waid: (angst)
waid ([personal profile] waid) wrote2010-09-22 01:46 pm

Winter in London -- Part XXI/XXI -- The End!


If'd I'd had the slightest idea how long I'd be writing this I'd never have got started... and so for many, many complicated reasons, I'm glad I didn't.

[livejournal.com profile] katieforsythe will know which bit is for her.

Thanks so much to everyone who's encouraged me along the way.

 Part I,
Part II,
Part III,
Part IV
,
Part V
Part VI,
Part VII
Part VIII 
Part IX
Part X,
Part XI,
Part XII
,
Part XIII,
Part XIV,
Part XV,
Part XVI
Part XVII,
Part XVIII,
Part XIX
Part XX

The Château de Beynac – Notes:

Rising high on the promontory above the Dordogne River, the Château appears impregnable, even now in its ruinous state. The village is ranked steeply against the hillside in a maze of terraces. With its sunken roads and thick town walls, the town is still so heavily braced and fortified against attacks that no longer threaten it.

Yet within are pots of geraniums and hanging wreaths of wisteria against sun-warmed, honey-coloured stone.

[Remember send postcard Mrs. H]

* * *

Last night was difficult. Though I did reduce the dosage over a period of a week before ceasing to take the drug altogether, clearly the incline was too steep and I should have continued for a while longer at ten grains. Nightmare; tremors; little actual sleep.  Yet having gone without it once, I feel reluctant to take it up again, even at a low dose. I am surely past the worst of it now,  and Holmes---  

* * *

I have idled away a good deal of the afternoon I meant to spend sketching out a rough account of the Milverton case. I am keeping very irregular hours at present but I suppose there is no harm in it. I dozed off in the garden, half in the sun and half in the shade of a walnut tree, and have woken to find I have the cottage to myself. Holmes, I surmise, must have gone into Saint Léon  for more wine or the smooth white cheese with walnuts from the market.

Holmes cannot see the use of writing of that extraordinary night.

 “My dear fellow,” he said, “if conscience compels you to turn us both in, can’t it wait until we return home? Allow us to savour our remaining days of freedom. ”

I might have said that considering his own remarks in Lestrade’s presence (“Why, it might be a description of Watson,”` indeed!) he had little right to lecture me about discretion. Instead I said, “I shall be careful. And decades from now, perhaps the tale will have its day.”

He gave me a quick and rather startled smile.  “You will have had quite enough of my profession’s peculiarities by then,” he murmured.

“I shall never have had that,” I said.  And then one of those moments occurred in which we are both trapped and panicked in the inability to stop looking at each other, and it was as if I had said, I shall never have had enough of anything to do with you – which was, and is the truth. 

In a kind of desperation to release us both I added at last, “Besides, I like to write for myself.”

And I find that is true too; I have begun aimlessly scribbling things down again, when for months  the idea of committing any private thought or observation to paper filled me only with a dull sense of defeat. But today I cannot after all turn my pen to Milverton.  What can I say of the moments of that night that are most on my mind? And what do I need with pen and ink to commemorate them?

 And even that memory is possesses me less than the pleasant urgency of anticipating Holmes’ return. I wonder what time he left? If our positions were reversed I suppose he would deduce it. I feel too lazy even to try it, however – I had rather indolently sit and wait, watching this line of ink unroll across the page and asking myself when will he be back?  without trying to answer.

I fear he has timed his excursion poorly for I can feel a faint warning throb in my shoulder, and beside the scent of lavender and laurel the air is heavy with approaching thunder and I have decamped inside. I should not mind a storm, to scour the tarnish off the bright Southern heat, but if my friend is unlucky he may be caught in it – Saint Léon is twenty minutes’ walk away.

He may have been grateful for a little time to himself.

Oh, God, that even here, and after everything, we should both be so frightened of each other.

I have the advantage of him. For once, I think I know more of his mind than he knows of mine. I know he has loved me a long time. I know he is afraid that all the answering desire I have shown for him will, if tested any further, vanish like a soap bubble. And then he will lose the only friend he has, and – for he will never forgive himself.  

And these are not groundless fears. I am afraid I have been blighted beyond repair, or that I always was and it has merely been uncovered. I am afraid we will ruin each other, or that we already have. How can I offer or promise him anything when I can’t get such ideas out of my head? And at times I see the last remnants of the future I expected vanishing and I cannot help grieving for it.

(Yet what use have I had for the expected since I first met him?)

