#terebell sheratan
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‘you will find that Terebell becomes ill-tempered without amaranth to numb the pain.’
‘And I thought it was just her personality,’
- The song rising
#the bone season#the mask falling#arcturus mesarthim#paige mahoney#the mime order#the song rising#warden+and+paige#samantha shannon#Lucida Sargas#Terebell Sheratan
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Terebell Sheratan finds out about Paige and Arcturus, 2060, colourised:
#this is not a bone season quote#the bone season#tbs#terebell sheratan#terebellum#warden#arcturus#arcturus mesarthim#paige mahoney#paige#the mask falling#tmf#the song rising#tsr#the mime order#tmo#rephaim
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Will we find out terrebells gift by the end of the series or will she remain mysterious. For some reason I think she’s a necromancer.
As of now, her gift is mentioned in TBS5.
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sequel to this ping-pong AU!
read on ffn or ao3
...
“You again?” Paige says, in disbelief.
Nobody hears her. It’s already quite loud in the arena, with spectators flooding by the tens and hundreds into the bleachers, so it’s no wonder that none of the Rephaite players catch what she says; they’re all standing in a huddle, listening to their stone-faced leader, clearly going over some last-minute strategy.
The tallest of them, however – the one known in the leagues as the Warden – glances over his shoulder. He meets Paige’s eyes for the briefest second and gives her a nod.
Then he turns back to the huddle.
“Them again?” Eliza echoes, showing up on Paige’s left in her Seals uniform. She looks similarly offended by the Rephaim’s presence. “Jax promised we wouldn’t have to deal with them anymore.”
“He doesn’t have every championship coordinator in his pocket," Paige observes, not without regret.
“Clearly. Look at them, it’s ridiculous.”
“What do you mean?”
“They’re bloody giants. They should be wrestling, not playing ping-pong.”
A white-gloved hand comes down on Eliza’s shoulder.
“There, my dear Muse, you are wrong.”
Paige nearly jumps out of her skin. Eliza, who must have an underdeveloped survival instinct, freezes instead. The hand belongs to Jaxon Hall, and he has – predictably – shown up to the finals looking like a Chicago mafia man out of the fifties. He turns a pale, frigid smile first on Eliza, then on Paige.
“The Rephaim may be ogres blessed with unnecessary muscles and a vertiginous outlook on life, but they are not giants, sweet Eliza. They are freaks of nature.” He pronounces blessed like it has two syllables. “I wouldn’t wish such a stature on my worst enemy. Do you think any of them can go about in London without being stalked by every busybody with half a mind to lay their hands on a walking laboratory experiment?”
Eliza blinks. “What?”
“Laboratory experiment?” Paige repeats.
Jaxon smiles beatifically.
“Have faith, my darlings. After today, we shall be the giants of the ping-pong world – not they.” He flings a disdainful look at their rival team, which has broken up the huddle and has begun to do stretches. “I ought to go enlighten them of the fact. Excuse me.”
Paige and Eliza mutely watch him stride into the Rephaim’s midst, bold as you please, and address their coach: a formidable-looking woman with burnished bronze skin and hair shorn close to her chin. Terebell Sheratan used to scare the living daylights out of her opponents back when she played ping-pong herself. Now she scares the living daylights out of rival coaches. Not Jaxon, though. He’s perfectly at ease where he stands, impertinently slouched over a cane he doesn’t need, provoking a woman who could squash him between thumb and forefinger. He looks like he could do this all day.
Terebell looks like she hates him for every second.
Around her, the Rephaite players don’t spare Jaxon a second glance; they’re busy stretching and talking to one another under the roar of the crowd. Paige watches the Warden roll his powerful shoulders, then link his arms behind his back and pull them taut. Briefly she wonders if she would be as intimidating as he is, if she just had his musculature – but he has a foot and a half on her. She could be John Cena and still not be able to beat him in a fistfight.
Damn.
“Is Jax about to make our lives harder?”
Nick has appeared on Paige’s right, a furrow in his brow. He, too, evidently smells trouble in the way Jax is badgering Terebell – now leaning into her bubble of space, now gesticulating artfully with his cane. Once it narrowly misses Terebell’s nose; she doesn’t so much as flinch.
“When is he ever not,” Paige mutters.
