Palamedes Sextus (
hellonspectacles) wrote2021-05-29 06:53 pm
Entry tags:
Dear Mr. Postman...
It’s not that Palamedes means to ignore the messages from Marianne. The day following Harrow’s arrival, his head feels fit to split open, and when he glances at his phone periodically to make sure that Gideon hasn’t sent him a frantic messages, he notes the usual texts from Marianne with a smile, and vows, quite sensibly, to write her back when he can see straight. But he ends up spending most of the next day with the Ninth, arguing with Harrow over this theory and that, only realizing when it has gotten quite late that he has again forgotten.
And then Camilla appears in Darrow, an event that had seemed so astronomically unlikely that he had tried with every fiber of his being not to hope for it, and he is swept up in the miracle of it. The pair talk into the night until their throats are hoarse, they spend days poring over all the evidence Pal has collected about Darrow, sometimes with Harrow and Gideon, sometimes on their own. His promise to return Marianne’s missives becomes more and more distant.
It’s Thursday, and Palamedes is alone while Cam goes for a run—still half-terrified to let her out of his sight, he’d offered to go with her, and she had just looked at him—when his phone buzzes. It’s only a reminder that he has books due at the library, but it makes him realize, to his horror, that he had never replied to Marianne. Without quite knowing why, his stomach twists at the thought that she might be angry at him.
He opens their text chain and writes,
Marianne,
I hope you will accept my most sincere apology. I fear that, in my unconscionable silence, I have revealed something that I have attempted to keep from you: necromantic powers alone are not enough to keep me from being a complete jackass from time to time. My week has been unexpectedly eventful—please understand that this is an explanation, not an excuse.
In answer to your earlier messages: I like the first sunglasses best, I wasn’t free for coffee on Friday (explanation forthcoming), and Orlando was really quite remarkable.
Are you free for lunch this weekend? I would like to apologize in person.
Palamedes Sextus, Master Warden of Dunces, etc.
And then Camilla appears in Darrow, an event that had seemed so astronomically unlikely that he had tried with every fiber of his being not to hope for it, and he is swept up in the miracle of it. The pair talk into the night until their throats are hoarse, they spend days poring over all the evidence Pal has collected about Darrow, sometimes with Harrow and Gideon, sometimes on their own. His promise to return Marianne’s missives becomes more and more distant.
It’s Thursday, and Palamedes is alone while Cam goes for a run—still half-terrified to let her out of his sight, he’d offered to go with her, and she had just looked at him—when his phone buzzes. It’s only a reminder that he has books due at the library, but it makes him realize, to his horror, that he had never replied to Marianne. Without quite knowing why, his stomach twists at the thought that she might be angry at him.
He opens their text chain and writes,
Marianne,
I hope you will accept my most sincere apology. I fear that, in my unconscionable silence, I have revealed something that I have attempted to keep from you: necromantic powers alone are not enough to keep me from being a complete jackass from time to time. My week has been unexpectedly eventful—please understand that this is an explanation, not an excuse.
In answer to your earlier messages: I like the first sunglasses best, I wasn’t free for coffee on Friday (explanation forthcoming), and Orlando was really quite remarkable.
Are you free for lunch this weekend? I would like to apologize in person.
Palamedes Sextus, Master Warden of Dunces, etc.

no subject
Ducking his head sheepishly for a moment, he then turns to open the door, holding it for her after he's stepped inside.
no subject
"I accept the compliment," says Marianne, smiling as she steps past him into the restaurant. "Just to be clear."
Once inside, she shrugs out of her jacket. She'd deliberated over the top before she'd put it on, aware that it's leaving a lot of skin bare, but she also likes the way that it makes her shoulders and her collarbones look, and she thinks (hopes) that Pal might like it too.
no subject
"It seems like ages since we've seen each other," he says. "But I think that's just because so much has happened."
no subject
"It's been about a week and a half, I think," says Marianne, reaching for a menu and flipping it open. "I was beginning to think you'd realised that I wasn't worth talking to..."
no subject
no subject
She rolls a bare shoulder in a shrug, eyes on her menu.
