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The ''ColSec Trilogy'' (''Exiles of ColSec'', ''The Caves of Klydor'', and ''ColSec Rebellion'') is a young-adult s-f series by Douglas Hill (of ''[[Last Legionary]]'' fame), first published in the 1980s.
The ''ColSec Trilogy'' (''Exiles of ColSec'', ''The Caves of Klydor'', and ''ColSec Rebellion'') is a young-adult s-f series by Douglas Hill (of ''[[Last Legionary]]'' fame), first published in the 1980s.


[[After the End]], an authoritarian regime has seized control of what's left of civilization. Criminals and dissenters are shipped offworld by the Colonization Section of the world government. If they can build a colony, the world is ripe for exploitation; if they don't live that long, they're no great loss.
[[After the End]], an authoritarian regime has seized control of what's left of civilization. Criminals and dissenters are shipped offworld by the Colonization Section of the world government. If they can build a colony, the world is ripe for exploitation; if they don't live that long, they're no great loss.
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Oh, hell...it's [[Better Than It Sounds]].
Oh, hell...it's [[Better Than It Sounds]].
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{{tropelist}}
== Provides examples of: ==
* [[Action Girl]]: [[The Big Guy|Heleth]], unequivocally. [[The Smart Guy|Samella]] [[The Lancer|Connel]] also has her moments.
* [[Author Tract]]: Not obnoxiously so, but you can kind of tell that Hill's views were fairly anti-authoritarian.
* [[Aerith and Bob]]: Names are either [[Only One Name|singular]] and fantastical (Jeko, Heleth, Rontal), or consist of a slightly unusual or fairly ordinary given name paired with a fairly ordinary (if sometimes [[My Nayme Is|idiosyncratically spelled]]) surname ([[The Hero|Cord MaKiy]], Samella Connel, Bren Lathan). Being as it's [[After the End|post-apocalyptic]], [[Fridge Logic|it's possible that this is the result of language drift]].
* [[Barbarian Hero]]: Arguably, Cord MaKiy...in a [[Space Opera]] setting, no less.
* [[After the End]]: Set a century and change after [[Apocalypse How|human die-back]] over much of Europe, Asia, and eastern North America. References to the "Virus Decades" imply that this was caused by some sort of plague.
* [[Big Damn Heroes]]: {{spoiler|Jeko, Rontal, and Stele play this role in ''Rebellion'' when they break the others out of the prison transport.}}
* [[At Arm's Length]]: At one point in ''Exiles'', Jeko and Heleth get into a heated argument that threatens to turn into an actual fight. Cord breaks it up by straight-arming Jeko. (Although Cord isn't stated to be taller than Jeko—both boys are kind of shorties—he's stockier and a ''lot'' stronger.)
* [[Crapsack World]]: The Organization's earth makes the colony worlds—no matter how rough and dangerous—look like the [[Ghibli Hills]] by contrast.
* [[Author Tract]]: Not obnoxiously so, but you can kind of tell that Hill's views were fairly anti-authoritarian. There's also a faint undercurrent of anti-corporatism and/or environmentalism—Cord's simple life in the idyll of the Highlands before his exile, the unspoiled new worlds of the Colonies being exploited by the grasping Organization.
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Rontal.
* [[Better to Die Than Be Killed]]: {{spoiler|Bren}} tries to pull this several times. {{spoiler|He survives to the end of the series nonetheless.}} There's also {{spoiler|Samella's ploy in the asteroid mine}}.
* [[Dumb Blonde]]: Samella Connel inverts this by being [[The Smart Guy]] of the group.
* [[Big Damn Heroes]]: {{spoiler|Heleth and Rontal}} play this role towards the end of ''Exiles'' by {{spoiler|intervening in the fight with the [[Advancing Boss of Doom|giant worm]]}}. And in ''Rebellion'', {{spoiler|Jeko, Rontal, and Stele}} play this role when they {{spoiler|break Cord, Bren, and the girls out of the prison transport}}.
* [[Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette]]: Heleth, who's also got [[Facial Markings|facial tattoos]].
* [[Blinded by the Light]]: Heleth gets a face full of high-beams in ''Rebellion'' and actually faints from pain.
* [[The Empath]]: Samella, again.