“You ready?” Eliza asks Nick, nudging him with her shoulder.
“Pretty much. Oh, hey, Zeke called. He says he’s flying over next week. Nadine’s staying in the States to finish her second year.”
“Shame,” Paige says absently.
“What’s that?”
“I said, I’m game.” Nick doesn’t need to know how poorly she gets along with his future sister-in-law. “When’s the match starting again?”
“About five minutes.”
“Guys,” Eliza says loudly.
Jaxon, who has up till now been lavishing on Terebell the most passive-aggressive pre-game pleasantries known to man, is trying to get their attention. When Paige meets his eyes, he crooks a gloved finger.
“Are we supposed to go over there?” Eliza asks dubiously.
Paige sighs. “I’ll go ask.”
When she reaches Jaxon’s side, he chucks her under the chin with the head of his cane. “Coach Sheratan has suggested we up the stakes of our match. What say you to that, O my lovely?”
“Up the stakes?” she repeats, with slowly dawning alarm. This can’t be good. “Uh – Jax –”
Too late. Jaxon spins on his heel and squares off with Terebell, who now has the full force of her team assembled behind her: they’ve left off stretching and come to back up their coach, like the muscle squad they are. Nick and Eliza, both looking wary, come to stand beside Paige, and all at once the Seven Seals and the Rephaim are staring each other out on either side of an invisible line.
Paige is five foot nine – a very respectable height, nothing to sneeze at – but standing in front of these buff beanstalks, she feels pretty fucking short.
“Coach Sheratan here” – Jaxon gives Terebell a mocking, deferential little bow – “has expressed doubts at our ability to wipe the floor with her team. Her exact words, I believe, were … what were they?”
“I said that when we win,” Terebell tells them in a low voice, “I’ll have that cane, and that tie pin of yours.”
The solid gold tie pin in the shape of a chess-piece rook. According to rumour, Jax won it off Didion Waite in a high-stakes game of Operation ten years ago. Paige hasn’t managed to wring any more details out of either Jax or Nick. All they would tell her was that it was a bloody, messy affair.
Maybe it was a real game of Operation. She’s a little afraid to ask.
“This pin?” Jaxon pulls his chin against his neck so he can look down at it; his mouth turns down at the corners. “Absolutely not. It’s of sentimental value.”
“It’s tacky,” Terebell says curtly. “If you like, you may choose a trophy of equal value, in the unlikely event that the Seven Seals pull ahead. You have one minute to deliberate.”
Paige glances at the Warden, only to find him already watching her. Instead of looking away in embarrassment, like any normal person would do if someone caught them staring, he holds her gaze. A chill runs down the backs of her arms.
“Oh, I don’t need to deliberate,” Jaxon says smoothly. “You wish to mortify me by relieving me of my prized possessions; very well, humiliation for equal humiliation … If we win – and I don’t say when because I know humility –”
Paige and Eliza exchange an incredulous look.
“– if we win, your player shall buy our player dinner.”
What?
“Agreed,” Terebell says flatly.
She and Jaxon shake hands. Both are wearing gloves, yet both look mildly disgusted at having to touch one another. Anything else they might have said is interrupted by a loud squeal of feedback from the commentator’s booth.
“GOOOOOOOOOD AFTERNOON, LADIES, GENTLEMEN AND HONOURED GUESTS,” Scarlett Burnish drawls over the loudspeakers. “WHO’S READY TO WATCH SOME PING-POOOOOOOOONG?”
The crowd shouts assent. Jaxon turns to the Seals, his expression dead serious.
“Time to choose our champion.”
Nick, Eliza and Paige each obediently stick out one foot into the middle of their huddle. Jaxon takes out his cane and counts out a schoolyard rhyme on their toes.
“Sky blue, sky blue, everyone is out except – for – you. Congratulations, Paige. Kindly don’t lose me my cane.”
…
Paige’s opponent is, of course, the Warden. Because the universe hates her.
“Hi again,” she tells him, as they shake hands in preparation for the match.
“Pale Dreamer,” he says mildly. “No intimidation tactics this time?”
“Nah, you kind of took the wind out of my sails.” Mostly by being so polite and unruffled that it felt like all her efforts were going to waste.
The Warden inclines his head to her. “I apologize.”
Exhibit A.
