Bruno Behrends wrote:For me it was hard to swallow that Honor's family on her mother's side is this high ranking on Beowulf.
On Manticore and Grayson Honor had to work her way up and that's one of the thing that is so likeable about her.
Now it turned out that on her maternal side her family comes from the uppermost crust of Beowulfian society - and has been there seemingly forever.
That diminishes the character for me. Too much of a good thing. Less is more and all of that.
You're not the only person who's said something along those lines to me. Again, part of the problem is that I had intended Honor to die before the . . . nosebleed elevation of her Beowulf family connections became central to the story of her
kids. At that point, the reader was supposed to find out that Allison had become — and remained — completely estranged from everyone except her brother Jacques because of her refusal to toe the family line back home on Beowulf. Honor was supposed to be connected with Jacques all the way through — hence her membership in the society for creative anachronisms, her love of archaic handguns, etc., etc. — but to have had virtually no contact with the rest of her Beowulfan family.
Then she didn't die
and the Alignment became central to the plot line, which dragged the Beowulf side of the family front and center.
So, what we have instead, is that Allison — while she did patch things up with her mother (who we sort of meet at secondhand in
Uncompromising) after a fashion — is absolutely, 100 percent adamant that Honor is
not going to grow up thinking of herself as a member of the top 0.00000001% in
either of her family's home star systems. ("Oh, no! Not
my little girl! Not after all the crap
I had to deal with!" Which, of course, makes what happens to Honor eventually even more ironic.)
So Honor literally doesn't think of herself as related to Beowulfan "royalty" (especially when she's only a teenager or at the Academy during her confrontation with Young). Moreover, Beowulfan connections — while relatively common in Manticore — have zero implications for a naval career. Had she gone into the diplomatic service, instead — had she gone into medicine, had she gone into commerce, had she gone into finance, had she gone into
law — those connections on Beowulf would have been absolutely invaluable to her as part of the "old girl" network. She chose pretty much the one career path where they literally didn't mean squat, really. (For the reader, the irony about all the titles heaped upon her was supposed to become evident only after her death when they found out that, in effect, the woman who'd been made a Duchess and a Steadholder was already Beowulf's equivalent of at least a duchess in her own right.)
From my perspective as the writer, and given Allison's attitude, I don't find it unreasonable that Honor truly thought of herself as a "yeoman's daughter" — but remember, she was the daughter of a pretty darned
well off yeoman couple, given her parents medical practice — on her way up through the Navy. Now, is she much more aware of that relationship and its . . . power implications than she ever was before? Absolutely! But she's been
becoming aware of it over the course of several books now.
I don't think it's the most seamless patch in literary history, and from some perspectives, I would've preferred to go ahead and let the reader find out about the connection
she'd always known about but always refused to even
try to use as a card in the patronage game, only after her death, when Raoul and Katherine (who are already from pretty stratospheric social strata both in Manticore and on Grayson) are entering the fray against the
newly discovered threat of the Mesan Alignment. They were supposed to find out that Honor had shared Allison's alienation from the rest of Allison's family, mostly because of the Beowulf side's view that Allison had "married beneath herself" with Alfred, despite the way they'd met. I leave you to imagine how Honor would have felt about
that. (And if you are gathering from this that Honor's Beowulfan family wasn't nearly so nice in their original iteration, I congratulate you on your perceptiveness.
)
In the original game plan, her kids really become aware of their Beowulfan connections only when someone in a position of authority in the Navy or the Diplomatic service decided they needed someone — "like you, Raoul!" — to contact highly placed members of the Beowulf government (while Beowulf is still part of the League and there are no active hostilities) and guess who we've picked to do the contacting? I'd even sketched in the scene where Raoul meets his great-grandmother for the first time, complete with a treecat on his shoulder who really,
really doesn't like her initial emotions. Of course, when she sets eyes upon her great-grandson and sees the granddaughter she never allowed herself to know in his eyes, her stony old heart melts and she becomes a Better Person™.
It was a pretty darn good scene, actually, if I do say so myself.
Unfortunately, that route was no longer available to me when the timeline got telescoped the way it did.