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amrev_intrigues2022-04-27 08:34 pm
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Private storyline 5!
They stay at the inn for two days after the wedding, celebrating their union and waiting for the snow to pass. For once, Burr and Hamilton both eat their fill--of fat fish and fresh bread. Gifts trickle in, from the nearby town, overwhelmed with patriotic sentiment even if they are not overwhelmed with joy at being paid in continental currency when the time comes to refresh their rations. They receive gifts for the baby--clothing and blankets and other odds and ends, a few bottles of cheap liquor. For Hamilton and Burr's part, they spend much of their time in bed.
It is October, when they leave. Burr is nine months pregnant, likely should not be moving, but there is nothing for it. They continue to be pursued by Cornwallis, and soon they are urging wagons through thick snow, over shallow, fast-moving rivers. Burr once more is relegated to the wagon, laying down amid crates and bags of supplies, rocked with each bump and dip of the road. Hamilton is somewhere ahead, riding through the snow, though he could even have been sent to meet with nearby scouts, towns, and Burr would not know. Days of travel, with no information or update, until they stop moving and he can make his way to the head of the column.
It is snowing once more--no longer light and fluffy but thick and wet. The wind is blowing--a wretched howl, that cuts through clothing to freeze men's bones. Like the wind on a mountain pass, working its way towards Quebec. Burr is bundled beneath every spare blanket they own--Hamilton's and Lauren's and even Washington's, but still he shivers as they rock along, damp creeping through layers that will not be dry before the next day. A miserable, wretched journey.
They do not stop for anything--at noon, men eat their rations as they march, and jovial banter has given way to eerie silence, a kind Burr knows too well, a feral focus on putting one foot in front of the other. One wagon loses a wheel, but the army does not stop, taking only enough time to shuffle what supplies can be salvaged to other wagons before abandoning the damaged wagon to the snow. Cannot burn it, to keep it from falling into British hands, for the wind.
Burr manages to doze, for some time of this, but wakes again rocked with pain, a sharp stabbing in his abdomen. Each time the wagon rocks it grows worse, till he is rising to heave his paltry lunch over the side. Burning cramps, so much worse then, as he collapses back into the wagon. He can feel something--liquid, thick and warm. Not melt, he thinks, though he is numb enough to not be sure. Too cold to remove his cover, he reaches a hand into his breeches blind. He cannot be going into labor--not here, not now. The baby will freeze, and if they stop they could be captured by the British.
He feels sticky on numb fingers, pulls his hand out. Blood. They cannot stop the wagon. He can handle pain, until they reach some safe haven. Telling someone will change nothing, will only make their march that much worse. Another jolt, and he gasps, clutching at the swell, falling back against the blankets.
It is October, when they leave. Burr is nine months pregnant, likely should not be moving, but there is nothing for it. They continue to be pursued by Cornwallis, and soon they are urging wagons through thick snow, over shallow, fast-moving rivers. Burr once more is relegated to the wagon, laying down amid crates and bags of supplies, rocked with each bump and dip of the road. Hamilton is somewhere ahead, riding through the snow, though he could even have been sent to meet with nearby scouts, towns, and Burr would not know. Days of travel, with no information or update, until they stop moving and he can make his way to the head of the column.
It is snowing once more--no longer light and fluffy but thick and wet. The wind is blowing--a wretched howl, that cuts through clothing to freeze men's bones. Like the wind on a mountain pass, working its way towards Quebec. Burr is bundled beneath every spare blanket they own--Hamilton's and Lauren's and even Washington's, but still he shivers as they rock along, damp creeping through layers that will not be dry before the next day. A miserable, wretched journey.
They do not stop for anything--at noon, men eat their rations as they march, and jovial banter has given way to eerie silence, a kind Burr knows too well, a feral focus on putting one foot in front of the other. One wagon loses a wheel, but the army does not stop, taking only enough time to shuffle what supplies can be salvaged to other wagons before abandoning the damaged wagon to the snow. Cannot burn it, to keep it from falling into British hands, for the wind.