They take their places on either side of the ping-pong table. He stands with his hands clasped behind his back, and as Burnish introduces them both to the audience, Paige contemplates the appalling visual dissonance of a giant like him getting ready to bat around a dinky little plastic ball. Eliza was right: the Rephaim should be in wrestling or swimming or Olympic discus throw, something heroic and majestic that makes use of all those pointless muscles. Jaxon proclaims on a regular basis that ping-pong is, without a doubt, the most heroic and majestic game of them all, but it’s not like anyone actually believes him.
A hush falls over the arena. The Warden holds up the ping-pong ball in his off hand, ready to serve the first round. He looks Paige in the eye.
She gives him an awkward nod.
Scarlett Burnish counts down from three, and the ball hits the table.
…
“ELEVEN-TEN! THAT’S ELEVEN-TEN TO THE SEVEN SEALS! PAIGE MAHONEY WINS THE GAME; GIVE THEM A HAND, EVERYONE!”
Dazed, Paige puts the paddle down. Her eardrums are being assaulted by a dreadful mélange of noise: partly the crowd cheering, partly the blood pounding in her ears, partly Jaxon’s triumphant yelling in her ear as he picks her up and spins her around.
“That’s my girl, Dreamer!” he shouts, gleeful as a schoolboy. “We’re on to the finals, yes we are! I cannot wait to see the look on Sheratan’s face!”
When he finally puts her down, she’s caught by Eliza and Nick, who hug her with such gusto that she’s left gasping for breath. “Nick –” Her laughter stutters as he claps her on the back. “Nick, I can’t breathe –”
“Oops. Sorry, sötnos.” He lets go, still grinning down at her. “I’m so proud of you. They’re a tough team to beat, but you trained and trained and you got better. Even he” – this with a head tilt toward the Warden, who was conferring with his own team on the other side of the table – “can’t argue with that.”
“Right,” says Paige, her smile fading. “I beat him. So Jax gets to keep his tie pin and cane, and I have to …”
Nick grimaced. “Yep.”
“Maybe they’ll back out,” Eliza says encouragingly, patting her on the shoulder. “It’s not like there was a contract.”
Paige shakes her head. “If they don’t insist, Jax will.”
“How well you know me, O my lovely,” says Jaxon, appearing out of nowhere to take her by the elbow. “I will get my dues from Sheratan if it is the last thing I do. Come, darling, time to collect your prize.”
Paige, resigned, allows him to drag her over to the Rephaim. They’ve clustered together around the Warden and appear to be deep in a blow-by-blow analysis of the match; a few of them are giving him pitying looks. Yet the Warden seems to be bearing his defeat with good grace. He stands as tall and proud as ever, leaning close to Terebell so she can hear him over the noise of the arena; it’s impossible to tell from his expression if he even cares that his team just got kicked from the semi-finals.
Jaxon politely waits for a lull in the conversation before saying in a dispassionate voice, “Arcturus, I believe we had a deal.”
Terebell gives him a poisonous look, then mutters something to the Warden under her breath. It sounds suspiciously like, “Good luck.” Then she turns and walks away, as if brushing her hands clean of the matter.
Once she’s gone, the Warden – Arcturus – looks down at Paige with a glimmer in his eyes.
“You played well, Pale Dreamer.”
She takes the proffered hand and shakes it once. “Thanks,” she says. Then, because she feels bad for being so rude the last time, “Guess I must have loosened up.”
“Indeed.”
He frees her hand. Paige pushes a loose strand of hair off her sweaty forehead, suddenly hot in the face; why isn’t he as much of a mess as she is? Didn’t he spare any effort to beat her?
“I hope,” Jaxon says to him in a saccharine voice, “that there are no hard feelings, Arcturus. After all, there are lessons to be learned in every defeat, wouldn’t you say?”
“Certainly.”
“And what might you have learned today?”
Jaxon clearly hopes to mortify the Rephaite a little further, but Arcturus is unperturbed.
“That if I am to be rewarded for victory and defeat in equal measure, I should continue to bet against you, White Binder.”
With that, he turns and follows Terebell to the changing rooms.
