Paul Atreides (
terriblepurpose) wrote in
deercountry2021-12-08 04:28 pm
let me look at the sun | open
Who: Paul Atreides, open
What: Event catch-all
When: Month of December
Where: Archaic Archives, streets of Trench, the forest's edge, memories
Notes: Go ahead and contact me at
terriblepurpose or by PM if you'd like to discuss any starters or suggest new ones! For tagging in your character's memories to Paul, feel free to start with whatever your preference is.
Content Warnings: Violence, body horror (lockjoint), death, religious extremism, extensive Dune spoilers, suicidal ideation, funerals, grief
What: Event catch-all
When: Month of December
Where: Archaic Archives, streets of Trench, the forest's edge, memories
Notes: Go ahead and contact me at
Content Warnings: Violence, body horror (lockjoint), death, religious extremism, extensive Dune spoilers, suicidal ideation, funerals, grief

no subject
Nah, nah, it's cool. You couldn't have known I'm from a place with way smaller ships and only bone magic. Summoning food is way more useful, I wish we could do that instead.
[ Speaking of which: Gideon takes a sip of the hot chocolate, which is indeed hot, and therefore vastly exceeds all of her culinary expectations! It slaps! She closes her eyes, takes another sip, and then lets out a happy little sigh.
Gideon keeps listening to Paul through her little Moment with the hot chocolate. So they've got more flying machines than the big one? And hot food? These people must be loaded. No wonder Paul's homesick. Anyone else would be a little bummed for the nice kid who gave them a delicious hot beverage, but Gideon sees an opportunity to have some fun. (Frankly, this guy looks like he needs it.) ]
Oh, yeah? Does that mean we could, like, fly on one?
[ Come on, dude, wouldn't that be so fun! More fun than beach brooding, at least?? ]
no subject
...I think so?
[They probably could, he realizes, if he pushes the end of the memory. And flight practice wouldn't be a bad thing. It gives Paul something to offer in exchange for walking through a memory he thinks will otherwise be fairly dull for her.]
Yes. I'll take you up in one, if the memory holds together. [He nods, picking up his own thermos but leaving it unopened. He appreciates that she liked it, appreciates the grin, even if he still isn't sure how to talk to girls he meets in his mental landscape. (This isn't like Chani. Whenever he sees her, he's terrified. Gideon is only intimidating. But still.)] We have to go up to the cemetery first, but it won't take long.
[And then, as the background processing he's been doing reaches a conclusion (bone arts and crafts sounded like Winter Mournings, but bone magic in general, well):] Are you from the Ninth House?
[Palamedes mentioned they might be around, although...this is not exactly the dusty scholar Paul had been picturing. Maybe bone magic is a more muscular art than spiritism.]
no subject
Sweet. Let's go.
[ And, oh, he knows roughly who she is, even without the paint! Neat. Gideon will take this as an indication that, in Trench, she's becoming really cool and popular. ]
Yeah, how'd you know? I'm guessing you haven't met Harrow, she'd probably have let me know if you had.
[ Most likely to warn Gideon about another one-sided magician rivalry, but, you know. That's just how Harrow rolls. ]
no subject
I've met Warden Palamedes. He told me a little about you. Only good things. [Paul walks towards a narrow trail rising from the beach as the rising vessel finally fully clears the water and the first surge waves begin to lap higher on the sand.] I'm glad we finally met.
[It's not fair to her to hide the things he's aware of, if only in the broadest details, from Palamedes' memory. It's not possible to tell her any of them and risk hurting her, even if he doesn't know if any of them happened to her - as he told Palamedes, that's worse, and Paul can't betray his trust either.
He thinks Gideon's the first real person he's seen in any of these memories, their own or his, who's seemed anything other than miserable in one way or another. He's not taking that away so he can feel less guilty. (For Paul, acknowledging to himself who Gideon reminds him of, with her easy confident charm and strong shoulders in the context of this memory, is something he isn't prepared to do.)]