Burr manages to doze, for some time of this, but wakes again rocked with pain, a sharp stabbing in his abdomen. Each time the wagon rocks it grows worse, till he is rising to heave his paltry lunch over the side. Burning cramps, so much worse then, as he collapses back into the wagon. He can feel something--liquid, thick and warm. Not melt, he thinks, though he is numb enough to not be sure. Too cold to remove his cover, he reaches a hand into his breeches blind. He cannot be going into labor--not here, not now. The baby will freeze, and if they stop they could be captured by the British.
He feels sticky on numb fingers, pulls his hand out. Blood. They cannot stop the wagon. He can handle pain, until they reach some safe haven. Telling someone will change nothing, will only make their march that much worse. Another jolt, and he gasps, clutching at the swell, falling back against the blankets.
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His back hurts, a low, dull ache, and he turns onto his side and entreats Hamilton to rub it, makes demands of him that are rude and unfair.
"My feet hurt," he grouses, "I'm thirsty," then "I don't want anymore," and "I want a bath," which really is not something that can be accommodated easily. He wants to take another walk, has some strange urge to pace, as much as he begins to pick at his bedding with steadily increasing distress. He needs more blankets, or the ones he has are not soft enough. He starts crying, when he finds a small hole, then starts crying harder, when someone tries to take the blanket to mend it.
"I want strawberries," he cries. "Why is it winter. It's not fair. It should be warm out. Help me walk. I want to see Laurens, and Lafayette, and Washington."
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But once the demands start coming, he falls into the habit of looking at that omega, the one who spoke about birdcages, and she gives him little signals: nods, shakes of her head. Back rub: yes. Water: yes. Bath: no. Strawberries: no.
"You men get so practiced ignoring your pain," Mrs. Smith sniffs. "Shouldn't be finding out how to listen to your own body at a time like this. Now, stand up, sit down, lie down, as you need. Any bit that hurts less." She ruffles Burr's hair and gives him a bit of Hamilton's maple candy.
A walk outside: no, according to Mrs. Linden.
"I'll help you walk in here," Hamilton suggests, desperately. "You'll see them soon."
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He walks for a long while, wearing circles in the dirt on the floor, but after a while he grows distracted by Hamilton, begins rubbing his head in Hamilton's scent gland, his own gland on Hamilton's skin. They need to smell of one another when the baby comes, he is sure of it, and then he grows agitated once more by the size of the small bed and commences to pulling the coverings onto the floor, closer to the fire, agitatedly arranging them in circle that he can borrow down into.
The cramps are growing worse, during this, to the point of actual pain as opposed to discomfort, though they are still not close together. He stops and grasps at Hamilton, grinding his head down into his chest, gasping.
"That one hurt," he says, shifting from foot to foot but unable to relieve the pressure. "I want to lay down," and he doesn't wait for permission, but drags Hamilton down with him, curling against him.
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Burr's hand squeezes tight on his -- this is a rough one, and Hamilton hopes that this means the suffering is close to done. His ignorance about this topic, now that it comes down to it, is shocking, and he will need to remedy this for --
For next time.
The purring is the right call, and he's sure of it when Burr nestles against his chest, ear pushed right where he can hear and feel the purr at the same time. He would have been beyond embarrassed to display this kind of behavior in front of anyone, a few days ago, but right now it seems natural and good. Burr holds one of his hands, and the other wraps around Burr's back, rubbing in between his shoulderblades.
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He doesn't feel he can get enough air, and there is more shifting, too much pressure, more than he feels he can accommodate--he whimpers, rolling in the bedding, his nest, as the omegas force his legs open.
"It's time now," Mrs. Smith says, "he's got to kneel down here, against the bed will be easiest."
