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#turnfic
lasangnana · 1 year
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• Would That I •
Finally posting my fic!! :D very excited to start sharing this slow burn time traveling monstrosity!! ♡♡♡
Pairing: Benjamin Tallmadge/Original Female
Summary: 15 year old Chloe Woodhull crashes back into time, specifically 1770, where she is found and taken in by Hercules Mulligan, working in his tailor shop and with no way of going back home to her time, will she find herself on the same path as her great great grandfather Abraham and survive the upcoming war through acts of espionage and deceit or will she be able to avoid the war conflict entirely and die as an unknown spinster in peace and quiet?
( https://www.wattpad.com/story/330666706-would-that-i? )
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ms-march · 3 years
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Lead me to the Garden
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So I got this originally as a prompt several weeks ago by @anahiranz from the Eye for an Eye playlist prompts list and the quote was "we were so very wild and free" and while I was not able to use all of the quote exactly, I did incorporate it in the piece! While it was probably intended for Thadrienne, I had this John and Adrienne scene from the wedding weeks sitting in my notes app for so long and I could not even stop outthinking about it. Thank you to @tallmadgeandtea and @culper-spymaster for beta reading! If you liked it PLEASE give it a like, comment, and/or reblog!
John finally spoke, “You know I feel horrible about this.” Adrienne snorted, incredibly unladylike, moving around him and wedging herself between him and the railing.
She wrapped her arms around his torso, resting her head on his chest. She paused, allowing him to wrap an arm around her before she spoke, “So you waited till now to get cold feet?”
John just laughed, his chest shaking her as he laughed. He replied, speaking quietly, “No, I feel horrible taking you from him- your father, I mean. He loves you so much, and I barely know you. It feels like some kind of cruel joke.”
“Well,” Adrienne smiled against his waistcoat, “I, for one, have no regrets for taking you from your father.”
It was John’s turn to release a very un-genteel snort of his own, wrapping a single arm around her petite figure and planting a single hand squarely in the middle of her back to keep her in place before replying. “I do not think that stealing me away from my father is possible. Trust me, I went all the way to London to try.”
Adrienne hummed in agreement, grumbling about the man in her reply. “He is a rather miserable fellow. And, if you would permit me to say, a bit….”
“Perverted? Slimy? A thorough ass?”
“I was going to say discomforting.”
The pair broke out in a peal of happy laughter at their own jokes, all made at the expense of Henry Laurens, for several moments before they were once more rudely interrupted by the silence.
“What about your mother?” It was not a question Adrienne would have dared to ask a week ago. She would never presume that she was close enough to him to be privy to such private knowledge, but it had been eating at her all week. His mother was named Eleanor. She had discovered that while being in the wrong place at the right time.
That was the kinder way to say she had been eavesdropping on Henry Laurens a few days prior.
Adrienne had so many questions. How did she pass? Why did they never speak of her? Did John favor her or his father more in character or appearance? She had so many questions about Eleanor Laurens, and it had been driving her mad for the past week.
So she had asked.
She did not wish to bombard him with all of her questions, not at once. That would only ensure that she did not receive an answer to a single one of them. No, she couldn’t ask it all, so she settled for asking a question about nothing at all. What about his mother?
He was a mama’s boy. That much was evident by the softened look in his eyes and the melancholic smile that graced his face at the mere mention of her. Good, that was good.
“What about her?”
Well, that certainly had not been the answer Adrienne had been expecting to pass from his lips, but she still faulted herself for being surprised. Of course, he would want to evade her question; he had done well covering the coveted memories with his mother from the bald eye, and he was not to stop now. Besides, Adrienne could hardly make a claim of being privy to such personal information.
But it was eating her alive.
She just had to know.
“Anything really,” Was her reply. She had so many questions and not a single clue as to an answer to them. Adrienne would take anything he would give her. “I do not know a thing about her, none beside her name.”
“She was beautiful.”
There was a long pause after his wispy words that almost made her think that he had told her all he was willing to share, but just as she prepared to drop the subject and be consumed by the silence once more, he continued. “She was the most beautiful woman I have ever seen. Her hair… Well, I am no student of poetry, Miss Fairfax, so I am afraid I haven’t a poetic comparison to give you, but it was a beautiful golden color. It had streaks of honey and even a few light brown in it, but you could never tell they were different from the rest of her hair unless you got close enough.”
He had paused again, looking out over the railing as he had been before, but this was somehow different. She could not place it precisely, but Adrienne knew better than to interrupt him. She shifted on her feet in his arms, letting out a small yelp in surprise when he suddenly lifted her to sit on the railing, placing the hand that had not been holding her before on her waist as he propped himself up with the other.
“I cannot figure out for the life of me if she would have liked you or not.”
Adrienne was not sure if she should take that as a compliment or an insult, but decided to keep her mouth shut, merely tilting her chin up to look at him, encouraging him to continue with that happily curious smile of hers. “And why,” his eyes dropped to hers at the suddenness of her words as they interrupted his previously silent space, “is that?”
He continued to look at her eyes with quite a quiet intensity that she had become familiar with in the past week before a slight toothy grin spread on his face. “Well, she would have been mortified by such an attraction as this,” he nodded vaguely at the property Belvoir sat on as he spoke, “She was always saying that Mepkin was like an out-of-place monument to material among the natural beauty of the Carolinas. She would have called this a palace. And she would have been mortified by how strictly grown the gardens are.”
“She did not enjoy such things? Even for the sake of the visual beauty?” Adrienne could not help but let the questions slip from her lips and found that she only slightly regretted asking because, much to her surprise, they were met with an answer and an eager one at that. She could see it clear as day in his baby blues, or ought she to say Carolina blues?
“She loved nature as it belonged,” was John’s reply, continuing more with that same smile on his lips, “It was my father’s wedding gift to her. 100 acres around the house to do whatever she pleased with. I think just about everything that could possibly grow in the Carolinas can be found there.”