…
Paige catches up to him outside the arena. Even amid the crowds emptying from the massive lobby, it’s laughably easy to spot him, because he towers over everyone else. He’s standing under the striped awning, umbrella in hand, those strange tawny eyes fixed thoughtfully on the leaden sky. There’s a dark line on the pavement where the awning catches the rain, and his boots are lined up a precise ten centimetres away from it.
She comes to stand beside him, her freezing hands buried in her coat pockets.
“Hi.”
He glances down at her. “You are too late, I’m afraid. The other Seals have just left in a taxi.”
“I know. I told them to go on ahead.”
Pause.
“Listen,” she says. Her own voice is almost inaudible in the clamor of people all talking over one another, arguing and scolding children and waving down cabs, and beneath it all the steady drumming of rain. “You didn’t … throw the match, did you?”
Arcturus’s face betrays nothing.
“Why would I do such a thing?”
There is no humble way to say because my boss bet yours a dinner date. It would also be incredibly insulting. “I don’t know. You pretty well clobbered me the last time. I didn’t think I was that good.”
“Then you are better than you think you are.”
He says it like it’s the simplest thing in the world. Magnanimous bastard, she thinks, rather uncharitably. He was just as civil with her the last time they crossed paddles, when she’d challenged him with all the hubris of a sad, toga-wearing, epic-poetry-spouting Greek hero, and promptly been served her own ass.
“In that case,” she says carefully, “I guess you owe me dinner.”
“I suppose I do.”
He tilts his head back against the sky. Paige examines his profile from the corner of her eye.
“We could always falsify the evidence.”
“Evidence?”
“Yes. Photographic evidence. Jax’s idea, not mine.”
“Hmm. And I suppose if he is not presented with said evidence, he will continue to hold the unpaid debt over Terebell’s head as long as he lives.”
“Longer than that, knowing him,” Paige mutters. Jaxon would love nothing better than to become a poltergeist and harass everyone for eternity. “I’m just saying you’re not obligated to indulge in his lunacy.”
Arcturus looks back at her with unnerving directness. She resists the impulse to ask if his neck hurts from craning it down at lesser mortals like herself all the time.
He says, “I would not force my company on you for Terebell’s sake.”
“No, I know,” she says hurriedly. “I don’t have anything against the idea, do you?”
“Not at all.”
“Okay,” she says. “Great. It’s settled. I like spicy food,” she adds, almost without meaning to, “if – you know – you want to go somewhere with spicy food. Unless you have any allergies?”
He definitely looks amused now. “No. I have no allergies.”
“Good. That’s good.”
After another pause, Arcturus opens his umbrella and steps out into the rain. Paige reflects that he probably just decided to do the chivalrous thing and rescue her from her own babbling.
“I will be in touch,” he says.
She watches his dark figure retreat into the gray curtain, and when that fades, turns her gaze to a nearby tree with a full complement of bright gold leaves, shivering in the gale like something alive. It’s not a dinner she’s getting, she realizes, nor a date or even a chance to gloat over a rival athlete. No.
She is getting a rematch.
…
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Terebell Sheratan from The Bone Season.
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Given that Arcturus’ romances are:
Paige ‘Taller than average and filled with rage’ Mahoney,
Terebell ‘Tall like all Rephaim and wanted to die fighting’ Sheratan
and Kornephoros ‘canonical tallest Rephaite, tallest person in the entire series, and very angry’
it is possible to infer that Arcturus’ type is: Tall and Angry
#this is not a bone season quote#paige mahoney#arcturus#arcturus mesarthim#warden#terebell sheratan#terebellum#kornephoros#the bone season#the mime order#the song rising#the mask falling#tbs#tmo#tsr#tmf
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Will we get more time with Terebell in the remaining books? I find her really intriguing and I’d love to see her and Paige team up.
Yes!
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In The Mask Falling will we see more of Terebell?
No Terebell at all, I’m afraid. A good chunk of the main cast is missing from The Mask Falling, since Warden and Paige are in a different country, but you will see some familiar faces alongside the new characters. And you will learn more about Terebell, even if you don’t see her.
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Is there a significance/reason that when Paige sees into Warden's memories in TSR, it's *that* particular memory? Curious as to why it might have been at the forefront of his mind, as Terebell was his mate long ago and he's (presumably) interested in Paige now. He also has such a long history of memories to choose from! I don't think the memory upset Paige or made her jealous, but it seems an interesting choice? :)
No, it didn’t upset Paige at all. She does find his bond with Terebell challenging sometimes, mainly because he’s very loyal to her and that can bother Paige (e.g. when she has to serve drinks iin The Song Rising), but she’s not jealous of their romance. She understands that he had a very long past before he met her.
