Adina's Journal - Fic: Green Ice: Conclusion
Stuff and Nonsense

Adina
Date: 2005-03-22 10:20
Subject: Fic: Green Ice: Conclusion
Security: Public
Mood:creativecreative
Tags:fiction, jeeves & wooster
"Green Ice" is now finished.

Title: Green Ice
Fandom: Jeeves and Wooster x Lord Peter Wimsey
Rating: G or PG, I guess
Status: Complete

Part I
Part II
Part III



***

I woke in the dark, in silence. The Germans had stopped shelling, which meant that we must have stopped their advance finally, that or our lines had collapse completely, and they could advance without the walking barrage. But no, that was defeatist talk and even in the privacy of my own thoughts I could not allow that.

The lamp had gone out. I must have fallen asleep at my desk, writing the endless letters. I could perhaps find it in the dark, I knew exactly where it was hanging over my desk, but I didn't want to risk stumbling over one of the men, my men, in the dark. When the sun came up enough light would filter through cracks and shell holes for me to see the way. I had plugged what I could lest the Germans see my feeble lamplight, but enough remained to find the lamp, though not enough that I could write without the lamp.

Writing the letters to the men's families was the worst part. They were all heroes, of course. Never mind Dickens, killed by chlorine gas in the latrine with his pants about his ankles. It sounded like a joke, a rude joke never to be told in polite company. For his parents, for his sweetheart waiting for him to come home and marry her, he died with a rifle in his hands, fearlessly facing the enemy.

How far had I gotten before I fell asleep? I remembered finishing Sergeant White's letter: I gave him the right last words, "God bless the king! Tell my mother I love her!" Gone was the weeping and swearing, the smell of shit from his perforated intestines. He died peacefully, in no pain, boldly looking into the next world.

It wasn't lying, an Oxford man never lied, at least not about important things. It was the death he deserved. A classical education gave me the mot juste to comfort a grieving family, the proper quotations to eulogize a heroic death. There was no unpleasantness, never any unpleasantness. The Crown had given me the command of a company after I had taken a First in literature, perhaps knowing I would need this skill.

There were thirty-eight letters to write, nearly a third of the company. I could remember each of them if I tried. Had I finished all of them before falling asleep? The relief, the hope, was almost unbearable. If I was finished I could rest, really rest for the first time since the Germans overran our position.

The silence was broken by the sound of footsteps while I was still trying to enumerate the dead and their letters. I lay back, hoping the Germans would mistake me for one of the men. They had come once before, but I had hid. There was no time to hide now. I could only close my eyes, lie still, and hope that if they shot me our side would re-take the bunker and find the letters.

"Is he still unconscious?" The words were English, but the accent American. I had to wonder how old the speaker was--the boy sounded like a woman!

"Could be," another American voice said, older this time. They were Allies, but something in the tone I didn't trust. If they were deserters, battlefield looters, an Allied officer was the last thing they would want to see. My sidearm was missing, a careful exploration revealed, and while I didn't want to shoot looters, still less did I want to be shot by them. "You sapped him pretty hard," the man continued with a note of complaint.

"He saw you! You walked out into the hall like a total guffin, without even looking! Should I have let him raise the alarm?"

"Of course not. I just don't want to add a murder charge if they nab us, that's all."

"He's not dead, see? He's breathing," the boy said. I exerted every ounce of control to avoid stiffening in alarm. They knew I wasn't a corpse; I could only hope they didn't decide to correct the oversight on the part of the Germans. "You need to relax, honey bunch. We have the necklace, and with Bertie missing they'll assume he took it."

"You'd better get back to that mansion before the quality return, then." The man dropped into a stuffy English accent for those two words, the tone more sarcastic than respectful.

"Oh, no," the boy said. "Bertie kidnapped me, doncha know. His dear aunt will receive a ransom note from him in a day or two."

The man chuckled. "You're wicked, Charley, just wicked. You think she'll pay?"

