Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta wicked stepmother. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta wicked stepmother. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 23 de junio de 2017

APPLE, OAK, AND PLUM

Apple, Oak, and Plum

Work Text:

Lucas Fortier had grown to love his wife. It had not been a love match; no indeed, their marriage had been arranged despite the urgent pleading of both bride and groom. The first years had not unexpectedly been years of strife and estrangement; where a person might find the master of the house, they could be assured not to find the mistress. There were other matches, the whispers among the servants went, with the deepest of attachments. How could they feel anything but despair at the sight of one another?
Time heals many wounds, however, much as it did with these two wounded hearts. It began with a kind word, a gift given where none had been expected. A softening of hearts as seasons turned and they wandered the paths of their garden together. As grey began to find its way into Lucas’ hair, as Isabelle shed the uncertainty of youth for the confidence of adulthood; estrangement turned into mature love.
In the years that followed, Lucas and Isabelle spent many days working side by side in the merchant venture that had been the reason for their marriage contract. Late in the year they celebrated the thirteenth year of their union, Isabelle gave birth to a daughter and their heir was thus produced.
It was, however, not to be.
Their daughter, Elle, was a mere child when her mother passed away and Lucas found himself alone in a house that did not feel like his, and with a child that he could not bring himself to care for.
“Take care of her,” he told the servants on the day of Isabelle’s burial. “I do not wish to see her.”
The love for a mother does, after all, not assure a love for her child, and for Lucas, the sight of the happy girl child was a sharp reminder of what he could have had, once. As a young man, he had dreamt of daughters and sons at his side, their auburn hair and green eyes the very image of their mother's. This child of his, with her golden locks and wide brown eyes, seemed as foreign to him as the life now ahead.
“She’s your heir,” his sister told him some months past Isabelle’s death. “Should you not remarry and produce another child, you will need to raise her.”
It was meant as a chastisement, but instead it set in motion a series of events that would give him a new outlook on life.
Lucas had not forgotten the love of his youth. Intelligent Sylvie with her long fingers that danced across the keys of her pianoforte, and that had tangled in his hair during their illicit meetings in shadowed corners and darkened glens. Independent Sylvie that had cast away the match her parents had made in the wake of Lucas’ engagement and announced that if she could not have love, then she might as well have wealth and standing.
They had not kept in contact – not beyond the emotional letters that followed their parting – but he knew well that Sylvie’s husband had passed away not recently and left her with a fortune and two heirs. It was not whim that made him write her a letter, but instead a stirring sense of hope. Perhaps it was not yet too late for the match he had fought to make those years before he came into his inheritance.
Her reply, when it arrived by courier that could not have cost a small sum to hire, even for one of Sylvie’s wealth, did not only reawaken hope, but set flame to a heart that had thought it would never again feel passion. When they met once again, crowded into a private dining room in a well-established inn, Lucas found that all he could say was her name while she could not manage even that, straightening his collar instead with trembling fingers and a smile that could rival the sun as he took her hands..
“I cannot ask you to…” he began to say, but she silenced him with one look.
“You can ask me to do anything. You always could, Lucas.”
He remembered then the offer she had made on the eve of his wedding, to eschew all of her inheritance and his, to run away and be happy with what little they had. He had not dared then, his family holding him in a firm grip. Now, however, he found that he cared little for family and societal ties.
“May I ask you to become my wife?”
She met his eyes without hesitation as she replied, “I would have said yes even had it been a solicitation for a mistress.”
He laughed then, his entire being lighter than it had been since before Isabelle’s death.
“Then we shall marry and your daughters will be my heirs as they are yours.”
“Have you not a daughter by your wife?”
“She’s not my daughter in any way but name and shall have the sum the law accords her. I have given her into the care of the servants and there she will stay; she has all she needs to live and plenty of caretakers around her. “
If Sylvie had any thoughts on the matter, she kept them to herself and as she entered the house as its mistress, she followed Lucas’ will. Young Elle remained with the servants and was not treated any different than any gentlewoman’s servant, though her parentage was never kept from her or Sylvie’s daughters.
Lucas found in this second marriage all the passion he had lacked in his first, for all there had been sincere and strong love. It seemed to him as if his youth had been returned to him and that Sylvie had brought life into a place that had been dead.
When Elle, by her mother’s heritage, captured the interest of and subsequently married the Prince, he did not give her anything but the well-wishes society demanded; the daughters he had come to by his second marriage received instead all the love and gifts that others would have accorded their daughter of blood as they entered into marriages negotiated for them by the newly crowned Princess.
Lucas remained married to Sylvie into his old age and lived modestly and happily in the very home he had lived in for all his adult life. When Elle visited him once his health began to ail, she asked him whether he regretted anything in his life.
“No,” he said. “I have had both Isabelle and Sylvie in my life; I have two daughters by marriage that I love and adore, and a daughter by blood that has married well. I can ask for no more.”
And though Elle could not have fully felt at peace with the answer, she nevertheless kissed his forehead and left him to the care of Sylvie and his daughters.
When Lucas shortly thereafter passed away, he was laid to peace in a grave next to Isabelle, his other side left for Sylvie. Their daughters planted trees on their graves and even now you can visit their resting place to see the great oak flanked by apple and plum shade the remnants of their graves.

