#turn: washington’s spies fic
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tallmadgeandtea · 5 months ago
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Turn Week 2024
Crossover
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Fly Like A Jet Stream: A Top Gun AU with @ms-march
California, 1971
The United States Navy Fighter Weapons School, colloquially known as TOPGUN, is in its early stages. Only the navy’s young, best, and brightest pilots are selected for the chance to enter a new era of aviator warfare.
Recent college graduate Elizabeth Walker uses her father’s connections to earn a position as a civilian instructor at TOPGUN. She’s even given her choice of candidates: the brilliant Adrienne Fairfax, the only female pilot desperate to prove herself after a targeted accident; the arrogant draft-dodger (well, almost) Thaddeus Kosciuszko; and Benjamin Tallmadge, a soft-spoken, bookish Long Island boy with blue eyes Elizabeth can’t look into for too long.
But California’s beaches and off base bars barely conceal the cutthroat, high stress environment TOPGUN thrives on. Will they make it through without breaking any rules, or will their careers- and their personal lives- crash and burn?
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tallmadgeandtea · 5 months ago
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Check it out!! Some of Clair’s best writing :)
TURN WEEK: Medieval AU Crossover with SS:SP!
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Why haven’t I been writing LBL recently ( for about year really) you ask? This is why. This AU has occupied so much space in my head it is so banger if I ever to get around to writing more of it TRUST you all will see it. @tallmadgeandtea and I have been going insane over a TURN crossover medieval au for a while now & Yes, that is Ser Harwin Stong as a FC for Thaddeus Kosciusko. 😅
Her head was spinning. It had been for days. Weeks even. She had not been able to consume food that didn’t leave her feeling nauseous for days. He started to make her join him in eating. It was the only way he could ensure she did not starve herself.
The capital had been taken days ago, and the new king and his court of traitors had occupied the rooms that did not belong to them since they arrived. Andre was dead. She knew that. No one would tell her, not the guards at the door of the apartments she resided in, not George, whose rooms she stayed in instead of her own for safety. She had not heard from nor seen Ban since this wanna-be king had arrived. With Andre dead, he was king. With Andre dead, she was the closest thing to a Queen Consort they had. This had been the status quo for weeks now.
The engaged pair were kept in separate wings of the castle. Not a word to be exchanged between them.
Thinking of it made her sick to her stomach.
It made her head spin.
George would not answer any of her questions. She would go mad with questions. Or she would go mad with fear. She still wore her fiance's engagement ring and donned dresses of Fairfax green and the deep blood red of the royal household as any Queen Consort should. George wore a horrible blue at each one of their meals. The sight nauseated her. It made her head spin. Adrienne had been so used to seeing him donned in royal military red, a Colonel in the army they had slaughtered. She was distressed by the blue. It wasn’t just George’s clothes. It was the banners in the courtyard—the guards at the gate.
All of it. It made her head spin.
And George watched her, carefully, like she was still on strings, like she might try to dash out the door or toss herself from a window. It nauseated her, this illusion of freedom. She didn’t wear shackles, yet. How long would it be? Another week? A few days? The waiting would make her go mad.
That commotion in the courtyard would make her go mad. What on earth could these people be doing now?
Adrienne made her way from the sofa, abandoning her embroidery in its hoop, leaving George there to pretend he was reading a book whose page he hadn’t flipped in fifteen minutes. The silence of the sitting room, the lack of conversation between them, allowed her to hear the commotion happening outside the window below her. She had not expected the sight before her when she approached the window. She had not accounted for any such thing, for surely, as Kingmaker, George would attend any kind of execution, any kind of formal state toppling.
Was that why he had been unable to read his book? The knowledge of death?
Was that the reason for his silence? Was he ashamed? Was he too cowardly to tell her? Did he fear it would escape if he uttered a sound?
Adrienne’s head was spinning. It had been for days. Weeks even.
Were her ears ringing?
She was sick to her stomach again at the sight in the courtyard before her. Banastre was in the courtyard in simple black wool. In chains. The Prince—no, he was the King now— in chains, and an executioner's block at the end of his path. She saw the sword in a black figure’s hands. Oh God, they were going to kill him.
Oh God, she was going to be sick.
Adrienne’s feet wouldn’t move, though. Her eyes couldn’t be torn from Tarleton, no matter how desperately she wanted to look away. She couldn’t do anything but watch. It nauseated her. Her head was spinning. Her ears were ringing.
She almost didn’t hear the dull thud of the sword on the block when it cut through his neck.
George called out to her before the second stroke. His command for her to come away from the window fell on her ears like an echo. She made no association between the man in the room with her and the words that were being ordered. He made his way to her side, grimacing at the sight in the courtyard of the severed head of a boy he knew. He reached out to her hand, which had gripped his curtains as though it was life or death for her. He had to pry the fabric from her fingers. He had to pretend it was fine.
How could she do that?
Adrienne was horrified. She had seen her fiance’s head hacked off his shoulders, and she hadn’t been blessed enough to faint at the sight of it. She felt faint. She felt nauseous. She felt like she was crying. She was in shock. Adrienne was horrified. Horrified at the scene in the courtyard. Horrified at the death of her intended. Horrified at George and all the other traitors who had allowed this to happen. Horrified that she would soon be next. When George finally pried her fingers from the curtains, Adrienne began to be conscious of her panic. Her fear. Her tears.
“Why would they do that,” Adrienne whispered as George pulled her feet from before the window, her voice becoming more hysteric the more she spoke, “Why would you do that? Why allow him to die?”
George had served a different banner than that horrible blue for the longest time. What had changed in this man she thought she knew, that he would allow the heir he knew since the heir was but a child to die. What had become of the man she knew? What would become of her if he would not have qualm with killing Banastre? Was she next? She had to be. Tarelton had been king, heir apparent, and she the closest thing left to Queen Consort there was. Would they behead her too? Or would she be tortured? Assaulted? Which would kill her easier? Which would be most painless?