"Probably not." I could imagine the shrug I heard in the boy's voice. "It'll confuse the trail some more either way."

The machinations of the deserters was nothing that would help the Kaiser, but as a British officer I had the duty to prevent lawlessness among the troops. I was contemplating how I could disable them both without my sidearm when the door burst open. An inarticulate cry of rage followed by the sound of a struggle convinced me to risk opening my eyes a slit.

A lamp set on a shelf near the door allowed me to see that I was no longer in the trenches, but in a cellar of some sort, apparently belonging to a farmhouse. Two men, one older, perhaps in his late-twenties, the other younger, were engaged in a fight while another figure looked on. The third figure turned and I realized that she was a woman, not the boy I had assumed. She might have been the owner of the farmhouse, though she didn't look or sound like the country-women I had encountered.

The younger man gained the upper hand, forcing the older back against the cellar wall, attempting to choke him while pounding his head against the stones. The younger man's back was to the woman, so he never saw her draw a sap from somewhere in her clothing and aim it for his head. Only chance saved his skull as he jerked to the side, the sap landing on his collar. The blow was sufficient to make him lose his grip on the older man and sink to the floor in pain, however. I could sympathize, having cracked my collarbone once in a riding accident, or at least I would have sympathized if I could have been certain that I hadn't just witnessed a falling out amongst thieves.

The older man stepped away from the fallen man with a look of mingled relief and contempt. "Took you long enough," he growled at the woman. I recognized his voice as the one who had been talking to the boy--the woman--before.

"I had to wait until I could get a clear shot," she said. "Fine lookout I'd be in if I knocked you out instead of him."

"Great." He reached a hand up to finger what I imagined must be a rather sore neck. "So what do we do with two of them now?" He turned towards me and I quickly closed my eyes again.

"Myrtle!" the man on the floor cried. It took me a moment to realize that must be the woman's name, that he wasn't just mangling French profanity. "You don't have to do this. I don't care what you've done in the past, I love you! Come away from here, from this man. Live with me and be my wife."

It was one of the more impassioned proposals I'd ever heard, not that I make a habit of listening to other men proposing, but it failed to move his intended audience. "You poor goober," she said with no discernable sympathy. "Why should I live in some draughty English castle with you when I can get all the money and enjoy it someplace warm and sunny?" She gave a light laugh, chilling in its heartlessness. "We should give them each another knock on the noggin for luck, tie them up, and skedaddle," she said to her companion.

I risked opening my eyes again, knowing my only chance was to disarm her when she came close. As a result I saw what the two conspirators did not, the cellar door opening a second time.

"I wouldn't advise that," a calm and cultured voice said just before my lieutenant appeared in the doorway. "This house is surrounded by police. I suggest you surrender." Lt. Wimsey was out of uniform, but I was never so glad to see him. The Allies must have pushed the Germans back to their former lines.

"I don't think so," the American deserter said, pulling a pistol from his waistband. "Not when I have an English aristocrat or two as hostages!"

Both the man and the woman were watching Wimsey, with their backs to me. I sat up and Wimsey's eyes widened a trifle before he got his face back under control. I made a circular gesture with my hand, encouraging him to continue.

"Oh, I don't know," he said conversationally. "I think you could find more valuable hostages. I'm a younger son, don't you know, the spare of the heir and spare so to speak, and Thetford here has a younger brother, one too young for the War, if you get my meanin'. I can't say how valuable you'll find a pair like us."

Good man, Wimsey. Their eyes were on him and his voice covered up any noise I made moving up behind them. A quick and gentle pressure to two points on the neck and the man dropped like a puppet with its strings cut. I kicked the pistol away from his limp hands.

"Well done, Wooster old man!" Wimsey's voice cut drilled into my aching head like hot lead through butter. The room seemed to sway for a moment.

"Thank you, Lieutenant." He looked clean and in control. "I take it we've pushed the Germans back?"