If neither of us dares move to accelerate our slide, nor do we do anything to arrest it. My friend, I think, does not quite understand that however often we shift to a safe, chaste distance from each other, however strictly  we both behave as if touches and  kisses already exchanged never happened, it is already too late to retrace our steps. And nor can we linger here on the edge for ever.  He has  told me nothing about his past affairs but he was very young when the last of them ended; wise as he is, I am not sure he recognises that a pair of lovers who have come as far as we have– who live in constant temptation and  have nothing to keep them apart –  must either separate and place very concrete obstacles between themselves, or else let themselves be swept off as if on a torrent of floodwater.  And I need not remark that the first course would be painful beyond bearing when it is so clear we have no intention of taking it; if we had we would hardly have removed ourselves to an isolated cottage of amber stone in a country where even the law is grandly indifferent to anything we have done or might do.

(And  I have discovered that I do not always object to breaking laws, if the cause seems worth it.)

And now I have written the word lovers quite coolly, as if it were any other word, although I know, in some room of my mind, there must be shock at it. But wherever it is I cannot find my way to it. Sometimes – now, after everything I have just written of ruin and fear –  all this agonising seems simply silly, the struggle not to touch him, both futile and absurd.  Why should we both work so hard to maintain that little space between us, when we have closed it already and the sky failed to fall in? 

 

    

I can read French tolerably well, and I can manage a simple conversation if Holmes is not present. My friend’s fluency renders me unfortunately self-conscious:  I trip over words I have known since my schooldays, my accent thickens atrociously, and the struggle to communicate seems such a waste of everyone’s time when Holmes could say whatever needs to be said so much more smoothly.  Holmes finds this unsatisfactory.   Therefore at unpredictable intervals I am subjected to intensive, mandatory French lessons. Yesterday afternoon he refused to answer me if spoken to in anything but that language but for the entirety of lunch and afterwards compelled me to summarise and discuss the news from Le Matin.  The garden slopes down sharply to a rapid stream, icily cold but clean and bright as diamonds, and he sat beside me under the willows at its edge, correcting my mistakes with increasing impatience.

Finally he lapsed abruptly into English. “Watson,” he said, “are you being intentionally dense?”

I tried to look innocently dejected, and found it a struggle because the truth was yes, I had been deliberately confusing avoir and être for the past half-hour with the sole purpose of annoying him.  

Under his suspicious gaze I soon had to give way to laughter. Holmes frowned, reached out and gave me a light, schoolmasterly cuff to the back of the head with my dictionary.

This is better. His carefulness with me touches me very much, but it troubles me too. I don’t wish to be treated like a tragic foundling out of a Dickens novel, certainly not by Holmes of all people.  I am the same man I always was.

I considered pinning him down in the grass, by way of retaliation. If I had had a second glass of wine at lunch I believe I should have tried it. 

“Je croyais nous étions en vacances,” I complained instead, with, I think, a rather better accent than I can usually command.  

“Le travail est aussi rafraîchissant pour l'esprit que le repos!"  decreed my friend imperiously, still in his character as a dictatorial teacher. “On ne gagne rien sans le travail.”

“Ou sans danger,” I said – but I retreated into timid, mumbling incoherency as I said it.

It was very hot; he had pulled off his collar that morning as soon as he returned with papers and croissants from Saint Leon, and I could see the long line of his throat slope down to the hollow shadowed within his shirt. There was a faint streak of sunburn on the crest of each cheekbone, almost precisely where the edge of the silk mask fit his face.  His eyes – amused and annoyed and provoking – were the same colour as the bright stream.

There is a tiny silver scar on his jaw, about the size of a grain of rice, only visible in certain lights.

 

I was right about the weather; a moment ago  an immense crack sounded among the clouds and rain is fairly crashing down on the garden and sparking white against the windows.

 

I have written briefly of that first night without chloral. I came to myself after a short, delirious struggle with visions I shall not record. I lay there for a while, trembling and trying without success to quiet my pulse.  Even as I decided these symptoms indicated only that my system had received a minor shock from the too-rapid discontinuation of the drug,  black thoughts rose to meet them. It is not only the memory of that awful night that torments me at such times.  Sometimes, when I find myself in conversation, whether with a friend or stranger – with Lestrade, say, or Mr Burrage, or the lady with whom I chatted briefly in the tea-room at Charing Cross – I think, If you knew what has happened, and what I have done . . .

. . . and it does not matter much whether I complete the thought, whether I imagine revulsion or disbelief or embarrassed pity. A barrier transparent as glass and impermeable as marble cuts me off from my interlocutor and from all the world,  and there is very little space or room to breathe on my side of it.  And when I am awake late at night I start thinking of spending the rest of my life confined so.  