“He is more just,” was all George could give as a poor excuse for his betrayal and his cowardice, “He is better. He won his contest-“
“How could you allow this madness?” Adrienne was going to go mad before they killed her. The shock and the fear were enough to do that. She was afraid. How could he claim the servant boy to be just?
“He is more just-“
“Is this just?” Adrienne questioned, her tone harsh among its distress, “Was that Justice?”
“Adrienne-“
“How is that Justice?” She exclaimed, “He has done nothing-”
“You know why it had to be done.” George said solemnly, wrapping her hysterical figure in his arms, “He will be just, and he will be fair, and he will be better.”
Better.
This was a cruel, sick jest. Better? How could the man before her, so clearly lost, know which boy—neither who had ever ruled—would be better of a King? The man before her was a coward. A traitor. And-
“Dear God.” she whispered, disgusted, “Your treachery nauseates me.”
“It is no longer treachery.”
With him dead, George was right. There was no man he was treasonous to. No man remained breathing to make such accusations. Adrienne’s head was spinning, her nausea overtaking her, causing her to stumble into a chair.
“Yes, it is” she replied distantly, shocked and stunned into near silence at his blatant disregard, “You can lie to yourself all you’d like. It won’t make your deeds less heinous, your treachery more justified.”
“Adrienne-“
“You killed him! He’s done nothing, and you killed him!!”
God, she was going to be sick.
She was going to die here like this. Her nausea would overwhelm her, and it would never cease till she too was lifeless, blood at the corners of her mouth, like Tarleton. Like Andre. Adrienne felt the bile rise to her throat, but the only thing that came out was the burning tears of acid rolling painfully down her face. It was too much. The sensation of the tears, the bile in her throat, the scene in the courtyard, George's terrible, awful blue that was everywhere she looked all the time. The sound of the chains through the window, the horrible thud the block made when the sword made contact with it, better. It was enough to drive anyone mad.
It would drive her mad.
Could she breathe? Why couldn’t she breathe?
Would this be the thing to kill her? Was that their plan? She would go mad—go into shock—at such a gory sight that she would stop breathing. The servant king’s hands would be clean of her blood. Could George have lived with it? If George hadn’t pulled her away from the window, would she have jumped?
Did she say something?
George was speaking to her, trying to calm her, trying to soothe her panic, her fear, and her rage. She couldn't breathe. Had she been choking out words this whole time?
She had choked out a terrified plea to be spared. She had choked out an angry accusation that they will kill her. George called for guards, he was becoming old in age and with Adrienne’s body doing as it pleased with no regard for her wishes, he could not wrangle her to her room alone. She did not want guards. The clamor of the armor and the chainmail was too much like the sound of cuffed chains.
It was too overwhelming.
Adrienne’s head was spinning. Her ears rang. Tears spilled down her cheeks like acid rain. She couldn’t breathe. She was nauseous. God, she was going to be sick.
Adrienne stayed like that for a few days. A week maybe. Possibly more. Crying, sick to her stomach, and silent. She rarely uttered a word. George would try to speak to her but to no avail. She did not want his words. She wanted to go home, away from here. She wanted to know what was happening. George could give her neither.
He still tried to keep her spirit up. He still made sure he knew when, how much, and of what she ate. Occasionally he would send in one of his traitors. Foreigners, usually.
Some faces she knew, others she had never seen. It made no difference. She glowered in silence at both. She had no plan of associating with traitors and murderers alike. She would not stoop so low. Her anger—her fury—at their deeds would not let her.
She only ate out of fear. She never finished out of fear, too.
She could not starve herself, that much she knew. George would never allow it. Her death—whenever it was to come—had to be at the pretender King’s hand. It had to be political. It had to be “morally” right.
She had no agency here.
She would rather eat and risk poison than be subjected to having meals force-fed to her. She would not be manhandled by these people.
She wanted to go home.
Her head was pounding, and when it wasn’t pounding, it was spinning, making her feel faint and nauseous. Her bedroom door creaked open, and she did not even blink at it. She had already eaten breakfast today. Was George dissatisfied with what she had eaten? Had he come to stuff food down her throat? Or had they come to take her to the execution block next? Or would they make her await death in prison?
“Lady Fairfax,” it was William Lee, George’s manservant. Was there a different option she had failed to consider? William had always been too polite. Had he been sent to poison her? Would he apologize to her before he did it? “The Baron wishes to see you in his office.”
The Baron. George.
The traitor had an office.
The traitor joined with murderers for an office.
“I do not wish to see him,” she croaked, “Do tell him such. I have already eaten today, I cannot stomach a traitor.”
“I am sorry, my lady," he said, giving her the apology she had been waiting for, “But I have orders not to accept any answer declining his wish.”
The Baron. He had been a Sir before they chopped off Tarelton’s head. He had betrayed every one of his friends and his country—he had become Kingmaker—all for an additional room and a singular title raise. Coward. He had sent his manservant to collect her for a purpose he likely did not specify to William. He was not brave enough to do it himself. Coward.
William offered her his hand to help her up from the chaise she sat on, and—having no other choice—she took it. “You must forgive me, my lady,” he said to her as they made their way out to the hallway, a place Adrienne had not entered since she was brought to George's apartments, where they met an escort of guards. Armored and armed. That horrible clink of the chainmail on their bodies set her on edge. “It was insisted upon,” William explained, “By His Grace’s counsel. You are not going to be harmed, I will be traveling with you.” It put her on edge, that godforsaken clinking sound.
It was reassuring not to be alone now.
“You speak like we are traveling cross-country, William,” Adrienne said quietly, “It is only down a few halls.”