* [[Brave Scot]]: Cord is the descendant of back-to-the-land types who retreated to the Scottish Highlands so as to not be bothered by The Organization. He pretty much plays the trope straight.
* [[Evil Albino]]: Lamprey borders on this.
* [[Crapsack World]]: The Organization's Earth (aside from a few tiny pockets of territory that they don't deem worthwhile) makes the colony worlds—no matter how rough and dangerous—look [[Ghibli Hills|positively idyllic]] by contrast.
* [[Five-Man Band]]: More or less, although most of the central cast overlap archetypes. (Samella, for example, is arguably [[The Lancer]], [[The Chick]], ''and'' [[The Smart Guy]].)
* [[Combat Pragmatist]]: Samella is a [[Reluctant Warrior|surprisingly]] dirty fighter. Sometimes [[A Handful for an Eye|literally]] so, no less.
* [[Genki Boy]]: Jeko.
* [[Curb Stomp Battle]]: Cord may be a [[Charles Atlas Superpower|physical powerhouse]], but he's no match for someone with extensive combat training. {{spoiler|Good thing Samella was able to find the spare batteries for the [[Ray Gun|laserifle]].}}
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Seems to be one of Rontal's main personality traits.
* [[Determinator]]: Cord, full-stop. {{spoiler|At the end of ''Caves'', the government killer Warreck [[Not Quite Dead|turns out to be one as well]].}}
* [[Dumb Blonde]]: Samella inverts this by being [[The Smart Guy]] of the group.
* [[Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette]]: Heleth—a [[Stealth Expert]] with [[Super Senses]] who's lived underground most of her life—has black hair and a complexion that's compared in ''Exiles'' to "mushrooms grown in darkness." (She's [[Embarrassingly Painful Sunburn|rather badly sunburnt]] by ''Caves''.) ''And'' she's got [[Facial Markings|facial tattoos]].
* [[Egopolis]]: Inverted at the end of ''Rebellion''. {{spoiler|It's the ''rest'' of the kids—at Cord's suggestion—who want to name the newly-discovered world after Samella}}.
* [[Elite Mooks]]: The Organization's equivalent of a police force, the Civil Defenders, have an elite branch who are better armed and are touted as having extensive combat training. They're called Crushers, and are frequent antagonists in the second and third novels. Elite paramilitary police, regularly beaten by street gang members—[[Sarcasm Mode|money well invested]]!
* [[The Empath]]: Samella, again, although this ''only'' factors into the plot at all in ''Exiles''.
* {{spoiler|[[Everybody Laughs Ending]]}}: In {{spoiler|the next-to-last chapter of}} ''Rebellion'', everyone just loses it at some tension-breaking silliness {{spoiler|after the asteroid battle}}.
{{quote|{{spoiler|'''Bren:'''}} "Nothing funnier than victory?"}}
{{quote|{{spoiler|'''Cord:'''}} "Nothing sweeter, anyway."}}
* [[Evil Albino]]: Lamprey, the main antagonist {{spoiler|of ''Exiles''}}, is deathly pale and prematurely white-haired. He's also a [[Chaotic Evil|vicious, unpredictable]] trained killer.
* [[Fiery Redhead]]: Cord has anger issues, especially if [[Berserk Button|Samella is endangered]]. They're somewhat mitigated, however, by his introversion and [[Chaotic Good|relentless decency]].
* [[Five-Man Band]]: More or less, although most of the central cast overlap archetypes. (Samella, for example, is ''mostly'' [[The Smart Guy]], but occasionally also plays the role of [[The Lancer]]—level-headed and extroverted where Cord is introverted and occasionally quick-tempered—and [[The Heart]].)
* [[Four-Temperament Ensemble]]: Cord is Leukine with Choleric tendencies, Samella is Phlegmatic, Heleth is straight-up Choleric, Jeko is Sanguine, and Rontal is Melancholic.
* [[Frame-Up]]: What got Samella exiled. Some other [[Got Volunteered|indentured workers]] at the computer firm [[Green-Eyed Monster|got jealous of her skills]] and falsely accused her of theft.
* [[The Gadfly]]: Jeko. Heleth is his preferred target, but he's also gone after Cord a couple of times.
* [[Genki Boy]]: Jeko again.
* [[Gonk]]: Lamprey is rather blatantly described as one—[[Evil Albino|pallid]], cadaverous-looking, and [[Fangs Are Evil|sharp-toothed]].
* [[Gonk]]: Lamprey is rather blatantly described as one—[[Evil Albino|pallid]], cadaverous-looking, and [[Fangs Are Evil|sharp-toothed]].
