Adina's Journal - Fic: Armistice (Jeeves & Wooster x Lord Peter Wimsey)
Stuff and Nonsense

Adina
Date: 2006-11-14 15:42
Subject: Fic: Armistice (Jeeves & Wooster x Lord Peter Wimsey)
Security: Public
Mood:creative creative
Tags:fiction, jeeves & wooster, wimsey

Yes, it's the sequel to Green Ice, or at least part of it. This is only the first part of a much longer story, but it stands on its own, at least for now. I have a bit more of it written, but this is the best stopping point, I think.



Jeeves was engaged in arranging bronze chrysanthemums in a bowl on the mantel when I emerged from the Wooster bedroom. "What ho!" I greeted him jauntily. Such was my mood that with any bird less dignified I might have biffed him on the shoulder, but that's just not the sort of thing you do with Jeeves. "What ho, what ho," I repeated.

"Good morning, sir," Jeeves said, repeating the salutation with which he had greeted me an hour before when he brought in the sausages.

"Topping morning, what?" I walked over to the window and might have flung open its draperies if Jeeves hadn't opened them himself some time previous.

"Most clement for November," Jeeves agreed.

"Especially after all the drizzle last week. Why does it always rain for Guy Fawkes, do you think?"

Jeeves finished with the flowers and gave the bowl a keen gaze, moving it finally three hairs to the left. "The Americans have the same complaint about their own Independence Day, I believe. It has been theorized that the smoke from gunpowder has an adverse effect on the weather."

"Tickles the clouds and make them let loose, you mean?"

"That is the general theory, sir," Jeeves stated with perhaps a hint of doubt in his voice. "Will you be lunching in today?"

"Much too top hole a day for that, don't you think?" I said, crossing to the mantle to steal one of the flowers for my buttonhole. "Make hay while the sun shines, don't they say? I thought I would toddle down to the Drones and see who's up for a spot of lunch."

Jeeves's hand intercepted mine before I could disarrange his flowers. "If I might suggest, sir, I believe this would be more appropriate." This was a species of red vegetation that appeared in his hand as if by magic. It was rather larger and redder than was the Wooster wont, but I have never known Jeeves to err in matters sartorial. If he has a fault it's that his tastes tend too far to the conservative, so if he thought this red cabbage leaf unexceptional then so it was.

"Right ho," I said after he had affixed the bally thing to my lapel. "Toodle-pip, then, Jeeves. If you want to totter down to the Junior Ganymede yourself feel free; I shan't need you."

"Very good, sir." Jeeves hesitated and looked at the clock. "Would you care for a whisky and soda first?" It was my turn to look at the clock, which read ten-thirty, earlier than is my wont regardless of what my Aunt Agatha might say. My look must have said it all. "Or perhaps another cup of tea?" he offered instead.

Jeeves's sudden impulse to provide the young master with liquid refreshment was rather rummy. "No need," I said with the cheery wave, heading for the great outdoors.

I had scarcely quit Berkley Square when two well-known figures turned the corner towards me, Tuppy Glossop and his uncle, Sir Roderick.

There was a time when the sight of Sir Roderick, the noted loony doctor, would have sent me leaping for the high hills, he and I having failed to click after he arrived at my flat to find it occupied by a plethora of cats, thanks to my cousins Eustace and Claude. He had thus determined that I was non compos mentis and unfit to marry his daughter Honoria, but an otherwise unfortunate night mutually spent with our faces covered in burnt cork had sparked an unlikely friendship. It was with a light heart then that I greeted them. "What ho, Tuppy! Sir Roderick!"

"Mr. Wooster." Sir Roderick was actually smiling, proving once again that he could be one of the lads once the ice was broken. Tuppy looked less pleased.

"Bertie!" he yelped. "What are you doing in London? I thought you would be down at Brinkley Court." B.C. is the residence of my good and deserving Aunt Dahlia, as sound an egg as ever chivvied a fox.

"Aunt Dahlia telephoned to say they were quarantined for the scarlet fever," I explained, wondering at his interest in my plans.

Sir Roderick chuckled. "That sounds like the excuse I once used--"

Tuppy interrupted what looked to be an interesting reminiscence. "No, I'm sure Mrs. Travers--" His voice trailed off at some thought known only to himself.

"Hildebrand and I are off to the Bellona Club for lunch," Sir Roderick inserted into what was threatening to become an awkward silence. "Would you care to join us if you are disengaged?" Hildebrand was the name that Tuppy's parents had provided the vicar at his christening, a piece of information that he naturally tried to keep quiet.