Halls she knew well, but could not help but feel like they were new. The tapestries of triumphs and banners and shields of red and gold that had once decorated them were gone, replaced by blue and white and silver at every turn. The suits of armor had been polished, and the weaponry removed. Was that because of her? Or were there others they worried about? Who remained alive still?
The fresh air and exercise of their walk should have made her nausea go away, but it made no effect. The hallways were nearly empty, and the horrible clanking of metal and their feet on the stone floor was the only thing to be heard echoing off the walls. Even the traitors were afraid of their actions. The deposition of a King in such a manner would not go unnoticed by the God who placed him there. Did these cowards fear God more than their servant King? Did they stay because they feared his hand too much to run? Or did they stay because they feared God’s power outside these walls of stone? They would bring down the walls on all who inhabit the castle eventually. God's wrath cannot be hidden from.
Her wrath made her nauseous. Which was worse: the deserted hallways that traitors were too scared to show their faces in that she was now faced with or entering into a bustling hall of celebrators? Which should she prefer?
Her stomach would have neither. Adrienne’s head was spinning, and when it wasn’t spinning, it was pounding. She hadn’t eaten much at breakfast, was that why she felt faint?
The company stopped in front of a solid door upon which one of the men rapped upon before opening it and ushering Adrienne and William inside. They did not enter with them, but rather waited. The group would seemingly push on. The Baron’s office was not their final destination after all. What a peculiar death march this was. She wondered how her death would come. What method would this questionable King use? Was he the sadist kind? Would he see her body mutilated by methods of torture till it could take no more? Or was he merciful? Adrienne doubted it was the latter. She had witnessed what the mongrel had done to Tarelton, like it or not.
“Ah,” George spoke, looking up at her as William ushered her through a second door, behind which George sat behind a desk of solid oak, “Adrienne. Please, come in, take a seat.”
The Baron.
The very thought nauseated her. She was going to be sick from this wicked display.
“George, or ought I to greet you as a Baron now?“ she said, moving her skirts to sit with grace as if she had not spent the morning staring at the pattern of the carpet in her room. As if there had been no war and this was a social call. As if her side of the war had not most recently lost. “It is a minor promotion for the Kingmaker, but I am sure you will make do.”
“How kind,” the man behind the desk replied dryly, “but I would have us discuss other things. Things more pertinent and pressing.” George stood up, walking to the large series of windows streaming light into the room as he continued without waiting for her response. “You must surely know by now that your world will be quite different from now on,” he began, stating the most obvious of things he could have. She wanted to know different- how. How would her life be different? What had happened? She wanted answers, and the pair had sat in silence for weeks because he could not provide her with any. He had not been permitted. What had changed?
“Have you summoned me to report my father’s death now?” Adrienne asked. It was very reasonable. Very logical. Life without her father—without the protection of his title and his peerage—would be most different indeed. So many had fled or been killed. Had he joined in their numbers? “Or have I been summoned so you may inform me that I am to be next?”
They would kill her eventually. She knew it.
Banastre had his head hacked off for his birth. Adrienne’s could very well be next.
“Neither,” George replied, ignoring the bite in her tone, “Though this has some to do with your father.”
“It does?”
“There was a ransom posted for you,” he continued, turning around to look at her like her head was not spinning like her ears were not ringing, “A tribute.”
Ransom. Tribute.
Tarleton had been parted from this world for crimes against this new King she too had committed—the engagement band of gold and the ruby resting upon it that still resided on her hand vouched for that. Yet he had been killed, and she remained untouched.
Her head was spinning, and the words rang in her ears like echoes in the abandoned halls of this once-bustling castle. “Then I am to be returned to him?” Adrienne asked, “Safely?”
And he stopped before he spoke. Paused. Hesitated. “Not quite.”
Adrienne wanted answers. All she had wanted for weeks was answers. She wanted to know what was happening. She still did not understand what was happening. Even now, and it infuriated her.
“What do you mean?”
“Your father gave His Grace a counteroffer to tribute.” George spoke hesitantly, lowering himself into the chair behind the desk once more, “You.”
Adrienne’s head was spinning, and she was nauseous. God, she was going to be sick. Was this room spinning? Poison would be a better date. Choking on her own bile would be kinder than being sold like a calf at market to the highest bidder. Was this new King a masochist? Or was he truly so heinous and odiously appearing that such a proposition would be accepted?
“He would-“ she stuttered, shocked, “He would offer me as a wife-”
“Not a wife, no,” George clarified quickly, causing her heart to sink and confusion to flood her mind once more. “Your Father’s own words were: “a servant for a servant” if I remember correctly.”
It was clever of him—the analogy. A servant for a servant. It was so clever she almost overlooked its severity.
“He would sell me off as a servant?” She asked, disgust and anger pulling her from shock and horror, “For the man who so slaughtered my fiancé? For the traitors who now run this court?”
God, she was going to be sick. She felt faint, and the room had not ceased spinning. George had sold his country out for an additional room and a singular promotion of title. Adrienne’s father—Sir William Fairfax of Denton, Yorkshire, Dorothy Gale, and Cameron, it would be a tale to say the titles and riches were not many—had sold his family off for what? What had he been offered for her humiliation? How could he have taken it?
“He has been offered full political immunity in return,” the Baron said, nearly reading her mind, pleading with her to be understanding. This is politics. People do what they must. Adrienne could expect no protection from her father. Politics were to be her lifeline now. This King would now decide her fate.
“His Grace has been kind and merciful enough to preserve your title and peerage for the protection it will give you in this court,” he began, “You will be presented to his grace, and you will kiss his ring. Bow before him. You will address him as Your Grace. You will show deference as befits a King.”