* [[Got Volunteered]]: Samella's family sold her into indenture out of desperation.
* [[Frame-Up]]: What got Samella exiled.
* [[Groin Attack]]: In the third book, {{spoiler|Samella}} first [[A Handful for An Eye|flings dust in a thug's face]], then kicks him in the nuts while he's distracted.
* [[Groin Attack]]: In the third book, {{spoiler|Samella}} first [[A Handful for an Eye|flings dust in a thug's face]], then kicks him in the nuts while he's distracted.
* [[A Handful for An Eye]]: See above. "[[Crowning Moment of Awesome|Now who needs looking after?]]"
* [[A Handful for an Eye]]: See above. "[[Crowning Moment of Awesome|Now who needs looking after?]]"
* [[Hot-Blooded]]: Cord (who verges on [[Berserker]] status), Heleth (who occasionally hauls off and belts people who needle her), Jeko (whom Rontal calls an "action junkie" at one point).
* [[Hot-Blooded]]: Cord (who verges on [[Berserker]] status), Heleth (who occasionally hauls off and belts people who needle her), Jeko (whom Rontal calls an "action junkie" at one point).
* [[Humans Are White]]: Averted. Cord, a redheaded, freckle-faced Scot, is the only central character who seems to be explicitly white. Samella is a gray-eyed blonde with an Irish surname, but apparently [[Dark-Skinned Blond|still looks tanned after three years indentured to an electronics firm]]; Heleth, although pale from living underground for the first seventeen years of her life, is ambiguous. Jeko and Rontal are explicitly ''not'' white; Rontal is black, Jeko is Japanese-American.
* [[If You Kill Him You Will Be Just Like Him]]: Played straight more than once.
* [[If We Survive This]]: Heleth threatens to make Jeko regret [[You Are Fat|insinuating]] that she [[Formerly Fat|used to be chubby]] in ''Rebellion''.
* [[I'm Having Soul Pains]]: Samella gets migraines in ''Exiles''. {{spoiler|It's because the [[When Trees Attack|sapient trees]] are freaking out.}}
* [[Innate Night Vision]]: Heleth has this, with the [[Power At a Price|drawback]] of [[Day Hurts Dark-Adjusted Eyes|light sensitivity]]. Exactly ''how'' she got that way is left ambiguous; however, Samella speculates in ''Caves'' that Heleth and the rest of the inhabitants of the tunnels under London may be some sort of mutants.
* [[Inevitable Waterfall]]: ''Caves'' begins with the five central characters rafting down a river. The first line of dialogue in the book?
{{quote|'''Samella''': "I think the current's speeding up."}}
* [[Karmic Death]]: {{spoiler|Lamprey meets a quite literal [[Death of a Thousand Cuts]] at the hands of Klydor-native humanoids}} towards the end of ''Exiles''. In ''Rebellion'', {{spoiler|Tuller meets a similar fate at the hands of his own gang}} after [[The Stool Pigeon|selling everyone out]].
* [[Karmic Death]]: {{spoiler|Lamprey meets a quite literal [[Death of a Thousand Cuts]] at the hands of Klydor-native humanoids}} towards the end of ''Exiles''. In ''Rebellion'', {{spoiler|Tuller meets a similar fate at the hands of his own gang}} after [[The Stool Pigeon|selling everyone out]].
* [[Kill Him Already]]: Heleth pretty much outright yells this in ''Exiles'' when {{spoiler|Samella has Lamprey at gunpoint}}.
* [[Meaningful Name]]: Lamprey boasts that he earned his [[Nom De Guerre]] for his tenacity. He could just have easily have earned it by virtue of being as ''mean'' as an eel, or by virtue of being an emotional parasite on the central cast.
* [[My Nayme Is]]: Cord's surname is an obvious phoneticization of "McKay."
* [[Nephewism]]: Cord was raised by his uncle.
* [[Nature Hero]]: Cord is a [[Downplayed Trope|downplayed]] example. He grew up in an isolated corner of Scotland, has extensive wilderness survival skills, and is [[Not Good with People|introverted and socially naïve]]; also, [[Wild Hair|his hair is described as somehow unruly]] in every book.
* [[No Biochemical Barriers]]: Not universal, but explicitly stated to be true of Klydor specifically: It's more-or-less safe to forage in the woods, but watch out for predators.
* [[No Biochemical Barriers]]: Not universal, but explicitly stated to be true of Klydor specifically: It's more-or-less safe to forage in the woods, but watch out for predators.