He hesitated a moment before speaking. "Yes...yes, we have." There was a larger story behind that, I sensed, but it could wait. We weren't finished here, as Wimsey demonstrated by turning to the woman. "Well, mademoiselle?" he asked. "Unless you too have a gun I suggest you surrender peacefully."

"She may not, but I do," the man with the probably broken collarbone said, holding up the gun I had kicked away. The gun was levelled, but not precisely aimed at any of us.

Wimsey screwed the monocle that gave him the name Winderpane amongst the men into his eye, peering through it at this new potential threat. "And whom do you intend to shoot with that, might I ask?"

"Myself, perhaps," he said. "Or this treacherous jade," he added, waving the gun at the woman.

"Oh, Sidney!" She was a good actress, I had to give her that. Real tears were falling from her eyes. "I had to say that. Raleigh is a violent man, he would have killed you if he knew I love you!" The last three words came out in a sob.

He wavered for a moment, I could see it in his face, and then his expression hardened and the gun came around to point at her chest. "I don't believe you. Why should I believe you? Why should I believe any damn woman!" It was strong language to use in front of a lady, but after she sapped him I couldn't say I blamed him.

Wimsey stepped forward. "Right, then--"

The gun fired and a bullet lodged in the ceiling. "Stay where you are, Wimsey. I'm not finished with this--this--"

"Jezebel?" I offered.

"She's not worth going up for murder, Thetford," Wimsey said as casually as another man might observe that going out in the rain would ruin a good hat. "The law can deal with her, her and her accomplice."

The gun wavered and I prepared to duck. "She led me on! She made a fool of me!"

"Will being court martialed make you look less foolish?" I asked. Wimsey shook his head at me and I took the hint to keep my mouth shut.

"Women make fools of men," Wimsey said. He considered a long moment. "Well, not all women. I could introduce you to a few--" He chuckled. "There's an opera singer I know. She'll lead you on, but you'll like where she leads." He kept moving as he talked until he was standing in front of Thetford and the gun. "She's not worth it," he repeated.

For a frozen moment in time Thetford stood with his gun pointed at Wimsey's chest, Wimsey gazing at him without fear or censure. With a cry Thetford let the gun fall. Wimsey put a precautionary foot on it before laying his hand on the stricken man's shoulder.

The woman had been following this drama with the keenest of interest, of course. She took the opportunity of the gun's fall to make her escape, or tried to. I brought her down with a flying tackle, the impact knowing the breath out of me, and the curtains came down on consciousness.

***

I awoke an instant before Jeeves appeared with my morning tea, or rather Jeeves appeared an instant after I awoke.

"Good morning, sir."

"Good morning, Jeeves." I struggled to sit up. "I had the most peculiar dream. Squid and Flim--" but already it was fading.

"I imagine you did, sir." The tea he handed me, strong and bracing, washed the rest of the night-fancies away. "Inspector Parker has arrested Charlotte and Raleigh Durham, you will be pleased to know."

I took a sip of tea. "And who are Charlotte and whatshisname?" It really was a capital morning, despite the slight remnants of a headache.

Jeeves opened the curtains and bright sun shone in. "Charlotte Durham is the real name of Miss Myrtle Chandler, while her husband, Raleigh Durham, has played the roles both of Walters and Miss Chandler's father."

"Impostors, eh?" Aunt Dahlia had not been much plagued by the species, unlike some chatelaines of our acquaintance. "Ah, well, into every country-house some impostors must fall, eh, Jeeves?"

"Indeed, sir."

A knock sounded at the door and Jeeves let Flim and Squid in. I wasn't sure whether I wanted to see Squid so early in the morning, but he was in, so I wasn't inclined to give him the bum's rush, as they say in New York. Squid's left arm was bound to his side in a sling. I indicated the newest fashion accessory with a wave of the tea cup.

"Have a little accident?" I asked.

"Are you trying to be funny, Wooster?" Squid growled.

"Funny? Me?" I shook my head and a further remnant of the headache manifested itself. "I never make jokes before breakfast." One of Jeeves's morning pick-me-ups would not have gone amiss right then. With preternatural understanding Jeeves appeared at my elbow with a glass.