"Not an engagement to be seen, old bean," I said. "Lead on." The Bellona Club was new to me, but I trusted Sir Roderick to provide a good feed.

As we walked Sir Roderick rambled on about the Bellona Club and his membership in it, but I wasn't paying much attention, spending my time trying to figure out the concerned glances that Tuppy kept shooting me.

"--fought in the Boer War, though you wouldn't think to look at me now," Sir R. said. "Rose to captain before I took shrapnel to the left calf."

"Er, yes," Tuppy said. He opened his mouth and then closed it again, with a sideways look at Mrs. Wooster's bonny lad. He had the look of a man nerving himself up to bite an uncle's ear, inhibited by the presence of an onlooker. "Yes, um." He pasted a ghastly smile on his face. "Did your aunt say how Angela was, Bertie?" he asked in a rush.

The poor sap must have been more worried about his fiancée than I thought. "Tickety-boo," I reassured him. "Tickety-boo. Well, actually she didn't mention Angela, but she said only one of the maids caught it. She was pretty incensed about the quarantine, told me to sneak in anyway."

I may have forgotten to mention at the time that Tuppy and Sir R. were both wearing the same red flower with which Jeeves had garnished me, and now I'll be dashed if the doorman of the Bellona weren't sporting the bally thing as well. There must have been a special offer on them, a conspiracy amongst the gentlemen's gentlemen of London to save some dosh.

Once inside, Tuppy pulled Sir R. aside and I courteously studied one of the paintings on the wall to give him privacy to put the bite on. It had been years since I had had to depend on Uncle Willoughby's largesse, but I remembered the embarrassment of having to ask for an advance from time to time. Sir Roderick looked not unsympathetic, though why he looked at me I couldn't say, and the business was quickly completed.

Sir Roderick was still smiling but didn't look terribly happy, if you know the expression I mean, when he stepped forward. Tuppy must have bit him for a whacking good sum. Honeymoon money, perhaps? "Mr. Wooster--" His smile if anything was more forced. "Hildebrand has a...tiresome formality to conclude before lunch. Would you care to indulge me in a game of billiards while we wait?"

Billiards was exactly what I wanted to work up an appetite for lunch. "Capital idea, Sir Roderick."

The billiard room was deserted, a condition nearly unheard of at the Drones. Sir Roderick proved to be an acceptable player, if somewhat given to leisurely shots. One time he spent a solid minute studying his shot, the billiard room quiet enough that I could hear a church bell tolling somewhere in the distance. Shortly afterwards Tuppy rejoined us, looking solemn enough that I wondered if he hadn't been negotiating with a bookie rather than contemplating matrimony.

It was still early for lunch, so Tuppy and I played another game after Sir R. and I finished, and then I stood by and offered helpful advice while Tuppy played his uncle. By the time that round was over it was time to get outside some calories.

The dining room at the Bellona was pleasant enough, not as sprightly as the Drones, of course--one could not use a ballistic bread roll to punctuate and argument, one felt--but airy and well-appointed. The headwaiter was able to seat us without delay despite the growing crowd. Scarcely had we been seated when a beak at the next table turned around.

"Wooster, old man!" Flim gave the glad cry. "Good to see you again. You know my friend Freddy Arbuthnot?" he asked, waving to the chap at the table with him.

Oofy Prosser had introduced us once when I ran into them lunching at the Baribault, so I said hullo and then made the round of introductions at our table. Arbuthnot and Sir Roderick already knew each other, illustrating Jeeves's wheeze about it being a small world. They hadn't seen each other for a while, so the rest of the conversation was put on hold for a time as they asked how Old So-and-So was doing.

Flim and Arbuthnot were wearing the same ruddy flower as everyone else. Even the waiter, hovering to take our orders, was sporting one, looking like a splash of fresh blood on his chest. A rifle shot to the heart bleeds surprisingly little, the organ and the man dead before it can pump out much blood. Private Jones had looked like that, just a tidy red spot and a calm white face. I couldn't believe he was dead until I turned him over and saw the mangled mess the bullet had made exiting his back.

Lieutenant Wimsey turned to look at me, all the blood leaving his face like it had the private's. He was dead; they were all dead, all the corpses with their neat little bullet wounds, waltzing around the room in nightmarish parody of life. One of the corpses leaned towards me and I jerked back, remember the clammy feel of dead flesh. My chair overset, dropping me backwards. I think I screamed when Lt. Wimsey's body fell on top of me. Knowing the Germans would hear I forced myself to silence as I tried in vain to struggle out from under his weight.