 Having learned the lesson that it is better to get up than lie passively at the mercy of such horrors, I rose, lit a candle, and went downstairs in search of some distraction. I tried to move soundlessly, but the creaking stairs  of this ancient  cottage betrayed me and Holmes soon discovered me pacing the floor of the sitting room.  I reassured him I was not looking for the chloral bottle and I would not let him do anything for me – he cannot always be ministering to me – but I could not persuade him to leave me.  So there we sat, talking of the chateau we visited and the campaigns it has witnessed; the crusades and the Hundred Years War.

Waking at dawn to discover we were clumsily entangled on the sofa and that I was half draped across him, I felt ashamed that I had kept him from his comfortable bed. And I think that was that was all I was ashamed of.

There is nothing on the other bank of the stream but trees. Yesterday, in the garden, we could have done anything we wished and no one would have seen us.

But there is no shortage of time.

 

 It now appears to me that these idle jottings, begun without any conscious design, all gather to  a quite outrageous purpose;  I am apparently working myself up to the task of ambushing my friend on his return and surrendering us both, finally, to what I seem to have concluded is inevitable. Well, then. When have either of us ever shied away from danger before?

Now I can see him coming down the lane, between the poplars. He is carrying something clasped against his chest, but he is not hunching against the rain nor running from it, being evidently so drenched already that it is no longer worth trying to protect himself.  It is not cold, after all.

 

THE END

 

 






 

A/N: Translation

Watson: I thought we were on holiday.
Holmes: Work is as refreshing to the spirit as repose! One gains nothing without work.
Watson: Or without danger.  

 

(My French is more like Watson’s than Holmes’, and this is unchecked by people who actually speak it properly  -- corrections welcome.)

 

[identity profile] spacefall.livejournal.com 2010-09-22 03:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Ahhh, the perfect end for this.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 02:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I was far more nervous about posting the ending than any other part of it. At least, I think so. It's been so long now!
(deleted comment)

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 02:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm really glad you liked the end.

>>Will you be writing any more SHfics or are you taking a break for a while?

Both, I guess -- I'll probably take a while to enjoy the feeling of actually being DONE and to concentrate on some RL stuff that needs attention, but I definitely want to write more Holmesfic. If only because pleased as I think I am with this, I don't know that I want epic rapefic to be my most significant contribution! I did have another one in the works, but I think it might have died for lack of attention, I'll have to poke it with a stick at some poitn and see if it twitches. And I see there's talk of a del.icious (?) file of unfilled prompts, I'll certainly look at that if/when it arrives.

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[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 02:59 pm (UTC)(link)
You're very kind --thank you so much!

[identity profile] tweedisgood.livejournal.com 2010-09-22 07:42 pm (UTC)(link)
It's finally over. *midway between regretful and satisfied sigh*. Funny, I sort of expected you were going to take us all the way there, but on reflection, you have laid the groundwork for the journey and our imagination is quite up to the task :-)

Beautiful writing and characterisation all through, well done and thank you.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm so glad you've stuck with it this long.

I worried/worry still that people would be disappointed that this didn't follow them all the way into the bedroom. But it didn't feel right to me to end with a sex scene. I thought we had to stay in the minor key, just with more hopeful lyrics.

Anyway, it's not the sex that's the HEA -- it's the hitting on the head with a dictionary!

(Also it's possible neither of them will have much time for writing for a while)

[identity profile] zauzat.livejournal.com 2010-09-22 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
A lovely end to a beautiful story. I will miss it but you should be very proud of having written such a wonderful epic.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I am proud, I think. Although Lord, I shudder to think at how long this has taken. And you know I once thought this would be about 4000 words? I just finally copied it all into one file and discovered it's OVER FORTY-FIVE THOUSAND. *headdesk* Stupid, demanding subject matter!


[identity profile] mothergoddamn.livejournal.com 2010-09-22 10:15 pm (UTC)(link)
I need to write pages and pages of praise but am falling asleep, I shall return!

But before I go-my fave line:

"I have written the word lovers quite coolly, as if it were any other word, although I know, in some room of my mind, there must be shock at it. But wherever it is I cannot find my way to it. "

[identity profile] mothergoddamn.livejournal.com 2010-09-22 10:16 pm (UTC)(link)
WAIT! Not falling asleep BECAUSE OF THIS. I just put sleep off because had to read the end.

Worth it. Eye twitching though.

LONGER LETTER LATER.

(no subject)

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com - 2010-09-26 15:14 (UTC) - Expand

[identity profile] rabidsamfan.livejournal.com 2010-09-23 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
Ah... A truly lovely ending to a wonderful fic.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for reading this endless monster of a thing and being so nice about it!