Squid opened his mouth to say something, probably at high volume judging from his expression, but Flim put hand on his shoulder.

"Thetford and I just came to say goodbye," Flim said once Squid had subsided. "Now that the Durhams have been arrested and the emeralds recovered I'm taking the old boy up to London for a few days, introduce him to a few people, that sort of thing."

Aunt Dahlia always seemed to start talking about the trains after a week's visit, lauding the frequency and quality of the train service between here and the metropolis. "I should be back in London in a few day," I offered. "Look me up at the Drones Club next week and I'll give you lunch."

-end-

***

I'm not entirely pleased with the last scene, I should mention, but I wanted to get this out. It will probably change before I post the completed story to Yuletide, so if you have any suggestions feel free to make them here or in email. Thank you all for bearing with me for the almost three months that it's taken me to finish this.

I doubt this will be my only Jeeves and Wooster story. Writing this has, if anything, just whet my appetite for more. I don't have any particular plans for a sequel to "Green Ice," however, or more about "Captain Wooster."
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sivib
User: [info]sivib
Date: 2005-03-22 16:11 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh, but it was wonderful. I loved and ached for Captain Wooster, and really want to see more of him. I understand how the muse goes, though. Thank you for sharing this story. I enjoyed it immensely.
S
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-22 16:25 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
You're a fast reader!

Someday I may write the evolution of Captain Wooster into Bertie, but I think I need to do it from a POV slightly more flexible than first-person. I've tried to hint at what happened to him here, without being too explicit.
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(no subject) - (Anonymous) Expand
User: [info]starlite304
Date: 2005-03-22 18:25 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
i adore this story, and the world really DOES need the evolution of Cpt Wooster, if one were ever so inclined to write it. :)
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-22 23:43 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Thank you and I will await inspiration.
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Rhi: thank you
User: [info]gryphonrhi
Date: 2005-03-22 20:58 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:thank you
Wow. I have no coherent words (although I still *adore* the 'herpetologist' line) only admiration -- well, and now I have to go read anything else you've written. This is lovely. Thank you so very much!
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-22 23:49 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I have not, alas, written any other Wodehouse fic (yet!). I have Lord of the Rings floating around here and there (or rather here and there and there), mostly Legolas and Gimli. I'm working on a site to get all my fiction in one place, but it's very much under construction. You can find it at http://home.earthlink.net/~adina-fic/ if you're so inclined. Only a few stories are linked in yet, the rest are broken links.
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Terpsichore's Lyre
User: [info]terpsichoreslyr
Date: 2005-03-23 01:43 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
You make me want to pet Bertie. I still just ache for Captain Wooster. I could have never, in my deepest imaginings, pictured this Bertie. Thanks for bringing him to life.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:15 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I'm glad you liked it. I have to thank [info]flambeau for this Bertie, at least in part. If she hadn't asked me--or Santa--for a Wooster x Wimsey cross I would have never started wondering what Bertie did during the war.
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Martha
User: [info]saffronhouse
Date: 2005-03-23 02:11 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
You know what -- I'm really *glad* you didn't finish this in time for Yuletide. The waiting and watching has been wonderful -- stretching out the pleasure of this story for three months instead of being read all in a heap with all the other Yuletide stories. I needed christmas in march!

Wonderful, and so satisfying. I had a great time. Thank you.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:16 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I'm glad the wait was worth it for you. I don't normally post WIPs, so I was very nervous about this one.
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Resonant: Sister suffragette
User: [info]resonant8
Date: 2005-03-23 04:19 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:Sister suffragette
This is beautifully done; I loved the Yuletide bit, and you've developed it in a really interesting way. I loved the way the Captain Wooster voice was so different from the Bertie voice.