It'll make the explanation easier. [There's just enough room on the trail to walk side by side, and Paul takes the outside edge.] I'd like to try to integrate you into the memory with magic as someone who belongs here, if you'll let me. I haven't tried it yet, but it's safe for you.
no subject
Warden Palamedes is an oddly formal-plus-informal way to refer to him, though. Gideon doesn't laugh, mostly because Paul sounds so earnest about it and she's not that much of a dick, but she does keep grinning broadly, absolutely thrilled by this turn of events. ]
Oh, nice! Cool to meet you, too. Are you also into books and stuff, then?
[ Yeah, Harrow will definitely think of Paul as another rival, which Gideon finds hilarious. Gideon, meanwhile, follows Paul along the path, looking alternately back at the sea and up at that huge sky. It's so different from the dull, dead pit that is the Ninth House, or the ruined citadel of the First.
She nods at Paul's plan, happy enough to go along if it means she gets to board a cool memory spaceship. ] Yeah, sure, that works. I'm used to being a fighter for the Ninth, just make me one for this place.
[ Belatedly, Gideon wonders if they even fight with swords here. Their spaceships are so different, after all. It would make sense that their weapons would be, too. Gideon can't imagine what else they'd use, though. Guns? How archaic. Swords that are also guns? That could be pretty sweet. ]
no subject
I am into books 'and stuff', yes. [He says it not like he's mocking her, but like he's never heard the expression before, and wants to turn it over in his mouth himself.] Thank you. Here.
[He produces a water polished smooth stone from his pocket and passes it to her, marked with a smear of blood: he had it ready before she got here. He had hoped it would be someone who could seem reasonable as a fighter for the House, as a matter of fact, but something about Gideon's lightness makes him entertain the brief and ridiculous thought of passing her off as a mentat.]
You're one of my bodyguards, so you don't have to do much except follow me. There isn't going to be anything you have to protect me from. [Below, the beach is being flooded with wave after wave. A flock of dark winged birds swarm down to dive into the troughs between them for stunned fish.] You can call the Duke 'my lord' or 'your grace', but he prefers 'my lord' with people from the House.
[Observant minds might notice that up until this point, there has been no mention of 'meeting a Duke' on the itinerary. Paul says it very casually, so perhaps that means it's not anything to worry about.]
You're not what I expected. [Clearly, nothing to worry about, if he shifts subjects so smoothly.] Not in a bad way. Is it impolite to ask if you're the necromancer or the cavalier?
no subject
She takes the bloodied stone, studies it for a moment, and then shrugs, slipping it into her pocket. Seems legit. Bodyguard works, so Gideon slows her pace to a half-step behind Paul's, typical for a cavalier of the Nine Houses. The familiarity is honestly kind of nice, especially in this strange memory. Gideon is definitely much better at this than being a mentat -- she can probably count on one hand the number of times she's had to do any math at all. ]
Sounds good to me -- [ night boss is Harrowhark, so instead: ] -- beach boss. Are you my lord too? [ Gideon is not especially intimidated by the idea of meeting a Duke -- her friends are heads of Houses in their own right, so she's almost used to it. If Gideon does startle a little at the title, it's only because where she's from, that's a Seventh term. Dukes and Duchesses of Rhodes. But Paul doesn't strike her as especially Seventh, thankfully. Nothing like Cytherea, with her little laughs and fucked-up eyes.
At not what I expected Gideon stands up a little straighter, clearly proud of herself, for some reason. ] It's not rude, but I wouldn't go asking people that, only because it'll make you look kind of dumb. No offense. [ not his fault he's not from the Nine Houses! ] Necromancers are always super frail and skinny. I'm one hundred percent not -- [ Gideon flexes a bicep, for good measure ] -- which means I'm the cavalier. You're not wrong, though, 'cause Ninth House cavs typically spend their days hauling around bones and whatever. That's not me, though. I'm the best swordswoman in my House.
[ Yeah, the competition isn't stiff, but that doesn't matter! ]
no subject
It feels far too easy to have her a half-step behind, making jokes no one else would dare make. If this is what a cavalier is, Paul thinks - and then he doesn't.]
