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Doctor Who Festivities 2023 nominations are open
Posted by: paranoidangel Nominations are currently open for the Doctor Who & Related Fandoms Exchange for 2023. They close on Friday, then sign ups open on Sunday, for a week. This is a gift exchange running on AO3, with a Dreamwidth comm at tardis_festivities, to write at least 300 words or draw a nice sketch on plain paper. Any Doctor Who or related fandom is included, and works will go live on 23rd November. Dates: Nominations close: Friday 29th September 7pm UTC Sign ups open: Sunday 1st October 7pm UTC Sign ups close: Sunday 8th October 10am UTC Assignments out: Wednesday 11th October latest Assignments due: Saturday 18th November 7pm UTC Works revealed: Thursday 23rd November 5pm UTC Links AO3 collection Info, rules and FAQ comments via The Fandom Calendar https://ift.tt/p7NEdL6
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Chapters: 1/1 Fandom: Doctor Who (Big Finish Audio) Rating: General Audiences Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: Sixth Doctor/Charley Pollard, Sixth Doctor & Charley Pollard Characters: Sixth Doctor, Charley Pollard Additional Tags: author-typical levels of relationship ambiguity, Unconventional Courtship Generator, Unconventional Courtship 2023 Summary:
Pretending to be a pair of newlyweds is both harder and easier than the Doctor and Charley expected.
#squeezed in under the wire with an unconventional courtship fic last night!#well. this morning but let’s not talk about that#anyway it’s six/charley fake married and it ought to be longer but it isnt#sorry#but I do think it turned out cute#doctor who#big finish#sixth doctor#charley pollard#six/charley#unconventional courtship generator#unconventional courtship ficathon
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3 Sentence Ficathon 2023
Hello my absolutely wonderful pocket friends!
I just finished spending 5+ hours putting all of my fills from this year's 3SF on AO3. I wrote something like five times more than I did last year. Here's the link to the series:
This year I wrote for: Star Wars (Mandalorian, Prequels/Clone Wars, Original Trilogy, Kenobi, Rebels), Dracula, Stranger Things, Narnia (w/ 1 Sandman crossover), Doctor Who, Star Trek (TNG, AOS, DS9), Goncharov (1973), Meta/Anthropomorphic, and Merlin.
There's also a collection with everyone's fills. You should totally check that out, too. It's here:
And, while prompts are closed for this year, fills are open forever, so if you want to try your hand at this, head over to the dreamwidth community, here:
Or to this year's specific posts which are here:
Go and have fun reading and writing, my friends! This is one of the highlights of my year, and I think everyone should have fun with this.
#3sf#3 sentence ficathon 2023#my fics#writing#star wars#dracula#stranger things#merlin#narnia#doctor who#star trek
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I've been doing some more tweaking & I think it works quite nicely now! :-)
I have not done anything I was supposed to be doing today; instead I made a random generator for mashing up companion (or companion teams) with any Doctor (or other regular renegade Time Lord), plus some story/object prompts thrown in. e.g.:
The Seventh Doctor and Romana II, in an adventure with a killer on the loose, armed only with their wits and a satsuma.
The Master and a Clara splinter, in an adventure with the Doctor being put on trial, armed only with their wits and a bomb.
The Seventh Doctor and Ace, in an adventure with Romans, armed only with their wits and some nail varnish remover.
The War Doctor and Rose, in an adventure with amnesia, armed only with their wits and expressive eyebrows.
etc etc
#doctor who#random generators#let me know if you spot any errors!#the companion and doctor list is not complete across all the eu#but let me know if you want me to add someone in#(not adding in side characters unless they have turned back up elsewhere or have further connection)#(might make a side characters generator if i can think of a good way to do it; gotta love DW guest characters)#(yes; i did used to run the DW Minor Characters Ficathon lol)#\o/#all object and plot prompts are based on canonical plots or items or at least things mentioned#(i was laughing a lot when i realised that some ridiculously super-specific improbable plot prompts applied to at least 2 or 3 stories in T#canon alone. oh dw <3<3<3)#it hits what i ask from a generator: a mix of plausible ideas; but-that's-canon and complete crack for a rainy day.
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[Image description: A polyam flag with the words “four or more fic-a-thon” on it. To the left of the infinity sign, there's a post-it that says "4 weeks to go". End description.]
THE FOUR OR MORE 2024 FICATHON HAS ONLY 4 WEEKS LEFT — Prompts by fandom
AO3 COLLECTION | SQUIDGEWORLD COLLECTION
Whether you've been itching to write something for that one prompt that you've been chewing on since day one or you're just hearing about this event and your curiosity has been piqued, this is your chance to see if someone has requested a fandom you're interested in. And if no one has requested your fandom, why not go ahead and leave a prompt. You never know who's watching.
Fandoms listed alphabetically with links to the respective prompts below the cut. Don't forget comments can have more than one prompt.
THIS LIST CONTAINS PROMPTS LEFT UNTIL SEPTEMBER 21st 1:30 pm GMT/UTC -4. Want to know if maybe someone has left more prompts after this? Check the main Ficathon post for more info.
A
A fandom you've never written before
Ace Attorney
Angel the series
Attack on Titan
B
Babylon 5
Buffyverse (Part 1)
Buffyverse (Part 2)
C
Chicago Fire
Chicago Med
D
Days of Our Lives
Doctor Who
Doom Patrol TV
F
Fate/Stay Night
Final Fantasy VII (Part 1)
Final Fantasy VII (Part 2)
Final Fantasy VIII
Fire Emblem: Three Houses
Friends
Full House
G
General Hospital
Grey's Anatomy (Part 1)
Grey's Anatomy (Part 2)
Grey's Anatomy (Part 3)
Gossip Girl
M
Monster Prom
P
Pretty Little Liars
Psych
S
Sabrina the Teenage Witch
Saved by the Bell
Sense8
Star Ocean 2
T
Teen Wolf
The Murderbot Diaries
The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System
Twisters (2024)
W
Warhammer 40000
Women's Murder Club
X
X-files
Y
Yu-Gi-Oh! VRAINS
Multiple fandoms or crossovers
A League of Nobleman, Tian Guan Ci Fu, The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System
Ace Attorney, Any fandom, Amphibia, Doctor Who, Dracula, The Owl House, Pokemon Horizons, Stardew Valley, The Great Ace Attorney, Star Trek AOS, Star Trek DS9, Star Trek Lower Decks, Star Trek TNG
Animator Vs. Animation, Any fandom, Deltarune, HfjONE, Omori, The Demon Headmaster (2019)
Angel the series, Buffy the vampire slayer (Part 1)
Angel the series, Buffy the vampire slayer (Part 2)
Any fandom, Angel the series, Buffy the vampire slayer
Any fandom, Charlie's Angels
Any fandom, Chicago Med
Any fandom, Danganronpa, Team Fortress 2
Any fandom, NU: carnival
Any fandom, Pitch Perfect
Any fandom, Love Between Fairy and Devil, Marvel, MDZS/The Untamed
Any PreCure Series, Delicious Party PreCure, Star Twinkle PreCure, Tropical Rouge PreCure
Beast Wars: Transformers, Detective Conan/Magic Kaito, Leverage, RWBY
Bridgerton (TV)/Much Ado About Nothing (Shakespeare or 1993 movie)
Caos, H2O, High School Musical: The Musical The Series, Outer Banks, Teen Wolf, The OC
Critical Role, Star Wars
Dead Boys Detective Agency, Julie and the Phantoms, Sense8, Star Trek Voyager, The Raven Cycle
Dishonored, Dragon Age
Final Fantasy VIII, MDZS, Teen Wolf, Voltron (2016)
General Hospital, MCU
Kamen Rider (various series), Ohsama Sentai King-Ohger, Samurai Sentai Shinkenger, Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's, Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V, Yu-Gi-Oh! VRAINS
MDZS, Star Trek, The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System, Voltron (2016)
If you have any questions, don't hesitate to contact us.
