[identity profile] ninedaysaqueen.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] queensthief
I was re-reading parts of The Thief today, and a small piece of chapter six caught my eye.

This is the chapter in which Gen tussles with Ambiades during the outdoor bath, then takes the older boy's expensive comb from his pack. A sudden realization struck me. Did Gen pick up Ambiades's comb to purposely rouse the Magus's suspicions? The Magus knew full well of Ambiades's financial state. The Magus would have known his apprentice couldn't afford such a fancy comb. Not if the boy wasn't obtaining money from shady sources. Was Gen trying to point this out to the Magus in this scene? Did Gen already know of Ambiades's betrayal? But... Perhaps I am just overreaching, and he simply had messy hair.

Opinions, please.

P.S.: If Gen did do it on purpose that disturbs me a bit. To think he can reveal someone's darkest secret just by picking up a comb.

*shudders*
 

Date: 8/17/09 01:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] viviolo.livejournal.com
That... is a really good point. I had thought he was just taking something and getting caught on purpose to let the whole group know that he was still nobody's pet, in a little moment that had nothing to do with the quest, and everything to do with his vanity. BUT this theory far more devious, so I approve.

I've held that Gen definitely knew that Ambiades was going to betray them for quite a while. However, the Magus was not likely to believe him, so he kept it to himself. Maybe he finally just got so irritated with Ambiades obviousness as a traitor that he had to do something, and stole the comb in a fit of pique. (Because I still like to think Gen does things 90% of the time because of random mood swings.)

Hmm, wasn't there some aside where Gen compared everyone's cloaks and their apparent quality? Did that come before the comb moment? That's probably when he could have discerned Ambiades' financial state.

(P.S. I love you for having a Skip Beat! icon.)

Date: 8/17/09 02:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keestone.livejournal.com
I don't think so. The comb incident and the "lord of rags and tatters" comment come at the same time (p.90 in the 1st ed) before the mentions of treason (p. 113) and the "who else are you serving" comment that was "a casual dig" but "hit a target". So, the comb and cloak along with Ambiades' background are clues that get put together later when one spy recognizes another. But, as far as Gen is concerned, he's there for one purpose . . . the Gift . . . and smoking out spies might get in the way of that. If the Magus figured out that Ambiades was a spy, he might have changed his plan.

As far as stealing the comb goes, it was useful, there, and of high quality. I don't think stealing the comb was as strategic as stealing the pocket knife and making sure he had something to tie his hair back with.

Date: 8/17/09 04:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keestone.livejournal.com
Well, he did steal the comb. Of course he's going to dissemble. :)

He has a habit of stealing valuable things from people he's annoyed with. Using the comb could as easily be a manner of flaunting it when he can't dedicate it on the altar to Eugenides. Ambiades would probably lose face if he made a stink about it, even if it hadn't been more valuable than he should be able to afford. I don't recall much in the way of clues to Ambiades' poverty before that scene.

There are enough in-character reasons for the actions and reactions for me to accept the narrative comment later that Gen and Ambiades "had exchanged our information involuntarily beside the dystopia" (p. 210), so Gen wouldn't have been clued in enough to suspect Ambiades of being much other than an unlikable snob earlier.

Date: 8/17/09 05:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] viviolo.livejournal.com
Haha, it's hilarious that the cloak moment actually exists! Because I totally thought it was a product of my fevered imagination while I was typing it up. (I haven't read The Thief in a while, can you tell?)

Yay, Skip Beat! fan! And I like that your icon shows their ridiculous height difference, hee. *ships madly, though a tiny, dark corner of her heart thinks that Kyoko/Shou is cute too ;____;*

Oh, I've tried to get others into it too (like [livejournal.com profile] zumie_ashlen! It's very hard to convince people that it's not just another tired shoujo retread. But it really isn't, since the the female characters are actually allowed to kick butt. For instance, consider the absolute best part about the manga/anime, the concentration of pure awesome that is Kyoko! Dear, lovely Kyoko, who probably wouldn't be at all out of place in a horror movie. As the monster. <333

*/end rant*

Date: 8/17/09 05:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
Haven't had a chance to read very much... really sorry. I swear I haven't give up on it.

Date: 8/17/09 05:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] viviolo.livejournal.com
I don't know, the "who else are you serving" jab seems oddly specific for Gen to have just pulled out of thin air. I would contend that he's had his suspicions for while (since the comb!), and that they're just now being confirmed by Ambiades' overreaction.

Date: 8/17/09 05:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
He has a habit of stealing valuable things from people he's annoyed with.

She liked to take the things people were most proud of... People were careful not to offend her.


FAMILY RESEMBLANCE, METHINKS!

Date: 8/17/09 05:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
I like this theory - but I think Gen tells us himself he wasn't certain Ambiades was a traitor until they fought by the dystopia (the fight is on pg. 112, but Gen mentions it on 210). So I don't know...

But, as I'm rereading the arguments, this does make sense. It would be just like Gen to try and get Ambiades in trouble. I doubt Gen thought it was as serious as it was ("but I'd assumed he was taking money from an enemy of the Magus' " pg. 177)... but he probably didn't want to help the Magus, either... Oh, Gen. So unfathomable.

