#To digress into TUG spoiler territory...
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Can we talk about Magnus in Harrow the Ninth? Because there's a tendency to paint him as this constantly cheerful figure and he's not - he's just very Fifth.
He's the only person who seems even slightly upset about the whole gun-toting horror thing:
âDid the Sleeper get them?â
âOnly by assumption,â said Harrowhark, while Abigailâs dolt of a husband said, âI bloody hope so.â
âMagnus,â Abigail said, a touch disapprovingly.
âWell, if the Sleeper didnât, thatâs two maniacs with an ancient weapon and a love of blowing off faces, dear,â said Magnus.
And he's got a very low opinion of Silas:
"She wonât tell me what he said to her, just that he âwas horrid.ââ
âCheeky little so-and-so,â said Magnus. âIf he were my son, Iâd give him something to think about. Iâm not surprised heâs gone to ground.â
âI would hope your son might be of different character,â said his wife, half-smiling.
âProtesilaus should have biffed him.â
âItâs strange,â said Abigail, ignoring her husbandâs exhortations to biffing.
Behind the jolly Jeeves and Wooster-esque talk of biffing people, let's remember that this is Magnus - who from Gideon's POV never saw a teenager he didn't want to adopt - earnestly wishing that a grown man had hit a 16 year old kid.
And when Harrow explains that she thinks she saw him jump to his death, Magnus isn't particularly sympathetic:
âWe should have made him a greater priority,â said Lady Pent.
Magnus said, âIâm not certain.â
and
âWe didnât need him,â he said bracingly.
Abigail said, âWe need everyone.â
âI never thought he was quite the thing.â
This "never quite the thing" line is the same one Abigail uses when she says Ianthe shouldn't have become a Lyctor and you get the sense it has a quite specific meaning on the Fifth. You get the distinct feeling Magnus is saying "good riddance" in response to a teenager's apparent suicide.
And then of course there's Magnus' conversation with Harrow as the River bubble collapses, as Harrow debates whether she should leave her body to Gideon:
She said: âIf I go back, it will finally destroy her soul.â
It was Magnus who stepped forward and looked at Harrow face-to-face. And perhaps she felt that more keenly: that he was the man who had, in Gideonâs own words a lifetime ago, been nice to her cavalier. His mouth was hard now, but his eyes were as kind as they had ever been. And kindness was a knife.
He doesn't pull any punches in laying out his understanding of the situation to Harrow:
âThis whole thing happened because you wouldnât face up to Gideon dying,â he said, which was a stab as precise as any Nonius had managed. âI donât blame you. But where would you be, right now, if youâd said: She is dead? Youâre keeping her things like a lover keeping old notes, but with her death, the stuff that made her Gideon was destroyed. Thatâs how Lyctorhood works, isnât it? She died. She canât come back, even if you keep her stuffed away in a drawer you canât look at. Youâre not waiting for her resurrection; youâve made yourself her mausoleum.â
His wife looked at Harrowâs face and murmured, âMagnus, youâve made your point,â but he uncharacteristically ignored her.
He's trying to get through to her in a very fraught situation, but he's certainly not pulling his punches:
âYouâre a smart girl, Harrowhark. You might turn some of that brain to the toughest lesson: that of grief.â
Abigail is also trying to talk her out of things, but she's much more discursive and apologetic. Magnus is kind, but it's kindness as a knife, not a cushion.
Magnus is so often written off as just a silly, goofy character, when he's more complicated than that. He's allowed to have a very real frustration with the River bubble and with Harrow, however much he does also care for her and want to help her.
And you know what, he's a CFO stuck in a horrorscape with his delighted ghost nerd wife and a bunch of soldiers. He runs with it - he cracks one of his House ordinal jokes while physically tackling a gun-toting ghost and makes a decent go at it before getting shot. But he's very much out of his comfort zone, angry, and no longer entirely held back by propriety.
#the locked tomb#tlt#magnus quinn#harrow the ninth#To digress into TUG spoiler territory...#A Lyctoral Abigail slowly blurring her calm and polite filter into Magnus' directness...