(And head injury/war trauma explains a lot about Bertie that sort of requires explanation!)
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:25 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I confess that a traumatized Bertie is a lot more fun/interesting to me than an idiotic one. Glad you found this plausible.
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nineveh_uk
User: [info]nineveh_uk
Date: 2005-03-23 10:38 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Gosh. That was corking, ripping, top-hole and utterly splendid (and the what-happened-to-Bertie explanation horribly grisly and convincing). It was also beautifully written, really catching Bertie’s narrative style (in the non-flashback bits), and all the more impressive that within that style you managed to convey the Sayers characters so very much in-character (loves opera singers...). The sections of Bertie captured conveyed both a sense of what Bertie was like “before” whilst retaining the flavour of his distinct voice. The ending had a very quiet ::gulp:: sort of sadness about it. I should also add that the plotting was ever-so-clever, too. I went back and read the earlier sections again after I’d finished, and there were lots of nice clues lurking that I hadn’t got the first time (because I never do), but was happy to see there. More from you on any aspect of Bertie Wooster or Flim would be wonderful.

And lucky Squid getting London introductions from LPW...
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:28 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I'm glad that the "voice" in the flashback scene worked. I knew I was changing Bertie's voice, I had to since he wasn't the same person before then, but I was worried that it wouldn't seem like Bertie at all. I'm also glad you liked the plotting--I have an Excel spreadsheet, would you believe, working out what scenes were needed in what order.
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Gilly McGillicuddy
User: [info]tootsiemuppet
Date: 2005-03-23 13:06 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh, this'll haunt me....
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:30 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
*evil chuckle* My work here is done.
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Sister Pistol of Mindful Patience
User: [info]an_sceal
Date: 2005-03-23 13:52 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Let me just add to the chorus of praise- this is wonderful! Thank you so much for writing it.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:31 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Glad you like and thank you.
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Ellen Fremedon
User: [info]ellen_fremedon
Date: 2005-03-23 21:26 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh, this was just amazing! I would never have thought you could have brought gravity and pathos to Bertie Wooster, and made it all believable and in-character, but this is just perfect. The line about his First in literature makes all of the half-remembered quotations just... *oww*. And Peter and all the other Sayers characters are dead-on. This is absolutely amazing. Love it.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:35 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
His First in literature makes so much sense to me--sad sense, but sense. Wodehouse's universe is populated with enough likeable but dim young men, but most of them don't *try* to make literary allusions. Bertie has the habits of an intellectual, with the mental resources of, well, anything but. Glad to hear I kept it in character, I had worried.
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Kat
User: [info]killalla
Date: 2005-03-24 16:02 (UTC)
Subject: Masterfully done -
I know that others have said it, but this added an interesting new dimension to the characters, and I'll certainly never look at "dim" Bertie Wooster in the same way again.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:36 (UTC)
Subject: Re: Masterfully done -
I'm glad I could add another dimension rather than just making him out of character. Thanks.
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mayhap, adv.: perhaps; perchance: pensive
User: [info]mayhap
Date: 2005-03-24 17:04 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:pensive
I'm speechless. That scene is one of the most perfect and moving things I've ever read in fanfiction. It hits you like a cosh on the old bean even though you led up to it so beautifully, and it works on so many levels, even including the Wodehousian humor. Just amazing.

I agree that the last scene seems like it needs a bit more room to breathe in, or something, not that I have any more helpful suggestions than that. :)
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:37 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Thanks.

I'll work on the last scene. I generally suck at endings, I'm afraid.
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this is not in the proper spirit of rumspringa: blue
User: [info]siriaeve
Date: 2005-03-25 23:28 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Keyword:blue
Here from [info]damned_colonial's rec.

For all the closeness in time, a crossover between the Wimsey books and the Jeeves and Wooster books had never really occurred to me. But you've made it all seem so wonderfully plausible; I could actually see something like this really happening. I would actually love to see more people writing Wimsey/Wooster crossovers now, because the contrast between the characters and the styles is just so engaging.