Date: 8/17/09 08:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keestone.livejournal.com
"Who else are you serving" is a pretty direct riposte to Ambiades' jab, which I think did hit home a lot harder than Ambiades expected because Gen was serving someone other than himself, and had put himself through months of prison for it. He's still got a temper like gunpowder, and pretty sharp intuition. I agree that the comb was a big clue, but I don't think Gen had enough info to put things together at the time he stole the comb. It could easily have been be a treasured gift. It's the recognition in the "who else are you serving" exchange that slots the pieces together.

Gen's long game is pretty sophisticated here, but I think it's in these exchanges, in his learning to keep his temper some in order not to blow his cover, that he's developing the subtlety we'll see in QoA and KoA.

Date: 8/17/09 08:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keestone.livejournal.com
I bet it's a personality trait most of the Thieves of Eddis had too. :)

Date: 8/17/09 10:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] etv13.livejournal.com
I've always found that description of his mother a bit disquieting. Much as I love Gen, I think I would have hated her.

Date: 8/17/09 10:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
Really? She sounds so much like Gen - who is also very nasty to people he doesn't like. No matter how much we love him, he isn't nice.

Date: 8/18/09 04:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] etv13.livejournal.com
Well, the author stacks the deck in his favor, because most of the people we see him being nasty to aren't very nice theselves. I can't offhand think of any examples where we're shown Gen treating people badly -- especially to the extent of permanently depriving them of the things they're most proud of -- just because he's personaly offended by them. But I think there's a reason, beyond cousinly neutrality, why Helen isn't wholly on Gen's side in his battles with his cousins.

Date: 8/18/09 05:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
I was under the impression his mom did the same thing - stealing the jewelry of people who were over-proud. The word, "flaut" makes me think that.

Date: 8/18/09 05:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] etv13.livejournal.com
Well, Gen's thieving, to the extent it is thieving and not actually espionage, is the least attractive aspect of his character, and if he stole my favorite earrings, I might hate him, too. And the thought of people having to be careful not to offend his mother, for fear of losing the thing they most valued, grates on me.

I wonder if Eugenidies the Thief-God would actually be angry at a victim who had the chutzpah to steal their stuff back from his altar.

Date: 8/18/09 12:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rosalui.livejournal.com
I honestly don't think he did it on purpose... in a way, he wanted the trip to go smoothly so he could get at the stone... if Ambiades had been revealed as a traitor at any time, it might have changed the Magus's plans for a while....

....Oh no, a fic is eating my brain to be written now. D:

Date: 8/18/09 01:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] savetheworld42.livejournal.com
I agree that Gen was probably trying to prove himself by taking the comb. He wanted to show that he didn't have to depend on anyone else for his own needs. Either that, or he just has a habit of using whatever he needs, regardless of whether they belong to him.

Date: 8/18/09 04:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
That's Lady Jane for you. I'm trying to explain what I mean in little, unclear comments, and she goes off to write an essay on it. ;-)

Well said, Lady Jane!!!

Date: 8/18/09 04:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
I agree with what Lady Jane said - I expect Gen's mom didn't like people picking on her either, and... she retaliated. I'm not saying either of them is innocent, but I do think the people they stole from probably deserved it, just like Breia did.

Date: 8/18/09 04:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
I'll try the anime - I've been having trouble manuvering the manga, and I don't know if that's my computer, the website, or my own ineptitude. ;-)

Date: 8/18/09 06:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] etv13.livejournal.com
Nobody has enough information to form an accurate judgment of Gen's mother's character; we're told very little about her, and what little we are told isn't entirely consistent. I said I found what Gen said about his mother stealing the things people were most proud of "disquieting" and I do. Gen has told Sophos that his mother was never the Queen's Thief -- she died before her father, and the title passed directly to him. There's nothing to suggest that she was isolated and despised, or picked on by anyone. To the contrary, as you point out, "'She was a favorite at the court and was called Queen Thief but not Queen's Thief. They said she stole people's hearts away. She certainly stole their jewels and wore them herself or sometimes dedicated them. She liked to take the things that people were most proud of. So if you flaunted your new emeralds, you were likely to see them next on Eugenides' altar, and once dedicated they were irretrievable. People were careful not to offend her.'" There's nothing there to suggest that anyone picked on her, that she only stole from people who had offended her, or that she was justified in stealing "the things that people were most proud of." To the contrary, the passage says people loved her and were afraid of her. I don't think there's anything "simplistic" about finding that disquieting. I also don't think you'd be all that philosophical if somebody stole your favorite, valuable earrings, that were perhaps a gift from your lover, or a family heirloom. I mean, "Oh, fine, I deserved that?" Really? My mother had nearly all of her jewelry stolen by thieves who got in using a realtor's lockbox, and thirty years later I can still remember her cry of dismay when she discovered the loss. (I still miss those jade and gold bracelets, too.)