#polyships#poly shipping#polyam shipping#polyamorous ships#polyamory#writing event#ficathon#admin post#fourormore#OT4#OT5#OT6#star trek#final fantasy#teen wolf#buffyverse#yugioh#polyamoryinfandoms#prompts
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Rose fic. Can be about anything, can include any characters EXCEPT the doctor. He’s not relevant at all to whatever’s going on.
hm. any characters, you say. any characters? say, like, any characters including non-doctor who characters? any of them? anyone i like?
----
There's something outside the bars of the Cage, and when Lucifer first looks at her, it burns him until he finally falters back to the furthest corner away from her and bows his head.
"I've been here," she whispers, and he cranes to hear her voice, ancient and young, terrifying and beautiful—It's been a very long time since Lucifer had a God—"and I destroy you, but you're so desperate to be free, I..."
Gods do not hesitate before judgment, but She does, sweeping Her gaze over Lucifer until She's scattered Herself through his past to watch and stood beside him in every possible future; Lucifer is failing to breathe through his sudden, horrible awareness of all of himself before it slips from his mind with Her, and She raises a hand to wipe the Cage surrounding him from existence.
[3 sentence birthday ficathon]
#:3 lucifer time babyyyyy#i can put him Anywhere i really can#ask#spn#doctor who#rose tyler#lucifer spn
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Irresistibly Contagious
Pairing: Arthur Havisham (Dickensian) x OFC (Elsie from "The Road Forgotten")
Summary: Arthur discovers the joy of Christmas with some help from Elsie and two unexpected guests.
A/N: This was written for the JQ Holiday Ficathon. Since Dickensianis a Christmas show, I've wanted to write a Christmas fic for Arthur for a while, but as I was in the middle of my longer WIP, I thought I wouldn't be able to finish it in time, but I did! It's technically a sequel to "The Road Forgotten", though you can more or less read it as a standalone.
And of course, I had to have some references to Dickens in here. The title is a quote from "A Christmas Carol" ("There is nothing in the world so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humor.") The quote about family ("Not merely those with whom we share blood...") is a paraphrase from "Nicholas Nickleby".
Warnings: None! There are some very brief mentions of psychological trauma and infertility, but other than that, it's the fluffiest of fluff fics.
Word count: 7k
The village of Oakley lay at the foot of the Surrey Hills, a handful of cottages clustered together, overlooked by a church at one end and a manor house at the other, with a little thoroughfare called the High Street by its inhabitants with a touching, if slightly inflated, sense of pride. As it is usually the case with an English village, especially one of this size, everybody tends to know everybody's business. They take great satisfaction in it. When Mr. Babcock made his first visit to the doctor in twenty years, his illness was known around the village by lunchtime. When Mrs. Shackleton bought marmalade at the village shop, it meant her mother-in-law was visiting and she couldn't bring out her homemade preserves for fear of the old woman's reproach. When young Stanley Milford went to the West Indies for five years and came back with a native wife in tow, the story of exactly where and how he'd acquired her was quickly discovered and whispered over teapots and shop counters for days.
This is not to say that the people of Oakley are a censorious, meddlesome lot, far from it. They care for their neighbors. Thanks to them, Mr. Babcock's son was able to come back from Scotland and saw his father one last time before the old man passed away. Mr. Sidwell, the grocer, knew to keep a pot of marmalade on the side for Mrs. Shackleton whenever he saw her going to meet the stagecoach. And despite their initial wariness, they eventually made Mrs. Milford feel welcomed. No, the people of Oakley are good and kind. They simply think that lending one's neighbor a cup of sugar is an excellent opportunity to find out what they are having for pudding, that's all.
So when some people moved into the old Avery cottage on the edge of the village, they caused quite a ripple in the still pond of Oakley. The newcomers were a young couple, though they didn't have the bright, eager look of the newly married about to build a life together. They looked rather world-weary, like those who had been through a lot and only wanted to settle down to a quiet existence. That contradiction was enough to pique the village's curiosity.
The husband, a pale, boyish young man, was called Arthur. The villagers couldn't seem to find out what his christened name was. The wife, handsome rather than pretty, was Elizabeth, or Elsie, as her husband could be heard calling her. So they became known as the Arthurs. Supposedly they used to live in London and came to Surrey for Mr. Arthur's health. When the villagers heard of this, they nodded sagely, for Mr. Sidwell, whose son worked as a clerk in London, never missed an opportunity to regal his customers with tales of the horrors of the big city. Anyone who moved away from that den of vice and pollution was bound to have a lot of good senses.
But some uneasiness remained. Truth be told, the couple did nothing to disrupt the quiet life of the village. They kept to themselves, worked hard to turn the old dilapidated cottage into a cozy, homey place, and were affectionate with each other and cordial to their neighbors. Their biggest fault, however, was something the people of Oakley could not overlook: they did not celebrate Christmas.
For a small village, Oakley took Christmas very seriously. Every year, as December rolled around, the village positively dripped with evergreens, pine boughs and ivy vines and holly branches adorned every door and window, Mr. Sidwell's shelves burst with chocolate and oranges and other good food, people talked of little else but the Christmas feast that the Squire gave every year at the Assembly Hall, and children could be seen gawking at the toys on display in the window of the village shop or racing after the fattened geese as they marched through the village on their way to the Christmas Market in London.
Through it all, the old cottage at the edge of the village stood quiet and closed off. No wreaths decorated its front door, no cheerful carols came through the window, no enticing smell of roast goose or plum pudding rose from the chimney. The Arthurs, who went to church as regularly as the rest of the village, made no appearance at the Christmas service, bought no Christmas present or provision, and although the Squire extended to them an invitation to the feast on the very first Christmas since they arrived, every year they politely declined. There were always excuses. They had just moved in and couldn't prepare in time. Mr. Arthur wasn't feeling well enough. They were away visiting families (Mrs. Shackleton, whose house was closest to the old Avery place, went by to check that year, and indeed, they seemed to be away during the day but were certainly back in time for the feast that evening.)