I felt a prick on my left shoulder, a sting like a bee. How strange that that would hurt more than a bullet to the heart. My strength was ebbing, the lights dimming. I could only hope Sgt. White and the boys would forgive me for being so late.

Just before the lights went out for the last time I heard a voice speak.

"I always carry a sedative on Armistice Day."

***

That's all for now. I would like to thank, if that's the right word *grin*, [info]the_blue_fenix for the suggestion that led to this story.

Post A Comment | 91 Comments | Add to Memories | Tell a Friend | Link



Page 1 of 2
<<[1] [2] >>
buddleia: Birds Uphill
User: [info]buddleia
Date: 2006-11-14 20:58 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:Birds Uphill

Oh, ow ow, I said it before, but poor Bertie. I love your 'kindly conspiracy', and the way Bertie's perception of the poppies suddenly shifts. I loved the premise of 'Green Ice', and this is a sharp and moving follow-up.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-14 21:37 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Thank you kindly. I'm glad I could cause so much pain. *grin* It gets worse from here, though!

Reply | Parent | Thread | Expand | Link



Rhi: Ingrid
User: [info]gryphonrhi
Date: 2006-11-14 21:26 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:Ingrid

*Ouch*. I was starting to worry that was what was going on. Poor Bertie. Hell, poor Peter -- I hesitate to think what Bertie's expression was.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-14 21:34 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

If I might ask, when did you start to suspect?

Reply | Parent | Thread | Expand | Link



Daegaer: OTP by slightlights
User: [info]daegaer
Date: 2006-11-14 22:00 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:OTP by slightlights

Oh, oh. Oh, Bertie.

This is just so good.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-14 22:06 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

It gets worse from here, as the Lemony Snicket books keep warning.

Glad you liked it, and thanks for the insta-rec.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Ellen Fremedon
User: [info]ellen_fremedon
Date: 2006-11-14 22:24 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Ow. Ow. Ow. Ow.

This is excellent-- all the hurt of Green Ice concentrated in one poignant little story. Ow.

(Here on [info]daegaer's rec, btw.)

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:10 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

That seems to be the common reaction: "Ouch!" Glad you liked it.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



lynnmonster
User: [info]lynnmonster
Date: 2006-11-14 22:43 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I'm so glad to see more from the world of "Green Ice" -- this is very powerful, and the narrative voice is just right!

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:11 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Thanks. Getting the narrative voice right is the hardest part about Wodehouse fic.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



The RCK
User: [info]therck
Date: 2006-11-14 22:50 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Oh, ow. Beautifully done.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:11 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Glad you liked it.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Martha: Lord Peter
User: [info]saffronhouse
Date: 2006-11-14 23:48 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:Lord Peter

Oh, heartbreaking! Lovely, lovely movement from poor Bertie's cheerful oblivion to his unendurable memories.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:12 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

It's going to be a while before we see cheerful oblivion in this story, I'm afraid. (Actually, I revel in it, bwa-ha-ha!)

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



A Certain Ms Une
User: [info]slemslempike
Date: 2006-11-15 00:23 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

That was really amazing.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:12 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Thanks.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Irresponsible Jones: video confessional
User: [info]lemmealone
Date: 2006-11-15 00:47 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:video confessional

Oh my God. I've been waiting patiently for this ever since I read Green Ice so long ago, and it's... *hands*... oh my GOD. The title told me what was going on before I started reading, but even with that foreknowledge the tension just ratcheted higher and higher until. God. Bertie's mind slipped so quietly from flowers to blood and my insides turned to absolute ice. Oh, wow. And there's going to be MORE.

This had made my week.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:18 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I'm glad you like the story and especially glad that the "break" worked for you, I was a little concerned that it was too abrupt or something.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



she praised god for the creation of the heights
User: [info]naomichana
Date: 2006-11-15 03:20 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I loved "Green Ice," and I'm delighted that you're working on a sequel. This certainly feels promising, with hints of a plot back in there somewhere. (I friended you just now so I could keep up with any developments; I hope you don't mind.)