[identity profile] f-m-r-l.livejournal.com 2010-09-23 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for your gift of this story.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:18 pm (UTC)(link)
You are very welcome and thank you in return for reading it and being so kind.
ancientreader: sebastian stan as bucky looking pensive (Default)

ah, wonderful

[personal profile] ancientreader 2010-09-23 03:05 am (UTC)(link)
And I couldn't be more grateful for your timing, as I'm on a stressful and lonely business trip very far indeed from the South of France and from my own beloved. This lovely, just slightly shadowed ending. And when I get home I can (after happy greetings!) reread from part I. Thank you as ever for the pleasures and pains of WiL.

Re: ah, wonderful

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm glad if this was pleasant company on your horrid trip. I hope you're home now, or will be soon.

innie_darling: (reading heals)

[personal profile] innie_darling 2010-09-23 03:32 am (UTC)(link)
I've so enjoyed this story.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm very pleased to hear it, thank you for saying so!

[identity profile] katead.livejournal.com 2010-09-23 04:24 pm (UTC)(link)
GAH! It's here! Hurrah! I can't read it now but I'm saving it for later and I know it will be wonderful :DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDd

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Glad you're pleased! Hope you enjoyed/will enjoy it when you get to read it!
Edited 2010-09-26 15:25 (UTC)

[identity profile] nodbear.livejournal.com 2010-09-23 08:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Sorry to comment only at the end -seems churlish when you have been providing such pleasure -but I don't oftten get time to say what I would wish
this is both delicate and fine and intelligently written- and the end is a great part of the way you have maintained a graceful arc of story

and I look forward to reading it entire again very soon

thank you

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you very much -- it's so nice to hear you've been following this and found it worth your time. And I'm so glad you liked the ending.
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[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! This is pretty much the ending I always envisaged, yet when it came to it I was very nervous people wouldn't like it! So I'm very glad you thought it fit with everything.

[identity profile] jenlee1.livejournal.com 2010-09-24 01:55 am (UTC)(link)
*deep, contented sigh*

I fear that I've been rather remiss in commenting on the past few chapters - real life has been unbearably demanding lately, although that's really no excuse for failing to tell you how very much I've enjoyed this.

At any rate, as I'm sure you're already aware, this is an absolutely exquisite piece of work from start to finish. It's been a wonderful journey, and I can't imagine a more fitting conclusion than the one you've given them - tentative and expectant, poised on the brink of a happy ending.

God knows they deserve it, after everything that's happened ;)

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 03:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh it's nice to know you've still been reading! (Sorry about RL, it does do that, doesn't it? I hope it'll ease off soon -- I'd love to read more of your fic!) Thank you, I'm so glad you liked this whole thing and that you found the ending fitting -- "tentative and expectant" is a lovely way of putting it and just what I was going for. And yes, after the wringer I've put them through, sending them to kiss and whack each other on the head with French dictionaries in the sunny south of France seemed the least I could do for them!
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[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 04:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! There's some lovely stuff out there so that's a very high compliment. I'm so glad you liked the ending -- it was much the most nerve-wracking part to post. And best wishes to you too!

[identity profile] kate-lear.livejournal.com 2010-09-24 03:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Do you know that as soon as I saw that you posted the final instalment of this story I pounced on it, read it avidly, & loved it so much that it's taken me two days to calm down enough to comment coherently on it & not just mash the keyboard in my uncoordinated, flailing joy. I've just *adored* this series - the slow build-up between the pair of them, the growing closer by increments, Watson achingly slowly pulling himself back together after what's happened while Holmes feels helpless in the background, the link to the Milverton case...

It's all been just glorious. The characterisations (which were *spot on*, by the way)... *sigh*

Thank you so much for persevering with this. It's been really beautiful series to follow.

*goes off to re-read the entire thing from the start*

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 04:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, I'm so pleased you liked it -- I was really very nervous about ENDING this finally, and switching back to Watson-voice, and oh, everything. Thank you for being so nice!
(deleted comment)

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 04:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Well you were perfectly right, my dear --it needed to be there! I can be stingier than I should be with the sweet bits because I worry about things getting too soppy, (I went for years and years of my writing life refusing ever to use the word "heart" in any but the strictly anatomical sense, for example, and can still probably count on one hand the number of times I've allowed it.) But sometimes soppiness is required and appropriate and it allowed me to get in all kinds of important information about the state of the Watson.
Sleep-cuddling FTW! is what I'm saying.

And I'm so glad you like it. This is the one chapter I've really had severe "close eyes and press post" syndrome about. (And then "bite nails and gently mope" syndrome.) Which seems to have meant I posted it with an awful lot of mistakes. Bah. Fixed now, I hope.

>>"I shall never have had enough of anything to do with you." Yes. Exactly.