Since the Arthurs seemed in every other way pleasant and humble, the villagers agreed that this was not a snub to the Squire or the village itself. The only reason they could think of was that the young couple, inexplicably, objected to the very idea of Christmas itself.
But the young couple didn't object to the idea of Christmas, or at least, only one of them did.
"I ran into Mrs. Shackleton at the shop today," Elsie told Arthur as they walked down the path that led from the woods behind their cottage to the back gate of Langton Asylum. This was a shortcut they had discovered shortly after moving to Oakley. It was a rather pretty walk in the spring and summer, through dells and glades filled with bluebells and other wildflowers, and shaved off nearly half a mile from the main road, for which Arthur was grateful. It had been nearly four years, but his bullet wound still troubled him sometimes.
And more importantly, the shortcut shielded them and their weekly visit to Elsie's sister, Marianne, from the prying eyes of the likes of Mrs. Shackleton. Arthur knew Elsie had worked hard to keep Marianne's existence a secret, not because she was ashamed in any way, but because she knew how the villagers would talk if they found out she had a sister in a lunatic asylum, and talk was something both Arthur and Elsie wished to avoid.
"What did she say?" Arthur groaned. He was more sensitive to gossip than Elsie, having been subjected to it most of his life, and had had to avoid even going out into the garden for the past few days for fear of being accosted by Mrs. Shackleton. He had a very good guess as to what that good lady had to say.
"Oh, she asked what I was going to wear to the Christmas feast." Elsie glanced at him questioningly, and Arthur braced himself for the inevitable. "I told her I haven't decided yet," Elsie continued. "Are we going?"
Arthur sighed. "Elsie, you know I don't want to."
"I know." Elsie tucked her arm through his. "Only this would be the fourth year in a row, and I do believe Mrs. Shackleton would come to our door to personally drag us to the feast if we decline again. We may need a plan of escape."
Arthur smiled but felt no amusement. When they first came to Oakley, he had been recovering from his injury, and with the roof leaking everywhere and the rest of the cottage barely fit to be inhabited, Elsie had gone along with his decision to not join the Christmas feast. But when he had declined again the year after that and showed no wish to celebrate Christmas at home either, Elsie had been at first surprised, then indignant, and then, when Arthur had refused to explain it, she had dropped the question, but it became a sore subject for them ever since.
From her gentle teasing, Arthur knew Elsie was trying to make light of the matter. He also knew he was being selfish, and unfair to her.
"You can go, if you wish," he told her.
"I'm not going alone. How would that look?" Elsie replied, aghast. She peered at him, her green eyes slightly hurt but still full of sympathy, trying to understand. "What is it, Arthur? Why don't you like Christmas?"
"I have nothing against Christmas," Arthur said with a scowl. "I simply think it's silly to spend money on a tree that you're going to throw away and overpriced gifts!"
"What about love, compassion, good cheers, and all that?"
"Those are just pretty words, made up to sell chocolate and sugar biscuits."
Elsie stopped in her tracks, her arm slipping out of his. "You sound like a bitter old man. What about family?"
"Family?!" Arthur exploded. "What family? Our parents are gone, your sister is in an asylum, and mine has locked herself away in a crumbling old house. What sort of family do you call that?"
As soon as those words were out of his mouth, he realized how horrible and hateful they were. He could only watch helplessly as Elsie reared back, looking like he'd just struck her across the face.
"Elsie, I—I'm sorry—" he said, reaching for her hand.
Elsie stood still, not moving away from him, but not responding to his touch either. "Aren't we a family?" she said with a quietness that hurt him a thousand times more than her rage. "Or am I not enough for you?"
Arthur silently cursed himself. How could he have been so stupid? When they had first become intimate, Elsie had told him of an accident during her years of working at a bawdyhouse, which had left her unable to bear a child. Although Arthur had reassured her again and again that it made no difference to him, he knew she still keenly felt the pain, the void. And here he was, reminding her of that void all over again.
"We are," he said, drawing her into an embrace. "And you are. More than enough." He kissed her to show her how much he meant it.
Elsie's stiff back slowly relaxed under his hands. Encouraged by her response, he took a deep breath and revealed the painful truth. "I know this doesn't excuse what I said, but the last Christmas I had with my sister—with Amelia—that was right after our father died. The beginning of the end. Compeyson had wormed his way into that party, tainting its memory. From then on, I could never celebrate Christmas without feeling like I was making a mockery out of everything."
Elsie's eyes softened. "Why didn't you tell me this before?"
Arthur shook his head miserably. "I didn't want you to think Compeyson still had any influence on our lives." Damn Compeyson. Damn him to Hell. Arthur could never utter that name without tasting bile in the back of his throat. It seemed they could never be rid of that fiend.
"But he's in prison," Elsie reminded him. She cradled his face between her palms, her touch both fierce and comforting. "If we avoid mentioning him, we will always have to live in fear of him. He is gone, Arthur. And we must continue with our lives."
Arthur nodded, wishing he had her conviction. They went on their way, Arthur slipping his arm around Elsie's waist to hold her close. From time to time, he caught her looking at him with a thoughtful expression, but she said nothing.
By the time they arrived at Langton and an orderly had brought Marianne out, Elsie seemed to have forgotten the fight, turning her focus on her sister. They gave Marianne a bag of oranges and some chocolate—though they didn't celebrate Christmas, they always brought little gifts for her. Marianne exclaimed over them with the delight of a child, which she was, still, mentally and emotionally. Elsie stood a little further back, watching, as was her habit—Marianne had improved a great deal over the years, but she was still in danger of a relapse if she was reminded of the past, and sadly, that included Elsie. The look on Elsie's face, half of love, half of fear, whenever she turned to her sister, put a twinge in Arthur's heart. A visit to Marianne was always bittersweet for Elsie, and he wanted to kick himself for piling on her pain with that pointless fight.
While they sat with Marianne outside—it was cold, but the snow was yet to arrive, and the garden gave them a reprise from the constant moans and screams of the asylum—Arthur saw, curiously, two children running around, a girl of about seven or eight and the boy of three or four. They didn't make a lot of noise, but their lively movements and quiet giggles struck an incongruous note amongst the sedate inmates of Langton. This was no workhouse, so where had these children come from? Were they with a visitor?
Arthur soon had his answer. A woman, dazed and frail-looking, was led into the garden by an orderly, and the children ran up to her—or rather, only the little boy ran to her, showing her all sorts of things he'd found, from a pretty pebble to a piece of string. Meanwhile, his older sister stood back, looking at the woman with the same exact expression that Elsie had whenever she looked at Marianne. It was painful to see such a grown-up look on a child's face. The woman didn't respond to the boy. She didn't even seem aware of either child.