But Burr does not want to leave the nest, begins again growling when they try to move him, and instead positions himself on his knees, clinging to Hamilton, legs open. His body is shaking, and he is crying, when the next contraction comes, and Hamilton's shoulder is in a propitious position, for Burr angles his head down and bites him as he cries, muffling the sounds against flesh.
"It hurts," he says, "It burns. It is supposed to burn so much? Something feels wrong--" but what the hell does he know, its not as if he has birthed many babies before this. And then he nearly tumbles over, because his thighs are cramping, and he needs to lay down again, but after only a minute and a half the next contraction comes, and he is biting down on Hamilton once more, which really won't be something he can continue the whole of this, if he doesn't want to leave Hamilton bruised and bloody.
"Should I push? I feel like--" he feels like he should, but Mrs. Linden is between his legs again, and he yelps when she pushed inside him, feeling.
"On this next one," she says.
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He moves to his knees too and steadies Burr against him. Holds up his weight, determined to be as tireless and patient as it takes. Burr suffers, sinks in his teeth from the magnitude of his suffering, and Hamilton, honestly, hardly even feels it. His poor body, wracked with agony, Hamilton so totally focused on him.
Mrs. Linden gives him a twisted bundle of rags and he stares at it, unsure, until she tells him, "Shove it between his teeth next time," and the throb in his shoulder makes itself known.
"Oh," he says, and turns his attention back to Burr. He's pushing, now, and Hamilton shifts up and supports his weight. "Go on, Aaron, you're amazing, so wonderful, you're doing so good," wiping rebellious strands of hair from his face. "You are perfect. You're perfect and strong." At Mrs. Smith's nod, and as Burr's hand goes tight again, "Now, push, love, push," and he almost forgets to get that rag in the way when Burr goes for him again.
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He cries, when the next contraction comes, begs. He feels pitted, light headed. He is sure he will split in two, when they tell him to push once more and he can feel it, the baby, tearing through his insides. He is blubbering something to Hamilton, sobbing, and Hamilton is trying his best to be encouraging but is really only saying words, as if that could help, and Burr screams again as something gives way, a rush of blood. "I hate you," he sobs, as he waits for the next contraction, though Hamilton had not gotten him with child he doesn't care, blames him, as the burning increases.
"You have to push again," the women tells him, but he sobs.
"I can't--" he says, and he is so exhausted, so tired, and he really doesn't, but the spasms of his body seem worse for it, and he resumes his crying in earnest, falling against Hamilton and begging, "please, please," he says, "please help me," as if there were anything Hamilton could do.
The contractions come, and his body seems to bear down without him. The omegas are saying something, about crowning, and tearing, but Burr isn't listening. He is lightheaded, and dizzy, as he had been that night on the horse. He is no longer holding any of his weight, allowing Hamilton to bear it all as he gasps for air.
Another contraction, a drop, and he pushes one last time. Everything goes white-hot, spots bursting behind his eyelids, and Burr goes silent, unable to breathe, to make any sound. He is clawing, must be, but he cannot feel it, or see it, and then he does feel something; something being pulled from him, slipping free, but there are no sounds, and his sight is blurry, unfocused. He is being eased down, but he cannot hear, and after a moment he realizes he is screaming again, and writhing on the bed.
The baby is out of him, but he hears no crying. Maybe he passes out, but the pain doesn't stop.
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The surgeon seems to appear from nowhere, having left most of this endeavor to the women of this little village. He is doing something between Burr's legs, and then pressing down on his stomach, pushing hard. Hamilton is pulled back, away, and the first thing that tears his eyes away from Burr is a higher, piercing wail.
"There she is," he hears Mrs. Smith say, and he turns to see a tiny, bloodied, wrinkled, impossible thing, little eyes screwed closed and little hands making little fists.
Hamilton's heart breaks, instantly. In a single breath, he has become someone else. He has transformed.
"A girl," he whispers, and then she is settled into his arms, so small that he has to wrap himself carefully around her.