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#the locked tomb#tlt#magnus quinn#harrow the ninth#To digress into TUG spoiler territory...#A Lyctoral Abigail slowly blurring her calm and polite filter into Magnus' directness...
Can we talk about Magnus in Harrow the Ninth? Because there's a tendency to paint him as this constantly cheerful figure and he's not - he's just very Fifth.
He's the only person who seems even slightly upset about the whole gun-toting horror thing:
âDid the Sleeper get them?â
âOnly by assumption,â said Harrowhark, while Abigailâs dolt of a husband said, âI bloody hope so.â
âMagnus,â Abigail said, a touch disapprovingly.
âWell, if the Sleeper didnât, thatâs two maniacs with an ancient weapon and a love of blowing off faces, dear,â said Magnus.
And he's got a very low opinion of Silas:
"She wonât tell me what he said to her, just that he âwas horrid.ââ
âCheeky little so-and-so,â said Magnus. âIf he were my son, Iâd give him something to think about. Iâm not surprised heâs gone to ground.â
âI would hope your son might be of different character,â said his wife, half-smiling.
âProtesilaus should have biffed him.â
âItâs strange,â said Abigail, ignoring her husbandâs exhortations to biffing.
Behind the jolly Jeeves and Wooster-esque talk of biffing people, let's remember that this is Magnus - who from Gideon's POV never saw a teenager he didn't want to adopt - earnestly wishing that a grown man had hit a 16 year old kid.
And when Harrow explains that she thinks she saw him jump to his death, Magnus isn't particularly sympathetic:
âWe should have made him a greater priority,â said Lady Pent.
Magnus said, âIâm not certain.â
and
âWe didnât need him,â he said bracingly.
Abigail said, âWe need everyone.â
âI never thought he was quite the thing.â
This "never quite the thing" line is the same one Abigail uses when she says Ianthe shouldn't have become a Lyctor and you get the sense it has a quite specific meaning on the Fifth. You get the distinct feeling Magnus is saying "good riddance" in response to a teenager's apparent suicide.
And then of course there's Magnus' conversation with Harrow as the River bubble collapses, as Harrow debates whether she should leave her body to Gideon:
She said: âIf I go back, it will finally destroy her soul.â
It was Magnus who stepped forward and looked at Harrow face-to-face. And perhaps she felt that more keenly: that he was the man who had, in Gideonâs own words a lifetime ago, been nice to her cavalier. His mouth was hard now, but his eyes were as kind as they had ever been. And kindness was a knife.
He doesn't pull any punches in laying out his understanding of the situation to Harrow:
âThis whole thing happened because you wouldnât face up to Gideon dying,â he said, which was a stab as precise as any Nonius had managed. âI donât blame you. But where would you be, right now, if youâd said: She is dead? Youâre keeping her things like a lover keeping old notes, but with her death, the stuff that made her Gideon was destroyed. Thatâs how Lyctorhood works, isnât it? She died. She canât come back, even if you keep her stuffed away in a drawer you canât look at. Youâre not waiting for her resurrection; youâve made yourself her mausoleum.â
His wife looked at Harrowâs face and murmured, âMagnus, youâve made your point,â but he uncharacteristically ignored her.
He's trying to get through to her in a very fraught situation, but he's certainly not pulling his punches:
âYouâre a smart girl, Harrowhark. You might turn some of that brain to the toughest lesson: that of grief.â
Abigail is also trying to talk her out of things, but she's much more discursive and apologetic. Magnus is kind, but it's kindness as a knife, not a cushion.
Magnus is so often written off as just a silly, goofy character, when he's more complicated than that. He's allowed to have a very real frustration with the River bubble and with Harrow, however much he does also care for her and want to help her.
And you know what, he's a CFO stuck in a horrorscape with his delighted ghost nerd wife and a bunch of soldiers. He runs with it - he cracks one of his House ordinal jokes while physically tackling a gun-toting ghost and makes a decent go at it before getting shot. But he's very much out of his comfort zone, angry, and no longer entirely held back by propriety.
#the locked tomb#tlt#magnus quinn#harrow the ninth#in between the mind-fuckery and terrible jokes#it's easy to forget how even side characters are VERY richly characterized
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