Amy (
kitchen_maid) wrote2005-09-15 12:42 pm
Thursday, Early Afternoon, Forest of Faraway, Near Amber
It is one of those beautiful days September bestows when she is in an especially good mood. There is bright sun, and a breeze, and just the barest hint of approaching autumn in the air. The very edges of the trees have begun to flame crimson and russet and gold, but for the most part, things are very very green. In short, it is a perfect day for a picnic.
They had managed to get Peter through the kitchen without too much trouble (although he had gotten a scolding from the second senior cook about being neater with the flour in the future) and Peter Aurelious and the squirrels joined them at the palace gates. And now here they are, in the clearing near edge of the Forest of Faraway, where the Ordinary Princess always comes on her every-second-Thursday-afternoons-off.
She spins all the way around, arms out, smile dazzling, in a sweeping, dizzying, giddy gesture that takes in the trees and the sky and the stream and world in general. "This," she says to Peter, "is home."
They had managed to get Peter through the kitchen without too much trouble (although he had gotten a scolding from the second senior cook about being neater with the flour in the future) and Peter Aurelious and the squirrels joined them at the palace gates. And now here they are, in the clearing near edge of the Forest of Faraway, where the Ordinary Princess always comes on her every-second-Thursday-afternoons-off.
She spins all the way around, arms out, smile dazzling, in a sweeping, dizzying, giddy gesture that takes in the trees and the sky and the stream and world in general. "This," she says to Peter, "is home."

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It should be noted that she is not blushing.
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"Do you want...?"
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She squeezes his hand, and then unlaces her fingers from his. "I think we should have lunch."
Because, frankly, she needs to think. And she rather thinks he needs to think, too.
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He goes back to the other side of the blanket, a safe distance away.
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And tries to think of something to say. On any subject expect whatever is going on here. Or the weather.
"You said this place reminded you of home. Is that England or Narnia?"
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And he looks a bit confused for a moment, as he looks at a silver birch, but then he's smiling again.
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She's rather grateful to be back to something that resembles a conversation, too.
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"Did the Narnian tendency toward impressive strings of titles for its kind exist in your day? Or just in Caspian's?"
Narnia -- it's a safe topic, more or less.
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"Peter the Magnificent, Fenris-Bane, High King over all Kings in Narnia, Emperor of the Lone Islands, Lord of Cair Paravel, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Lion. Is that enough titles for you, my lady?"
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He raises an eyebrow, suppressing a grin.
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But it's pretty clear that the distinction "titles" is important.
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"I told you all mine."
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"On less formal occasions, they left out the House."
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"Amethyst" was unavoidable, given the jewel theme. And she can forgive her parents for "Augusta" and even "Adelaide." But "Araminta"?
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He thinks for a moment.
"Yes, it's truly awful. I'm sorry, Amy."
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She smiles, brightly. "On the other hand," she says, "I didn't have 'Magnificent' all the time, I could just be 'Ordinary.' I should think having to be 'Magnificent' would be rather a lot of pressure."
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"It was, yes. It is."
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"So, why do you still have to? Be something else. Be . . . whimsical or . . . courageous or hopeful or kind or quiet or clever or something. I didn't have a choice about "Ordinary" -- it's a fairy gift, and I have seven others, too. And I like them, but I didn't ask for them, and if I didn't want them it wouldn't make any difference. But you get to choose."
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It's not precisely angry, but it's certainly sharp, sharper than she's ever heard from him before.
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"If you choose to believe that you don't, than that is your choice, and you've made it."
One of those fairy gifts was Wisdom. She therefore occasionally comes up with things like this.
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