A King who had killed her fiance. A King who has slaughtered his ruler in cold blood. A King upon whom God would one day settle his wrath upon. The thought of being made to bow before him brought the sensation of tears to her eyes. It brought a flush of embarrassment to her cheeks.
“And how much more humiliation am I to suffer before you finally do something?”
Had George not been the one to ride ahead of them all and collect her under the cover of night? Had he not taken her to his rooms for safety and kept this King's guards from entering through his door for her? Had George not been the one to pry her horrified fingers from the curtains and grimace at the sight she had witnessed? Had he not this far protected her at every turn? Why would he now see her publically humiliated? To what end was this cause determined?
“You will not speak so freely,” was all he could muster. An admonishment. Pitiful.
She was a woman. Adrienne was familiar with the limitations of her sex. In the previous court, she had been its princess. They had not applied to her then.
“When must I be presented like tribute upon a platter before this council of traitors?” She replied, paying his criticism no heed. He was a coward. The whole of them were Godless cowards and would one day die such deaths.
“Now,” he said firmly, gesturing to the room she had just come from before the hallway. “You will make yourself presentable—I have had your things brought here, and your maidservant sent for,” he said, picking up a pile of papers, “The king wishes to see this famous beauty of yours he has heard so very much talked about. It was heard of him even off the continent: the beauty of the English Princess.”
Flattery.
Coward.
She knew she was talked of. Her beauty bordered on legendary. Emissaries would often come to court raving over the tales of her beauty. It was part of her appeal to Tarleton. It was part of her duties as a Princess—even if she was only a Princess to be. Vain as it made her, the legend of her beauty was true, despite her appearance after the sickness she had suffered these past few weeks from shock and distress. She would have no say in her humiliation, but there were still some things she could control.
This new king would get the British beauty he wanted so desperately to see, but he would not get the queen he wished to come with it.
She would not give him that submission.
George returned back to his papers, grabbing a few before leaving the offices altogether without a further word. When he had fully exited, Ona—Adrienne’s maidservant—came into the room with a gown of dark crimson red and rich gold and enough to prepare the blonde for presentation at court.
The guards escorted her to the familiar doors. She retraced a familiar path but felt no familiar feelings. This whole moment was familiar.
Last time she had been dressed so—her hair curled and arranged carefully down her back, a veil pinned to the headband she wore, soft silky organza cascading down her curls—a familiar set of faces had awaited her. It was where she got the band of gold on her finger that held a ruby so red at the center of it it was unmistakable who she was, or rather, who she had been. She had been dressed in a deep crimson red with the finest of gold ornament spanning the parts of the dress not made of red and gold brocade, much like the one she wore now with golden ribbon decorating her veil and the chemise that peeked out from the top of the neckline, at her shoulders, elbows between the ties of the sleeves.
She was gorgeous. Her lips were soft and plump and pink, and her cheeks were brushed with a rouge that would make her flush glow in the light of the hall’s windows. She looked beautiful. Irresistible even. But she would affront him, and refuse him his queen.
It was all too much. The clinking of chainmail as they walked through familiar halls, the valet that leaned in and whispered to address him as “your grace,” the familiar doors opening before her to reveal faces she was too familiar with. It was all too much. It overwhelmed her. Her head did not spin, and her stomach did not toss, but she could feel tears being brought to her eye.
He donned Andre’s crown like a mockery. The faces she knew—and the few she didn’t—whispered to themselves with every step she took. She had not even heard the steward announce her by title. Her only focus was on the man sitting perched on a throne that was not his. He seemed to feel the same, never breaking eye contact with her as she made her way down the center aisle of the room to the foot of the dias the throne sat upon. She would test him. In court, one never ascended the dias until the King had invited them to. It needn’t be verbal. A simple beckoning with his hand would suffice.
She saw him falter. She saw the confusion in his proud, steely eyes, panic setting in behind them. How well did he trust those faces in the crowd? Did he trust them at all? Or did he fear he had finally overstepped with this mockery and humiliation? Adrienne didn’t trust them either.
She stared back at him, her face calm and submissive but her eyes challenging him from where she stood. He finally motioned for her to join him, though she doubted he realized what he had done. Her feet walked forward despite their unwillingness to kneel at his feet and kiss the ring upon his finger she had sworn allegiance to when a real king had worn it. She lifted the hem of her dress ever so slightly so as not to trip on it while going up the few steps of the dias, sinking to her knees to a swift motion before him, eyes not breaking his intense stare even as she lowered herself to the cushion before his feet.
She would challenge him.
He would not get the queen he had wanted. That submission she would rob from him.
The man, dressed in a creamy, white silk corded jacket with gold and cream brocaded undersleeves, offered her his hand, offering her the ring to kiss like it was her honor to do so. Knowing she had no other choice—knowing this was why she had been brought here—she kissed it. Adrienne moved slowly, giving this King the drama he wished for, pulling her eyes from him, fluttering them closed as her lips made sweet contact with the ring. A tear escaped her eye when they closed, sliding gently down her cheek. She hesitated there, pausing her lips on the ring until the tear had fallen to the fabric of her skirts arranged at his feet like a tribute for just a moment, enjoying his squirming.
She fluttered her eyes open when she moved back from his hand, looking up at him through her lashes, kneeling still before him at his feet, her lips—pink and soft and now slightly plumper—parted carefully. He wished for beauty. She would give him that. The gold band on her left hand gave him his Queen. She would affront him, and he could not complain.
“They had not lied of your beauty,” he said, speaking finally, his voice softer than expected but just as sturdy, “It is a shame what has happened that you might find yourself so alone. Many a man would be untrue before God and have shame were you unchaperoned.”
“Then perhaps I should be grateful to the Baron, Your Grace,” she spoke quietly, soft and sweet and smooth as possible, “For his protection these past few weeks.”
He had demanded beauty.