* [[Not Good with People]]: Samella calls Cord out for being socially naïve in ''Exiles''.
* [[No, You]]: When ColSec Commandant Mirvandel [[You Have No Chance to Survive|demands the rebels' surrender]] {{spoiler|in the asteroid mine}} in ''Rebellion'', Jeko's response is a catcall:
{{quote|'''Jeko:''' "You throw ''your'' guns down and come out!"}}
* [[One-Handed Zweihander]]: Cord's [[Improvised Weapon|improvised]] [[Carry a Big Stick|bludgeon]] in ''Exiles'' is stated to be heavy enough that "many people" would need both hands to wield it effectively. And Cord uses it one-handed, apparently just because he ''can''.
* [[Only One Name]]: Tends to be true of people living, shall we say, ''outside'' the law (Jeko, Heleth, and Rontal included).
* [[Only One Name]]: Tends to be true of people living, shall we say, ''outside'' the law (Jeko, Heleth, and Rontal included).
* [[Penal Colony]]: Every habitable planet is treated as one. There [[Ambiguous Situation|may or may not]] also be one in Antarctica.
* [[Ragtag Bunch of Misfits]]: The central cast.
* [[Police State]]: The entire ''world'' has pretty much become one.
* [[Redheaded Hero]]: Cord.
* [[Ragtag Bunch of Misfits]]: The central cast. {{spoiler|Can also be applied, all things considered, to the rebel army as a whole.}}
* [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]: What got Cord exiled. His adoptive father was turned away from a hospital and left to die; Cord tried to trash the place. (And that was only the first of ''several''.)
* [[Redheaded Hero]]: Cord, although his hair is specifically described as dark auburn.
* [[Reluctant Warrior]]/[[Technical Pacifist]]: Samella is the least physical of the central cast, and seems to have a moral opposition to killing. That said, [[Combat Pragmatist|in a pinch]], she's not afraid to {{spoiler|threaten to [[Knee Capping|put holes in someone's kneecaps]], [[A Handful for an Eye|throw dust in faces]], [[Groin Attack|kick crotches]], or [[Taking You With Me|rig an asteroid mining operation to self-destruct]] and [[Better to Die Than Be Killed|kill everyone present at her next keystroke]]. (She admits, however, that she wouldn't have had the nerve to go through with actually pushing the button)}}.
* [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]: What got Cord exiled. His uncle/adoptive father was turned away from a hospital and left to die; Cord tried to trash the place. (And that was only the first of ''several''.)
* [[Robinsonade]]: Of sorts.
* [[Robinsonade]]: Of sorts.
* [[Running Gag]]: Samella calling Cord a "barbarian."
* [[Running Gag]]: Samella calling Cord a "barbarian."
* [[Sand Worm]]: A recurring threat in ''Exiles''. Justified in that they have tough exoskeletons and don't dig themselves in that deeply.
* [[Ship Tease]]: A clearly deliberate one for Cord and Samella, a [[Belligerent Sexual Tension|strongly implied but much more subtle]] one for Jeko and Heleth.
* [[Self-Destruct Mechanism]]: {{spoiler|Samella}} rigs {{spoiler|the entire asteroid}} to detonate at her next keystroke {{spoiler|in the final battle in ''Rebellion''}}. {{spoiler|Samella's and Bren's}} acts of [[Vehicular Sabotage]], in ''Exiles'' and ''Caves'' respectively, may also count, although the former was only such by virtue of the freighter's lack of re-entry shielding.
* [[Sixth Ranger]]: {{spoiler|Bren Lathan, by the end of ''Caves''.}}
* [[Ship Tease]]: A [[Implied Love Interest|clearly deliberate one]] for Cord and Samella; although it's never [[Official Couple|outright stated]], it's fairly clear that he's in love with her by ''Rebellion'', and she seems to reciprocate. Jeko and Heleth have an [[Aw, Look -- They Really Do Love Each Other|implied]] but much more subtle (for a certain [[Belligerent Sexual Tension|value]] of "subtle," that is) one.
* [[The Stool Pigeon]]: {{spoiler|Tuller}} is a "Betrayer Barry" of the "just a [[Jerkass]]" variety. {{spoiler|He gets his [[Karmic Death|comeuppance]].}}
* [[Sixth Ranger]]: {{spoiler|Bren, by the end of ''Caves''.}}