Marianne gave the children some chocolate, which they took gratefully. The little boy clearly wanted more, and Marianne offered him the rest of the bag, but his older sister held his hand back. "That's enough, Simon," she said sternly. "Remember what Mama says. You mustn't be greedy. Save some for Marianne."
Elsie and Arthur smiled at her bossy tone, though Arthur felt an echo of guilt in his heart, faint but never faded, like an old scar. Those children reminded him of another girl and another little boy, running around Satis House a long, long time ago. He hadn't heard any news of Amelia in nearly two years, since their lawyer, Jaggers, informed them that Amelia had adopted a little girl, whom she named Estella. Arthur hoped that Estella could bring his sister, if not happiness, then at least some comfort.
Later, as they took their leave, little Simon ran up to Elsie and shyly presented her with a branch of holly, its red berries shining like rubies amongst the shiny green leaves.
"Why, thank you," Elsie said, sticking the holly to the brim of her bonnet. "Do I look ready for the Christmas pageant now?"
The boy only smiled at her. Arthur wondered if he could talk at all.
A voice called behind them, "Simon! Betsy! Stop bothering the visitors and go inside now, it's time for your tea." They turned around to find Mrs. Gordon, the matron, striding toward them. The children took off running.
"Is the asylum now taking on the children of patients as well, Mrs. Gordon?" Elsie asked, after they had exchanged greetings.
Mrs. Gordon shook her head with a sigh. "No, these are special circumstances." She dropped her voice. "Their father was killed in a mine collapse right after Simon was born. The shock was too much for their mother." She indicated the frail woman, who was still walking around the garden in short, jerky steps, leaning on the orderly's arms. "She can no longer take care of them. A benefactress has arranged for her to come here and the children to be put into an orphanage, but it is too close to Christmas, the orphanage cannot take them yet. I'm letting them stay with me in the meantime, but you both know that this is no place for children—"
As if to prove her words, a long, mournful wail sounded from somewhere in the depths of the building. A moment later, the children came running out again, their faces pale.
"Mrs. Gordon," said the girl, Betsy. "Daisy did it again. She called Simon her son and grabbed at him." Simon clung to the matron's skirt, his sleeve hiked up to reveal a reddened wrist.
Mrs. Gordon gave Elsie and Arthur a long-suffering look. "All right, dearies," she said, absently patting Simon's head. "You stay here and have tea with me."
"Which orphanage, do you know?" Arthur asked her in a low voice, so the children wouldn't hear.
"I don't know. I only know it's in London. It's been all arranged."
Arthur fell quiet. During his time in London, he'd seen enough of those orphanages and workhouses, like the one ran by the Bumbles, not far from where he used to live, to know what their conditions were like. He looked down and saw little Simon's brown eyes staring up at him. He tried to remember if he'd ever looked like that once, so trusting and full of hope. He must have.
"Arthur, can I have a word with you in private, please?" Elsie said, drawing him away.
Arthur knew what she had in mind even before she could open her mouth. He could see his own thoughts reflected on her face. "Elsie, no."
"I haven't said anything yet!"
"I know what you were going to say. We can't."
"It's only for Christmas!"
"Let Mrs. Gordon take care of them."
"She has her hands full with all the patients. And you see it yourself, it's not safe for them."
"We don't have the space."
"There's the spare room."
"They're children, not some stray dogs or cats we pick up from the street—"
"Exactly." Elsie looked straight at him. "They're children, Arthur. And they have no one. Just like us."
"We have each other."
"We found each other. And now they've found us."
She took his hand and laced her fingers through his. When she held his hand like that and looked at him with those green eyes, so bright and beseeching, he would've given her the world. He relented. "Well, if you can convince them—"
A quick smile lit up Elsie's face. "Mrs. Gordon," she said. "Would you trust the care of these children to us? They can stay with us during Christmas, and once the—once they are ready to leave, we shall deliver them back to you."
"Could you?" Mrs. Gordon said in relief. "That would be a great weight off my shoulders. We're always short-staffed around the holidays, I can't spare anyone to watch them too."
Elsie turned to the children and asked, "How would you like to stay with us for a few days? We live in a cottage not far from here."
Simon let go of Mrs. Gordon and tugged at Elsie's sleeve, pointing to her reticule, where she'd kept the chocolate. Elsie laughed. "No more chocolate for you, young sir," she said, "though you can have cake for tea if you want."
That seemed good enough for the boy, but his sister was more circumspect. Her eyes, of a darker brown than her brother's, regarded Arthur and Elsie with suspicion.
"You told us we can stay with Mama until after Christmas," she said to Mrs. Gordon, accusingly.
Mrs. Gordon cleared her throat, uncomfortable. Elsie crouched down until her face was level with the girl's. "You are Betsy, aren't you?" she said.
"My name is Elizabeth," the girl said, lifting her chin, "but Mama calls me Betsy."
"That's my name too, except I'm called Elsie. This is Arthur. And I believe you know my sister, Marianne." The girl nodded, still full of wariness. "Now, I promise you, Betsy, that you and your brother can come visit your mama any time you want. And if you don't like staying with us, we'll bring you back here to Mrs. Gordon right away. Do we have an agreement?"
She extended a hand. After a moment's hesitation, Betsy placed her own small hand in Elsie's, and they shook.
Soon, Arthur and Elsie were leading the children down the path back to Oakley, Arthur carrying the two small valises containing their things. Elise took Simon's hand, but Betsy stood at the start of the path with her arms crossed, refusing to move.
"Why are we going through the woods?" she asked.
"It's a shortcut," replied Elsie.
"A shortcut?" Doubt flitted across the girl's face. "I don't believe you. Is it some sort of trick?"
"It's not a trick, Betsy," Elsie said, her eyes twinkling. "We live in a cottage made out of gingerbread, and this is the only way to get to it."
Simon's jaw dropped. Betsy rolled her eyes with all the exasperation and contempt of a big sister, which Arthur instantly recognized from his childhood memories of Amelia. Elsie must have recognized it in herself as well, for she turned away to hide a grin.
"There is no such thing as a gingerbread cottage, Simon," Betsy said. "It's only a story."
Arthur was close to leaving the girl in the woods at this point, but Elsie's patience knew no bounds. She simply said, "Well, why don't you come along and find out then?" and went on her way.
Betsy scowled, but eventually, she followed them, running ahead to take Simon's other hand, not wanting Elsie to command his entire attention.
Back at the cottage, while Elsie busied herself making up the bed in the spare room, Arthur stirred up the fire in the kitchen and put the kettle on. He brought out the seed cake Elsie had baked the previous day, which went a long way toward lessening little Simon's disappointment that the cottage was not made out of gingerbread. The cake even managed to smooth out some of the furrow between Betsy's eyes as well.