Then I'm twice honored, meeting the swordsmaster of the Ninth and their cavalier in the same day. [He believes her when she says she's the best, his look at her bicep when she flexes suitably impressed.] Thank you for unburdening me of my ignorance.
And you don't have to call me my lord. [Which is a sideways way of saying yes, as if he doesn't want to be direct.] Or beach boss. I wouldn't want to have to challenge the gulls here for it, they're too fat.
no subject
-- best not. They're going to see a ship! That's super cool. ]
No prob, dude.
[ Okay, he is a lord. Good to know! Gideon does not anticipate using the title unless she has to, in order to board the ship. She's long since checked her pride at the Ninth House, a little my lords here and there don't bother her at all. She's not quite sure what a gull is, though, although a brief and dizzying look off the cliff's edge suggests that they're those birds? They make an awful lot of noise, especially for someone who is not at all used to birds. ]
Mmm, right. Sounds incredibly dangerous indeed. [ Said in mock-seriousness. She's onto you, weird little birds!! ]
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They're more dangerous than they look. [A real-serious warning, delivered with a nod down at the wheeling birds.] Serrated beaks and poisoned spurs. Every three months we have to come down with spear-guns and clear them out to keep them from making off with livestock and children.
[He's still holding the thermos in his hand, unopened, so he opens it and takes a sip. His has more pepper, the way his favorite cook used to make it for him, and with the west-wind in his hair and the cool air of Caladan on his face - he can pretend. Just for a while.]
You should see some of the scars. They like to go for the eyes.
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At that absolutely Insane Wildlife Fact, Gideon just nods. ] Okay. Don't fuck with the baby-eating birds. Got it. [ The eyes?? Yikes. ] Ugh, I have the best tinted glasses back in Trench. Should've brought them here. Guess I can't be one of your bird-fighters, too.
[ So it goes! And then, so Paul doesn't think she's a complete idiot for not knowing how birds work: ] The Ninth doesn't have any of this stuff. The castle's deep down, close to the planet's core, and we've gotta pump in the atmosphere ourselves. [ Which means: no birds. Or any kind of wildlife, really. Just skeletons! ]
no subject
That's all right about the glasses. None of that was true. [Paul glances back at her with a trace of apology, eyes shaded by dark lashes.] They do smell terrible.
[From here, a jutting spur of land is visible, a cluster of black veiled figures standing at its base. Dark stone tombs dot the winter-yellowed grass slope, the resting place of the honored Atreides dead. There's another figure in black farther away, crouched by one of the tombs, almost invisible at this distance.
Paul stops. He screws the top of his thermos back on and sets it down, leaning against a stone. He straightens his coat, thumbs running along his collar, and brushes unruly hair from his face. He seems calm, perfectly so, and if he's pale, he's always pale.]
How do I look?
[It's a reflexive question, on the tip of his tongue before he can think of the absurdity. Gideon isn't going to be able to tell him if he looks different, she's never seen him before.]
no subject
Okay, beach boss. [ Said sarcastically, now truly a joke.
And oh, hm, there's someone in the distance and Paul seems to suddenly care about what he looks like. Gideon, meanwhile, is more taken by the graveyard. The Ninth, who boil their skeletons and send them out to work, don't bury their dead like this. She's lived nearly all her life in a grave, but never seen a graveyard.
She looks back to Paul, bright golden eyes carefully assessing. ]
A little bit like one of our skeletons, actually. [ she's obviously being sarcastic -- that's payback for the birds, paul!!
Genuine, this time: ] Kidding. You look fine. [ All the heirs of the Nine Houses are super skinny and some degree of brood-y, so. ] Good enough for the Duke, if you ask me.
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And yet: he doesn't mind. He's only surprised. (And what does it matter? Who would care if she shoved him off this cliff and sent him tumbling onto the rocks? The gulls do go for the eyes, when it's easy.) So he lets it go, blinking away the look and returning to a slight smile.]
I'm sure the skeletons of the Ninth House are very handsome. [He adjusts his coat again, although nothing has changed. Everything is correct, as it should be, his skin unblemished and unbruised.] All right. This won't take long.