domingo, 12 de octubre de 2014

THE HEIRS OF VERLANGENS: REVIEW

I have the Springtime Lake - Summer Lake 'verse I have created (feudal yet LGBT fantasy: no large communities or technology from before the 1850s; the presence of pegasi, werebeasts, dragons, and fair folk... yet queer, interracial, and subversive characters, and issues like speciesism and realpolitik play a relevant role)...
and its female ruler Radegunde in mind. To loyalists of the old regime, she's the wicked stepmother or the usurper, "an evil-disposed woman"..:
"she concealed the malignity of her heart under the mask 
of friendliness..."
But she has also got supporters at court, who know the truth about their warrior queen's rise to power: she's actually an upstart of the gentry from the provinces, sent to court and betrothed at an early age against her will (by a powerful widowed mother) to an adult child with a penchant for strong drinks and fair maids... She's actually a well-intentioned usurper, something like Catherine the Great. She led a conspiracy of army officers against her own husband. I took inspiration from Catherine and from this text (aside from the Clever Princess, one of my favourite characters):
<< Not all of us became Christians ; and one of our 
orders in particular, which had learnt from a Greek the 
philosophy of Epicurus, still held to its doctrines.
 A light and godless race they were, thinking 
nothing worth their care but how to appear in colors 
gay ; and to their sensual maxims true, they would 
drink deep of ambrosial dew, and then for hours would 
sleep... By their uncer- 
tain zig-zag flight, dear child, thou well may'st see, that 
they have drunk more than is right, and their senses 
clouded be. 
These were the confirmed old topers, who 
had imbibed so much of the ambrosial dew that their 
bodies had grown fat and unwieldy, and had very large 
stomachs. and so whenever one ap- 
proached, each bent aside its calyx bright in mockery 
of the uncouth wight. Or if by chance one clambered 
up to reach the blossom's nectar-cup, its stem would 
bend beneath its weight, and down the-awkward creature 
straight would go, and all its members dislocate.
ir evil deeds they did under the cover of the 
night. When every flower was soundly sleeping, they 
came like midnight robbers creeping — ^then drew them 
softly to the ground, and sucked from their lips their 
nectar breath ; so that many a flower at morn was found, 
lying pale in death, and sinfully robbed of all its wealth, 
that had closed its leaves in rosy health. 
and emptied the pitcher with a satyr- 
like expression of countenance. 

The liquor seemed quickly to affect him ; for almost 
as soon as he had swallowed it he manifested his satis- 
faction by fantastic leaps, and all kinds of ridiculous 
antics. Overpowered by 
fatigue, and the strength of the liquor he had drunk, he 
gradually sank down by the stream, and fell asleep. 

" Those who had drunk deep by day, roused by it 
could not sleep away the ill effects of their carouse, so 
they with aches and fevers rose.

<< In the first tumult of their ire some of our fiercest 
spirits did conspire their monarch's blood to spill. They 
tore the thorns from the stem of the rose, and the strongest 
and longest and sharpest they chose to work their wick- 
ed will. Beneath their mantles green they hid the 
spears; and sought their king, the curse-beladen one, 
who again in the tulip lay alone in sorrow and in tears. 
Wildly they the stem ascended, and in their rage they 
struck the deadly blow ; they pierced him till his heart's 
blood forth did flow and with his life his sorrow ended. 

Whether it 
was the effect of the too hastily swallowed drink... he lay dead.
And her only son Kyle, allegedly (according to the old regime loyalists) a bastard, is later revealed to be gay... a direwolf and a white female cat he met in the wide world (a thick fir wood,), revealed to be werebeasts (the werewolf is the rightful heir Henri, and Kyle's lover!), follow Kyle back home... What will happen at court? Will war return to the lands of Verlangens? Will the "usurper" fall?
There is a scene where a whole army is turned into the cutest little boys ever, inspired by this story:
...he caused his whole
army to draw up on the plain, and commanded them to 
watch day and night, that no one whatsoever should 
approach the tower. 
As he 
came nearer to them, he remarked that they grew 
gradaally less and less, and that their lines contracted; 
and when he got so near that they could bear 
him speak, he perceived, to his no small astonishment, 
that all these formidable soldiers, and mustached gren- 
adiers, had shrunk into children of four years old, so 
that he cried aloud to them : — " Yield this moment, or 
you shall all be whipped." 
Then the whole army began to cry, and ran away...
To as many as he could catch, he gave sugar-plums, 
whereupon they immediately swore to obey him. 
 ...................................................................................................HERE'S MORE INSPIRATION
...to the open plain, and began to strike, his sword here and 
there in the ground, and in. a few minutes there stood 
on the plain many thousand well armed combatants, 
and the youth himself, richly armed and adorned, sat as 
their leader on a noble horse decked with gold embroid- 
ered housings and a lustrous bridle. The young general 
led his troops against the foe, and a bloody battle was 
fought. Unceasing death-shots thundered from the 
commander's hat, and his sword called up one regiment 
after another from the ground, so that in a few -hours 
the enemy was vanquished and scattered, and the flag 
of victory waved above the conquered camp. The victor 
pursued and conquered from his foe a considerable por- 
tion of his country.
The realm beyond which the wide world begins is the isle of Verlangens,
located in the middle of Springtime Lake and with the misty Summer Lake in the middle.
It's a feudal land without settlements, only castles, villages, and marketplaces.
There's a monarchy and several vassal dynasties. 
The ruler is Radegunde (disabled and pardoned, abdicates) then
replaced by Kyle and his two disenchanted companions as a ménage à trois.