“And my gardens are a testament to who I am as an individual?” She had meant it as a jest, she really had, but he had other plans in mind for the comment, cupping the hand he had been propping himself up with on the side of her face.
“Yes,” he replied, not noticing just how hard she was trying to regulate her breathing at the soft touch of his bare hand on her cheek. “It says a good deal as a testament to your character.”
Adrienne was not sure why this had affected her constitution so greatly, sinking her heart in her chest as he uttered the words. “Then she would not have liked me?”
Perhaps it had upset her because she rather believed him to favor his mother. The heart in her chest was outweighed by the stone in her stomach, and, were she a weaker-willed woman, there might have been tears sparkling in her eyes. Adrienne, however, would not be moved to tears when she was not entirely confident why she was crying.
“No,” he said tenderly, wickedly interrupting her silence, “I rather think she would have considered it quite a complementary recommendation.”
“She would?”
Who could blame her for being startled at such a sudden change?
“The neat rows of manicured hedge, monuments to towering statues and fountains of marble, and the piles of pure bloom flowers..” he hesitated before continuing, not stopping his tender study of her face, “They are certainly a spectacle, but they are warm. For some reason.”
She understood him immediately. Belvoir was always warm to Adrienne.
The imposing facade, elaborate decor, and imported marble floors were intimidating to most of the guests. It was designed for such an effect. The house was, by the family’s station, public grounds. But William Fairfax made sure that those who entered knew deep down it was not theirs.
Everyone except for John.
Belvoir was always warm to Adrienne, and eventually, it would belong to John.
And it was warm to him.
“And what does that say about me?” It came out as a hushed whisper, not wanting to disturb him when he was so close to her as if any louder might have caused him to rear her off the balcony railing.
“Is it not obvious?”
What kind of answer even was that? Adrienne was not sure to proceed in her questioning, as she did suppose that she could make sense of his comments on her own if she tried, but something in her wanted nothing more than to hear him say it. She wanted it, quite frankly, to pass through his lips rather than be developed in her own mind.
Thankfully, she did have to ask him for such. John took her lack of speech as ignorance and continued. Unfortunately, his continued speech meant a finger— a thumb, to be precise— caressed her cheek as he spoke, “Because somewhere, underneath this beautiful facade, I believe you have a heart.” She laughed suddenly at the solemn tone that accompanied the statement, bringing a smile to his face and humor to his tone as he defended himself. “I am serious! You pretend to be all formalities and— what’s that phrase you just used… the...ah, yes— “visual beauty” I believe that, somewhere, locked away, you have an extraordinarily warm and tender heart.”
“I would not particularly hold your breath for that.”
John had a quite unusual laugh, Adrienne had never paid it any attention till now, and it came from so deep within him it seemed to be a part of his very nature of being. It was oddly warming and made her want to smile to join in his joy. And oh, oh he had called her beautiful, of all things.
“And she jests!” He exclaimed with a grand flourish, lifting her off the railing and giving her a short spin through the air before placing her into the crook of his arm to hold her near him.
Adrienne might never get used to how he looked out of uniform.
She might never become used to it, but, oh, did she love it.
He had called her beautiful.
He had called her beautiful and held her to him as a man and wife ought to be, and, oh, did she love it. For just a moment, they were alone on a beautiful marble balcony, and just for a moment, the two were so at ease.
And for just a moment, they were so very young and wild, free of the burdens of station for a mere moment on that marble balcony.
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nettlestonenell · 4 years
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The Secret Diary of Jenny Outerbridge of Setauket
Jenny Outerbridge's diary, kept secret and hidden. A Setauket resident's record of season one’s events. Relationships and the plots that reflect TURN's established canon, only from an outsider's perspective. All sorts of characters show up. Entries for every episode of Season One (some multi-part).
[excerpt] ... Mr. Strong, of course, as I have written before, was sentenced to the prison ship Jersey, and has left Mrs. Strong (Anna as we her acquaintances know her) to tend both house and tavern in his absence. But she is far more sorrowful than I recall her being, and though I can imagine it is the loss of her husband, it is far more likely the increase in work and - for all Setauket - the entire lack of jolly pleasures the summers used to afford us here...
... It was most public (more so than had he been at the church or other meeting house), and I am not ignorant of the dark things some in the village have been saying about Abe and his part in Selah's arrest (and his own, odd release from that same arrest), but I must confess myself startled to see him declaring undying loyalty to King George. It is peculiar, is it not? The notion that Abraham ought publicly vow to support the King in His Majesty's endeavors, when the King has taken no such oath in favor of His subjects? Will the King work to defend and uphold the honor of Abraham and Mary's family?...
The Secret Diary of Jenny Outerbridge of Setauket on AO3
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jynkiess · 7 years
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@apedarling asked: How about some kid caleb, Anna, Ben shenanigans???
Thanks for the suggestion, this was fun to write! I made Caleb older because historically he is, but I forgot until the end that Anna’s actually, historically, older than all of them, but whatever! Also Sam is here because I like Sam.
“You’re cheating!” Ben shouted.
“It’s not cheating if you made up the game!” Abe retorted. This earned him a shove from Ben that sent the other boy backwards, much to the delight of Anna, who’d also been tagged out by Abe already.
“Sam, Ben pushed me!” Abe whined in the general direction of Ben’s older brother. Sam and Caleb were both leaning against opposite sides of the same tree, obviously not watching their charges as they both missed Ben’s assault on Abe.
“Well push him back!” Caleb called and Sam whacked him lightly on the arm.
“No, do not! Do not-” Sam started, but Abe had already gotten up and pushed Ben in return. “Do you ever think before you speak?” Sam said to Caleb as they both went over to break up the fight that had started between the two seven year olds. Sam grabbed Ben while Caleb took hold of Abe.