"Go on, she needs to give suck," and Mrs. Smith steers him back towards Burr. "It'll help him with the afterbirth."
Hamilton has literally no idea what that is, but he follows her instructions, trying to wake Burr, get his attention even through the continued pain. Trying to position the baby so she can seek out his swollen breasts.
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She is so tiny, and fragile, and small. Anything could crush her, and Burr cradles her so gently, his eyes blurring once more.
"Hamilton," he rasps, but he is too tired to even prop his head up, and soon he is falling back down into his nest, trembling and shaking and sweating.
"She's--" but he doesn't know what to say, as he starts to choke on his emotions, but broken cooing noises bubble up in him, something instinctual, as he bends low and licks her, scents her.
"Theodosia," he says. She looks like him. "Theodosia Montgomery."
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He glances up, and he sees a terrible flood of more blood and tissue from between Burr's legs, along with the rest of the umbilicus. His heart stops. The surgeon examines the mass, and Hamilton turns back to Burr, begins to purr again, tucking Burr's head under his chin.
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"Our daughter," Burr slurs, as he sinks more against Hamilton, Theo cradled between them. He's tired, but he doesn't want to crush her. But his eyes are closing, and he grasps at Hamilton's hand, desperate.
"Watch her," he says, "don't let her out of your sight," and then he is loosening, into Hamilton's scent, her scent, which is nothing more but damp and Burr himself. And sweetness, something sweet.
"Theodosia," he says, closes his eyes.
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Burr falls into utter exhaustion, and Hamilton is a little surprised to find the activity of the birth isn't over. Theodosia needs to be cleaned off, which is done with a damp cloth, though she frets while it's going. Then, Mrs. Smith demonstrates how to swaddle her, and also how to pin the little wool clout in place.
The surgeon winds cotton bandage and presses it inside Burr to help with the bleeding that still doesn't seem to be done. Helps them wipe Burr down, cleaning up the worst of it, where his body has soiled itself in the strain. Dabs off a trail where his nipple has leaked white.
Hamilton lifts Burr to put him on the bed, while the linens that were on the ground are taken to clean. The women are uncomplaining, though this is an incredible amount of work. When Hamilton tries to help, he is firmly redirected towards the bed with the baby and his mate.
"Could you ask Laurens," he says, to Mrs. Smith, "to bring a spare shirt?" Hamilton had one, in the saddlebags. His current one is filthy, and so is he. The bruise where Burr bit him is going to be pretty spectacular, looks like.
Laurens is at the door, then, and Hamilton meets him. "A girl," Hamilton says, weakly. "Theodosia. She's healthy; Burr is resting." Burr is not so healthy.
Laurens breaks into a broad grin and hugs Hamilton tight. "You're a father," he whispers, so as not to disturb Burr.
"And you, a god-father," says Hamilton, "if -- I mean -- if you wish it." And if Burr doesn't get mad at him for that when he wakes up. He thinks Burr would approve, though.
"Oh, Alex," and Laurens is embracing him, again. "I would like nothing more."
He returns to the bed, holds the little wrapped-up Theo in his arms. Tucks himself in next to Burr. Burr seems fretful, almost-conscious when Hamilton comes back, but once they're together again, Burr steadies out and falls into a deeper slumber.
Eventually, with the distant sounds of cheering and a bit of revelry among the men -- Washington must have told them, and let them celebrate -- Hamilton falls asleep too.
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He knows Hamilton is there, a warm weight against his body, a comforting smell, as well as something new, which makes his heart flutter in his chest. Warm, resting over his heartbeat. Maybe he hears high-pitched cries, but he does not stir enough to know.
Burr passes in and out of sleep for three days, before he finally regains himself enough to open his eyes. When he does, his vision dances with black spots, and the room tilts. His body aches, terrible throbbing, from tears and ripping, and his breasts feel over-full, stretched, his mouth dry, unable to swallow. The bed is empty and cold, and he is alone. A small burst of panic, yet he has a hazy, indistinct memory--Hamilton promising to not let Theodosia out of his sight.