"I'm used to that kind of thing," she says, trying to make her voice light and almost managing. "And a week and a half is a long time to go radio silent when we text as much as we do."
no subject
no subject
"You don't have to be sorry," says Marianne, lifting her eyes from her menu and giving him her full attention for a moment. "I'm just ..pretty glad that I was wrong this time."
no subject
no subject
If the word friend stings, a little, then it doesn't show on Marianne's face. She just smiles at him.
"It's happened to me a few times," she says. "I'll be texting someone for a while, think it's going really well and then...poof!" She makes a gesture with one hand. "They just stop replaying. It happens enough that there's a name for it. You call it being ghosted."
no subject
Pal shakes his head. “Don’t get me wrong, there’s plenty of people I’d prefer to avoid corresponding with, but I’ve never seen the point of playing an elaborate game about it.”
no subject
"People are weird," she says, rolling one shoulder in a shrug. "Usually, when it's happened to me, I think it's because they've...you know. Got what they were after." She blushes. "Anyway. I'm glad that you didn't ghost me."
no subject
"But no, I employed no ghosts." He grins a little, using the term incorrectly on purpose. "Only..." Pal shakes his head, in awe of everything that has happened recently, "Emperor's bones, Marianne. Camilla is in Darrow. I didn't even dare hope I would see her again." His face lights up in that indescribable way it does from time to time. "And that's not only the half of it."
no subject
He's talked to her about Camilla before but, this time, when he says her name, his face lights up in such a way that Marianne feels like she's finally realising something. That's why he went quiet on her; it explains something, at least. She manages to keep it off her face, at least. "That's amazing," she says, smiling. "I'm so happy for you."
She wonders how she'd feel if Connell turned up? He's really the only one who might even slightly make her face look that way.
no subject
He fiddles with the corner of his menu and smiles sheepishly. “And that has, in turn, led to my unfortunately ghost-like behavior.”
no subject
"It sounds like you've had a lot going on," she says. "You must be so glad to have her back, though?" Once again, that stab of something that feels almost like jealousy. She works on letter that go; it's not like he owes her anything, is it?
The waiter chooses that moment to come over to the table and Marianne orders a pasta dish with clams, a glass of white wine to go with it.
no subject
When the server comes, Palamedes orders a vegetable sandwich and tea, and then returns to his tale. "I had another friend from home appear even before Cam did, if you believe it."
no subject
"I'd like that," says Marianne, smiling, though, honestly, in that moment, she can't imagine anything worse. She's going to need a least a day or two to reorder the way that she feels about Palamedes in the wake of this new news. It's not the first time that it's happened -- she'd done it with Connell enough times. She'd figure it out.
"Now I feel bad for ordering wine," she says, brushing her hair back as the waiter leaves. Her eyes widen, though. "Two? Like buses, huh?" It occurs to her that that reference won't mean anything to Pal. "You wait ages and then two come along at once."
no subject
Palamedes looks puzzled for a moment, but as soon as Marianne explains what she means, his eyes light up with mirth. "I'm going to have to remember that," he chuckles. "Harrow is the Ninth House heir. Her arrival was, ah, a bit more complex." He purses his lips thoughtfully, considering how best to explain the (literally!) gory details in a setting such as thing one.
no subject
"Complex how?" asks Marianne, leaning her chin into his hand and giving him her full attention. She lets herself relax, lets herself enjoy his company as a friend, nothing else.
no subject
no subject
Marianne's dark eyebrows draw together in a frown, her mouth hanging open a little. The waiter comes with their drinks and she picks up her wine glass.
"How bad does it have to be for her to give herself brain damage? Do I even want to know?"
no subject
Almost unthinkingly, he picks up his spoon and absently stirs his tea. “For the record, I sincerely doubt that such an extreme intervention was necessary. I’m certain there was another way. Hell, if only I’d been there.”
no subject
"Oh, my God," says Marianne again, her hand over her mouth. "That's all...It sounds so awful." Palamedes is younger than her, so she has no reason to assume his friends wouldn't be. They were all so young to go through that. "That's..." She shakes her head, taking a sip of her wine. "But you fixed it?"
no subject
“But that’s hardly the point now, is it?” He flashes a tiny smile. “The important thing is that we were able to repair the damage, and she seems to have recovered her memories without causing herself further harm. I’ve been spending as much time keeping an eye on her as she’ll let me.”
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)