Twilight Robbery is a children's or young adults'comic fantasy novel by Frances Hardinge, published on 4 March 2011 by Macmillan in the UK, and, under the name Fly Trap, by Harper Collins in the USA. It was shortlisted for the 2011 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize. It is the sequel to Fly by Night, featuring the same protagonist Mosca Mye. It is set in the same grotesque fantasy world of The Realm, which Hardinge describes as bearing some similarity to early 18th century England. The people follow the cult of numerous small deities, known as the Beloved, each sacred in just a few hours in the year. Everyone is named according to the Beloved in whose time they are born. The novel is mostly located in the town of Toll, which has the only surviving bridge over the Langfeather gorge. Toll’s unique character comes from its division into Toll-by-Day and Toll-by-Night, the two towns time-sharing the same physical space. Residents are assigned to day or night according to their name, aligned to the Beloved they are born under, and must wear a badge showing their classification. Twice a day, at dawn and dusk, the bugle sounds for the 15 minute day/night changeover. The Jinglers lock one population into their sleeping quarters, and then release the other. Doors and trade-signs, even the street pattern, are reorganised at the changeover by use of moving panels. Toll charges a steep entry toll and separate exit toll, only affordable by the well-off. Exit from Toll-by-Night is twice the day charge. Visitors who pay for entry may stay three days in Toll-by-Day, regardless of their name. If they do not pay for exit, they become residents, and must live in Toll-by-Day or Toll-by-Night according to their name. Toll has been stable through the political upheavals in the Realm, and its bridge has survived. Most dayfolk superstitiously believe that a charm called the Luck, held in a room at the top of the Clock Tower, keeps them safe. Frances Hardinge based this idea on a number of British places which have legends of a Luck, an object whose loss or breakage would presage disaster.
Synopsis
At the end of Fly By Night, Mosca and her goose have left the city of Mandelion for lifeon the road with conman Eponymous Clent. At the beginning of Twilight Robbery, winter is approaching and Clent is locked in a debtors prison in Grabely. Skellow, a criminal, abducts Mosca for her writing skills. She assists him buy the services of the Romantic Facilitator to force a marriage on a maiden of Toll. Mosca escapes, and reunited with Clent and her goose Saracen, arrives in Toll to try to take advantage of what she knows about Skellow's plot. This leads to a series of increasingly dangerous adventures for Mosca, crossing the boundary between Toll-by-Day and Toll-by-Night, and impinging on the high politics of the Realm. Mosca’s decisions have momentous consequences.
Characters
Mosca Mye – our hero, a 12-yr-old dark-eyed orphan, book-lover, and accomplished liar
Saracen – her pet goose of violent inclination
Eponymous Clent – travelling wordsmith and conman, who has formed a working partnership with Mosca
Jennifer Bessel – businesswoman friend of Clent, who wears gloves to conceal her thief brand
Graywing Marlebourne – mayor of Toll, but his power mainly runs to control Toll-by-Day
Thrope Foely – the Night Steward, the Mayor’s official representative in Toll-by-Night
Aramai Goshawk – senior agent of the Locksmiths, the effective power in Toll-by-Night
Beamabeth Marlebourne – 16-yr-old adopted daughter of the Mayor, darling of the people and chocolate lover
Appleton Brand – ex-suitor of Beamabeth, discredited for radicalism his name has been reclassified as nightling
Sir Feldroll of Millepoyse –Beamabeth’s new suitor, governor of the major city of Waymakem
Rabilan Skellow – a shady character who abducts Mosca to write bids at a Pawnbrokers’ auction
The Romantic Facilitator – mysterious criminal who offers assistance with forced marriages
Leveretia Leap – a nightling midwife, who attended Beamabeth’s birth
Laylow – a nightling chocolate smuggler, who wears metal claws on one hand
Quince – a musician, whose band somehow includes both dayfolk and nightlings
Paragon Mollycoddle – a pale boy confined to the Clock Tower through no fault of his own
Factions
Toll dayfolk – residents of Toll-by-Day, superstitious believers in the protective power of the Luck. They are afraid of the nightlings who they perceive as dirty and dangerous.
Toll nightlings – residents of Toll-by-Night, made to do the dirty jobs that keep Toll-by-Day clean and running smoothly. Poverty means many nightlings turn to crime to get by. Thieves' cant is widely spoken.
Guild of Locksmiths – known as the Jinglers in Toll. Once they only made locks and strongboxes, but now operate as a mafia providing a wider range of security services. A Locksmith always wears gloves as the outline of a key is branded on his right palm. The head of each cell wears a chatelaine at his waist which match the brands of all the men that answer to him.
Guild of Pawnbrokers – have expanded from money-lending into fencing stolen property and facilitating other criminal transactions
Radicals – believers in freedom of speech and religion, who have taken power in Mandelion
Aristocrats – rulers of most of the city states of the Realm, who desire to contain the spread of radicalism. They have cut off trade with Mandelion, and are contemplating sending an army to overturn the regime.