He reaches for a mug on the table beside his bed, yet his limb moves slowly, uncoordinated, and the mug clatters to the floor. He goes to move after it--to swing his legs over the side of the bed, yet he shortly collapses with a bitten-off scream, at the pain that bursts between his legs. Lays in the mess of blankets that still smell faintly of birth, less faintly of Hamilton. He is invalid again. And Hamilton no doubt is off enjoying the fruit of Burr's ruin. Wonderful.
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The congratulations some of the men give him make him flush, especially since he did so little to bring this child into the world.
A cradle is borrowed from the Lindens. Hamilton learns to rock it with a foot while writing at the desk. Any real fussiness and he returns to Burr, with whom the baby is most content. Burr doesn't get fully conscious, it seems, but he does stir enough every few hours to let the babe suckle, or at least he seems to relent to Hamilton's nudges in order to do so. Hamilton doesn't like doing it this way, because it seems to him that Theodosia continues to drain some vital essence that Aaron himself needs to recover. Mrs. Linden does assist once, when Burr will not stir even slightly and Theodosia continues to cry and cry. She has her latest that she is weaning, and willingly assists.
Hamilton leaves the letter he wrote for Burr nearby, so he doesn't forget to give it. He thinks Burr would savor at least the you were right.
Now, Theodosia begins to fuss. Laurens takes Hamilton's pen, and Hamilton scoops her up. There is no smell of her soiling herself, so it's likely feeding she wants. He wraps her up and makes his way back across the now-muddied yard.
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Ah, but the letter is addressed to him, and as he fold it open and begins to read he feels something unfurl, a small, breathless feeling, different from before, but no more foreign; the feeling when Hamilton had slipped that rings on his finger, had shown him the ring near that river, when he asked for Burr's hand in the courtroom, when he stopped Burr in the hallway that first night, even when the feeling had been buried beneath fear and resentment.
Small sentiments, no less precious for their size; 'My Dearest Little Captain,' 'You were right,' 'I dream of you,' 'Be well, love.'
Burr is crying again, because he's been crying enough these past few days, what's a little more? Hamilton is so sweet to him, so good, as much as he is annoying and overbearing and has no sense of scale or temperance. Burr is right, and for all he thought Hamilton might never understand, that this might the an unfortunate, insurmountable hurdle in their relationship that Burr would have to learn to deal with, he has displayed a capacity Burr did not know he had.
He feels the rings on his finger, a nervous habit he has never gotten over, twirls the metal and watches how it settles against his flesh. His body is ruined, but it will heal, eventually. And Hamilton makes him feel more whole than anything.
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Hamilton shoulders the door open, not looking forward to another session of trying to wake Burr. But, to his incredulous pleasure -- which shows plainly on his face -- Burr is awake, and sitting a little up, though it seems the tin cup beside the bed has suffered for it.
"Aaron," and he kneels by the bed, sweeping Burr's hand into his and kissing it. "You're awake."
Theodosia complains, and Hamilton immediately lifts her, passing her to the wellspring of her craved material. Her little arms flail, fingers spreading out wide. It's like she doesn't understand how limbs work, and Hamilton finds it unutterably precious.
If Aaron takes Theo, then Hamilton will of course get a refill for that tin cup, right away. There is a pitcher nearby.
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He opens his shirt, guides her to his breast, and she latches on easily, sucking while he winces. More than worth it, to see her face bleed into contentment, pressed against him.
"She likes it," he says. Then, wanting to glance at Hamilton yet unable to tear his eyes away, "She looks like Montgomery."
A strange, queer feeling then, to have this thing out of him that was so long inside. A person, with thoughts and emotions and one day a self, identity. A responsibility, whose father was dead before she was so much as a speck. How easy it had been for Monty to die, a strong and virile man, who seemed often to eclipse life itself, who was more than that, for Burr. And here she was, so small and delicate, breakable, looking so like him.