Apropos of other comments, if you want your readers to be in suspense about the red flowers, I'd think you'd have to leave out the current title and the mention of November. And possibly publish it some other time of year. But most of the LPW fans will pick up on it by "Bellona Club" regardless. Of course, I spent the entire excerpt on pins and needs about when Bertie was going to figure it out, so I guess there's suspense either way. ;)

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:31 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I wasn't particularly trying to keep people in suspense about the red flowers as long as it doesn't make Bertie's obliviousness seem forced. The title, the Bellona Club, the poppies, the reference to Guy Fawkes Day the previous week, even the mention of the time, half past ten--I was a little worried that I was hitting people over the head with it.

I don't mind anyone friending me (or defriending, for that matter).

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Alexandra Lynch
User: [info]alexandralynch
Date: 2006-11-15 03:38 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Ohhh. Wow. Thank you. Do please keep writing. Please.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 16:32 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

More on the way, don't worry.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



User: [info]lastscorpion
Date: 2006-11-15 04:03 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:laurab1 Lois Lane red Any More?

Oh, my goodness, that's gorgeous! Absolutely beautiful!

I'm so glad you're doing more in that Green Ice 'verse!

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 17:43 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Thank you.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



The Pistachio Cowboy: shy jeeves
User: [info]tboy
Date: 2006-11-15 08:52 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:shy jeeves

Very, very moving.

Well done. So glad to see your continuation of a most memorable story.

I look forward (ie can hardly wait) for further developments, as you've mentioned above.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 17:37 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I'll work on it as fast as I can. Glad you liked it.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Damned Colonial
User: [info]damned_colonial
Date: 2006-11-15 09:16 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Oh, wonderful! Even better knowing what happens at the Bellona Club on that day. I presume it's the same year? I don't have my Sayers around to crosscheck events.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-15 17:37 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

No, it's not the same year. The "unpleasantness" was 1924, as I recall, and this is 1921, the autumn after "Green Ice." I think one crisis at a time is sufficient for the poor club.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



rosemary_green
User: [info]rosemary_green
Date: 2006-11-15 21:35 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

A sequel! I enjoyed all the little clues about the day, and waiting to see when Bertie would pick up on them. It's great to see more of this story..looking forward to whatever may happen next.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-17 21:57 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Glad you're enjoying it. I'll get the next piece up as soon as I can--I just finished this year's Yuletide story, so I have no excuse.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Gramarye: Foyle's War: Sam in thought
User: [info]gramarye1971
Date: 2006-11-16 01:26 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:Foyle's War: Sam in thought

...oh, wow. I wish I could be more coherent than that right now, but just...wow. Small wonder I've seen this story recced up and down my friends-list. Marvellously done.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-17 21:58 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Glad you liked it.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



themolesmother
User: [info]themolesmother
Date: 2006-11-16 12:55 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Here via a rec from [info]nineveh_uk. Read Green Ice yesterday evening and am delighted to discover a sequel.

It's a wonderful premise and I like what you've done with it.

Have friended you. Hope that's OK.

MM

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-17 21:59 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I'm glad you liked both "Green Ice" and this. You're more than welcome to friend me, too.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



you're always running into people's unconscious: bertie hiding
User: [info]innocentsmith
Date: 2006-11-16 15:07 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:bertie hiding

Meep! Oh, poor darling Bertie. "Green Ice" was one of the first fics I read in the J&W fandom, and I'm thrilled to have a follow-up. And lord, it's already wonderful. I knew something had to be coming, but the turning point with the poppy was just...devastating.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-17 22:01 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Thanks. I'm glad the turning point worked for you, I was a little worried it was too abrupt.

Love your icon, by the way. I discovered when writing "Green Ice" just why Bertie always wound up behind a sofa or in a cupboard at least once in every story--it's the only way for a first-person narrator to tell about all the things he shouldn't be hearing!

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Karin: Lord Peter Wimsey
User: [info]hangingfire
Date: 2006-11-16 15:18 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:Lord Peter Wimsey

*wibbles terribly* Oh, very well done, and absolutely devastating at the end there. I read "Green Ice" at [info]innocentsmith's recommendation several months back (have been a Wimsey fan since I was twelve) and loved it; it's marvelous to see a followup. Your handling of both the Wimsey and J&W is fabulous.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-17 22:02 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Thank you. Combining J&W and Wimsey was more of a challenge than I expected at first. Glad it works for a fan of both.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



the_blue_fenix
User: [info]the_blue_fenix
Date: 2006-11-16 22:55 (UTC)
Subject: Oh. My.

Torturific. It's strangely touching that it's Sir Roderick who gets delegated to distract Bertie at 11:11. I know it makes sense from sheer professional qualifications, but it's also a side of the man that we never saw in canon.