She could give him that.
“Indeed,” the blonde man replied, “It seems he may be the only one to do so.”
The coward.
How reassuring.
“Your father said “a servant for a servant,” my dear. You should be happy I am so merciful as not to strip you down to such,” he replied carefully, “Your beauty is wasted upon a servant.” She knew that much. She knew that her veil of white organza, framed by golden ribbon, and the soft glow of her skin, the thought of her lips upon the ring were enticing to many in this room, whether they voiced their thoughts and desires or not. “You will enter into my household a Lady,” he affirmed. Could he afford anything less? How well did he rely on this crowd of faces too familiar to her? “You will attend to the Lady Walker as her Lady in Waiting. We shall see if such beauty remains unparalleled in blue.”
Snarky bastard.
It was a blessing in the least. Being a Lady of the court—and she would have to be if she were to serve in such a position—there was a certain level of protection that accompanied her.
What had been her other option? Had he intended to have her brought back to rooms she had not come from? Had he meant to lay her on her back and strip her of dignity? Men could be depraved, especially in the field. Men of combat took wives, but they also took mistresses. It was snarky of him, and Adrienne was certain she would hate it, but it was the best of her options. She would have more agency there than anywhere else. Adrienne did not even know this Lady Walker. She had not been aware there was one.
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culpeppercheckers721 · 4 months ago
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This is the vibe tonight, lads (depending on how far you’re into Hotel Room Service, you know 🤡)
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arrthurpendragon · 4 months ago
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As far as her father was concerned, Lydia's current feelings for Benjamin were simply that of a heartbroken girl whose childhood sweetheart had betrayed her. But the truth of the matter was that Lydia Woodhull would always love Benjamin Tallmadge, rebel or not.
Read Of Love and War at AO3 or WATTPAD
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queerquaintrelle · 4 months ago
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Battle of the blonde dandies...
In the left corner, Major Benjamin Tallmadge: smarter than you (probably), Protestantism, won't freeze if you dunk him the Delaware river (TURN), won't die if you shoot him (TURN), never been severely injured in war (history - citation his memoir), spying, politics, Yale, can and will yell at Thomas Jefferson (history - citation his memoir), good aim - doesn't like duelling.
In the right corner, Monsieur the newly made vampire Lestat de Lioncourt (1780 - books): mind reading, the sun won't kill him (he tried), can set small fires with his mind, speed, agility, can pick up information twice as fast as a vampire, as a young country lord he was made to go out in the snow and kill wolves that were attacking his village. Bisexual-biromantic (to the point where it causes problems <- affectionate) an atheist (also Ricean vampires will laugh at you if you try the crucifix thing).
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Common things: blonde, hot (don't lie), smart (depending who you ask), anti-heroism, aspiring for goodness, really really want to do the right thing despite nature/spy. 18th century men who look good in blue(?)
Context: I wrote this in my fic anti-hero, neither won, cause the plot requires they both live, yes, they can beat one another without killing each other (Audrey - oc, would prefer that tbh) but who wins (whatever 'winning' is) in this situation, now vote.
Note: vote based on the information provided, not impulse.
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iceman-maverick · 7 months ago
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fic: top gun but it's the american revolution and they're on horses, not planes
fire and fleet and candlelight
“A favor,” Stinger smiles, “from the General,”
“Which General?” Mitchell says, head snapping to Nick.
Figures. Mitchell can lead a company of men through the jaws of hell and back without a single casualty but it's Nick, who couldn’t tell his musket’s barrel from its stock, whose name carries any weight.
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enbylestat · 16 days ago
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In the dark
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Chapters: 2/2 Fandom: Turn (TV 2014), Original Work Rating: Explicit Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: Benjamin Tallmadge/Original Female Character(s) Characters: Benjamin Tallmadge, Original Female Character(s), Original Characters, Audrey (OC) Additional Tags: Kinktober 2024, Kinktober, Explicit Sexual Content, Teacher-Student Relationship, Alternate Universe - Student/Teacher, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Alternate Universe, Alternate Universe - Modern Setting, Alternate Universe - College/University, Bisexuality, Bisexual Female Character, Canon Bisexual Character, (because Audrey is bisexual), Sexual Content, Inappropriate Behavior, Inappropriate Teacher/Student Relationship, Cunnilingus, Oral Sex, Desk Sex, Under-Desk Blow Jobs, College, Vampires, Human/Vampire Relationship, Sex, Vaginal Sex, Vaginal Fingering, Multiple Sex Positions, Sex Work, Prostitution, Teacher Benjamin Tallmadge, One Shot, Plot What Plot/Porn Without Plot, Porn with Feelings Series: Part 7 of Benjamin Tallmadge/Audrey., Part 1 of Kinktober2024 (enbylestat's version) Summary: On her first day/night at Yale College, the vampire Audrey sets her mind to cause problems. Professor Tallmadge must discipline her, the trouble is... Audrey's tongue is talented, and she rather likes being disciplined.
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@duckprintspress
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little-desi-historian · 1 year ago
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The English were so petty, I can’t stop laughing. Research for writing purposes is fun!
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gellavonhamster · 6 months ago
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no one knows
Turn: Washington's Spies || Anna Strong & Caleb Brewster, Anna Strong & Benjamin Tallmadge || mentions of tallster ao3 link eng || this was first written and published on ao3 in Russian in 2017 but I didn’t attempt to translate it into English back then. 
1.
No one knows it, but she almost married Caleb Brewster once. Not for real, admittedly. They were sitting in a tree and eating apples – small apples, sour to the point of astringency, but they seemed delicious because they were almost real adult wages; Mrs. Barrow gave them some for helping her pull out the weeds. The biggest apple Anna hid in the pocket of her apron to bring it to Abe later – after he fell from another tree a while back, he was ordered to stay at home until his leg healed.