[He feels as though he's said that already. It doesn't matter. They can't stay here. So he starts walking again, shoulders at ease, hands open, stride sure and unhastened.]
no subject
They sure are. You should see my friend, Dr. Skelebone.
[ And with that, Gideon fixes her robes a bit and nods, following Paul. She slips back into that half-step behind him, and this time, her face takes on the expression of perfect Ninth calm. The whole experience is not unlike her "vow of silence" at Canaan House, and Gideon is once again comforted by the fact that, as strange as this planet may be, there's so much about it that's familiar. (Hopefully not too familiar, though. Ideally, there will be no murders here.) Gideon trails Paul noiselessly, like a tall, dark shadow. ]
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They pass by where the veiled figures stand, watching them go by impassively. The house mourners are attentive to their duties, if nothing else. The farthest figure turns, raises an arm in greeting, and Paul takes a sharp breath as they walk past the first tomb. He pays them no attention, but if Gideon does she'll see each is carved with an individual scene, stylized depictions of heroes battling men and beast, seated on thrones, commanding armies.
The figure straightens up and walks to meet them. His features come into focus, a handsome older man with grey shot through his full dark hair and beard. Where Paul is tense, he is at ease, his smile warm as he approaches. The Duke Leto Atreides, first of his name; Leto the Just, the good lord of Caladan; Leto, Paul's father.
Paul knows his father is dead. Beyond the fact no other possibility exists, he knows it, a certainty that is cold and clear inside of him.
But he doesn't believe it. He's never going to believe it. He's going to spend the rest of his life waiting for someone to tell him there's been a terrible mistake, waiting to turn around and see him walking towards him again like this.]
Paul [says his father, and there must have been something Paul missed in himself, because his father's eyes crease at the corners as they search his face on his approach] Came to say goodbye to the old bull, eh?
[Then his gaze shifts to Gideon, his smile turning to the grin of an old commander:] Gideon! Getting him into trouble, I hope?
[While his memory talks to Gideon, Paul does - nothing. He stands there, watching his father with his face barely guarded, drinking in every gesture and word like water, like air. He doesn't think, doesn't have space for anything but this, doesn't let in anything but this.]
no subject
Gideon expects the Duke to be much like Paul -- quiet, polite, tense. She does not anticipate the smile, the gentleness, the welcome. The family resemblance. This is Paul's father, and he reminds her so much of the only other true father she's ever met.
Magnus never got to be this old, Gideon thinks, and then pushes that idea aside before she can recall the image of a crumpled-up body at the base of a ladder. There's a moment -- and Paul might catch it, if he's paying attention -- where Gideon's mellow completely evaporates, and she stands there shocked, like she's just seen a ghost. But she catches herself, and it passes. She gives the Duke a polite nod, and a smile in return. ]
You know it, my lord. [ Gideon grips that thermos like a raft in the middle of the sea. She can practically hear Harrowhark chiding her -- come on, Griddle, think of something. This was so much easier when she could just fake a vow of silence. ] Those gulls never stood a chance.
[ There! That probably makes sense, maybe? Gideon's knowledge of what typically goes down on this planet is limited to weird birds and hot drinks, so it'll have to do. ]
no subject
You do House Atreides proud, protecting our tender youth and meager sheep from - what was it again?. [He turns to Paul, teasing and fond.] Saws for beaks, poison claws? Worth a medal, anyway. I'll have it commissioned. A gull, rampant on vermillion!
[Paul catches Gideon's look because it echoes the one he's striving to keep off his face. He'd stood on that beach for however long, imagining what would happen. How he would react, what he would say, how he would sift this memory for every precious scrap of what he could take from it. He didn't imagine this; should have, but was too lost to see it.
The duke leans towards Gideon, voice a conspicuously loud whisper:]
Did Paul tell you about the boat?
[Paul hunches his shoulder towards his ears, a flush appearing at their tips as he ducks his head in embarrassment, and of all the things he thought he'd say to his dead father he starts with the soft, flustered protest of:]
Dad.
