Reading twotq ch. 5 in a nutshell

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Reading twotq ch. 5 in a nutshell
Dear Cristina, from Emma
Dear Cristina,
I was going to try addressing this letter to Polyamorous Cottage In Faerieland, but I figured it might never be delivered. :) Ok, ok, Iâm kidding. Iâm sending it to the New York InstituteâClary says sheâll hold onto it for you. I know Jules and I have been popping around the globe like ping-pong balls, but weâve finally settled here in London for at least a couple of months, so you can â and should â write me back at the London Institute â Iâm not sure the place weâre staying even has an address.
(And sure, I could have just sent you a fire-message, but I have too much to tell you. Buckle up.)
So, a while ago Jules and I were in Manaus, in Brazil, studying Curupiras, when we got called into the Rio Institute. They had a message for Julian. His great-aunt â yeah, the one he was visiting when you first came to L.A. â had died. Really sad. And then, remember the beautiful house in Sussex where she lived? Well, she left that to some cousin nobodyâs heard of, but she left Julian Blackthorn Hall. Which is a crumbling ruin in Chiswick (kind of a suburb of London). And then we had to come here, because of a codicil in the will (ahem, according to the dictionary, thatâs âan addition or supplement that explains, modifies, or revokes a will or part of oneâ). Either Julian has to fix the place up, get it livable again, in five years, or he has to donate it to the Clave.
Anyway, you know how Julian is. He makes up his mind fast. We Portaled to London the next day after he got the news.
I was all set to eat scones, drink tea, and go on the Eye (all the things I didnât get to do last time we came to London, due to being pursued by unkillable Faerie warriors.) But that was before we took a black cab from the Institute out to Chiswick and really saw the place.
From the outside it looks like a museum or an old libraryâyou know, big marble columns, grand staircase, big metal dome on top that looks like it should have a telescope in it. (It doesnât; I checked.) But inside itâs more like a fairytale. Not, like, something from Faerie. Or something from a kidâs movie. Itâs like one of those fairytales where a crumbling palace sleeps for a thousand years. It was kind of romantic, for about five minutes. Then we spotted the first rat, nibbling on the tassel end of one of the drapes.
Itâs a weird mix of interesting history, weird old art, and total ruin. There are cool portraits of old Blackthorn ancestors, mostly intact. Julian says he doesnât recognize most of the faces. Some of them have names written on the back of the canvas or on the frame but other than âBlackthornâ none of the names mean anything to any of us. There are wooden chests full of ancient books and papers, and beautiful overgrown grounds that Iâm sure were once gardens and are now Englandâs version of a jungle. Thereâs an old greenhouse and a weird little brick structure we canât figure out. (Storage shed? Very small weapons room?) The whole place is just a mess, and most of the house isnât habitable at all anymore. Someone built an apartment with âupdatesâ off in one wing, probably in the sixties. (The apartment, by the way, reminds me of that vintage shop in Topanga I dragged you to. Remember?) Whoever lived in it left a closet of all kinds of vintage clothes and thereâs crazy flower-patterned wallpaper and modern art everywhere. At least the apartment has electricity, running water, and heat, because the rest of the house definitely doesnât â
Iâm back now. Sorry, had to stop writing for a second. Julian was calling me. He was up in what was probably a ballroom? But anyway he took a wrong step and his foot went through the floor. (Not all the way through the floor, which is a relief. But it definitely made a hole.) The ballroom is big and dusty, but you can see how long ago it must have been beautiful, and very fancy. It has these huge French doors that open onto marble balconies, though most of the glass in the doors is gone now.
Once I freed Jules from the broken floor I figured it was my only chance to try to talk some sense into him, so I pointed out that this is a gigantic project for two people who have never fixed up a house before, and that we have a perfectly fine place to live already. And the weather is better there.
Jules, being Jules, took his time answering, really thinking about what Iâd been saying. Then he said, âIf you donât want to do this, we donât have to do it. Youâre more important to me than a house. Any house.â
âItâs not that I donât want to do it,â I said. âI just donât even know where to start.â
Jules calmly explained that heâd been in contact with some faerie builders of some kind, hobgoblins maybe? who would be here Monday to do âa walkthrough.â Then he put his arms around me and said, âI know we can always live in the L.A. Institute. I love it there, too. But as much as any Blackthorn legacy exists, this is it. All these old papers, whatever secrets the house is hiding, theyâre our family history. I want to pass it on to Dru and Ty and Tavvy. I want to give them what I never had.â
Well, what could I say to that? I get it. I have Jem as my living family history. Jules doesnât have anything like that. And while Aline and Helen run the L.A. Institute now, they might not always, and besides, it belongs to the Clave. I get that he feels like he canât give away a big chunk of his familyâs history without giving them a choice in the matter.
I said, âAll right. Weâll see what we can do. If we ever decide itâs too much, we can hold a big family meeting and everyone can vote. Keep the place or not.â
He picked me up and swung me around. Then we started kissing. Iâll be merciful and not give you the details.