"You don't have any Christmas decorations," the girl pointed out.
"Oh, we don't—" Arthur began, but he didn't have a chance to finish, for Elsie had appeared in the doorway and smoothly interjected.
"We don't have time to put them up yet," she said. "Do you want to help?"
The children's eyes both lit up eagerly.
"Then eat up and have a good night's sleep," Elsie continued, "and we'll start early tomorrow, shall we?"
As the children stuffed themselves on the cake and scones and preserves, Arthur went into the spare room on the pretext of helping Elsie. He grumbled, "I know what you're trying to do."
"I'm not trying anything," she said evenly, spreading a quilt on the little bed. "I only see some poor, lost children, and I'm doing my best to give them a happy Christmas. You don't have to be such a grouch about it."
Arthur didn't ask if she was including him as one of those poor, lost children as well.
***
The next morning, Arthur was awakened by Simon's excited scream—the snow had finally arrived, and the cottage and the garden were covered in a white blanket, as though a giant baker had passed by during the night and given everything a dusting of icing sugar. Arthur grudgingly admitted to himself that it was the perfect Christmas scene.
After breakfast, Elsie took her old coat off the peg by the kitchen door and turned to the children. "Which one of you would like to go with me and pick out a tree?"
Simon jumped up, waving his arm.
"And where are you going to find this tree?" Arthur asked.
"In the woods," said Elsie. She went out the back door and picked up the axe lying by their wood pile.
The thought of her trampling through the cold and the snow while he sat at home with his feet by the fire was more than Arthur could bear. He snatched the axe out of her hands. "You'll do no such thing. I'll go."
"But—your wound—in this cold—"
"I was shot through the collarbone, not my lungs. I'll be fine."
A small smile played around Elsie's lips as she watched Arthur shrug on his coat, while she buttoned little Simon into his jacket. She then wrapped a scarf around Arthur's neck and tucked the ends into his coat.
"Find us a pretty tree, won't you, my dear?" she said, giving him a peck on the lips.
"You'll find that my taste in Christmas trees is impeccable. And don't call me 'my dear'," Arthur said, trying to scowl and failing utterly. "You sounded like that old crook Fagin."
They set out into that world of white, Arthur slowing his stride to match Simon's short one. The boy said nothing. The silence between them was peaceful, not uncomfortable, broken only by the crunch of the snow under their feet and Simon's occasional tuneless but contented humming. Arthur was thankful for that, for he had no idea what to say to Simon. He didn't have Elsie's easy way with children, and there was no one he could have looked to as a model. His father had been both harsh and distant; Arthur's only memories of him were of his many reproaches and punishments.
They managed to find a little fir tree of just the right size in the woods behind the cottage. "What do you think?" Arthur asked. "Is that pretty enough for Elsie?"
Simon nodded, his eyes shining.
They dragged the tree back to the cottage and set it up by the fireplace in the parlor. Bare as it was, it already gave the room a Christmassy look. Elsie was in the kitchen, rolling out gingerbread dough and cutting it with a knife under Betsy's critical eye.
"What are you doing?" Arthur asked, hanging up his and Simon's coats.
"Making gingerbread biscuits. We can hang them up on the trees, and eat them afterwards."
"What's that supposed to be?" He glanced at the shape Elsie was cutting.
"A bird," Elsie said, sounding peeved. "Isn't it obvious?"
"You don't say. I would think it's a mushroom."
Betsy hid her giggle behind her hand. Elsie glared at Arthur. "All right, so I might have skipped a drawing lesson or two in school. I'd like to see you try!"
Arthur was not artistic, but at least he'd had a few more drawing lessons than Elsie. While he cut the dough into birds, houses, stars, and men, Elsie taught the children to make garlands out of dried apple slices and stick cloves into fresh oranges to make pretty patterns. Soon, the gingerbread was in the oven, and the warm, spicy fragrance of ginger and cloves were added to the sweet smell of the fruits. Arthur shared the offcuts with the children, and when Elsie chided him for setting a bad example by eating raw dough, he only winked at them and popped another piece into his mouth.
Since that morning, Arthur had existed in a state of fearful anticipation. After Elsie had told him she was determined to have a Christmas celebration for the children whether he wanted to or not, he had been waiting for something to go wrong, for the old feeling of dread and guilt to come creeping back like a thief in the night. But it never came. It helped that Elsie kept him busy so he had no time to think about the past, and what they were doing was so different from what he was used to. He didn't remember much of his childhood Christmases, and after he came of age, Christmas had always been a day of gaming and whoring and drinking, until, inebriated, he would crawl back to Satis House in time to make an appearance at the Christmas ball and be reminded of what a disgrace he was to the Havisham name.
There was none of that in their little cottage. No scandalized whispers behind gloved hands, no cold looks of disapproval and disappointment, no harsh words of reprimand. There was only the soft swishing of Elsie's skirt as she moved from the table to the oven, the sound of her humming while she bent over a task, and the children's laughs. The sole note of discord was when Betsy told Simon he had put too many cloves into his orange and it looked like a hedgehog, and Simon stuck his tongue out at her, and even then, their argument felt tranquil, comforting in its triviality. The knot in Arthur's stomach slowly loosened, to be replaced by a little warmth. How much of that was due to Elsie's gingerbread and how much was due to her presence, he couldn't say.
After the gingerbread had finished baking and cooled, Elsie iced them with sugar, put a piece of red ribbon through each, and together, they hung the shapes on the tree—Arthur managing to sneak a few more bites—and wound the garland of dried apple slices around it. Arthur draped some ivy on the mantelpiece. Elsie placed the clove-studded oranges amongst the green leaves, and they all stepped back to admire the effect.
"Well, Betsy?" Elsie asked. "What do you think of our Christmas decorations?"
"'s nice," Betsy said, discerning as ever. "But the top of the tree is missing." She turned and ran into the spare room.
Arthur and Elsie exchanged puzzled looks, but they soon had their answer, for Betsy returned presently, bearing an angel with a wooden head and a skirt and wings made out of gold foil.
"How pretty!" Elsie cried. "Where did it come from?"
"Papa and I made it," Betsy said, cradling the angel in her hands like a precious treasure. "He painted the face and cut out her wings and I made her skirt. He said for Simon's first Christmas, he would let Simon put her on top of the tree, but..." She sniffed and wiped furiously at her nose. "He never got to. And we never had a tree again."
Elsie looked close to tears herself. She reached out a hesitant hand, and when Betsy didn't move away, gave the girl's shoulder a comforting squeeze. "Oh, sweetheart..."
Betsy said nothing, just stood with her head bent over the angel, and kept sniffling.
"Well, we have a tree now," Arthur said, "and we can certainly have Simon put the angel on top of it, can't we?"