* [[Stout Strength]]: Cord is a double subversion. He's ''very'' strong (bordering on [[Charles Atlas Superpower]] territory) and looks pudgy when fully clothed. However, when he [[Clothing Damage|loses his shirt]] during a fight in the first book, it's revealed that while he may be built like a fireplug, he's actually fairly trim.
* [[The Stool Pigeon]]: {{spoiler|Tuller}} is a "Betrayer Barry" of the "just a [[jerkass]]" variety. {{spoiler|He gets his [[Karmic Death|comeuppance]] in the end.}}
* [[Super Senses]]: Heleth has superhuman night vision (with the drawback of light sensitivity) and incredibly keen hearing. Exactly ''how'' she got that way is left ambiguous...but, as she's lived most of her life in a system of tunnels under London, it's speculated that she (and the tunnel-dwellers in general) may be some sort of mutant.
* [[Stout Strength]]: Cord plays with the trope. He's ''very'' strong (bordering on [[Charles Atlas Superpower]] territory) and looks pudgy when fully clothed (partly on account of being built like a fireplug, partly on account of being baby-faced). However, when he [[Clothing Damage|loses his shirt]] during a fight in ''Exiles'', he's revealed to actually be quite trim.
* [[Team Dad]]: {{spoiler|Arguably, Bren after the end of the second book}}, although he does his best to treat the five central characters like equals.
* [[Super Senses]]: Heleth and the rest of the Bunker dwellers have, quote, "eyes like owls and hearing like cats."
* [[True Companions]]: The five main characters by the end of ''Exiles''. {{spoiler|Bren is arguably a true companion by the end of ''Caves''.}}
* [[Team Dad]]: Although he does his best to treat the (much younger) five central characters like equals, {{spoiler|Bren seems to somewhat fall into this role after the end of the second book}}.
** [[Token Adult]]
* [[True Companions]]: The five main characters by the end of ''Exiles''. {{spoiler|By the end of ''Caves'', Bren has become a [[Sixth Ranger]].}}
* [[Tsundere]]: Heleth is a type A. She's always bickering with Jeko (and, to a lesser degree, almost everyone else), but there's the occasional implication that she doesn't outright hate him.
* [[Tsundere]]: Heleth is a type A. She's always bickering with Jeko (and, to a lesser degree, almost everyone else), but there's the occasional implication that she doesn't outright hate him.
* [[Unskilled but Strong]]: Cord is ''not'' a trained martial artist, but anything he can actually land a punch on is usually out for the count.
* [[Unusual Euphemism]]: Heleth uses "yeck" as both a euphemism for (probably) "shit" and as an expression of disgust.
* [[Unusual Euphemism]]: Heleth uses "yeck" as both the obvious expression of disgust, and as an apparent euphemism for "shit" (calling people who annoy her "yecks" and "yeck-heads" and things she dislikes "yecky").
* [[Vehicular Sabotage]]: The series all but starts out with {{spoiler|[[Alliteration|Samella sabotaging a spacecraft]]}}, thus [[It Makes Sense in Context|allowing the central cast to survive in the first place]]. In ''Caves'', {{spoiler|Bren does away with Warreck by [[Self-Destruct Mechanism|rigging his escape ship's engine]] to overload}}.
* [[What Happened to the Mouse?]]: Samella's [[empath]]ic ability never comes into play again after ''Exiles''.
* [[When She Smiles]]: Samella plays it straight.
* [[Wounded Gazelle Gambit]]: Cord sets out to {{spoiler|rescue Bren from the clutches of the Crusher team}} in ''Caves''. His plan involves {{spoiler|feigning a broken leg until he can sucker-punch Warreck}}. Things don't go entirely according to plan...{{spoiler|but luckily, Bren wasn't actually unconscious, just playing possum.}}
* [[Wrench Wench]]: Samella, although computer hardware is more her forte.
* [[Wrench Wench]]: Samella, although computer hardware is more her forte.
* [[You Are Fat]]: Cord is on the receiving end of ''quite'' a bit of this in ''Exiles'' (and it's lampshaded at the beginning of ''Caves''). This is ''mostly'' due to Lamprey [[I Shall Taunt You|trying to stir the shit]]. And in ''Rebellion'', Jeko inverts this at Heleth, stating that she "[[Formerly Fat|doesn't look as fat as she used to]]." (Neither character ''is'' fat, although both are solidly built.)
* [[You Have No Chance to Survive]]: The Organization's prime flunkies seem fond of this. {{spoiler|It never works.}}