“What happened?” Sam asked, turning Ben to face him and kneeling down to brush dirt off the smaller boy.
“He cheated. He called for a time out then came up to me and started the game again and tagged me out,” Ben explained as though it was the most important thing in the world.
“Ben, it’s just a game,” Sam sighed.
“And technically that’s not cheating,” Caleb added with a laugh and Sam pulled a face. “It isn’t! You should have known better than to let him get that close!”
“Yeah!” Abe shouted. “You should know better!”
“Alright, calm down tiger,” Caleb said as he struggled to pull the boy back to him after he lunged. “It’s just tag.”
“Yes, thank you,” Sam added. “It’s just a game, Ben. You can’t be hitting people over something silly like that.”
“I have to be tougher or people are gonna walk all over me,” Ben replied, which Sam didn’t like hearing at all.
“Who told you that?”
“Caleb,” Ben said and Sam shot Caleb another look.
“Oh, yeah, I did say that,” Caleb said, but Sam didn’t look amused.
“Why?” Sam asked, exasperated.
“He was getting picked on by some kids the other day and he didn’t stand his ground. I told him-”
“-it’s his fault they’re picking on him?” Sam finished for him.
“No, just that he needed to fight back if he wanted it to stop.”
“Or tell me, maybe?” Sam suggested, then sighed and returned to facing Ben, whose eyes looked larger than normal as he tried to figure out what the older boys were talking about. “Ben, you’re fine exactly as you are, OK. You don’t need to hurt other people to fix your problems, you just tell me and I’ll deal with it.”
“What if you’re not there?”
“I’m always gonna be there for you, Ben.”
“Promise?” Ben said, holding out his pinky finger.
“Promise,” Sam said, taking his brother’s pinky in his hand. Ben smiled and returned to playing with his friends, his dispute with Abe forgotten already. Standing up to his full height, Sam quirked his eyebrow at Caleb, who gave a shrug in response. There were worse things he could have done, Sam supposed. And he usually did a good job watching Ben, so he had to cut him some slack. Still, a little extra protection didn’t hurt, so Sam held out his pinky to Caleb.
“I might not always be able to be there for Ben, no matter what I told him,” he said. “Promise me you’ll always look after him.”
Caleb laughed and linked pinkies as a scream came from Abe about a worm Anna had thrown at him.
“As long as you promise to never be away for too long.”
Those were terms Sam could agree to. He had no intentions of going anywhere without the two of them for a long time.
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itsclydebitches · 7 years
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HEY! ITS BEEN SO LONG BABE!!!
Number 18. Hewlett x Anna. “This is without a doubt the stupidest plan you’ve ever had. Of course I’m in.” Prompts here. 
ahdfkjadkfajdk HELLO OH MY GOD ITS BEEN FOREVER WE GOTTA CATCH UP I’VE MISSED YOU
and shit shit shit how do I write these dorks again??
“Are you aware that some courtships can take years to complete?” Hewlett murmured, gaze firmly fixed on the sky above them.
Anna’s lips twitched, though she didn’t allow the smile to grow. Not yet anyway. It was quite rare for Hewlett to speak of anything other than the stars this time of the night and yes, he counted her among them. Rather, Anna had a sneaking suspicion that they hadn’t left his favorite subject at all, though she was willing to let things play out in his own time.
“Oh?” she said, with the perfect amount of surprise infused in her voice. It was accompanied by Anna slipping her hand across his, just a light skittering that sent a shiver wracking up Hewlett’s body. He was obliged to take several deep breaths before continuing.
A nervous clearing of his throat introduced his next words. “Indeed. Quite an arduous process overall. Years of carefully supervised socialization. Negotiations between families. There is the dowry to think of, and the actual wedding of course. It’s all very laborious, though I’m sure you’re quite aware of that, being…ah, being a woman and all…”
Anna bit her lip nearly to bleeding, the smile threatening to overcome her. When she spoke her own voice had gone husky with both humor and fondness.
“I am. A woman.” (Hewlett flinched, though it was unexpectedly becoming.) “We tend to marry much more quickly in these parts though. Most families don’t have the wealth for all those rituals and our farms can’t spare the time.”
Hewlett nodded. “There is something to be said for expediency,” he whispered.
“And something else to be said for taking one’s time.”
His hand had tilted, slipping easily into hers. Anna believed they were already the perfect balance between those two worlds: Hewlett in his ironed uniform, her in a hem-muddied gown; their linked hands a moderately innocent act, yet the lack of chaperone made it into something grand. Thrilling, even. They were poised somewhere between the traditional and the new.
Which was why Anna wasn’t at all surprised by Hewlett’s next words. She’d seen them coming for quite some time. 
That, and she could feel his fingers trembling between her own.
“There is also a judge of close acquaintance right down the road,” he said, so softly that Anna could hardly hear. “He is a man whom I trust to keep things quiet and… and I… well I.” Hewlett shut his eyes, his hand shaking desperately now. “I am a man more than willing to take such an unprecedented step… if only because it is for an unprecedented woman.”
Anna did smile then. Under the cover of darkness it was, as it always had been, more blinding than the stars.
“This is without a doubt the stupidest plan you have ever had,” she laughed. Before Hewlett’s expression could crumple Anna had pulled them to their feet, fulling intending to drag this man before Judge Woodhull and everywhere else she pleased. For the rest of their lives.
“Of course I’ll do it. Did you ever doubt I would?”
“No,” Hewlett whispered, lied, swallowing and smiling in turns, but Anna was already leading him away.
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ms-march · 3 years
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Last night proved that.
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Hello!! This was a thadrienne prompt request from @tallmadgeandtea with “same time tomorrow?” And honestly I love it here. I didn’t intend on it being this long but honestly I did think it would also be longer than this. So here you go? Have some soft morning after thadrienne for spring because I said so. Also happy Easter!