He held out a handkerchief to Betsy. She obediently blew her nose and gave him a tentative smile. Arthur couldn't help smiling back. "Where's Simon?" he asked.
"He's probably cleaning up the last of the gingerbread," Elsie said, stepping into the kitchen. "I'll bring him."
She returned a mere moment later, eyes wide. "I can't find him."
"He must be around here somewhere," said Arthur.
"I was just in the bedroom, he wasn't there," Betsy reminded them.
Elsie ran to their own bedroom and quickly came back, shaking her head. Arthur's stomach dropped. The cottage was tiny—only the parlor, the kitchen, and the two bedrooms. There was nowhere to hide. And if Simon had gone outside, surely they would've seen him, wouldn't they? Unless he'd used the backdoor...
"Simon!" he called. "Where are you?"
"If you're hiding, it's not funny!" Betsy chimed in.
Elsie wasted no time. She went through all the rooms, opened every cupboard, and looked under every piece of furniture. When this yielded no sign of the boy, she threw on a coat and went outside. Arthur and Betsy followed her.
The snow, which had stopped while Arthur and Simon had been in the woods, was coming back, a spinning, churning curtain of white. Usually, such a scene would compel Arthur to stop whatever he was doing and marvel at the beauty of nature, but now, all he could think was how this fresh snow had covered up any footsteps Simon might have left. They spread out around the garden, calling for the boy, their voices sounding thin and reedy, muffled by the snow.
"Simon!"
"You don't—you don't think he's gone into the woods, do you?" Elsie said to Arthur, her lips trembling slightly.
"No," Arthur replied with a conviction he did not feel, trying to reassure her. "It's dark and frightening. Why would he go there?" All the while, he kept thinking that everything had gone wrong again. There may be no Compeyson darkening their doorstep, but this could be worse, much worse.
"Simon!"
They were in the back garden now. The woods, which had looked so lovely and inviting that morning when they went in to cut the tree, now stretched out cold and forbidding in the gathering gloom. If Simon had indeed wandered in there, how could they ever hope to find the boy with the snow coming down thicker and faster every minute? Arthur peered into the snow-covered grove, trying in vain to spot something that didn't belong. He realized he didn't even know what Simon was wearing. Why hadn't he kept a closer eye on the boy? How long had he been gone? How long could a little boy like that survive in the woods? Some guardian he was...
"Simon!"
"We can't go into the woods by ourselves," Elsie said, trembling either from the cold or fear. "We have to alert the neighbors, rouse a search party—"
"Miss-toe," said a voice from above, interrupting her.
They all looked up. The old apple tree was spreading its limbs over their heads, and there, perched on one of the topmost branches, was Simon. He was reaching for a clump of mistletoe at the very end of the branch, a defiant spot of bright green on the gray bare tree, the pearl-like berries gleaming here and there amongst the leaves.
"Miss-toe," Simon said again.
"Oh my goodness!" Elsie cried, arms outstretched even though Simon was far out of her reach. "Simon, sweetheart, don't move! Arthur, get the ladder!"
The ladder was already there, leaning against the tree—it must have been how Simon had managed to get on the tree in the first place. Arthur quickly climbed up and grabbed Simon, holding the boy tight to his chest for a moment, breathing in the warm gingerbread smell from his hair, feeling weak with relief. Then, carefully tucking the boy against him, he made his way down the ladder again.
The moment Arthur and Simon were back on the ground, Betsy was upon Simon, shaking him. "You idiot!" she screamed. "Didn't you hear us shouting for you?"
Elsie came to Simon's rescue, sweeping both him and Betsy into her arms in a tight hug. "Hush, Betsy," she said. "Everything's all right now."
Betsy buried her face in Elsie's shoulder, her rage quieting down into relieved sobs. Arthur knelt down and found himself enveloped in the hug as well.
Simon, oblivious to all the alarm and fear he'd caused, leaned out of Elsie's arm to point at the mistletoe again. "Now kiss," he commanded.
Elsie laughed. "You're a slyboots, aren't you?" She obliged anyway, and then, because they were all under the mistletoe, Betsy and Arthur each got a kiss as well. They sat there for a while, holding each other. The snow, big, ponderous flakes that did not so much fall as swirl majestically through the air, kept landing on their head, brushing their cheeks and their eyelashes with icy kisses, but Arthur hardly felt the cold. The warmth inside him grew, slowly but steadily, like the first spark of a fire.
***
Arthur put his gifts under the tree, a book of poetry and a little brooch for Elsie. Other gifts were already there, a silk cravat he'd seen Elsie working on for some time, a little hair bow, and a box of wooden blocks carefully sanded smooth and painted with colorful letters, things she must have made the previous night, after they'd decided to have the children stay with them. That was Elsie all over, always thinking of others, always taking care of everyone.
Looking over their parlor, he could hardly recognize it from the little room he was used to. It had always been cozy, if a little cluttered, but now, with the Christmas tree, completed with its gleaming candles and the angel on top—Arthur had lifted Simon up so he could put it in place—by the side of the fireplace, providing a spot of light and glitter, and the branches of holly and ivy draped on the mantelpiece and wound around the windows, it looked... festive. Cheerful. They hadn't discussed attending the village Christmas feast yet, but Arthur felt he could face it now, and perhaps even enjoy it as well.
In the spare room, Elsie was putting Betsy and Simon to bed. Arthur came to stand at the doorway and watched while she plumped their pillows and tucked the quilt more closely around them, murmuring some gentleness. Simon, tired after a day of excitement and his adventure with the mistletoe, fell asleep right away, but Betsy was still awake. She said, in a small voice, "Elsie?"
"Yes, dear?"
"Are we going to see Mama tomorrow?"
"Of course. You and Simon have to give her your presents, don't you?" That evening, Elsie had helped Betsy bake a little cake, and Arthur had managed to cut down some of the mistletoe after all, so Simon could wrap a bunch of it in a red ribbon as his present.
"And—and—are we—"
"What is it, Betsy?"
It came out in a rush. "Are we to stay with Mrs. Gordon until she takes us to the orphanage? Or can we stay with you?"
Elsie hesitated. "You can stay with us as long as you like," eventually she said.
"They're going to separate us in the orphanage, you know," Betsy said, as Elsie was getting to her feet.
Elsie froze. "Where did you hear that?" she asked.
Betsy shrugged. "Everybody knows they keep boys and girls separate there," she said with an air of resignation that seemed much older than her eight years. "But how'd Simon get on without me? He doesn't talk much. They'll think he's strange. And what if he wets the bed? He still does." She added, with loyalty, "Only sometimes though."
Elsie turned around and met Arthur's eyes. On her face, he saw reflected the agony in his heart. Then she turned back to Betsy and tried to put on a cheerful voice. "Come, let's don't worry about that tonight, shall we?" she said. "Now go to sleep, or you won't get your gifts in the morning."