They were talking about pirates then, for some reason. Children like nothing better than stories that make their blood run cold.
“Are there still any pirates?” asks Anna.
“Of course there are. They just don’t sail under the black flag anymore, or they’d all get caught,” Caleb, as befits the older of the two, explains in a condescending tone. “But they still have entire islands of their own. I’m gonna go there, too, when I grow up.”
“Why?” Anna asks, horror mingled with admiration. How is he not scared? It’s not like spending a night at the graveyard on a dare or some other rubbish – these are actual pirates.
“To look for treasure. To rob ships. What’s there to do here? No adventures at all.”
“I wanna go, too,” Anna says resolutely.
Caleb – that pest! – breaks into a hoot of laughter right away. “Why would you do that?”
“What’s there to do here?” she echoes, knitting her brow. They don’t have much in the way of adventures here, that is true. And girls get scolded for adventures more than boys, because girls must not behave like that, or so everyone says.
“Who’s gonna let you? Girls can’t sail anywhere on their own. Only with a father or a husband… Unless you marry me? So that we go together?”
She gaped at him.
“Hey, hey, I’m kidding! Why would I get married? And what if I told Abe you wanted to… Ouch, that hurt! Stop, we’re gonna fall down!”
That was how it went. She clean forgot about it, but suddenly her memory tosses her that distant summer day – and she, having just cried wearily on Brewster’s shoulder, starts shaking with laughter. He releases her out of his bear hug at once, grips her shoulders and draws back a little to look her in the eye. Must’ve thought she’s gone mad.
“Annie, Annie,” and she asked him to stop her calling her that, she’s not six and not even sixteen anymore, “hey, what’s wrong?”
“I should’ve… married you back then…” he’s still looking at her with a confused frown, but Anna can’t stop choking with laughter and tears. Such things happen when you remember a silly joke late at a sleepless night – it’s not that funny, but you still cannot stop. “When we wanted to go to the pirates�� remember? It might’ve been easier if I did.”
Not enough adventures, was it so? Now she would gladly trade half her life for some peace.
When it finally dawn on him, he starts laughing as well, and pulls her closer again, pressing her face right into that cloak he surely hasn’t washed even once in his life.
“Sure I do. So what happened, pirate?”
“I’ll tell you on the way. And now, get me out of here,” she begs in a hoarse voice, and Caleb glances over her once more, quickly and closely, and nods without demanding any explanations.
“Gimme your luggage. Let’s go. Pirates or soldiers… Before someone notices you’re gone.”
The river, agitated by their boat, laps gently against its sides, and little by little, Anna calms down.
2.
When Ben learns about the rumours going around in the camp, he grows terribly embarrassed.
“So that’s how it is, then,” he says, perplexed. It seems like it hasn’t even crossed his mind that tongues might wag like that. “This is awkward. I am sorry.”
Anna shrugs.
“What does this have to do with you? They’re curious why I spend so much time in your tent. They’re trying to answer their own questions in some way.”
Besides, they don’t like her. The camp followers, the prostitutes, the soldiers’ wives. They think she’s stuck-up, while she just can’t afford having a friendly chat with them, because she can’t tell anyone about most things she’s been up to lately. And she doesn’t like gossiping about others as soon as they turn their backs – so they gossip about her instead. They’re barely hiding, so she has a rough idea of what is being said. Acting like a damn princess, this one. Thinks she’s better than us because she spreads her legs for the major. As if better or not is something that applies here; as if there is some kind of unified ‘we’. If Anna has understood something during her time in the camp, it is that everyone here has their own complicated fate, their own scars left by the war on their body or in their soul. A tattered book of sad tales.
But by God, at least she doesn’t badmouth others behind their backs.
Ben shakes his head stubbornly. Of course he knows what his responsibility is, and what it is not. The former is almost everything that concerns him in any way whatsoever, and the latter are floods, storms, and the like, things he can have no impact on, even if he might well think he ought to.
“I am sorry the nastiness you’ve faced in Setauket goes on here as well.”
“It’s all right,” Anna says reflexively. In her head, she adds: I’m already used to it.
Except the talk in Setauket and the talk here are far from being one and the same. Here, the gossip is unfounded. It is clear what it looks like when she stays in his tent for hours every day. These women wearied by cold and hunger and labour have no idea that they might see him as the young strapping Major Tallmadge, but all she sees is little Benny. Younger and shorter than her – he shot up later – with a cloud of golden curls and easily moved to tears. He’s steeped in blood up to the elbows and carries the entire world on his shoulders – sometimes she feels like she can see that burden he carries with him at all times, losses and failures and duties and plans. But she doesn’t see the handsome man that so many ladies pine for. Heaven knows what he sees when he looks at her – perhaps a little girl as well, a girl with messy braids who’s holding his hand while he’s crying over being stung by a bee. Or perhaps not, but that doesn’t matter, because when he looks at all those pining ladies whom he doesn’t remember as small and funny, he doesn’t see them either.
And in Setauket, it was true. Painted all the colours to look more outrageous, yet true. Her weakness, her mistake. She’s not ashamed of having a beating, living heart, but not everything in this life can be built on what the heart wants, and she dared for a moment to believe that was not the case.
Ben, who hasn’t lost his integrity in the flames of war, still persists.
“Perhaps I should talk to someone…”
“No,” she cuts him short. “That would make things worse.”
He’s taller than her now, and ranks higher (not that she has a rank, despite risking her life for their cause for years), but this time he listens to her.
In the end, the gossip proves useful when they have to compose a fake letter for Mrs. Bates – which is to say, for General Clinton.
“Let me read it,” asks Anna when Ben in done.
“There is nothing of note there. What is important is that it mentions we’ll be marching on New York.”
“You wrote me a love letter, and I can’t even take a look at it?”