He finds suddenly that he cannot look at her, panic welling within him, and though she is nursing he pulls her away, thrusts her out towards Hamilton as she begins to wail.
"Do you want to--you should hold her, take her," he says. He will break her, or she will break, and Burr will break along with her.
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Theodosia does not like this interruption. For a moment or two she's just stunned, her little mouth open in surprise, and then she wails.
Hamilton is concerned by the abrupt reversal, but he takes Theodosia, who buries her face in his shirt and screams, trading her for the full cup of water. He perches down next to Aaron.
As hard as it is to retain any personal dignity with an extremely affronted baby in his arm, he asks, "Does it hurt? Can I help?"
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He knows he has to nurse her. That she is his child, that no one else can do it, but he does not want to.
"I'm sorry," he says, through tears. "You can give her back to me," though he does not hold his arms out, turns his body away from them both. Hamilton is good with her, she does well with Hamilton. He likes her, even as she is wailing and screaming, and here he is, having done nothing in bed for days while everyone else rushed to take care of him and he cannot even look at her.
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"I believe you have made a sad error," says Hamilton, after a moment, and, strangely, his tone is light, and fond. "I think it is one of two possible -- no, three, so I will hazard a guess.
"First, I see her, not yet recovered from the flush of a newborn, ssh, Theo," stroking her little back, "so very small, and I see you, with your pallor... Perhaps you fear for her health, which must be so fragile. In this, you have made an understandable error in your calculations. For she is half your get -- more than, since your blood beats in her tiny heart -- and even if she had but an eighth part of your will and determination, she could shrug off British bullets without care. You, who forged your way to Quebec and back, who carried a child through hardship, deprivation, and snowstorm, through blood and pain. And, look," as Theo wails anew, "she is like to surpass her Mama in oratory. I think we do have the first lady lawyer of New York here, with us. I thought you seemed weak and small when we first met -- perhaps it was my fear of how others saw me, of course -- but you have proven me an idiot a thousand times over."
He tentatively shifts, to see if Aaron will let him settle his arm around those narrow shoulders, bring the both of them into his embrace.
"Second," he says, "you may think that she prefers me. In this, you could not be more wrong. She adores you boundlessly. When she sleeps between us, she always turns towards you. Your scent is enough to soothe her. I am but an interloper, though a beloved one -- it seemed, when I read aloud a letter to General Washington yesterday, that she turned her face towards me as though she knew the tones of my voice, and I'm afraid my heartbeat has been aflutter since, and has not yet recovered."
A breath. "And third," he says, "you have not counted on my willingness to employ base and corrupt bribery to gain your goodwill." He produces, from his pocket, a bit of that maple candy, and tentatively offers it. Despite the almost silly tones he is employing, he is tentative, and worried, for he knows Aaron must already adore this child, and what good is he as a mate if he cannot fix what difficulty Aaron is having?
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At the same time Theo is brought near enough to his chest that it takes only a little nudging for her to latch on again, and then it is blessedly silent as he suckles, and Burr's hands come up to cradle her, carefully. Hamilton is beside him, and nothing terrible will happen, and she seems so content there against him that he feels as though his heart might break.
"If such bribery is to form the basis of our relationship I fear I will grow fat on candy or be kept naked in bed--" Hamilton has employed that trick, before, "or both."
Hamilton is so devoted to him, to making sure Burr is well, to saying and writing wonderful things about them. He will be a good father, no doubt. Had stayed caring for both him and Theo, where other fathers might have used duty as a convenient excuse. Burr has no doubt he will devote all his attention to making sure she has the education she needs, to fighting all of new york, of America, should they try to bar her from her chosen path due simply to her gender.
