timebethine: A picture of a white man with curly, wind-tousled brown hair. He is shown almost in profile, looking up and away, and has a worried and suspicious expression. (Suspicion)
timebethine ([personal profile] timebethine) wrote2024-03-26 01:30 pm

[Closed Post: Be You and I Behind an Arras Then]

The moment draws nigh. Laertes will soon speak to Aornis in the library. All is in readiness--Asmodean long since in place, invisibly veiled in saidin; SecUnit's drone watching from its customary vantage.

In the game room, SecUnit, Claudius, Sagramore, and Nightingale gather around the grainy CRT television, watching the drama unfold ...


[This post is for live reactions from the war room! Participation in this thread is totally optional.]
wickedwit: (faceclaim is Aidan Turner from And Then There Were None) (Default)

[personal profile] wickedwit 2024-04-01 11:56 am (UTC)(link)
Claudius freezes, the instinct of a prey animal, but the calculating, human part of him thinks this is still to our advantage. The point was to present Aornis with a weakness, Laertes’s fear of fulfilling his fate Elsinore, and see whether she would make moves to exploit it. But this hits upon something that seems far closer to her. Claudius knows that when Laertes speaks of how it must eat at her, being here and unable to answer a sibling’s death, he’s speaking from newly-understood empathy. He knows his hope that someone may visit the mansion after death (like Grantaire, like Enjolras, like Courfeyrac and Combeferre for a day) is genuine.

Aornis could use this. There is no one better to understand the grief of loss and frustrated revenge than Laertes as he is now. Claudius has faith in Laertes’s judgment and still, if he were in Aornis’s place, he’d know how to sway it to his side. And Claudius does want to know, desperately, what she has to say, what she might reveal about her brother and his visit to play on Laertes’s sympathies.

This might be her true motive, to do whatever she must in her brother’s memory. If it’s a weakness in Laertes, it’s a weakness in her, too. It’s something Claudius can use to deal with her, to negotiate a better arrangement.

Does that justify it? Can he sit back and wait for her to manipulate Laertes at his most vulnerable, just to see whether she’s capable? Past all his calculations, he feels the fierce pangs of protectiveness for the man he loves, the desire to deliver him from that room now, and be the one to care for his wounds. He could have, if he was the one to give Laertes the news. He didn’t want to hurt Laertes, the way he’s surely hurting now.

There is, he decides with a sigh, something he should try. This is the ideal time to try it, when her reactions seem the most genuine, when it could still take her by surprise. He waits until she’s started a sentence, after the delay on-screen.

“Aornis1,” he says sharply.

1Ping.
Edited 2024-04-01 11:58 (UTC)
sagramore: (wintery)

[personal profile] sagramore 2024-04-01 12:46 pm (UTC)(link)
(Sagramore freezes when Nightingale grabs his wrist, and it means he misses exactly what happens between Aornis and Laertes in that moment, only catches Claudius' deliberate choice to say her name.)
wickedwit: (intent)

[personal profile] wickedwit 2024-04-05 10:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Claudius releases a breath he didn't know he was holding, that frozen, fearful moment replaced by a feeling like pride. Laertes knows what he's doing, knows what he's done, from the moment he let that mask of careful, retreating deference slip for familiarity in grief. Later, he thinks, he'll kiss Laertes for his cleverness and his deftness, and -- apologize, all the same. This isn't a test he should have had to take.

"Take care with that name," Claudius says at last, to the others in the room. "She can sense it being said. I'm rather confident in it." Magnus's experience, Lan Wangji's words, and now the avouch of his own eyes.