She really must go.
She had to go.
The late March sky illuminated the borrowed bedroom, the blue haze of dawn barely seeping through the bed curtains. Adrienne Fairfax laid wide awake on her pillow at this ungodly hour, reserved usually for sentries and aides. She was awake with sleep still nipping at her heels as she watched him sleep, peacefully if not quietly. His little breaths did not phase her. No, she found them rather endearing, enrapturing enough to keep her bare shoulders in the sheets of the bed. Though it wasn’t as if she needed any help doing that.
She really must go.
He looked perfectly handsome like this, his sculpture-like body glowing with the haze of dawn. He was stirring from his sleep, as she expected he would start to do soon. He kept his eyes closed and he muttered out a gravily “good morning” to her, his sleep coated voice tempting her to close her eyes once more.
She had to go.
She must go.
She knew she must.
He knew she must.
“I must leave soon.”
She knew she must.
He knew she must.
“Must you?”
He was no longer attempting sleep, his beautiful deep brown eyes softly peering into her own. He knew she must leave soon. They would be caught otherwise.
He shifted towards her some and she began to plea with him “Thaddeus-“
“Let me hold you,” he was pleading with her now, “I only wish to hold you. Before you go.”
“You make it sound as though I am leaving you forever,” she murmured, shuffling over to rest her head on his bare chest.
Thaddeus hummed at this, stroking his hands gently through her hair as he replied, “it feels as though you are.”
His skin was soft, but her’s was softer. She knew he wished her to stay just as much as she wished to stay. She wished to stay exactly where she was, wrapped up in his arms, head resting on his bare chest, with one hand stroking her hair and the other tracing delicate patterns on her back.
She really must go.
She knew she must.
He knew she must.
This time Adrienne spoke, following a small contented sigh that escaped her own lips. “I must leave soon.”
This time Thaddeus spoke in a defeated tone, one that understood how his pleas might fall. “Must you? Pulaski will not return until-“
“Quarter to five today,” she finished. She had heard it many times over the night previous as he begged her to reconsider her departure. She really must go.
They lay in silence, only for a moment, her curled into him, bare skin on bare skin, and him looking down at her like she was his everything.
She was his everything.
Last night proved that.
It was her that broke the silence, shifting up to her elbows beside him. “You sneaky little-“
“Is that word becoming of a young lady?”
Adrienne only huffed in response, tossing the sheets off of her and swinging her legs off the side of the bed as he reached out to grab her, just missing her as she got to her feet. He let out a slight whine, complaining about the coldness of the room and her standing to dress.
“You may come help me dress if you wish, or do you prefer just to sit there and complain?” She spoke as she pinned back her hair to the sides of her head, leaving it free flowing down her back.
She did not need to look back at him as she spoke, knowing that the rustling of sheets and the padding of his feet on the wooden floors ensured his joining her. He held her clean chemise she had brought in his hand. From looking into the mirror, she could see that he was holding it out to her, and when she was satisfied with how her curls fell, she reached a hand back for him to hand her the linen chemise.
Thaddeus had other plans, placing his warm hand on her waist, pulling her closer to him, before draping the material over her shoulders. Adrienne smiled at him in the mirror, laughing a bit when he smacked away her hands from the tie, insisting on doing it himself, no matter how often he fumbled with the little ribbons rather than successfully tying them. This elected another laugh from Adrienne she attempted to suppress, eyes gleaming with amusement in the mirror, meeting his tender and adoring eyes.
“I like it like this.” She did not know if he was talking about her hair, which he adored seeing let loose from her pinned curls, or if he was talking about her. About them. Adrienne said nothing in response.
She was his everything.
And she really had to go.
She knew it.
So did he.
When Adrienne finally managed to tear her eyes from his, reaching for her stockings only to discover them missing. When she turned, however, she was met face to face with her stockings and their position beneath the garters already in the hand of her Colonel.
Thaddeus had placed his hand out to her, standing beside the foot of the bed and beaconing her to him once more. Adrienne obeyed his wish, propping herself up on the edge of the bed as he held her hand, maintaining that contact as he slid to his knees before her.
She was his everything.
This morning proved that.
He took his time.
Slowly, he slid the first stocking up her leg, her foot resting on his thigh as he rolled the silk over her skin, carefully resting it on her thigh before pulling the ties of the garter ribbon carefully overtop it.
She was his everything.
This morning proved that.
He was gentle.
Carefully, he held the ribbon in his calloused hands, its softness a harsh contrast against his coarse hands that her own equally soft skin had found safety in many times over. His hands were strong as they tied the ribbon around her thigh, steady and sure of their purpose there.
She was his everything.
He repeated this same process on her opposite foot, sliding his hand up the side of her thigh and chemise as he stood to his feet, bringing her to hers as he did so.
He was gentle.
Last night proved that.
“Please,” she begged, “Do not start something that we cannot finish.”
“We could if you would just-“
She really must go.
She knew she must.
He knew she must.
She silenced him with a kiss. She pulled him gently down to her lips by the linen of the nightshirt he had pulled on to cover himself in the dawn light. When they finally separated from the tender embrace, she spoke.
“It will only be three weeks,” her hands still clutched the linen, “and then you will see me-“
“For a day,” he complained, interrupting her sentence as he did so.
“For a day,” she agreed, unbothered by the interruption, “A very special day.”
“I try not to think about that part too much.”
“Why ever would you need to do that?”
“It makes me feel like a crippling old man.”
This pulled a happy laugh from her lips and a smile in turn from his. He looked at her with all his adoration in his eyes as he watched her smile and laugh to herself at his expense.
He adored her.
She was his everything.
She really must go.
