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- Community (TV) (5)
- Pride and Prejudice & Related Fandoms (3)
- Lizzie Bennet Diaries (3)
- Schitt's Creek (2)
Recent works
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Summary
It surprises him sometimes, how different the Lucy down the hall is from the Lucy who wrote the journal. There are moments—expressions, a certain turn of phrase, an opinion on some event—that tie them together, but from a wider view: they are not the same.
In some ways it makes sense: the woman who handed him that journal so many years ago with her vulpine expression had promised him he could save his family. She had said he would help her save her family. She had said he could make it all go back to the way it was.
(Garcia Flynn considers the nature of Lucys.)
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Summary
No one mentions Emma, pale faced and silent at the other end of the diner—
It's better that way, she thinks. She doesn't know exactly what she feels, but it's like there's a warhead caught in her breastbone: large and looming and liable to level a city block if she's not careful.
And she doesn't feel careful.
(Emma, mourning.)
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Summary
There’s a name for fools like her, she realizes, watching him. Because this is weird—like Killian has become someone else in the last 24 hours, like he’s a stranger to her—and she lives in a world of witches and magic and spells and curses. There are any number of things that could make a man she—she trusts no longer himself.
(Emma Swan gets the voicemails and saves the damsel in distress.)
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Summary
The point is that she’d arrived at his hotel room wearing red lipstick with a split of champagne dangling from her fingers, proposed a toast to Boston, and then set about initiating what he’d thought would be relatively straightforward, mutually enjoyable sex. Except she’d gotten him mostly naked and aroused, straddled him, and then set about torturing him with the slowest handjob known to mankind while talking to him about Marilyn Monroe, of all things.
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Summary
The body isn't that surprising. The gem-encrusted tiara is a little out of the ordinary, but not everything can be a tidy little crime, now can it?
The doctor they call in reminds her vaguely of Seth in that way small town doctors sometimes do: he greets everyone like a benevolent prince, asking after kids and dogs and hairstyles with a knowing, distracted patter.
The similarities end there, however: this doctor is a beanpole of a man, tall and lanky and vaguely rumpled, as if he'd crawled back into and out of bed after being summoned down to investigate the body. The way he stands is just ever so slightly crooked, ever so slightly uncomfortable. And there’s a strange frantic energy to his presence that everyone seems content to ignore.
(Jessica Fletcher runs into Hawkeye Pierce and BJ Hunnicutt.)
Recent series
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