“I will write you a dozen more letters if you wish.” Ben rubs his temples tiredly. “But they won’t be love letters, sorry. It’s so… strange.”
Indeed. The camp busybodies pay attention to the obvious – a young woman whose husband is far away, and who is a daily guest in the tent of a handsome dragoon. Not, for instance, to the way that very dragoon blushes like a girl and gets frustrated when the uninhibited Marquis de Lafayette kisses him on the cheek to greet him. And certainly not to how tightly and fervently he embraces Lieutenant Brewster when they meet and part, furtively pressing his face – his lips? – into the latter’s neck, into his shaggy beard. How the other looks at him as if bewitched and tries to steal a seemingly accidental touch whenever he can. Sometimes Anna wonders if they know that she knows, but she’s not going to ask until they ask her themselves. No one pays attention to that – and good thing they do not.
Not everything in this life can be built on what the heart wants.
“Splendid,” Anna agrees. “You’ll write me letters when it’s all over and I’m back home and you’re, I don’t know, wherever war heroes go…”
“The graveyard?”
“Curse that tongue of yours! Anyway, then you’ll write me. When the war is over.”
“Yes,” Ben nods, and corrects her with a smile, “when we have won, and the war is over.”
There is no room – can be no room – for ‘if’ here; they will move heaven and earth to ensure that.
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meerawrites · 1 year ago
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OC snippet tag
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Read the full story here.
Tagged by: @malicious-compliance-esq.
Tagging: @amberlynnmurdock, @voidfromouterspace, @flower-crowned-lady and @musicboxmemories.
Benjamin held the door like a gentleman and stepped through, as Audrey followed behind him.
Though really, given the circumstances, she was by far the more dominating presence here.
It all seemed gaudy to him, the velvet chaise couches, the red, and the symbols of swords and roses painted flashily across the back wall. Ahead of them sat a blonde woman, small, blonde hair like some Greek classical painting.
Benjamin found himself at a loss for words, taken aback a bit. He’d seldom imagine a woman in such power, and yet, there the vampire prince sat, looking most dignified. Audrey gave him a gentle tugging glance and he spoke.
“Major Benjamin Tallmadge, I come in peace, I’d ask to be of service, given my standing, but I doubt you’d require it,” he said, as Audrey had instructed. Magdalena glanced between Tallmadge and Audrey, as though calculating pieces in chess. “Audrey, dearest,” Magdalena said sweetly. “We’ve explored much together in our friendship, haven’t we?” She asked rhetorically.
“Spare me a kiss before you leave, won’t you?” She asked, genuinely this time. “In any case, even if I wished to aid you financially, I couldn’t, that would breach the code of the masquerade… perhaps your de Lioncourt would be more appropriate to your assistance,” she suggested, it was truthful but there was something of a disheartening lack of warmth in the words.
An air of nervousness suddenly overcame Audrey, nevertheless, eyes briefly gazing at Ben, half desperately, either for assistance or something else, she isn’t sure. Audrey stepped forward kissing Magdalena on the cheek twice and once hard on the lips.
Magdalena wanted Audrey selfishly in the way many individuals seem to. Mouth to mouth, between her thighs, and in her bed. But she would simply have to bide her time for that, one night perhaps, law and order was always the first priority, Magdalena’s wishes could wait.
An odd grudging feeling suddenly took hold of Ben. He had no right to that, he knew, Audrey was to bargain their way out. He simply couldn’t imagine just what was being bargained for.
Leave all your love and your longing behind, you can't carry it with you if you want to survive…
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tallmadgeandtea · 2 years ago
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SS&SP Drabble: Homeward Bound
Hello, everyone, and Happy Easter or Passover or just a regular Sunday! I thought I’d share a little scene I’ve had sitting in my notes app today, as a gift and an apology for the incredibly long wait for the next chapter! With college and transferring and research project my life has just *explodes.* Anyway, here it is! Benjamin and Elizabeth have their most intimate conversations right before she goes home, which I think is interesting. Perhaps it’s their way of unwinding after a day full of supply talk and dealing with Congress’ bullshit and Hamilton being Hamilton (I say this with love.) Enjoy, and thanks for sporting me and SS&SP!
“Is it true, Major Tallmadge?”
“Is what true, Miss Walker?”
“My father-“ she began, remembering the look on their faces whenever she brought him up, the flashes of disdain and resentment. Did she have any? “He always said New York had too many Tories and not enough Patriots. Said it was more divided than Pennsylvania could ever be- which seems impossible now that I know- now that I’ve seen it.”
Benjamin let out a soft whistle between his teeth. “I don’t want to agree with your father. He seems to assume rather than know.”
“Believe me, I learned that quickly.” She never wanted to leave him to be exposed vulnerable, alone. “He promises rather than acts, too.”
“But it- it’s complicated.” His fingers fell back onto the map, his gaze gone for a second, before he spoke again, “Do you remember where I’m from?”
“Setauket?”
He smiled, that wistful, sad smile- torn and frayed, a hint of defeat. “There’s a troop of British soldiers quartered there. No, not quartered- occupying. Ruling.”
Her heart dropped as soon as he said it, her stomach turned when she glanced down and saw where his fingers were- tracing the Long Island coast, subconsciously showing it to her.
“They- they turned my father’s church into a stable. Terrorize the citizens. They don’t respect them- they hate them-“ he inhaled a sharp breath, “they want them to suffer.”
“And there was nothing you could do,” she said.
Just like there was nothing anyone could do when the British burned the valley. When she saw the smoke from her window, all she did was stay inside, trying to hide instead of fight.
“I tried. I tried, Miss Walker.” His eyes met hers- did they match the color of the sound? She never stood at the edge of the shore, so close to the fathomless deep. “Do not doubt that for a second, I tried.”