[Leto smiles wider, looking back to Gideon with his eyebrows raised in invitation to ask. Paul watches them with eyes shining too bright, love a crushing weight on his chest he hopes pins him here forever.]
no subject
If she were any less a daughter of the Ninth, Gideon would flinch. Instead, she follows the Duke's gaze towards Paul, who seems to need this, badly. Gideon can't put together why, right now, but she can help him the best she can. (She can focus on that, and not on how the way he says Dad reminds her of how Isaac Tettares used to say Maaaagnus.)
She leans back towards the Duke, shaking her head no. ]
He didn't, my lord. What, uh, happened?
no subject
Eleven.
[Leto pauses, bringing a hand to his beard as he thinks:] Was it?
[As Gideon well knows, much of the dynamic of teasing is in how things are said, not so much what. This apparently spontaneous exchange has the well-worn air of being part of a rhythm, and Leto's tone is nothing but affectionate. Paul's hunched shoulders are part of that rhythm too, the embarrassment half-feigned, the corners of his mouth threatening to turn up unless he keeps his lips pursed and looks down at a clod of fascinating dirt.]
You know how old I am.
You have gotten taller. [Leto makes a small 'hmm' of a sound.] About the same amount of hair, even back then.
About eleven years ago, Paul wanted nothing more than to have his very own boat. Not a big boat, as he insisted on making clear, but a little toy boat, with white sails. His mother, being a wiser woman than I, used the promise of this little toy boat to entice Paul to behave himself at an upcoming banquet she was throwing for every Atreides cousin, kinsman, and out-freyn relation in the galaxy. Wretched people, half of them. I think she worried you'd tell them that.
Now, at first, everything went as planned. The boat is presented on the morning of, and Paul spends the day sailing it on the koi pond. The banquet begins, we bring him out to make his introductions - very properly -
She said she'd take the boat away if I didn't. [Paul remembers having been offended by that. He'd gotten his end of the bargain, he wasn't about to not follow through.]
As I said. Wiser woman than I. So! The thing is done, and we send him off to bed with two bodyguards and a nursemaid. And do I think anything of it? Of course not! I have larger concerns on my mind, including finding a moment's peace.
I steal away to my study about halfway through the night, after enough of them have become sufficiently drunk - only to take my one moment, of course - and what do I find? My son, soaking wet in his nightclothes, working at the lock on my weapons cabinet.
Gideon doesn't care about -
[Leto waves a hand in acknowledgment, gives Gideon a sly look; Paul fidgets, half-proud, half-annoyed, all raw open nerves:] He turns around, not an ounce of shame on his face, and tells me he needs my spear-gun, because he has to attend to a matter of honor. And tell me, Gideon - who do you think my five year old son was feuding with?
no subject
It's much easier for Gideon to focus on trying to piece this story together than the relationship before her -- a loving father, an embarrassed son. She focuses mostly on the Duke -- he's the one telling the story, after all -- but occasionally she'll steal a look back towards Paul, fidgeting and carefully studying the dirt. He's even harder to follow than the story. Why the embarrassment? Doesn't he see how lucky he is?
As the story wears on, Gideon relaxes little by little. The image of a soaking wet five-year-old trying to pick a lock is pretty funny, and so Gideon smiles back, genuine this time. ]
...The birds, my lord? [ He probably wouldn't try to shoot a guest, and Gideon has no idea what a koi is, so that leaves the gulls. Trying to bail Paul out a little, she adds: ] If one of them had stolen my boat, I'd have done the same.
[ Gideon has, in her life, raided the Ninth House weapons cache to make Harrow pay for like, stealing her food and whatnot. As a child, Harrow was about the size and weight of a large bird, it totally counts. ]
no subject
[Leto is thoroughly pleased by Gideon's engagement, another light touch on her shoulder to signal so. He always made it look so natural, Paul thinks, the effortless way he folded people in. So much so that between him and Gideon, both drawing him out of himself, he can't help but step into the story on his cue. And he is shy, Gideon right about him the first time, at least about this.]
