Palamedes Sextus (
hellonspectacles) wrote2021-04-18 05:29 pm
Entry tags:
The beginning of a beautiful friendship
Palamedes has been in Darrow for two weeks, and the days have begun to blend together. Some days, he stays up so late that it’s nearly early, other times he rises before the sun. Most days he works on theorems that have begun to wallpaper his apartment, or sips tea in Gideon’s kitchen, or surrounds himself with a citadel of books in some corner of the public library. Darrow has yet to give up its secrets, but Palamedes is still determined, and he often pontificates at Gideon about his latest theories. Sometimes he talks to the kitchen table instead, since it’s less likely to talk back.
“Warden, you need to get out more,” says the voice in his head—the one he thinks of as Camilla’s—as he paces his apartment restlessly. She’s right, of course. Camilla usually is. On impulse, he picks up his phone and texts one of the few people he actually knows in this strange city.
Mr. Darlington,
Do you like tea? I would be very interested in meeting up to learn more about these portal magicians of yours.
I promise, I’m slightly less of a raving lunatic these days, though my furniture may believe otherwise.
I look forward to your response,
Palamedes Sextus.
“Warden, you need to get out more,” says the voice in his head—the one he thinks of as Camilla’s—as he paces his apartment restlessly. She’s right, of course. Camilla usually is. On impulse, he picks up his phone and texts one of the few people he actually knows in this strange city.
Mr. Darlington,
Do you like tea? I would be very interested in meeting up to learn more about these portal magicians of yours.
I promise, I’m slightly less of a raving lunatic these days, though my furniture may believe otherwise.
I look forward to your response,
Palamedes Sextus.

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"Go back," he says, sipping his tea. "Tell me more about Book and Snake."
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The Lettermen had always been one of the vaguer societies, their Thursday night activities cloaked both in the grim secrecy working with the dead almost seemed to require and the more amorphous and equally shadowy nature of who it was usually fueling the requests that drove each rite. It makes them difficult to explain with the kind of detail Darlington wants to give. "As an example," he continues, "the last ritual night of theirs I was present for involved the controlled reanimation of a corpse, who was then used as a conduit for the spirits of recent casualties in the Ukraine. Soldiers with information on troop movements that someone in the State Department had an interest in hearing." He shakes his head. "It was a macabre sort of relay, one ghost after another, a translator standing by to take down whatever was said."
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Now that he thinks about it, calling up dead soldiers sounds like exactly the sort of tactic the Cohort would employ. Palamedes doesn’t like it one bit.
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Picking up his spoon, he stirs his tea, then lifts the mug to take a sip. "What does your Eighth do, that's so similar?"
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"And for what it's worth, I've never met an Eight with any sense of humor whatsoever."
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There was another example of Manuscript trickery more recent and more personally embarrassing to Darlington, but he wisely keeps his silence on that for now.
"Harnessing the souls of the living, though, that's a new level of disturbing. Tonally similar to the kind of ethics violations that led to the founding of Lethe, honestly."
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It doesn't surprise him, exactly, to hear that the morals of Darlington's magic-wielders are as tenuous as those of the heirs he had encountered at Canaan House, but it certainly is disappointing. "And you're part of Lethe, right? Does that mean you supervise them all?"
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He lifts an eyebrow, looking across the table at Palamedes. "My girlfriend would say that's their response to everything because they're all rich kids who've never been told no in their lives, and I don't think she's wrong." Alex would also say it more colorfully than that, but the general principle still held.
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Of course, the scholars of the Sixth always find plenty of ways to create their own hierarchy. "In the Library, it's always Archeo that gives me the most trouble. And Archives, of course." He grins briefly. For all her aggressive performance of professionalism, Zeta had never quite gotten used to having her requested budget denied by her son. Then again, she would have made trouble for the Master Warden regardless of who they were.
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He listens as Palamedes describes the hierarchy of the Sixth, a system that seems as byzantine as anything he'd encountered at Yale or Barton, let alone between the societies. "Oh, God, of course it'd be the archives," he says, echoing the quick grin Palamedes flashes him. "Good to know some things are constant between worlds."
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He takes another drink from his mug, the neglected tea inside now a little closer to lukewarm. That was the price one paid for getting wrapped up in conversation. "It's a sizable house, built in 1882 and acquired by Lethe six years later after the owner abandoned it, but it's a city house. Constrained by the size of the lot. It doesn't sprawl like...well, like Black Elm." He makes a small nod of acknowledgement, a gesture towards their plans for the day. "You'll see. Anyway. Lethe's collection of books kept growing, and before long there wasn't enough space in the house to hold it all."
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He wonders who told her that he was dead.
It’s a thought he shakes away as quickly as it comes; he can’t do anything about any of that.
The matter of growing collections and limited storage is one Palamedes is very familiar with, and he nods eagerly as Darlington expounds. “Of course. Did you have to build underground?"
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Turning his attention back to the initial question, Darlington slips a little further into easy explanation. "The more specific you can make the query, the better," he says. "Just like any search parameter. You write it in the book, and put it back in its place on the shelf. Once it's done gathering everything--which you know because the bookcase itself stops shaking--you open the door to the library and everything in the collection pertinent to the request is there."
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Darlington's description of the retrieval process makes him lift his brows, particularly at the bit about when the bookcase stops shaking. "Remarkable. I do feel professionally obligated to ask: the collections aren't harmed by the process?"
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The interest and mild shock on Palamedes' face is more than a little entertaining, a bonus to the already-present thrill in enumerating one of Lethe's secrets for an appreciative audience. "The collections are perfectly safe," he says. "I admit I don't know all the nuances of what Albemarle created--he was brilliant, designed it all when he was still a student himself--but as long as the portal magic's maintained, everything works the way it should." There was the cautionary tale of 1928 and poor Chester Vance, but at least that had only happened once.
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Technically, it's no longer his headache, not in this universe or the one he left behind, but that's not something Pal has quite allowed himself to comprehend.
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Darlington picks up his mug again, half-surprised to find it empty. "Speaking of what you can do, though...should we head out to the house? I'm parked around the corner."
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Of course, Palamedes will never been the Warden of the Library again. Even if he were to be taken from here, he would be returned to his revenant self, waiting for Camilla to bring him back to some semblance of a body. His research could continue, but his life would never be the same.
He tries not to think about it, and thankfully, Darlington offers a distraction quickly enough. Palamedes stands up and collects their mugs, taking them to the sink. “I’d be delighted. Let me just get my keys. And a notebook. And- oh, I’ll just bring my bag.” Shortly after his arrival, Pal had acquired a messenger bag, and he thinks it might be one of the most brilliant things ever invented.
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Palamedes finishes collecting his bag and everything else, and they head out of the apartment and downstairs, out onto the street. Their car here isn't as elegant as the old Mercedes he used to have, without the same sentimental attachment, but it's more than serviceable.
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While Palamedes has ridden on city buses often enough, this is his first time traveling in someone’s personal car. It still surprises him how common they are, how wasteful they seem, though he can't argue against the convenience. He remembers, too, that Darlington had had an entirely different vehicle back home. “Do most people know how to use cars?” he wonders aloud.
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