Gen is a complicated, flawed, but ultimately heroic character. Being a thief -- an actual thief, and not the Queen's Thief, or a secret agent -- is a flaw in his character. It's understandable that he stole things from his cousins, under the circumstances, but it is not admirable, and I don't think MWT intends us to think of it as admirable. He outgrows that aspect of his character pretty early in the series; I don't think he actually steals anything from anyone after The Thief. What he's doing in Attolia's palace is more like espionage (or stalking), and of course "stealing" the Magus or the Queen of Attolia is not the equivalent of stealing jewelry.

When I asked about Eugenides the god, I wasn't asking why people didn't take their jewelry back. They didn't think the gods are real -- but we know they are. I was speculating on what the actual god would think about somebody daring enough to steal from his altar. Gen eats the bread left for the gods, and nothing bad happens, right?



Date: 8/18/09 08:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] etv13.livejournal.com
Well, as I said in my reply to Lady Jane, I don't think there's any evidence that she was picked on. And I think morally it's highly problematic to say that people deserve to have their things, especially "the things they were most proud of," stolen. That a picked-on kid retaliates in the most effective way he can is one thing, but that an adult woman, widely popular, demonstrates by her willingness to steal valuable things from you that you'd best not offend her is quite another. Gen's mother pretty clearly was not a pariah; she was the wife of the king's highly respected brother and a favorite at court. If someone were rude to her, there were plenty of more appropriate ways she could have dealt with it. Stealing their jewelry and wearing it? Look what that is saying: I can openly steal from you, flaunt my power and status publicly, and you can't do anything about it. I can't imagine what one of her in-laws or anyone else could do to "deserve" that, and I think it's pretty detestable.

Remember Gen stole Ornon's sheep. He was apparently pretty offended by something Ornon had done. Ornon turns out to be a pretty decent guy. Did he really "deserve" to have his sheep stolen? And that one seems much more like a prank than what Gen's mother was up to.

Date: 8/19/09 12:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keestone.livejournal.com
From the little description of his mother that we get, I imagine her as having Gen's wit and edge, but also the kind of charisma that Helen and Agape have.

I can't help but want to like someone who would dance on the rooftops of the palace.

Date: 8/19/09 02:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zougla.livejournal.com
I haven't read the book in a while, but I would tend to err on the side of, it's something the author was aware of and trying to set up, and the characters just "fall" onto it sort of by luck, and that this then propels the plot forward.

Gen is pretty cunning, but I'm not convinced that 50% of his cunning isn't just good luck and good allies/friends.

Date: 8/19/09 03:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thelasteddis.livejournal.com
It's not admirable - I agree that thieving just because she wants to was bad. I was under the impression that you thought Gen's thieving was ok, while his mom's wasn't. That would have bothered me.

I think a lot of the Thieves are under the impression that they are in charge of dealing out punishment - so even if they're not, both Gen and his mom are at least under the impression that they're in the right. :-)

Date: 8/19/09 07:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] openedlocket.livejournal.com
I missed waaaay to many posts...anyway: I think he did it half on purpose. I can't really elaborate on that as I am being chased by Time. I'll get to explaining that soon though.

Date: 8/19/09 08:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] etv13.livejournal.com
No, no, I never meant to suggest that Gen's thieving was okay, just that it was (sort of) excusable in light of his age and circumstances, which are very different from his mother's.

My sense of what the Thieves' mission was is "serving Eddis," and that they're more like intelligence agents than actual thieves. (The Magus describes the "current Thief" as "someone exalted.") That is, they have all the skills of thieves, the dexterity and agility and ability to move through crowds and palaces unnoticed, and pick pockets and the like, but they're supposed to use those skills in the service of Eddis, not to satisfy their own personal desires. Gen in the actual time of the books, as opposed to Eddis's memories or other flashbacks to when he's a pre-teen or young adolescent, is very much in that mode. In The Thief, he's on a mission for Eddis -- the realm of Eddis as well as his cousin, Helen, both of which are under threat from Sounis. He talks about stealing earrings, but I don't think in the time of the books, he actually does that; indeed, he does the opposite, giving Attolia earrings. (How I love the use of those earrings! Does anybody here know Red Adam's Lady, where there's a similar device with the heroine's use of the hero's name to signify that she's really his wife at the point where he's in the deepest trouble at the hands of his enemies?) In The Queen of Attolia, there's plainly a personal element in the way he keeps going back to Attolia's palace, but Eddis has asked him to do it, too, he isn't just there on a personal frolic. In the books, we never see Gen stealing in retaliation, or out of some personal whim; the things he steals are needed tools for his mission. It's interesting, and maybe a little ironic under the circumstances, that Attolia imposes on Gen the traditional punishment for a thief, cutting off a hand, rather than the punishment for a spy, which is hanging or shooting. It's spying that he's really "guilty" of.

Date: 8/19/09 04:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zumie-ashlen.livejournal.com
DARNIT I'M ALMOST HALFWAY THROUGH STOP PRESSURING ME

*replies eons late*

Shou is fantastic because I love fail-y characters (hence my love of Costis, maybe?). But Kyoko/Ren is cute too. Actually, I just want a show about Shou failing at everything. I support that.

And damn you guys have The Thief memorized or something, I barely remembered the comb thing just reading this. :X

Date: 8/21/09 12:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beatlelove927.livejournal.com
And I love you for having a Glee icon!

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