Only after she'd closed the door to the spare room that Elsie fell into Arthur's arms and allowed her tears to flow. He held her close, rocking her against his shoulder. "Don't cry," he said softly. "You're doing a wonderful thing for those children."
"But is it enough?"
Arthur thought of how Simon had looked at him when Mrs. Gordon mentioned the orphanage, and how the boy's eyes had shone when they found the tree, when he found the mistletoe. He thought of how the four of them had held on to each other in the snow. They had felt like a family. He hadn't felt that sense of belonging in a long time, had never felt it until he met Elsie. Perhaps this is what family is. Not merely those with whom we share blood, but those for whom we would give our blood as well. The warmth inside him grew into a flame, bright and glowing, and with it, a decision formed in his mind.
"We could do more," he told Elsie. "We could keep them here, with us. We could take care of them, and have them close to their mother."
Elsie lifted her tear-stained face to look at him, understanding dawning, mingled with disbelief and trepidation.
"Could we?" she said.
"I'm sure it can be arranged. I shall ask Jaggers. He's arranged for Amelia to adopt Estella."
"No, I didn't mean the legality of it. I mean—could we take care of them?"
"We have been taking care of them."
"It's been only one day, and Simon almost broke his neck."
"He didn't, did he?"
Elsie still seemed unconvinced. "But could we do this for years and years and years?"
Arthur looked into her eyes and entwined their fingers together, finding his strength from their touches, their connection, as always.
"We can," he said simply, but that was enough for her.
"If you'd promise not to eat any more raw biscuit dough," she said.
"If it's as good as your gingerbread?" Arthur said in mock consternation. "I can't possibly stay away!"
They both laughed then, and Arthur leaned in to give Elsie a kiss, a long, lingering one that was an apology, an expression of gratitude, and a promise, all wrapped up into one. There was no mistletoe above them—they'd decided to leave the rest of it on the apple tree, for next year—but Arthur didn't need the mistletoe as an excuse to kiss Elsie.
"Merry Christmas, Miss Bradford," he whispered.
"Merry Christmas, Mr. Havisham," she said, kissing him back.
***
The next day, the villagers of Oakley got the shock of their lives when the Arthurs arrived in church just in time for Christmas service, bringing with them two little children, smiling shyly at their neighbors as they slipped into a pew. Gone was the weary, wary look on the young couple's faces, and as they looked at each other and at the children, whose hands they were holding, their eyes shone with such hope that the villagers felt this was a more eloquent picture of the Christmas spirit than all the decorations and gifts and feasts in the world.
Of course, Mrs. Shackleton took all the credit for herself, claiming she had finally convinced the couple down with her neighborly solicitude and persuasion. The rest of the villagers, on the other hand, simply chalked it up to a Christmas miracle.
THE END
#arthur havisham#dickensian#arthur havisham fic#arthur havisham x ofc#joseph quinn fic#joseph quinn#12 days of joemas#holiday ficathon#its beginning to look a lot like quinnmas
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The Sunnydale Herald Newsletter, Saturday, January 6th
BUFFY: Listen, Doctor, I don't see why we can't take her home, you know, just until... (gestures) I-I mean, wouldn't it be better for her to rest someplace where she felt safe and comfortable? DR. KRIEGEL: Even if it would mean some work for you, taking care of her? JOYCE: (sighs and leans back in bed) Oh, thank god. BUFFY: I'll do it, anything.
~~Listening to Fear~~
[Drabbles & Short Fiction]
Rotten by MadeInGold (Faith/Willow/Kendra/Cordelia, G)
before I laid eyes on you by Agent Lokitty (Spike/reader, not rated)
there for you by Agent Lokitty (Giles & OC, not rated)
[Chaptered Fiction]
Flavor of the Week, Chapter 7 by Alittleauthor (Giles/Inara, multiple crossovers, G)
The Key To Being Buffy, Chapter 7 by BlueZeroZeroOne (Buffy, Dawn, Stargate crossover, M)
"The Sky's Gonna Open", Chapter 13 by lindseymcdonaldseyelashes (Lindsey/OC, E)
Under the Water, Chapter 19 by dwinchester (Buffy & Gage Petronzi, M)
Ghost World, Chapter 18 (complete!) by Nonkosherian (Buffy/Faith, T)
It takes a team to raise a vampire, Chapter 3 (complete!) by AnkiKind (Ensemble, M)
No dick sucking in the library! - The sign's origin, Chapter 2 by DancingAngel0013 (Buffy/Giles, M)
Moonlit Shadows, Chapter 7 by WillowBee326 (Oz/Spike, E)
The Forging Ghost Yahoo! Group's FGF Challenges & Ficathons (circa 2001 and written by the Moderator Ghostsforge), Chapters 1-3 by Ghostsforge
Slaying the Slayer, Chapter 2 by WillowBee326 (Buffy/Faith, E)
athletes don’t love nerds, do they? part two by Agent Lokitty (Giles/reader, not rated)
Amara Time, Chapter 14 by Joan963z (Buffy/Spike, NC-17)
Love Ridden, Chapter 3 by scratchmeout (Buffy/Spike, NC-17)
Pack My Box with Five Dozen Liquor Jugs, Chapter 6 by honeygirl51885 (Buffy/Spike, NC-17)
A Waxy Gent Chuckled Over My Fab Jazzy Quips, Chapter 6 by violettathepiratequeen (Buffy/Spike, PG-13)
What If Love Was Enough? Chapter 4 by Spikelover4ever (Buffy/Spike, NC-17)
Afterburn, Chapter 1 by Melme1325 (Buffy/Spike, NC-17)
It's Easy Time, Until It's Not, Chapter 7 by hulettwyo (Buffy/Spike, G)
The Freak Show, Chapter 7 by hulettwyo (Buffy/Spike, Adult Only)
Love Lives Here, Chapter 5 by Passion4Spike (Buffy/Spike, NC-17)
[Images, Audio & Video]
Artwork: The Slayers and Their Watchers by CoffeeMilkLvr (worksafe)
Cartoon: Buffy and Doctor Who by Paul Gadzikowski's The Hero of Three Faces (worksafe)
Fanvid: Wicked Game (Lucifer Version)- Buffy and Spike (Spuffy) by Bobblehead89
Fanvid: Buffy + Spike - Talking Body by Faith Victoria
Fanvid: Buffy: The Lucid Dream Acid Trip Fiasco (Feature Film Cut) by MyLoveableCrayon
Fanvid: Buffy and Angel - Best Damn Thing by juliaroxs241
Fanvid: Buffy Summers - Working for the Weekend by juliaroxs241
Fanvid: buffy & angel | jackie and wilson by lostlcve
Video: One Last Scene | Tears, Not Blood | Buffy the Vampire Slayer by Cool Channel DreadTube (Spike analysis)
Song: Buffy the vampire slayer - Going through the motions by Anjerikku
[Reviews & Recaps]
Video: The #btvs Twisted Guide S02E04: Inca Mummy Girl by Twisted View
[Fandom Discussions]
buffy and angel as a subversion of the knight in shining armour and damsel in distress trope is PERFECTION by bangelism
We really should have gotten some Angel and Anya interactions by oveliagirlhaditright
How babygirl is Willow? by The Babygirl Polls
Could Vamp Willow maybe haven been foreshadowing Dark Willow in season 6? by Kristine
Question - Who really is Buffy's "best" friend? by Joan the Vampire Slayer
Is it me, or was Xander done dirty? continued by sybil
Why was Lilah evil? by onceamonthfor18years
my thoughts on season 2 first time watching it by Ok-Connection4791