The memory of Terebell might seem a random one, but that meeting was a prelude to one of the defining moments of Warden’s existence. He’ll tell you about it in TBS4.
#sshannonauthor book asks#warden and paige#warden and terebell#arcturus and terebell#arcturus and paige#arcturus mesarthim#terebell sheratan#paige mahoney
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Why is Arcturus the only warden who is adressed by his ceremonial titleinstead of his nane when Terebell and Adhara Sarin are mainly refered to with their names? At first I thought it was because that is what Paige is used to calling him and since it for her has become his name,but in the colony all the humans called him Warden as well.
Paige has never met Adhara, but if she met her in person, she would be expected to address her as Warden.
The humans in the colony didn’t address Terebell as Warden because she no longer formally holds that title under Sargas law. She is the rightful (in her opinion) Warden of the Sheratan, because the Mothallath bestowed that title on her. Nashira revoked it after civil war. Consequently, Paige doesn’t call her Warden, because when Terebell properly introduced herself in The Mime Order, it was as ‘Terebellum, once Warden of the Sheratan, sovereign-elect of the Ranthen’.
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Terebell sounds like Terrible, and honestly, that perfectly embodies exactly how I feel about her.
I like her, but I know her backstory.
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Surely, surely Errai + Terebell must still be suspicious of Warden & Paige’s relationship b/c they’re smart enough to put two and two together: Nashira says Warden’s with a human and simultaneously he has a Golden Cord to that same human, indicating intimacy. Are they just quiet b/c it’s more convient to believe it’s not true? Or are there other motives too?
Oh, they’re suspicious, all right – but evidence is lacking, and for them to believe Nashira over Warden would be a betrayal of the Ranthen.
#sshannonauthor book asks#errai sarin#terebell sheratan#arcturus mesarthim#nashira sargas#warden and paige#arcturus and paige
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Does Nashira actually believe the lie she fed Paige via Jaxson, that Warden was ordered by Terebell to seduce her, or was it just a way to get to Paige? B/c I can imagine that would be Nashira's was of rationalising Warden's actions, unable to comprehend another reason to be romantically involved with a human.
I can’t tell you what Nashira believes. You need to interpret that for yourself.
#sshannonauthor book asks#nashira sargas#arcturus mesarthim#paige mahoney#jaxon hall#terebell sheratan
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God, it must be so awkward for Arcturus. His current lover is constantly butting heads with his old flame, who in turn is making life difficult for her. He respects them both and owes both his loyalty, so it must be hard. It always sucks when two people you like don't like each other.
Oh, it is. His whole life is just one agonising bucketload of awkward.
#sshannonauthor book asks#arcturus mesarthim#terebell sheratan#paige mahoney#the unholy trinity of awkward
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What do the Ranthen we've met so far (Terebell, Lucida, Errai) think of Paige? It seems like they respect her well-enough, but aren't very enthused about having to work with any human.
Maybe spoilers kinda.
Lucida likes Paige a lot, but feels a bit too embarrassed to stick up for her. (Lucida is from the final ‘wave’ of Rephaim before the Netherworld began rotting and was born into the war, so she feels she has less experience of humans than her fellow Ranthen.) They would be friends if Lucida got her confidence up.
Pleione doesn’t really like or dislike Paige.
Errai doesn’t like her one bit. Thinks she’s arrogant and doesn’t have enough respect for Rephaim.
Alsafi liked her towards the end. He came to have great respect for her endurance and self-sacrifice, which he hasn’t often seen in humans.
Terebell … well, I’d like to keep that one a mystery.
All of them have gained a touch more respect for Paige since her torture in the Archon.
#sshannonauthor book asks#terebell sheratan#lucida sargas#pleione sualocin#errai sarin#alsafi sualocin#the song rising spoilers#spoilers#spoiler
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Was it well known that Warden and Nashira had not formalised their union i.e. had sex? And did Terebell know? I feel like she'd have strong feelings on the matter.
Yes, it’s well-known. Terebell is aware.
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