Adrienne forced herself to reach for her stays to don the item, reaching the point of no return with the shapewear. Thaddeus took the cues and stepped forward as she shouldered the silk, boned garment. His hands followed a familiar path, pulling the ribbon through the lacing at her back, motioning for her to grab onto the poster of the bed before tightening the laces. His hands were strong as they drew the stays around her waist, his body heat radiating onto her. His closeness kept her warm in the chill of an early spring morning, the warmth of his hands seeping through the pads of his fingers as they rested on her sides.
He adored her.
He was gentle.
With two fingers on either side of her waist, he used the rest of his hands to grasp the silky ribbon. His hands were strong— oh god, they were strong and confident and careful all at once, last night proved that— their strength shook her small frame slightly as he tightened the stays around her. Confident. Careful.
The same applied to her petticoats, fastening the round ties of the underskirt by pulling her flush against him, wrapping his arms around her— they were strong too, his arms— and whispering sweet nothings into her ear, bringing more laughter to her lips once more.
She was his everything.
She adored him.
The outermost petticoat was tightened with its drawstring ties, his hands rocking her with strength once more. It was perfect.
She wished she could stay.
She must leave soon.
She could afford the time to enjoy herself now, in this moment, however. And so she did. Smiling warmly down at the crouched down Colonel with dark curls as he fastened the cloth-covered buttons over her stomacher and at her cuffs, pressing a kiss to her wrist—right on the pulse point— before buttoning them.
She was his everything.
He adored her.
Thaddeus settled himself on the edge of the bed, handing her hairpins as she fasted the small flat lace cap to the crown of her head. He looked at her like she was his everything. He adored her. Last night proved that.
She looked back at him in the mirror on the wall, silence passing between the two like a continuous harmony before he smiled softly at her, beckoning her to him.
She could afford the time to enjoy herself now, here, in the moment.
He was her everything.
He looked up at her, fully dressed and perched on his lap, and pressed a kiss, not to her cheeks, head, or lips, but her hand.
She extended her hand to the stately man, who, in turn, brought it to his lips, ‘there was no room for him to properly bow in here’ is what Adrienne would tell Martha later, as his eyes met hers, he offered her a charming smile.
“I have heard of your beauty from the Lieutenant Colonel, but I believed him blasphemous,” the silver-tongued Colonel, who still held her hand near his lips, had certainly just been acting out of courtesy. She’d tell that to Martha later as well. “I’m afraid I now owe him an apology for not believing in the angelic beauty that now stands before me.”
“Same time tomorrow?”
She smiled, laughing at his continued antics, and he looked at her like she was his everything.
He adored her.
He was her everything.
She adored him.
Last night proved that.
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ms-march · 3 years
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Chapter 11- Luck be a Lady (Turn AMC)
Chapter 11 is the same day as chapter 10, later that nighy. It is entirely focused arounf Geroge, Lawrence, & how Adrienne fits as a connector between them. Please like, comment, and/or reblog if you like it!!
“George sat alone in his war tent, eyes drifting in and out of consciousness. He was exhausted, his shoulders ached for rest, his head pounded him blow after blow, but he could not sleep. He refused to. Every time George closed his eyes, he saw her, the still body lying in the sheets, bloody bandages wrapped around her waist, pale as death itself. In a way, he supposed she was. It was not official. She still breathed, and when the strength could be found, cried in pain, but it was clear how little hope there was for recovery. George kneeled beside the bed for an hour as she lay still, her chest barely rising in her unconscious state. Lawrence had not looked like this. He was flushed and sweaty. He fought with every breath. Lawrence was the strongest man George had ever met, and even he lost the battle against death. Adrienne, his poor Addy, lay there without any color to her skin. She was not sweaty, still smelling of rosewood oil and lemongrass perfume. She was not fighting.”
Thank you to @culper-spymaster for beta reading this chapter for me!!
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ms-march · 3 years
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Luck be a Lady- Chapter 12 (Turn AMC)
Chapter 12 is done!! If you are even the slightest fan of Lams (as I suspect many of you are based off their edit) you’re really gonna love this chapter. If you’re as emotionally emattached to Adrienne you might wanna fight Hamilton, but what’s new there? There’s also some very lovely young Lafayette content too! If you like it please like, comment, or reblog!!
“The shorter redhead responded with a huff, nodding shortly as his hands moved down the buttons of John’s waistcoat, undoing each of them as they passed. He did not rush and was gentle with the fabric. Clothes like this were irreplaceable to Alexander; they always had been. He would meticulously care for his shirts, jackets, breeches, and waistcoats, outright refusing to allow them to be mended by camp followers, electing to sit on the chair in the attic room and sew them under his hand by the dim candlelight. John can recall many nights where he sat in bed, watching Hamilton scrunch his nose in frustration, scoff and grumble at uncooperative stitches, and squint his eyes to see the seams as he pulled the needle along. John had always wondered where he learned the skill so well. Alexander loved his own voice and could talk and talk and talk for hours if you let him, but there was one thing he would never talk about. Hamilton never talks about his family or home. He says he came from New York, and people leave it at that, and John, who knew only vaguely of his true origins, knew better than to push him further.“
Thank you to @culper-spymaster and @tallmadgeandtea for beta editing this chapter for me!!!
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jynkiess · 7 years
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It’s finally here! The Tallster, MaryAnna, Townhull, Abi-Fantabi, murder mystery, crime drama, Sense8-esue Turn: Washington’s Spies AU I know you’ve all been waiting for finally has a chapter posted for your reading pleasure! Go check out Part of a Whole on AO3 right now!