Buffy Appreciation by unknown_asofyet
am i the only one who thinks buffy got hotter over the seasons? by morallygreat
Sprucilla is still the sexiest.....even when Spike is chipped by alrtight
I disliked Chosen by debujandobirds
First time watcher here. Half way through s4 by stephygrl
Is it ever explained how everyone in Sunnydale is able to shrug off insane paranormal incidents on a week-to-week basis? by PapaCousCous
Two questions regarding buffys season 1 stake and also her training by Tsole96
You gotta admit the Him episode is pretty funny 😂 by artsygrl2021
What Buffy Opinion are you defending like this? by CoffeeMilkLvr
The point of The Wish by bevgron
Is Joyce just vampire kryptonite? by loki2002
What's xander's most in character quote? by ImAViewNotPretty
What’s with the bed-making in Buffy and Faith’s dreams? by classified12345
Hot take: Anya wouldve ran angel investigations like the navy by theducksystem
Does anyone truly deep down inside believe this is good? [Slayers audio drama] by BretBaber
Are you surprised by Spikes reaction from the real Buffy kissing him while pretending to be Buffy the robot? (Intervention S5E18) by sushibananawater
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I was tagged by @shredsandpatches to list five things you might find in my fics. Gosh I haven't written anything except for the ficathon for so long, I really do want to get back to it. Anyway:
1. Bibliography - in some of my more serious/longer fics I've included a works cited, either for specific texts mentioned (like works of literature) or whatever I used for research. I'm still a history major at heart.
2. Whatever my hyperfixation at the time is - you can track my hyperfixations via my Ao3. Main ones have been Doctor Who, Ancient Rome, and the Henriad.
3. Certain ships - I tend to write for a small handful of ships. All of them are rare in the grand scheme, some of them less so in relation to their fandoms but they still don't have tons of fic. But that's okay. I promise I have fandomy interests out of shipping I swear, it just turns out I write a lot of it.
4. Crossovers and various historical AUs - 15th century French politics transported to Mai 1968? Why not! My main fic that I keep promising will someday be finished is the broadcast AU, This Realm, This Earth, This Station (is anyone still interested in that?) is the Henriad in loval broadcasting. Years ago I was known for my Julius Caesar x Attack on Titan fic. I just like playing in AUs and crossovers that to me make sense but probably not to anyone else.
5. Weak endings - only a few of my fics actually have good endings. Most of them don't really end, they just kind of stop because I am Bad At Writing. But seriously, for some reason I have trouble writing endings that don't feel like I just ran out of energy or things to say. Anyone else have trouble with that?
I tag: @the-golden-ghost @goosemixtapes @nebylitsa @stripedroseandsketchpads @cuetheviolins
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Broken
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/0TaOiPN
by LadyCara
After World War Three, the Doctor and Rose land on the supposedly peaceful planet Verolis when the Doctor is abducted and slowly driven insane. Unwilling to just give up and go home, and armed with nothing but a sonic screwdriver, Rose walks into the lion's den, determined to free her friend...
Written ages ago for the "Jiggery-Pokery... is love" ficathon "Lillibet" hosted on LJ in 2010.
Words: 15808, Chapters: 4/5, Language: English
Fandoms: Doctor Who (2005)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Categories: Gen, F/M
Characters: Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler, Original Characters, The Doctor's TARDIS
Relationships: Ninth Doctor/Rose Tyler
Additional Tags: Action/Adventure, Hurt/Comfort, Torture, Angst
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/0TaOiPN
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Works are revealed
Happy Doctor Who Day! All the works have been revealed. There are 16 works in 5 fandoms.
You may want to change the date of your work to be today's date. That way it will be on the first page for the fandom - otherwise people looking at the fandom page might not see it if they've gone as far back as the date they last checked. To change the date, click on the Edit button. Halfway down the page will be an option to 'Set a different publication date'. Select the box and then change the date. It will let you change it to any date in the present or past, but not in the future.
Thank you to who created works, especially to the pinch hitters.
A feedback post will follow.
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Sign up's closing soon!
Doctor Who Festivities 2024 sign ups are open
Posted by: paranoidangel Sign ups are currently open for the Doctor Who & Related Fandoms Exchange for 2024. This is a gift exchange running on AO3, with a Dreamwidth comm at tardis_festivities and a Tumblr at tardis-festivities to write at least 300 words or draw a nice sketch on plain paper. Any Doctor Who or related fandom is included, and works will go live on 23rd November. Dates: Sign ups close: Saturday 5th October 7pm UTC Assignments due: Saturday 16th November 7pm UTC Works revealed: Saturday 23rd November 7pm UTC Info, rules and FAQ comments via The Fandom Calendar https://ift.tt/BPpOdno
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11. What was the last color you used in your current WIP/most recent project?
So apparently the last time I used a color word was in one of my 3 Sentence Ficathon fills, which I will now reproduce in full:
“Suits you, that color,” the Doctor comments one morning, when Rose debuts a new top.
“I thought you hated orange,” she says, surprised; “you convinced me to buy that blue jumper instead of the orange one, last week.”
“Who said anything about orange—that blouse is bright varnob in the infrared spectrum!”
So technically the last color I used was varnob. XD
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Tied the Knot
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/w5Zk42z
by human_nature (AllyHR)
Donna doesn't exactly like this idea..
Words: 82, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
Series: Part 7 of 3 Sentence Fics ( 2023)
Fandoms: Doctor Who (2005), Doctor Who
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: F/M
Characters: Tenth Doctor (Doctor Who), Donna Noble
Relationships: Tenth Doctor/Donna Noble
Additional Tags: 3 Sentence Ficathon
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/w5Zk42z
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Would anyone be interested in doing a River Song secret santa/advent/ficathon/SOMETHING bc we need more River Song plz like or reblog or yell at me in my inbox if you're interested plz be interested in going through withdrawals
#river song#river song ficathon#doctor who#gif not mine#aflawedfashion#made it#its so pretty#shes so pretty#plz lets celebrate river#i need her
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