She is not of Hamilton's flesh--she does not look like him, she likely will always be remembered and noted as Montgomery's ilk, more than either of theirs. But he will care for her regardless, seems already to be head over heels for her. He will be a good father, Burr thinks, as he leans over to press a maple-sweet kiss to Hamilton's lips. To more than just this child.
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The kiss is a lovely and delicate thing, flavored sweet.
"Ah, there are those lips that have so occupied my mind," he murmurs. He draws his thumb along Burr's lovely, full lower lip. "They begin to blush again with health -- you longed for strawberries, before, and I saw none but your lips, today sweeter than spring's best harvest."
He drops his hand. "But I didn't mean to just flirt," he says. "I have so much to tell you, and I have been so worried for you -- when you fell from that horse, my heart fell with you. I growled -- at Washington." A self-deprecating look -- "He scruffed me like a naughty kitten.
"And I want to tell you the Army's plans, and know what you think. And I -- oh, I nearly forgot. I see you've read the letter, but I believe you deserve the words from my own lips as well. You were right, Aaron, and I, in the wrong. I am very fortunate to have you to open my eyes."
It is a veritable flood of words, and Hamilton realizes that he's starting to ramble on a bit. There is just so much he's wanted to share.
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"Your letter was very sweet," Burr looks away, embarrassed, and perhaps there is more he should say, compliments or honied things, but those words have never flowed as easily for him as they did for Hamilton, at least, not in the instances when Bur truly meant them. "Perhaps if we are married another sixty years I might hear you admit to being wrong once or twice more, if I am lucky. As far as your bed, I don't feel as if I will ever be recovered enough to engage in those activities, I am sure there is not a bit of me that isn't torn or brusied in some way. The reports I have received from the surgeon do not seem so truthful."
More than teasing there are things he needs to know, and pressing concerns. "I am afraid I was too disoriented the last days to have much an idea of what was going on, especially considering no one would tell me anything. What do you plan, now that we have her to keep safe? We might ready another wagon, but she cannot handle the elements as you or I can, and I would be devastated if--"
Well, if much of anything happened. Had been devastated before, but the mind had a way of getting over even the most unimaginable losses, limping onward.
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"They had no need," says Hamilton, primly, and with sparkling eyes. "I was far too frightened to disobey Mrs. Smith in the least, smallest way. I know when I am defeated."
"The surgeon has said," Hamilton says, "that, in his phrasing, 'beneficial paroxysms' may assist in properly constricting the womb, and so, well." He flushes a little. It is easier to say these things when Burr is already half-mad with desire. "You are wounded, still, and I would not hurt you for the world and everything in it -- but when you wish it again, my willing mouth and your willing cock seem a lovely match." A pause, and he hesitates to suggest -- they've already done such filthy things together, but some do view what he has to say as something against the proper order of things. Then again, what does Burr care for the proper order of things? "And, if you would like, I am not unfamiliar with being myself penetrated." It is an unmanly, un-Alpha thing to volunteer. "And I do not rush you," he hurries to add. "I simply mean you to know what I am willing to give."
He presses on. "The Pennsylvania militia has come, and with them, supply wagons. After our next attack, we will go to winter quarters, so we must wrap you up carefully before then, and after, there will be time enough for you to heal from this strain."
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He is careful not to dislodge Theo, but he grabs Hamilton by the cravat, yanks him firmly into the mattress and turns so that Burr is hovering over him, carefully throws a leg over his bulk so that he cannot move, knee pressing into his groin.
"I would like nothing more than to pin you to this mattress and fuck you," Burr growls, pressing into him, "until you were needy and begging and out of your mind," leaning down, licking beneath his ear, nibbling.
"but I am afraid we must control ourselves, in front of dear Theo." Oh, but how fun it is so toy with Hamilton, to leave him breathless and overwrought, so before he pulls away Burr wraps a hand into his hair and tugs harshly, connects their mouth in a filthy kiss, biting and sucking until Hamilton allows him access with his tongue, refusing to pull away even as Hamilton squirms, until he must disconnect to breathe.
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