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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He guides the car between the stone pillars marking the entrance to Black Elm's long drive, the gravel crunching beneath the tires as they make their way up to the house. After so many months, it's slipped back into feeling routine, but there's still a part of him that holds its breath a little, afraid that somehow the house he loves will have vanished again as quickly and mysteriously as it appeared.
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It’s filled with history, too. Even from the drive, Palamedes can detect the swirls of thalergy and thanergy of the lives that have passed through it. His instincts had been right. This will make for an excellent demonstration.
As he gets out of the car he says, “And this just…appeared one day? Must have been quite a surprise to the local wildlife.”
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In a way, it's a different version of that moment he'd been looking forward to for three years with Lethe, the chance to reveal something beautiful and extraordinary to an unsuspecting soul. As Palamedes sits and stares through the windshield at the house, Darlington can't help but smile as he undoes his seatbelt and slides out from behind the wheel. There's an academic curiosity in that look along with the surprise, a desire to know more not out of acquisitiveness but as a chance to understand Black Elm's bricks and trees and the beams of its roof a little better. It's exactly what he might have expected--exactly, he thinks, what he'd hoped to see from the other man.
"Out of nowhere just like the rest of us," he says. "I'm honestly not sure what was here before, but we see enough wildlife on the edges of the property that it's safe to assume it was just woods. Not unlike where the house was situated back home, come to think." Westville had expanded considerably since the first Daniel Tabor Arlington began work on Black Elm, the lot itself sold off in bits and pieces as time went on, but there was enough there still for it to feel utterly different from the regimented lines of downtown New Haven.
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Pal doubts that he could get a read on an entire building all at once. He needs to focus on some portion of it, some detail he can isolate.
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Palamedes asks to see inside, and Darlington nods. "Of course. Although..." He looks up at the house, musing for a moment. "You should know the house is warded. Basic stuff, but for Alex's sake I'm wary of taking it down completely. Is that going to interfere with what you're hoping to do?"
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“They shouldn’t, though it might depend on the wards. You said Alex is your girlfriend, right?”
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"It's understandably not something she shares with most people," he says, "but Alex sees ghosts. And has for...as long as she can remember. They've always been there for her, whether she wanted it or not. It's why Lethe was so interested in bringing her in as a delegate." He looks up at the house, at its looming tower of crumbling stone and the wide bank of windows that marks out the nearest wall of the ballroom. "We warded the house against them, along with a few other places around the city, so she'd have some quieter places to go."
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Pal has about a thousand questions, too, but mostly he just feels for the poor girl.
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Darlington's expression grows sober, unable to keep from thinking of the worst stories he knows from Alex's past. They're not his to tell, but he thinks of them regardless.
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"Whatever you have planned for today," he says, unlocking the front door and pushing it open, "isn't going to be quite that challenging to test, I'm guessing."
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Palamedes follows Darlington inside, and is greeted with an interior as grand as the exterior promised. He is still awed by how much wood is used in construction in Darrow--and by extension, in pre-resurrection society. Here, it's warmth and shine is on full display.
Now that he's here, he properly considers the options for his demonstration. "Is there a part of the house that is integral to its construction, but could conceivably have been built independently, at least in part?" Pal tries to remember some of the more old-fashioned aspects of Canaan House. "A fireplace, perhaps?"
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The question and its limitations has him nodding, thoughtful, and when Palamedes mentions a fireplace in particular, Darlington smiles. "In the great room," he says, nodding towards the vast open space just beyond where they're standing. Since the house's arrival in the city, he and Alex--mostly Alex--have spent a lot of time and money turning it into a place that suits them both, with new paint and updated furnishings, decorative objects on the shelves and a few pieces of art on the walls. Still, there are some parts of Black Elm neither of them are able or willing to change. The fireplace fills a good portion of one wall in the great room, its dark stone blackened further by generations of fires, the wide wood mantle above the hearth burnished to a gloss over the years. He's always loved it.
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When he sees the fireplace he grins. “Perfect.” Without further ado he approaches it, lightly running his fingers over the mantlepiece. He never likes to make assumptions about an object based on necromancy alone, but he knows almost nothing about the aging of wood or styles of architecture on pre-Resurrection Earth, so he can’t say much about it by observation alone. He rests one hand on the stones of the hearth and explains, “The Sixth House specializes in psychometry. We’re trained from an early age to read thalergenic and thanergenic signatures on objects to determine their age and other characteristics of their history. Rather good skill for a librarian— Hmm.”
He’s not getting much. A trace of age, yes—two hundred years? Three hundred? But other details remain out of his grasp. Dozens of people must have laid their hands on the fireplace over the years, but it’s like they’ve blurred into the background.
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They go into the great room, Pal's delight immediate and palpable from the first moment he sees the fireplace, and even that is a reward in itself. Not the same as revealing a new piece of magic to an unsuspecting person, but close enough--showing a bit more of a place he loves to someone so rapidly becoming a friend. "That is a useful skill," he says. "Psychometry's not something practiced by any of the Ancient Eight, or Lethe, and even what little I've read on the subject is incomplete. I think the closest anyone comes is...Aurelian, maybe, but even they are..."
Noticing the frown on his friend's face, Darlington stops talking. "What is it?"
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But additional details about the house remain out of reach. With a huff he turns away from the fireplace, taking off his spectacles and pressing his fingers against his closed eyes. “I should be able to get significantly more than that, but it’s like trying to read a street sign without my glasses. Damn.”
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Darlington winces in sympathy, seeing him pinch the bridge of his nose and press fingers against his eyes. "What can I do to help?"
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The idea is fascinating, but the questions will have to wait. When the other man asks for something to write with, Darlington breaks from his train of thought and nods. "This way," he says, inclining his head towards the open doorway that leads to the kitchen. "I know I have at least one notepad in a drawer." It's old habit, carried over from when there'd been a land line in the corner of the kitchen; messages taken down in Bernadette's neat penmanship and his own far messier scrawl, grocery lists and rough outlines of planned menus for the Layabouts' occasional visits. He and Alex might only use their cell phones, but the junk drawer remained.
Entering the kitchen, Darlington finds a pad of paper and a pen, setting them on the counter next to Palamedes.
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He stops abruptly and pauses, tapping the end of the pencil on his chin as he looks over his notes. "Well, it's a start. I may need to sleep on it." With a rueful smile Pal turns back to Darlington. "I'm afraid my demonstration didn't live up to expectations," he says. "Sorry about that. What I get for being so cocky."
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When Pal stops writing and looks up, apologizing, Darlington smiles, shaking his head. "No need to be sorry," he says. "Even if it didn't go as planned, it was still...I told you what little experience I had with psychometry, so even those few impressions you were able to glean were fascinating. And once you find a way to work with whatever Darrow's doing to limit your abilities, you're more than welcome back to try again."
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He finishes with his notes and folds up the piece of paper, tucking it in his pocket. “In any case, enough psychometric show-and-tell. This house is absolutely remarkable.”
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He takes in the kitchen, the Delft tiles above the countertops, the rack of pots and pans above the stove, the heavy door of the old refrigerator and the dark wood floors that stretch into the butler's pantry and through the rest of the house. Affection, bone-deep and utterly genuine, flickers in his face for a moment. "It's the only place I ever really called home."
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