designing a machine in her head.

“I wish there was another way, I do,” she thought. “Why blood? I fear it, I don’t want it so. But I can taste it in my mind. Aceldama in the music, blood on the tonal fields.”

A grey thrush landed on top of the wall, started his vespers.

“A musical instrument like no one has ever seen,” Maggie said, admiring the fieldfare in song as the light turned wan.

She envisioned a structure larger than a house, with wires and gears, struts and enjambments, a tabernacular engine.

“Like in size to the organ at St. Macrina’s, but much more . . . complex.”

She arranged in her mind levers and pipes, knobs and buttons.

“The method of fluxions will not be enough,” said Maggie, scratching out a calculation with a stick in the ash-kettle. “To build and steer this choir-boat, we will need Mr. Laplace’s celestial mechanics, Mama, and something of his latest on probability—if only I knew French better. Not neglecting the monadology either.”

Maggie had spent hours by candlelight alone in her tiny attic room dissecting a broken timepiece she got from the rag-and-bone man, contriving models made from scraps she found in refuse heaps and middens, drafting schematics and charts with pencil and a pale blue crayon. She read every book and paper on mathematics that she could convince Mrs. Sedgewick to buy or borrow for her. On her Saturday afternoons, she haunted the watchmakers’ district in Clerkenwell, and once she spent a day’s wages to visit the Mechanical Museum on Tichbourne off Haymarket, having first been denied entrance at the Adelaide National Gallery of Practical Science on the Strand (serving as it did, “only the most esteemed and genteel elements of the Publick.”)

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