Y’know what. That’s totally fair. But! To be fair to me! I listen to so many podcasts that are both gay AND set in space, so really you should’ve assumed it was in space. And welcome! Welcome to yelling about a bi space disaster detective lady!
Tag: the penumbra podcast
You may ask “Nava, why are you a patron if you’re not going to listen to the episodes early?” and the answer is because the Penumbra Podcast is a very good podcast and even though I am a wuss who procrastinates episodes bc I’m not ready I also enjoy all the extra content and scripts on the Patreon page and I like knowing that I’m supporting talented voice actors and creators and this post got away from me but the point is that I’m a wuss who is afraid of that episode title
here I am with gentle domesticity fluff and bickering! i blame @krshush and today’s @todaynureyevis
Nureyev blows a raspberry at him.
Juno looks up from his comms, and stares. “Did you seriously just-”
He does it again.
“Are you twelve?!”
“Dear, you know that I am right just admit-”
“No!” Juno is halfway to a laugh, turning around in Peter’s arms to face him properly. “No, you’re not and you know it! there’s no way they could have stolen something that big-”
Peter Nureyev, Master Thief, Homme Fatale, Man of Mystery, blows a raspberry at him. Again.
Juno can’t help but laugh, because really? “You can’t win an argument by-”
And again.
“Peter-” He doesn’t actually finish the sentence, too busy laughing.
Peter’s grin is wide enough to match Juno’s, and this is the man Juno loves, this one, with the carefree laugh and bright smile, who will absolutely resort to underhanded tactics to get what he wants. Underhanded tactics in this situation means ’acting like a child’ and what he wants is ‘for Juno to smile’.
He knows this, because when Peter drops a kiss onto his forehead he says “You look absolutely gorgeous when you laugh, Juno.”
Juno narrows his eyes, smile still tugging at his lips. “You’re still not right-”
“And you are no fun at all, what if-”
“No! It’s impossible! You can’t fit that in your pocket!”
They dissolve into merry bickering, and Juno forgets about the rest of the day, letting the sun filter in through the blinds and crawl across the room, staying right here in Peter Nureyev’s arms, because hell, it’s not like he’s got anywhere better to go.
a fool and a lie
Summary: It takes a very good lie, to lie to yourself. Or a particularly attractive one. (it’s just a whole lot of Peter Nureyev-flavoured Final Resting Place angst)
It’s when Juno is describing the Mars that
had changed, in that hotel, that the first doubt springs up.
Well.
Not the first.
Juno is a divine, gorgeous, hardened, and
awe-striking lady who didn’t even need some Martian pill to carve a
space out in Peter’s mind and take up residence there. He’s like
nothing else. And Peter knows Juno, at least a little bit. (You learn
things about a person while you’re stuck in a tomb together for so
long.)
He knows that Juno loves this city. Loves it even when he
hates it.
And Peter knows… He knows that Peter Nureyev isn’t
quite enough to spirit him away from it.
So he asks if Juno is
sure. Is he certain?
And he knows then, watching his dear,
sentimental detective lie to him, that Juno couldn’t leave this place
for good.
So his voice breaks as he hides the hurt behind words,
“I am so happy to hear you say it, Juno.”
And Peter
dons masks and names seamlessly and with ease, but this… This isn’t
much of a mask at all. It’s just him lying to himself.
“You
know Juno, call me a fool if you like,” he yawns, “but I
think I may have fallen in love with you.”
That
is no lie. Painful, and true. Both that he is a fool, and that
he is in love with Juno Steel.
“I… If you’re a fool that
makes two of us.”
It takes a very good lie, to lie to
yourself. Or a particularly attractive one.
And nothing
bewitches Peter Nureyev more than the beautiful lie of Juno Steel
running away with him for a life of decadence and passion and
adventure.
It still hurts when he leaves.
He hadn’t fallen
asleep, not truly, too focused on memorizing the feel of the moment,
savouring how it feels to hold Juno Steel, (if he opens his eyes he
will have to acknowledge that this is temporary, fleeting.) but
dozing just enough. He feels Juno leave his arms, and tells himself
that he’s just leaving to go to the washroom. It’s not a good lie,
not at all, and it crumbles as he hears the door open, as Juno
leaves.
“Juno?” He murmurs, blinking through the dark
to see him haloed by the light from the hotel hallway.
Juno
pauses for a second, looking back at him.
Maybe he’ll change his
mind, Peter thinks. Maybe he’ll come back to bed. Maybe.
And
then he steps out into the hallway.
And out of Peter’s
life.
And Peter has a promise to keep.
He did
promise.
So Peter Nureyev gets out of bed, gets dressed, gathers
his things, and goes to the door. And, oh… Let’s see, Rue Galileo
sounds like a good name. Rue Galileo steps through the door, leaving
Peter Nureyev’s broken foolish heart in that dusty red city the
postcards always wax poetic about.
But Hyperion City is greedy,
Peter has learned. Full of so many people, so many people all looking
for something, maybe it’s their next hit, the next job, the next
paycheck, their next victim, or maybe just happiness, a life
fulfilled. So many people in such a beautiful, terrifying, greedy
city.
And Peter wants to say that the city has stolen his heart,
like a wistful traveller thinking of some one-time destination. But
it’s not the city. It’s just one person who lives in it. Just one
lady, who is scarred and gorgeous, full of righteous anger and
exhausted despair. A goddess.
He surprised Peter at every turn,
entranced him, bewitched him. And he stole the heart of a master
thief.
Rue Galileo has never known how scar-torn skin was
soft beneath his hands, how calloused hands can feel as they cup his
jaw. Rue Galileo has none of these memories to try desperately to
forget. And Peter Nureyev… Peter Nureyev exists on Mars. Where
those memories lay.
That’s what he tells himself at least.
If
he tells it enough, it will stop sounding like a lie.
train in the night – ghostking (Herebeinsanity) – The Penumbra Podcast [Archive of Our Own]
Words: 2,886 Chapters: 1/1 Relationships: Juno Steel/Peter Nureyev, Rita & Juno Steel Spoiler Warnings: Post The Final Resting Place
Working in a Private Eye’s office means you have to be observant. And after so long being one Juno Steel’s secretary, Rita is pretty proud of her observation skills.
She saw how her boss got all droopy and solemn and give-me-a-case-so-I-can-run-away-from-my-feelings when that pretty secret agent fellow got arrested, and she saw his hand go to his pocket when he stared off into space sometimes, and she kept seeing him reading a slip of paper over and over, holding it like the wrong touch will crumble it to dust.
So she took an opportunity when it presented itself, and picked her boss’ pocket.
train in the night – ghostking (Herebeinsanity) – The Penumbra Podcast [Archive of Our Own]