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itsclydebitches · 8 years
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Turn Fic: Call of the Crow
Title: Call of the Crow
Fandom: Turn
For: @poeedamerons​ (Hi! *waves*)
Pairing: Anna/Simcoe
Word Count: 1,067
Prompt: “I propose a challenge: in verse Simcoe/Anna while he is with the Queen Rangers. 😈” 
Where to read it: Below the cut, AO3, or FFN 
A/N: Once again my fic turned out weirder than I was expecting... oh well :p
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Anna gasped and cold water rushed down her throat, leaving her bloated rather than choking. It lined the pit of her stomach, fed into her arms, weighted her legs so that she was dragged down, down, down. Anna opened her eyes and recognized the murky waters of Setauket, distinguishable by the bits of cabbage debris, wood flecks, old earth that brushed past her cheeks. When her feet touched bottom—shoes dragging, then slipping away completely, leaving her stocking-clad feet free to explore—Anna thought she felt another presence behind her. She made to turn, but before she could one single, equally bloated finger rested against her cheek. Tap, tap, tap, it went against her skin.
Tap, tap, tap.
Anna’s eyes flew open, her body arching towards the source of the sound.
It was a crow. Hardly visible in the dark, outlined only by the light of a waning moon. Anna peered blearily at it, now awake enough to be astounded when it cocked its head in turn. The crow flicked its beak against her windowpane impatiently. Tap, tap.
Anna pulled herself from her bed.
Her movements certainly felt dreamlike—walking barefoot across the carpeted floor, her nightgown doing little to protect her from the night air. Anna shivered, hooking both hands on opposite elbows, letting her toes drag and feeling vaguely as if she’d done this before.
Despite the temperature, Anna eased open the window. She crouched slightly as the crow continued to wait on her, its own shadowed feet digging into the wood. Anna pursed her lips at the odd little visitor.
“Hello,” she whispered.
It was the wrong thing to do… or perhaps the right thing, for the crow took flight with a startling cry, knocking Anna backwards. Its black body disappeared amongst the shadowed trees… but not before she saw it heading towards the docks.
Without hesitation Anna followed.
This wasn’t a decision of the lucid, the fully awake, but nor was it made entirely without agency, for Anna knew exactly what she was doing when she eased open her door, lifting it from the knob to keep it from squeaking. She felt the pull of her bed—the tiny voice in the back of her mind questioning this action—but the draw of adventure had always been too strong. Anna was a cat this night—fed on curiosity, hunting a bird.
She cast a look on Hewlett’s door as she passed. Though frowning, Anna did not stop.
Down the elegant staircase, past the dining room, out the heavy front door. She didn’t pause for a coat or even shoes. The wood of the judge’s porch left subtle splinters in her heels. Anna didn’t feel them. She stepped out into a light shower and titled her head to the sky, suddenly, vividly recalling a dream of drowning. She’d loved the feeling of water flooding her lungs.
A cry sounded through the night air—the cry of a crow. Anna’s head snapped up and she picked up the pace, hefting her nightgown and tearing down the steps, out across the fields. She raced through the dewy grass, picking up mud that splattered along her stomach and thighs. Anna passed the dying trees of an orchard, their uncollected fruit rotting on the ground. A bucket with a rusting rim caught her eye, as did the shadows of gravestones. All of it whispered to her. These obejcts appeared eerie this time of night. Eager.
Within minutes Anna had made it to the grove where the crow had disappeared. In the distance she could see the docks, the grey outline of the water as it pushed and pulled toward shore. Another cry sounded above her—the crow calling her forward—but Anna was enticed by the waves. She pushed through the rest of town and came to the pier, drenched, muddy, the parts of her nightgown not brown and tattered sticking to her frame.
There Anna found someone waiting in the moonlight.
Except... no. He waited in shadows, hidden from the moon beneath the branches of a tree, that crow sitting above him, its call growing in volume. Anna stepped to him with the blank stare of the resigned—or with the bliss of the drugged.
“You’re late tonight,” he told her. “Don’t let it happen again.”
Anna nodded, his voice a slow, soothing cadence. The man’s fingers were suddenly skimming her face, gentle, then wrenching her against him. She went willingly and let her mind fill with pictures she couldn’t actually see: red hair that had turned black in the darkness, pale skin that now looked sickly grey. His mouth was demanding and Anna reciprocated, quite unwilling to do anything else. She lay with him beneath the fir tree as the crow watched their every move. The sound of the waves was the only thing louder than their breathing.
Dawn was the signal to sneak away. Or back. She couldn’t quite tell which was which anymore. Where before there were two bodies, now there were three, the dark-skinned man appearing to reclaim his crow. He spoke to the bird, rewarding it for its work, and Anna was vaguely aware that he, like all around her, was two-fold. What was his name again? Something with a J? Or an A?
The red-haired man took back her attention. Moving between gentle and demanding, he slipped the nightgown back onto her frame, newly washed in harbor. Anna smelled the sea salt sticking to her skin as the man whispered clear instructions: step lightly but quickly back to your room, hang the nightgown to dry, mend the tears come morning—say nothing, recall little.
She would.
Anna did as instructed. She crept away from the docks, back past the bucket and the field of rotting fruit. Through the heavy door and back up the stairs, past the room where Hewlett still slept. She crawled into bed just as the first light hit her window, indicating that the rest of Setauket would soon come alive.
Anna, however, slept like the dead. When she did wake it would be to a naked body and muddied feet, her muscles sore in places unmentionable. She wouldn’t think much of it. Anna would go about her day—normal, smiling, until night fell and she could again dream of drowning. Wait for the water saturating her lungs.
Wait for the tap, tap, tap.
Wait for the crow.
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itsclydebitches · 8 years
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I wish you would write a fic where Hewlett marries Anna and they have a child. Cookie points if you write this in verse and if we see awkward daddy!Hewlett.
A/N: @poeedamerons, let’s pretend Hewlett’s mother is named Mary because that’s what one Google search told me and you can always trust Google XD
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The line was nearly out the door today, so when the commotion started it was quite like a ripple—a wave slowly making its way towards Hewlett at the front. He sat at his makeshift desk, telling John Walters that no, he was not in a position to grant him any unclaimed land (what did he want with that barren mud-hole anyway?) when the farmers at the very back parted, a river dividing to let something through. Mrs. Lettar twittered with Mrs. Lane, accidentally nudging the back of young Bill Suthers, who sent the current on through a group of men still engaged in some argument, who drew Mr. Walters out of his impassioned pleas... by the time Hewlett realized that his assembly was well and truly broken, his wife was already stepping forward.