“I know you did, Major. As you did at Brandywine, and Germantown, for Philadelphia.”
She rested her hand on the table— silence laid over the wood, the maps underneath their palms, their homes written in ink.
“I hate that living in an area they destroyed is something we have in common, Major Tallmadge. I’m so sorry about Setauket.”
He shook his head, as if it would solve and dispel his troubling thoughts. It never works for me. “Tis alright, Miss. It makes us work harder.” He said.
“It makes us fight for what we believe in. For our God given rights.”
“You truly are a preacher’s son, Major.”
“So you always say, but why?”
“You always find the blessing in disguise.”
The dragoons were outside.
It was time to take her home.
Benjamin smiled.
“I’m not the only one who does.”
At the tent’s open flap, she asked, “Will you tell me about Setauket, if I ask?”
“Well,” he considered it, a second too long. “I’m not sure it is beneficial for your mission.”
“Really? You are not the only Long Island soldier I feed, Major. Is that a sufficient answer?”
“Yes,” he said, clearly refraining his laugh, “yes, of course.”
She nodded, and laughed for both of them. Then she raised her chin, “Good. You just earned yourself an extra piece of ham.”
“Miss Walker!”
“I’m coming, Captain Seymour!”
“I’m not counting on the ham,” Benjamin remarked, “You’ll give my extra piece to a foot soldier, won’t you?”
“I-” she paused. He knows me.
“Yes, I would.” She moved forward, “Seymour is getting reckless. Goodbye, Major Tallmadge.”
“Goodbye, Miss Walker.”
And she left the soldier from Long Island.
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ms-march · 6 months ago
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Luck Be a Lady: Chapter 35
Woooo!!! This is the best chapter of LBL that has ever been published. I’ve been sitting on this chapter for about two years now, and I cannot WAIT for you guys to read it! And please excuse the dramatic shift in writing style from the last chapter. One day, I will edit previous chapters because I will have the time to do that... As always, if you enjoy it, like, comment, and/or reblog, PLEASE!!!!
“What if I want to make the next miserable decision myself?” Adrienne said bitterly before turning to head indoors, “at the very least, he is a gentleman’s son.” With the last of her words, the blonde slipped back through the door in the same manner she had come, leaving him alone, out in the cold for it to nip at his nose and heels and very bones, but none of that seemed to matter to him. “I am a gentleman’s son.”
Thank you to @tallmadgeandtea for reminding me that this line exists at least once again. He truly is the only man ever.
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culpeppercheckers721 · 1 month ago
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Hi @ everyone in this fandom need to make sure everyone has seen this, have you all seen this?
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Now you have 👍
(Of course from Nick Westrate’s instagram)
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arrthurpendragon · 4 months ago
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New (to AO3) Updates
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Ch. 12 The Rain in Spain
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Ch. 6 I Forgot to Remember to Forget
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Ch. 10 The Tournament Begins
Again, these are just "new" to AO3. These chapters have all been on wattpad for a while. I just forget I was cross-posting! Oops! lol.
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queerquaintrelle · 5 months ago
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TURN Week 2024: Favourite Crossover
"You're free to leave me but just don't deceive me — and please, believe me when I say I love you.." - El Tango de Roxanne, Moulin Rouge
My Fic: Anti-hero.
(the question is... is it Benjamin Tallmadge or Lestat de Lioncourt in this situation, or someone else entirely... or both, or neither... 🤷‍♀️😈)
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hmsannlett · 1 year ago
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Turn Week 2023: Day 2 — Content Creator Appreciation Day
In honor of today's prompt, I've put together a rec list of some of the Annlett fics I've enjoyed over the past few years. Leave a kudo and comment if you enjoy them, too!
And Now I Must Quit You by SheWasXena (NR, 23k, in progress):
Edmund Hewlett finds himself adrift after his broken engagement with Anna Strong. But when Anna seemingly pulls him back into her life, the two realize that their romance may be far from concluded.
fade into you by @viola-ophelia (G, ~600 words):
"No one had looked at Anna like that since– well, ever. She got the sense he saw something in her she’d never seen in herself..." anna jumps out of a boat and finds her way back to a different purpose than the one she'd thought she had.
Homecoming by violetdelights (G, 1.2k):
Major Edmund Hewlett has returned to Setauket, but he doesn't feel as if he has reached home until the night Anna finds him alone beneath a starless sky.
i look for love, i find a stone by @viola-ophelia (T, 1.9K):
would you help me rise up touch my face and watch me try to breathe again would you let me do this burn down the final wall Anna's feelings for Hewlett cause her to struggle with her personal loyalties.
Inklings and Overflowings by @lucyemers​ (G, ~700 words):
On the night Hewlett is kidnapped Anna thinks back over several moments and what they meant to her.
On This Cold Night by slushiepuff (G, 2.4k):
Her singular presence and no other meant fewer rules. They could be Anna and Edmund. They could sit a little too close. They could speak freely.
shattered ring by @viola-ophelia (G, 200 words):
"In the morning she’d wake up raw with the loss of him and keep on living." A set of two drabbles written for the ValenTURNs Day 2023 ship bingo. Hewlett sinks. Anna rises.
Sheet Bends and Sunscreen by @tortoisesshells (T, 1k):
A few moments in which Anna Smith Strong snoops on Edmund Hewlett's life via his reading choices - though, really, he's happy enough to talk that it truly isn't snooping?
yet Man is not consum’d by @tortoisesshells​ (G, 1.1k):
AU for 2x05: Smallpox arrives on the tails of the Rangers, and much of Setauket scrambles for quarantine or for variolation. In the midst of this, Anna Strong finds herself erstwhile nurse to the denizens of Whitehall - an occupation that gives her time to reflect on the help Major Hewlett has offered her.
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