You know that conversation we were having about their future (*repeats happy-universe "No Mary! Too painful!" reassurances*) I thought it was important for him to say something that, whatever happens -- even if they were to mess things up and hurt each other before they were through -- would always be completely true. And that is! (Shut up, Doyle, we all know those "Holmes was totally alone in that Sussex cottage, no Watson, no siree" stories were lies.)

>> I can't wait to see what you write next.

Thank you very much! And...I think I've just bloody gone and had an idea while replying to comments. It would be nice to write something more adventurey, I think. But I'll have to let it brew while I bask in "OMG I actually finished it" for a while.

[identity profile] sazzat.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 10:18 am (UTC)(link)
After a few days of reading this fic I've got to the end, and it was wonderful.

This was such a beautiful story. I have loved every moment. Just wow, really. I enjoyed it so much. Your pacing over such a length of time of writing was still always perfect. The plot was wonderful. It both broke my heart, made it ache and made me smile.

And this was a perfect ending.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much -- you're very kind! I'm particularly glad and relieved the ending didn't let you down.

Yeah... I really can't believe how long it's taken, but as I say, it's just as well I didn't realise what I was getting myself into at the start!

[identity profile] hitchin.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Guh. Amazing.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 04:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for sticking with it and letting me know you enjoyed it.

[identity profile] rain-curls.livejournal.com 2010-09-26 09:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Bravo! A beautiful ending! :)
ext_1059: (Default)

[identity profile] shezan.livejournal.com 2010-09-27 01:52 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, but how wonderful! Reflexive, elegiac almost, and the narration handed back to Watson - SO lovely. (And faultless French to go with the faultless Victorian prose - that's perhaps the most charming of it all, since most published contemporary writers seem entirely unable to construe the simplest sentence.) Wonderful Holmes; wonderful Watson - I'm glad you are thinking of sometime starting another Holmesfic - surely it can't be a sequel to this perfectly rounded tale; but I trust you to recreate another Doylean iteration.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-30 06:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm so pleased you liked this. And God, I'm glad if the French reads okay; I hoped it would, but it's years since I've spoken it and I was never more than intermediate level.

I'm getting more ideas for future Holmesfic than I really want. *whaps them*.

[identity profile] tinzelda.livejournal.com 2010-09-27 12:42 pm (UTC)(link)
I really liked the ending! It was so restrained, and the anticipation of whatever Watson may do is lovely - uncertain but hopeful and just a great idea. More fitting than a "they kiss and live happily ever after" kind of ending (although I'm sure they will be very happy). Well done, you!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-30 07:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you -- I wanted to point the way to as happy an ending as possible, but I didn't think we could go all the way there -- there had to still be some shadows. It's only been a few, rather tumultuous months for Watson, after all. But, well, a thunderstorm, a drenched Holmes who needs to get out of his wet clothes... what to do, what to do?
ext_30599: (Holmes: Granada Brett carbuncle lounging)

[identity profile] yan-tan-tether.livejournal.com 2010-09-27 09:27 pm (UTC)(link)
This is wonderful, and I'm happy that you left them poised in the moment at the end - it fits perfectly.

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-30 07:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much. Like I said above, I worried people would be disappointed, but it just felt right to leave things still slightly in suspense and vulnerable, but hopeful.

[identity profile] shimyaku.livejournal.com 2010-09-27 11:46 pm (UTC)(link)
I just caught up on the last couple of parts to this and just... wow! What a heartwarming ending - I feel more than a little bit gooey inside~. And that's a mighty fine word-count you've built up to as well! Just shows that the sheer epicness of this fic is not just in the plot! So then, well done all round, this was an absolute joy to read<3

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-30 07:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Aww, thank you! That was lovely to read.


[identity profile] muffinbitch.livejournal.com 2010-09-28 12:38 am (UTC)(link)
Ohhhh, I am both sad and happy that this has ended - sad because it was the most amazing, wonderful work, and happy because the ending is just beautiful and perfect. And so realistic, ehich I loved about the whole series - no sudden "cure" and jump into bed, just hesitations and uncertainties, and the acknowledgement that things could still go wrong, and it's not all sunshine and roses.

This was just one of the most wonderful, heartbreaking, beautiful and amazing stories I've ever read - I have enjoyed reading it so much! Congratulations on finishing it - it was truly amazing!

[identity profile] w-a-i-d.livejournal.com 2010-09-30 07:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much. That's just how I wanted the ending to read -- everything sort of fragile and painful in some ways -- because it just couldn't not be -- but still sunny and hopeful in others. And your comments about the story -- well, they're just lovely -- thank you again!

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