Only Anna Hewlett could bring smiles to faces while cutting in line.
“You’re late,” she huffed, one hand on her hip, the other dragged down by a weighted pail. Hewlett was immediately on his feet, ignoring the companionable jeers that had started up around him. Many men shouted things about ‘kept husbands.’ The women all nodded approvingly.
“I’m sorry,” were the first words out of his mouth, increasing the laughter. With a roll of his eyes Hewlett led Anna into the back of the church. He raised a hand to the noisy crowd, perhaps a slight more curtly than they truly deserved. Still, they would have to wait.
“As you can see,” Hewlett drawled, “today turned out rather more busy than expected. My apologies.”
“Apologies?” Anna stressed. She lifted one eyebrow.
Blushing, Hewlett leaned in to give her a chaste—but certainly heartfelt—kiss. His neighbors let out a cry unbefitting of their stations (or their age) and with a scowl he pulled Anna into a small alcove, out of their sight.
It was a good decision. Light streamed through the dirty window, framing Anna’s hair and glinting off the few grey strands she’d collected over the years. Hewlett was struck dumb just long enough to draw a laugh out of her. Anna lightly nudged his arm, her body carried forward by the weight of the pail. It was a large container, more suited for carrying wood than water.
Hewlett let out a quiet ‘tut.’
“You shouldn’t be carrying such heavy things,” he admonished. Hewlett’s hand automatically went to Anna’s stomach, beginning to swell now that winter had turned. “I do mean it, Anna. If you need something done let the servants do it. Working like this… you risk straining yourself and the ba—oh!”
“Trust me, I’m used to carrying this weight.”
Hewlett pulled back from peering into the pail, his hand leaving Anna’s stomach to press at his throat, startled quite beyond belief. He hardly heard Anna’s increased laughter, so entranced was he by a pair of warm, brown eyes.
“Hi, Papa!”
The eyes rose, popping up to reveal a mess of black curls, tiny hands, a painfully dirtied nose… little Mary Hewlett uncurled herself from the inside of the pail, her joints creaking like those of an old man’s rather than a five-year-old’s.
“What is this?” Hewlett cried. He heard curious murmurs from the crowd down the hall, but he ignored them in favor of scooping his daughter up into his arms. Mary went willingly, planting a raspberry against the side of Hewlett’s head and sending his wig askew. Anna must have enjoyed the look, for her giggles continued.
Hewlett shook his head bemusedly. “Water, wood, eggs, perhaps even some herbs… I was not expecting a girl to be delivered today!” He tossed Mary briefly into the air, catching her sideways ‘round the waist and twirling her, ever mindful of the small space.
“She’s still a tiny one,” Anna agreed. “You,” she poked Mary in the stomach, “came far too early. Now years later your father is late.” Anna looked morosely down at her stomach. “Will you be on time then, little one?”
Mary wasn’t interested in the activities of her sibling though. Not now at any rate. She squirmed until she had a leg on either side of Hewlett’s waist—his arms, now strengthened from his fair share of battles, holding her up with ease—and planted a hand on either of his cheeks. Mary smushed her father’s face gravely.
“You promised to teach me horses, Papa,” she garbled.
“Ah. Did I?” Hewlett made a show of thinking it over. “Horses, you say?”
“Yes!”
“Then I must have been mistaken. I thought I was to teach you horseback riding, but if it’s just horses perhaps we should start with something else: how to feed them, groom them, clean the muck from their stalls…”
“No!” Mary yelled. “Riding, riding!”
“You’re sure?”
Mary lifted her chin, puckered her lips, and said “Quite,” in a stuffy imitation of her father. Behind her Anna let out an indelicate snort.
“Very well,” and he swung Mary up onto his shoulders. “There’s still time?” he asked of Anna, the two of them already turning back the way they’d come. She smiled, reaching out to trail one hand down the small of his back. Her fingertips rose again and cascaded over his arm, ending at his hand, raising it up for a kiss. Lips pale from the cold grazed across Hewlett’s knuckles.
“We’ll be waiting with dinner,” Anna said, arms returning to guard her stomach. All at once her expression went from tender to stern. “Don’t allow that fool girl to break anything.”
“I shall do my best,” he said, gazing heavenward as Mary laughed and this time nearly sent his wig to the dusty floor. The three of them returned to the rest of their town, most of who had broken the line and were now chatting companionably.  
Mary nudged Hewlett’s chest with her heels. “Giddy up, Papa!”
“Yes, Major Hewlett, giddy up!”
He wasn’t sure which man had yelled it, but Hewlett scowled at the crowd as a whole. That is, until Mary’s head swung into his view, pale lips—just like her mother’s—pouting exaggeratedly.
“Pweeese?” she stressed.
So it was that Hewlett left the church in what might have been the approximation of a human gallop.
If he kept it up all the way to his family’s stables, well, only him, his daughter, and the rest of the town truly knew.
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itsclydebitches · 8 years
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Hello, @guardgenie! It is I, your Secret Santa :D
I decided that instead of making you wait for whenever I manage to get on tomorrow, I’d just stay up super late and finish things tonight (Santa doesn’t mind, right??). It was an absolute joy being your SS. I hope you like this humble little fic I wrote you <3 
Happy Holidays! 
Title: Simple Tales 
Fandom: Turn
For: Guardgenie - Turn Secret Santa 
Where to read it: Below the cut or on AO3
Story is based on @most--ardentlyy‘s fantastic shipping game! 
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“It must be quite the book, to keep your attention after all that.”