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Young Adult Literature]]
[[Category:Young Adult Literature]]
[[Category:Science Fiction Literature]]
[[Category:Science Fiction Literature]]
[[Category:The Col Sec Trilogy]]
[[Category:The ColSec Trilogy]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:ColSec Trilogy, The}}

Latest revision as of 09:19, 9 April 2017

The ColSec Trilogy (Exiles of ColSec, The Caves of Klydor, and ColSec Rebellion) is a young-adult s-f series by Douglas Hill (of Last Legionary fame), first published in the 1980s.

After the End, an authoritarian regime has seized control of what's left of civilization. Criminals and dissenters are shipped offworld by the Colonization Section of the world government. If they can build a colony, the world is ripe for exploitation; if they don't live that long, they're no great loss.

One particular group of deportees crash-lands. The survivors decide that they're going to do things their own way, the world government be damned.

Oh, hell...it's Better Than It Sounds.


Tropes used in The ColSec Trilogy include:
  • Action Girl: Heleth, unequivocally. Samella Connel also has her moments.
  • Aerith and Bob: Names are either singular and fantastical (Jeko, Heleth, Rontal), or consist of a slightly unusual or fairly ordinary given name paired with a fairly ordinary (if sometimes idiosyncratically spelled) surname (Cord MaKiy, Samella Connel, Bren Lathan). Being as it's post-apocalyptic, it's possible that this is the result of language drift.
  • After the End: Set a century and change after human die-back over much of Europe, Asia, and eastern North America. References to the "Virus Decades" imply that this was caused by some sort of plague.
  • At Arm's Length: At one point in Exiles, Jeko and Heleth get into a heated argument that threatens to turn into an actual fight. Cord breaks it up by straight-arming Jeko. (Although Cord isn't stated to be taller than Jeko—both boys are kind of shorties—he's stockier and a lot stronger.)
  • Author Tract: Not obnoxiously so, but you can kind of tell that Hill's views were fairly anti-authoritarian. There's also a faint undercurrent of anti-corporatism and/or environmentalism—Cord's simple life in the idyll of the Highlands before his exile, the unspoiled new worlds of the Colonies being exploited by the grasping Organization.
  • Better to Die Than Be Killed: Bren tries to pull this several times. He survives to the end of the series nonetheless. There's also Samella's ploy in the asteroid mine.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Heleth and Rontal play this role towards the end of Exiles by intervening in the fight with the giant worm. And in Rebellion, Jeko, Rontal, and Stele play this role when they break Cord, Bren, and the girls out of the prison transport.
  • Blinded by the Light: Heleth gets a face full of high-beams in Rebellion and actually faints from pain.
  • Brave Scot: Cord is the descendant of back-to-the-land types who retreated to the Scottish Highlands so as to not be bothered by The Organization. He pretty much plays the trope straight.
  • Crapsack World: The Organization's Earth (aside from a few tiny pockets of territory that they don't deem worthwhile) makes the colony worlds—no matter how rough and dangerous—look positively idyllic by contrast.
  • Combat Pragmatist: Samella is a surprisingly dirty fighter. Sometimes literally so, no less.
  • Curb Stomp Battle: Cord may be a physical powerhouse, but he's no match for someone with extensive combat training. Good thing Samella was able to find the spare batteries for the laserifle.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Seems to be one of Rontal's main personality traits.
  • Determinator: Cord, full-stop. At the end of Caves, the government killer Warreck turns out to be one as well.
  • Dumb Blonde: Samella inverts this by being The Smart Guy of the group.
  • Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette: Heleth—a Stealth Expert with Super Senses who's lived underground most of her life—has black hair and a complexion that's compared in Exiles to "mushrooms grown in darkness." (She's rather badly sunburnt by Caves.) And she's got facial tattoos.
  • Egopolis: Inverted at the end of Rebellion. It's the rest of the kids—at Cord's suggestion—who want to name the newly-discovered world after Samella.
  • Elite Mooks: The Organization's equivalent of a police force, the Civil Defenders, have an elite branch who are better armed and are touted as having extensive combat training. They're called Crushers, and are frequent antagonists in the second and third novels. Elite paramilitary police, regularly beaten by street gang members—money well invested!
  • The Empath: Samella, again, although this only factors into the plot at all in Exiles.
  • Everybody Laughs Ending: In the next-to-last chapter of Rebellion, everyone just loses it at some tension-breaking silliness after the asteroid battle.

Bren: "Nothing funnier than victory?"

Cord: "Nothing sweeter, anyway."

Samella: "I think the current's speeding up."

Jeko: "You throw your guns down and come out!"