So Iâve decided to consider all this An Adventure. Itâs like an archeological site, and we are intrepid historians. Later Iâll see if I can convince Jules to put on a tweed coat and a pith helmet while we sort through the debris. Because whoever lived here before had a lot of stuff. Itâs a big house, and every room has furniture with drawers and cabinets, and inside every drawer and every cabinet is clutter. Rusty weapons, water-damaged books, little boxes with more clutter in them, costume jewelry, portraits of random people, broken teacupsâŠAnd remember, weâll be going through it without any light but witchlights.
Anyway. I wanted to let you know what I was up to, and where we were. Our travel year was basically over anyway, so this is a sort of way of extending it and spending more time together. Iâm not sad about that part. I was actually doing pretty well psyching myself up for the excavation of Blackthorn History, until this morning.
I know I said the house seemed haunted, but I was joking. Mostly. Iâm not Kit; I canât see ghosts unless they want me to see them, and so far I havenât come across any ectoplasmic spirits with messages from The Beyond. But the place does feel odd â I keep finding myself turning around at the end of long, spiderwebby hallways, as if expecting to see something in the shadows. Or imagining I glimpse something over my shoulder in the mirror. I chalked it all up to nerves until this morning, when I came into the dining room and saw that the words âGO AWAYâ were written in the dust on the floor.
I literally jumped. I was actually reaching for Cortana before I got a hold of myself. Donât be ridiculous, I thought. That message could have been written any time. Long before we got to the house. It could have been sitting here in the dust for years, undisturbed.
I have a confession to make, though. I rubbed the GO AWAY message away with my foot. I didnât want Julian to see it. He worries too much as it is. I didnât want him to have that same bad moment of shock that I did, especially over something unimportant.
I feel better getting the story off my chest to you, though. Oh dear, Julian is calling for me again, I canât wait to see what heâs put his foot through this time. I will write again soon, and in the meantime pip pip cheerio from London!
Love to you and the boys,
Emma
Thomas and Alastair by Taratjah. The Sanctuary scene from Chain of Iron!
Legacy. What is a legacy? Itâs planting seeds in a garden you never get to see.
Vin and El from Brandon Sandersonâs Mistborn, I love to make myself suffer bye
Mistborn Comic Book Pages (you know, the scene where Vin saves Elend while only in her underclothes, that scene hits GOOD)Â
Iâve made a contribution to this fanbase
Whoâs Alex?
Billboard demonstrating gender stereotypes as most people automatically assume that Alex is the boy.
Actually, Iâve studied design and advertising, and I can tell you that the reason people would look at this and immediately assume Alex is the boy is because, quite simply, the boy is the focal point of the ad.
English-speaking readersâ line of sight goes from left to right and up to down. This ad leads the viewer from the words MEET ALEX etc straight to the boy and then over and down to the girl. I didnât even notice there was a set of parenthesis with words in them in the ad until I looked the fourth time.Â
This is a fallacious confirmation bias, as anyone looking at it will assume Alex is the focal point (i.e. The Boy) and then if theyâre perceptive theyâll notice the words at the bottom. Aha! Those damn gender stereotypes gotcha again! Except no, because the ad literally forces you to read it as âAlex is the boyâ by the visual language and lines of sight.Â
A better ad would have been structured from top to bottom instead of left to right, and wouldnât have pushed the girl, the real subject of the ad (who, by the way, has been VISUALLY PUSHED OUT OF HER RIGHTFUL SPACE ON THE AD BY HER BROTHER) off to the corner as far away from her identifiers as possible.Â
Here, Iâll make you a better ad.
Bam. Shitty stock photo but you get the point. If anyone sees this and assumes Alex is the boy, they donât have the the ad layout to use as an excuse for their internalized gender shittery. Likewise, the ad isnât actively trying to make you read it a certain way and THEN making you feel guilty for interpreting it the way they designed it to be.Â
Holy fuck someone who actually understands design, sexism, and how they intersect? Yesssss
The âAlexâ is even in a different font size and spaced so far away from âMeetâ in order to serve as a label for the boy. They couldnât have been more clear about making sure you knew the boy was Alex without making him wear a âMy name is Alexâ name tag.
Kelsier: Am I a good person? No.
Vin, hopefully: But are you trying to get better?
Kelsier: Absolutely not.
Vin: I need you.
Elend: For?
Vin: Ever.
Elend, voice cracking: Oh
some Vin practice
Elend at the start of mistborn 3
Fatren: âthe koloss are overwhelming us! Were doomed, youâve killed us all!!â
Some guy: âwait whatâs that speck in the sky?â
Elend turning around and seeing Vin careening down from the horizon straight into the middle of a Koloss army:
Duralumin Leap Heard Around Scadrial
Inktober 2018 Day 24 Prompt: Chop
Theme: Mistborn by Brandon Sanderson
Included a digital red sky version, couldnât find a traditional solution that pleased me. Besides being canonical, the red sky adds that certain something for me.
Kelsier is definitely going to throw the first punch
Hero of Ages by Brandon Sanderson (fan art by Giselle Almeida)
Brandy Sandyâs books have been inspiring me to write lately
These two gave me BIG spiderman meme energy in the first book⊠I miss it