I thought your character voices were really perfect - I could see Peter getting a nickname like Flim in university; it does seem a very Peter-ish nickname - and your Bertie voice was really remarkably good considering you're presenting a detective story from his point of view. Very funny, and very Wodehousian throughout. The first part of this chapter was so moving and quietly distressing to read and plausible (oh, Bertie's first in literature! Oh, ouch); I really felt something twist in my gut as I read it.

I hope you don't mind, but I took the liberty of recommending this on my LJ; looking forward to seeing more of your writing :)
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 04:42 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I wish I could take credit for Wimsey's nickname. Would you believe that Flim is canonical? I think Gerald (Duke of Denver) uses it in "Clouds of Witness" and I know he used it in "Thrones and Dominations." (Granted the latter is only semi-canonical at best.)

I'm glad the first scene in this chapter worked so well for you. I was trying for "quietly distressing." Melodrama is so easy, this is harder.

Of course I don't mind you recommending this in your LJ. I would be curious to see what you wrote, if you don't mind, however.
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Loligo
User: [info]loligo
Date: 2005-03-26 12:42 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Wonderful! And yeah, the bit about the First in literature is just so heartbreaking on so many different levels....

One format suggestion: since the rest of the story is in a very strongly narrated first person, presumably Bertie's journal, and since the Bertie-who-narrates is only subliminally aware of the existence of Captain Wooster, it might help to visually set that crucial section apart in some way. Maybe italicize the whole thing? I don't know -- other people might find that annoying. But for me, even though I *love* that section and agree that it's pretty much the only way to tell the story, I just find it jarring to be reading along thinking "Bertie's journal, Bertie's journal, la la la," and then get thrown into this bit that is clearly NOT in this copy of Bertie's journal that I have in my hands. So to speak. I would like something to signal the change before I even start processing the words.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 22:14 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I considered italicizing that section, but wasn't sure, as you said, whether it would annoy people. Another issue is that I (and a number of other people) usually set off dream sequences that way, so I was also a little worried that italics and Wooster's line that "I had the most peculiar dream" would make some people doubt the reality of the scene. (Another reason Squid shows up with his arm in a sling.)

I initially wrote something like this scene in third-person, but that really didn't work. Any further thoughts that you or anyone else has on this issue would be appreciated.
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Dr. Rivka
User: [info]rivka
Date: 2005-03-26 14:24 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh my, that was marvelous. Thank you.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-26 22:09 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
You're welcome.
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Raya D. Sunshine, PhD.
User: [info]nzraya
Date: 2005-03-27 03:33 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Goodness, I would *love* to see more Joosterfic from you. This was just amazing -- especially given how far removed in both time and space you (and most of us!) are from this universe. That is, it's not like writing LoTR fic where the universe is invented (and therefore everything known about it is in the canon), or -- or -- House fic, where at least the universe is present-day America and you know what's possible and logical, and what's not. For this you had to recreate a real but foreign, bygone world and populate it believably, while also maintaining an extremely demanding narrative voice AND a whole series of even more exacting character voices (Jeeves and Wimsey simply can't be written by anyone who isn't (a) very smart, and (b) incredibly attuned to the English language -- things that can't be faked!). I'm in complete and utter awe.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-27 07:14 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
*blush*
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Raya D. Sunshine, PhD.
User: [info]nzraya
Date: 2005-03-27 03:52 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh! I was wondering about the ranks, and I'm guessing you did some poking around in canon to figure out when Bertie would have finished at Oxford, relative to Peter, and how the ranks would have worked out had they served together and so on. So this is probably coals to Newcastle, but I just picked up Clouds of Witness (to find the bit where Gerald uses Peter's nickname!) and it's got Peter's Who's Who entry on the flyleaf, wherein 'tis reported:
Educated: Eton College and Balliol College, Oxford (1st class honours, Sch. of Mod. Hist. 1912); served with H. M. Forces 1914/18 (Major, Rifle Brigade).
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-27 07:21 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I knew that Wimsey ended up a major, though I had forgotten the precise dates he served. He was only a lieutenant under Captain Wooster, so this was quite early in the War, probably 1914, that Wooster wound up behind enemy lines.