Elizabeth looked up, startled, and immediately had to shield her eyes against the mid-day sun. It was obviously a soldier addressing her—the silhouette of a hat and bayonet gave it away—but which exactly she wasn’t sure. They were all the same, at least in her experience. Still, he’d yet to say anything lewd to her (yet) and the last thing she wanted was to be discourteous to one of Hewlett’s men. He at least was gentlemanly.
“‘That’?” she asked, looking up only briefly from her book.  
The man raised a hand, ticking off each event on a finger. “Mr. and Mrs. Woodhull had… ah, a bit of a row, as did Mr. Woodhull and Woodhull senior when he arrived, the youngest Woodhull was crying up a storm earlier—poor thing is ill—there was some sort of crash that came from the kitchen, and,” the man trailed off, cocking his head towards the side of the house. “I think the chickens have escaped.”
“Chickens,” Elizabeth repeated. She raised her boots and peered underneath, as if expecting to find one underfoot. “Is that something that should concern us?”
The man laughed, finally stepping forward and giving Elizabeth a clear view of his face. She was startled to find that he was quite handsome, even beyond the appeal of a well-starched uniform, and his eyes were unexpectedly kind. He smiled, quick, his lips spreading wide over his face in a manner that reminded Elizabeth of children—free of judgment, yet just a little bit self-conscious. She was shocked to feel herself smiling back.
“I believe you’re safe. If not, I will protect you.” The man bowed, though Elizabeth noted a blush staining his cheeks when he rose back up. He looked equally shocked at his own words.
He was certainly nicer than the other soldiers stationed in Setauket. Funny too. Feeling daring, Elizabeth set her book to her right and patted the spot on the stone wall to her left. The wall wasn’t terribly high, just large enough to keep the Woodhull’s few farm animals in (though apparently the chickens had become rather devious). Elizabeth delivered goods to them every Saturday and though they weren’t particularly close, Mary had never begrudged her a few moments on their lovely property, especially when the weather was nice and Elizabeth had a fine book to read. Normally she hated for anyone to interrupt this time… but perhaps some company wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world.
“Sit,” she offered, patting the wall again. “You must be tired. Hot too in this heat.”
He shook his head though. “As much as I’d love to, truly, I fear that Major Hewlett has called me to the chapel.” He pulled out a note from his inside pocket, waving it for her benefit. “Messenger. Another thing you missed. I’ll admit, I’m slightly worried leaving you alone with that book. Who knows what might become of you.”
Elizabeth smiled, shaking her head. “I will pay more attention. I promise. Though I can assure you, the only thing I’m at risk for is becoming lost.”
“Lost?”
“In an excellent tale.”
He chuckled, nodding appreciatively. “Perhaps next time I’ll be able to stay and you can tell me all about this captivating story.” It was only partly a promise—more of a hesitant question—and Elizabeth looked briefly to the space beside her, letting him know that his company would still be welcome.
The man turned to go… but then paused.
“I’m sorry, but… well. I’m still learning names around here. You’re Elizabeth, yes?”
Her breath caught briefly in her throat, wondering when he’d heard her name. Elizabeth only just managed to stutter out a ‘yes.’
“And your occupation?”
“B-baker,” she squeaked, then desperately cleared her throat.
The man smiled, the sun behind him making it seem all the brighter. “Really? What a coincidence. I’m Baker too. Ensign Baker.”
***
One week later Elizabeth was taking a stroll through the balmy night. Though admittedly, a stroll with a particular destination in mind.
She’d ‘bumped’ into Ensign Baker numerous times over the last few days and each time she did she’d grown to like him just a little bit more. He always had a smile for her, or if not that a look in his eye that told her he wanted to smile. Twice now he’d bowed as she passed. Three times he’d trailed off in speech, awkwardly moved to silence as she waved or dropped a curtsey. Once he’d helped her pick up a load of apples she’d let fall, their red romantically vibrant against the green of the grass, both of them bumping hands as they reached for the same thing.
Now the stars were out and Elizabeth carried a very different kind of food.
“For you,” she announced, startling the men. They were gathered around Major Hewlett’s home—or the judge’s, rather—keeping watch through most of the night in case of rebel attacks. Elizabeth didn’t think there was a good chance of any such thing happening. The Major, for all his fairness, was a rather paranoid man, and his soldiers thought as much too—if their lounging frames were anything to go by. Ensign Baker straightened quickly though when Elizabeth came out of the shadows, basket in hand.
“Eh?” another man asked. He sniffed the night air. “Did you bring us food, Ms…?”
“Guard,” Elizabeth said, somewhat curtly. She couldn’t abide their manners. The two other soldiers circled her like wolves. Only Baker stood politely off to the side.
“You didn’t have to do that,” he murmured.
“… no trouble,” she said, and cast a shy smile.
Removing the towel, Elizabeth revealed a whole basket of sweet rolls, the bread coated lightly in sticky syrup. The man ooo-ed at her work—Baker included—and they were so enticed by the scent that it took them a moment to actually dig in. When they did though, Elizabeth felt something in her shoulders releasing, particularly when she saw the expression of pleasure that crossed Baker’s face as he bit into her food.  
“You like it?” Elizabeth ventured, then beamed at the look he gave her.
“Yes, though… if I may be so bold, I like more than just the food…”
“You may be bold,” Elizabeth said and before she could lose her nerve she rose on tip-toe, granting Baker a swift, soft kiss under the cover of darkness. “Check the bottom of the basket,” she whispered. “There’s something there just for you. A gift from your baker.”
Pleased with her wordplay, burning at her daring, Elizabeth flew back down the house steps, raising her hand at the gratitude that sounded behind her. She didn’t hear Baker’s voice though. Not that she expected to.
She’d hear from him soon enough. She’d hidden her book beneath the rolls, tucked under another towel.
Perhaps he’d read it. Then there’d be a story to tell.
Perhaps they’d get lost together.
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