I can't decide if it's Sir Roderick, Lord Peter, or (a suddenly appearing) Jeeves who has the last line of dialog; I guess Sir R. makes the most sense.

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-11-17 22:09 (UTC)
Subject: Re: Oh. My.

Sir Roderick is an interesting character. When he first appears to scotch Bertie's engagement to Honoria he's a rather weird bird, definitely a bit on the neurotic side, with a phobia of cats and a digestion unable to handle "anything but the most mild of foods." As time goes by he becomes more and more one of the boys. I suspect Jeeves passed on his pick-me-up recipe to Sir R.'s valet; it's the only reasonable explanation.

It's Sir R. who carries the sedative on Armistice Day. With all the recovering (or not) shellshock cases at the time it seemed reasonable. Jeeves was trying to slip Bertie a mickey finn before he left the flat, however.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Expand | Link



Namaste
User: [info]namasteyoga
Date: 2006-12-09 22:19 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I'm late on this, since real life interrupted fic reading for a while, but I'm glad to see you taking this concept on again. It's an intriguing interpretation of WWI with Bertie, and Wodehouse's continual ignoring of the realities of life.

I'll agree with the others that the shift in Bertie's perception of the flower is very well done. Just curious ... did you intentionally have that shift happen when he sees someone of a lower social status? The type of person who was cannon fodder in the trenches? (Not that other classes didn't pay the price in the war, but let's face it, they weren't seen there as often.)

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2006-12-10 03:54 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

No, having the final trigger being the waiter wasn't deliberate, or at least it wasn't conscious. It would have been a great idea if I'd thought of it, though! *grin* Glad it works for you.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Vindictive euphemism
User: [info]castrucani
Date: 2007-01-13 07:07 (UTC)
Subject: Armistice

This is wonderful - well, horrible. But excellent. I'd been thinking of "Green Ice" lately. Having forgotten both title and author, I was worried about my chances of ever finding it again. And then I ran across this - thank you!

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2007-01-19 16:34 (UTC)
Subject: Re: Armistice

I'm sorry to be so long in replying. I'm glad you liked it, horrible as it was. It's only going to get worse, I'm afraid. I should be posting the next bit as soon as I find a Spinoza quote or two.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



wemblee: my fandom has been co-opted by a corpora
User: [info]wemblee
Date: 2007-01-19 11:34 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:my fandom has been co-opted by a corpora

Even the waiter, hovering to take our orders, was sporting one, looking like a splash of fresh blood on his chest.

Brilliant.

Because the Bertie-voice is so strong throughout, you get up to that line, completely buying it as a Woosterism, and instantly you're thrust into his nightmare and the transition is so jarring yet so smooth and perfect and right.

Brilliant.

(My icon feels a little tasteless, with a story like this, but it's the only J&W icon I've got.)

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2007-01-19 16:37 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

Glad you liked that transition, I sweated bullets (so to speak) over getting it just right.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



cousin_giry
User: [info]cousin_giry
Date: 2007-01-20 15:44 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I have read your Green Ice and was delighted to see this follow-up. It is a very sharp little story, going ever so quietly from the nice red of the poppy to the black-red of blood and war.

Does Sir Roderick know about Bertie's experiences?

Reply | Thread | Link



Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2007-01-20 16:04 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)

I'm glad you liked it.

Sir R. only knows what Tuppy tells him during this story, when Tuppy takes him aside and asks him to keep Bertie occupied during the one minute of silence at 11:11AM marking the end of World War I. (Bertie, of course, assumes that Tuppy is asking his uncle for a loan.) In the time available I suspect all he could say is that Bertie doesn't remember the War, that they try to keep him out of London for the armistice comemoration, and can Sir R. please get him to the billiards room and distract him.

Reply | Parent | Thread | Link



Ninja Kitty: Lord Peter - Pure Wimsey
User: [info]beadattitude
Date: 2007-01-27 15:33 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:Lord Peter - Pure Wimsey

::gasps::

I'm just stunned that I missed this in the normal flow of things. You're on my flist for crying out loud. I must be more behind in entries that I ever, ever anticipated.

Okay, gonna go read it now. I think it's probably going to make me cry, but it'll be totally worth it.

I'm a little scared, though, imagining what Bertie might have seen. Better hold on to one of the cats while I read it, since J is out of town. ::steels self::

Reply | Thread | Link



Page 1 of 2
<<[1] [2] >>
Browse
Journal
Links