I hope that the "walking barrage" was in use that early, I know that artillary techniques improved radically during the course of the war. (A walking barrage is a rain of artillary shells that advances across no-man's-land at a walking speed, with infantry following closely--and nervously--behind, hopefully protected from enemy fire by the barrage in front of them. A misfired shell can land within that side's own troops.)
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Grey Bard
User: [info]grey_bard
Date: 2005-03-27 04:40 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh dear. Oh, poor Bertie, and his gently packed away bits. Wonderful story, and *perfect* crossover
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-27 07:21 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Thanks.
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Quiet desperation
User: [info]lexin
Date: 2005-03-28 15:04 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I was directed to this story by [info]mecurtin. It was every bit as good as she said it was - extremely clever. I've tried to reproduce Wodehouse, and it's hard work - and I loved Captain Wooster - most impressive.

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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-31 20:45 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Thank you.
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mthespinner
User: [info]mthespinner
Date: 2005-03-29 19:53 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh, it is splendid! Two of my favorite people- Wimsey and Wooster!
More, please.........
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-31 20:46 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I'm sure there will be more, sooner or later, though I can't guarantee that it will be this crossover or Captain Wooster. I'll have to wait and see what ideas sneak into my head late at night.
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Ninjabear: coming for a stealth hug
User: [info]dangermousie
Date: 2005-03-31 20:41 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Oh. My. God. Found this from the [info]indeedsir. This is brilliant. One of the best fanfics I've ever read. I would have never thought that one could write a successful Lord Peter/Jeeves&Wooster cross-over, especially one that is intriguing, poignant and spot-on Wodehousian (and yet with Wimsey being entirely in character as well). But wow. Just wow. I really hope you've written more fic.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-03-31 20:50 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
The idea of writing LPW/J&W wasn't mine, [info]flambeau asked for it for yuletide. I have to admit that having written it I can see why no one wrote it before. *grin* I discovered when I went to write it that I had to either reinterpret Bertie, take piffling!Peter at face-value, or write one of them as unsympathetic. The latter two options were unacceptable, so....
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torch
User: [info]flambeau
Date: 2005-04-01 08:54 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
You know, I could really get into this thing where I go away on a trip and you write more story. Except that this is, wah, the end. I've loved this story from the first line, and it's the best Christmas present ever! The idea of Captain Wooster was brilliant, and the actual story definitely lives up to the idea. :)

Like everyone else, I'd love to see more of this particular Bertie (because, hello, who wouldn't, so if you feel an idea coming on, just tell me and I'll pack my bags), but right now I'm just going to sit here and gloat. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-04-01 14:13 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I am the queen of late Christmas presents, so I'm glad you're happy with this one even if it did take awhile. I have to thank you for the initial idea for the story, because without your Yuletide request I don't think it would have ever occurred to me to cross these two. I hope now that it's been done once other people will come up with some ideas and write too, because I'd love to see other takes on the matter.
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jemu
User: [info]pandap
Date: 2005-04-01 12:50 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
This, this is so good. Bertie having a first in literature makes so much sense and his half-remembered quotations and messed up allusions seem so tragic in a way now. I remember reading this when it was first up at the Yuletide archive and I'm so glad you've continued it.
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-04-01 14:14 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Glad you liked it.
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Ninja Kitty
User: [info]beadattitude
Date: 2005-04-01 22:24 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
Well, that was heartbreaking and wonderful. Poor Bertie's brains got terribly scrambled, didn't they. Poor love. I do hope you write more, when the bunnies strike.

(And I'm friending you, lassie. Nowish.)
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User: [info]lastscorpion
Date: 2005-04-02 01:05 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
My goodness! What a wonderful story, and what a perfect crossover! Thank you so much for writing this and putting it up!
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Adina
User: [info]adina_atl
Date: 2005-04-10 01:17 (UTC)
Subject: (no subject)
I'm glad you liked it. Sorry to take so long to respond, by the way.
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