It wasn't about the boat. They ate my myrmidons.
They were shrimp. Raw shrimp.
They needed to be armored, and if they were cooked they couldn't be myrmidons -
- and you snuck out past all of House Atreides' security -
- so did you -
I had to see these terror-birds myself, and how you'd gotten all the way down to the beach - all the way to the beach, Gideon!
We brought a net instead. You said we had to catch them, that any birds so wicked had to be agents of our enemies. [Paul closes his eyes briefly, shaking his head, his smile a fragile, soft thing.] You gave me your coat. I kept tripping on it. We didn't catch one, we just - ran up and down the beach. Until mom caught us.
She'd already reduced my head of security to near tears. [Leto steps to his son, rests a hand on his shoulder.] She was proud of you, of course - I think you got another boat out of it, didn't you? - but I didn't hear the end of it for months.
[Leto's eyes are gentle as he searches Paul's face, gently digging his thumb into a knot of tension:] It was worth it.
Now, let's walk, and we'll see if you want to tell me why you really came up here.
[He very much means you too, Gideon, if his warm but undeceived sideways glance is anything to go by. Leto is the patriarch of his house, and that makes every member of it, in a way, his family, at least as far as he reckons such things. If Gideon is going to come stand in his cemetery and look as lost as she did, he's going to take an interest. He releases Paul's shoulder after a firm squeeze, and Paul is nearly clumsy in his quickness to keep up with him as he starts strolling towards the edge of the cliff. But he's not as wretched anymore, something in him soothed and eased as it always is by his father. (Always was, the little poison dart of knowledge, but he can ignore it.)]
no subject
Eventually, before she can realize what's happening, Gideon is enjoying herself. It's not quite like they're old friends -- this place is far too strange for that -- but the Duke is warm, and merry, and even Paul is smiling, and for a moment Gideon can pretend she grew up on a planet as rich as this one. It's rather nice. ]
It sounds like a lot of fun. [ She means it. ]
[ The story ends, like all good comics do, and Gideon freezes momentarily at the Duke's glance, worried that she's been found out, her cover blown. She can't say that, though, so instead she follows, once again a half step behind. That, at least, isn't something she's faking. She'll try to catch up to Paul, hoping that she can shoot him a look that plainly reads: what the fuck do we do now? ]
no subject
It was. And as for fast - it turns out you don't need to be when you time out a security hole you neglected to mention when you noticed it, because 'it only worked from the inside'.
[-looking at him like he always used to, when he could tell something was wrong. Paul could lie to him about some things, but never about that. Leto always knew, some sense as subtle as anything Paul's mother ever taught him able to perceive it no matter what Paul tried. He remembers it perfectly, like he remembers too many things perfectly, and so it turns out that what Paul is doing to do, Gideon, is tell the truth:]
I was going to ask you to let me go to Arrakis, with Duncan. I had it worked out. [He looks at the ground in front of them, his hair falling around his eyes.] I knew you'd say no.
Paul-
[Leto's tone is one of immense sympathy, but Paul pushes past it. He can't stop. If he stops he's never going to be able to start again; he keeps going, his voice soft, thoughtful, aching.]
Wait. Please- [and now, a small glance at Gideon, a plea for her patience, her unearned trust extended only on grace] -let me finish.
no subject
I knew you'd say no, Paul says, and there's a split second where Gideon considers stopping Paul there. They are getting dangerously close to family drama territory here, and that's not something that Gideon is especially good at dealing with! She's close enough to butt in and say ha, ha, Paul's just guessing, he doesn't really know, also we're going to go hijack one of your ships okay cool bye.
But then Paul looks back, and Gideon meets his eyes, and any resistance evaporates. That look -- maybe she recognizes it. Maybe she's just projecting. Regardless, her expression softens into something more gentle, from what the hell to go ahead. Gideon doesn't really know Paul, but he offered her cocoa and laughed and her jokes, and that means more to her than he knows. The least she can give him is this: not trust, necessarily, but space and support. He won't have to say it alone. (Hopefully, that's better.) ]
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