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amrev_intrigues2022-10-31 01:56 pm
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This is Fine Alternative Denouement
Hamilton is there, when Burr comes home. He's not supposed to be there. Burr learns later: he finished his business early, returned to Philadelphia to surprise Burr. Because he loves Burr. Because he feels pained, when they are apart. But Hamilton arrives and Burr is not there. At dinner, the housekeeper tells him. But then hours pass and Burr still does not come home. Maybe that is not out of the ordinary, for them. Working late, wandering the streets.
But Burr doesn't expect Hamilton to be there, when the door comes open, and Burr stumbles in wrecked and weeping, abortifacient clutched in one hand. His heart stops, when he looks up and sees him. Freezes in the doorway, legs shaking. The smell is wafting off him. Heat, and Jefferson. Burr whimpers.
But Burr doesn't expect Hamilton to be there, when the door comes open, and Burr stumbles in wrecked and weeping, abortifacient clutched in one hand. His heart stops, when he looks up and sees him. Freezes in the doorway, legs shaking. The smell is wafting off him. Heat, and Jefferson. Burr whimpers.
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Still flushed, when he turns and makes for the door. "I will not stay to agitate you. Recover yourself and I shall return," to take the sting out. He closes the door behind h, but the hallway is its own awkward, heavy silence. A long dark hall, with carved wood panels. Stuffy air. He makes his way to one of the smaller bedrooms. Hardly made up for guests, but--good enough to be alone. To read, maybe. He doesn't want to think, either. So he finds a nearby housekeeper, requests a bit of brandy, then returns to the room and closes the door.
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No, it is just that his heart is breaking. He feels as though his family is wounded, suddenly, and that it may not be healed, maybe not ever. And Hamilton, Hamilton is simply so, so tired. He keens, softly and sadly, to himself more than to anyone else, turning over to press his face into the pillow, to muffle it.
What gave Jefferson the right to do this to them?
Why is this happening?
He finds that he is weeping. Ned's hand rests on his back.
This time, when Ned offers the laudanum, Hamilton does not refuse.
When Hamilton is unconscious, Ned goes to find Burr. Knocks, before he steps inside.
"Are you injured?" he asks. "Perhaps my foster-brother isn't in a state for it, but I worry about your health, as well. Even if you weren't wrestled to the ground by George Washington himself."
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So he doesn't really register until he is sitting in the room alone, watching the book clasped between his hands, and then between his knees, tremble. One empty room, windowless, stuffy with dust, and shaking hands clasped on a worthless. Book. He feels like he is eight or nine, sweating through a sweating summer reciting prayers he doesn't even understand.
It hurts, to sit. A horrible deep ache. He is bleeding, maybe. From when there had been no preparation, and--he is too relive himself in either way. Rings and a rod and--
Then there is the assortment of odd aches. The dull throb where he caught a foot in the rib. The heat that doesn't flee from a swollen cheek. The ache of his jaw, and the awful twisting of his stomach, threatening again at nausea. A pounding headache. Exhausted.
But none of this is--it doesn't compare to that awful numbness. Hollowed. Playing over Hamilton's face, again and again and again. Burr is--any other mate would have done something. Known what to do. Burr's never been a good mate.
"I thank you, I am well," Burr says, when Ned enters. "I beg your pardon. I will return to him once he is settled. I thought it best not to agitate him more, given his state." Which means--I am fine, please leave.
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He takes a seat across from Burr.
"You are bruised," he says. Gestures, at his own cheek. "Are you sure there is no internal injury?"
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"Nothing worse than I have welcomed gladly in the past," Burr says. Before Hamilton. Because that is a Burrian needle--playing at things too much for polite company. A dare to wiggle his way free. And because he wants to hurt, now. Not in any obvious way. Wants to embarrass. To--to make Ned feel foolish, for asking.
"You would do well to attend to yourself than me," he says. "Or perhaps one who does not welcome or take pleasure in the pain wrought by treatment or defilement." Yes, a doctor wouldn't be squeamish about the bodily. But perhaps he would be, about that, given his relation to Hamilton. Do not touch Burr, he might like it. And what would Hamilton say?
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"Had you welcomed these attentions," he says, "I would have to believe that a man who's my brother in law -- or as good as -- would willingly tear into my foster-brother's heart, leave it bleeding out, and rend his family apart, cast his children aside, for a moment's pleasure. I know you, Aaron. You are clever, gallant, and charming among far more than just your husband -- but you love him. I've seen you reach for his hand when you think no one is watching, just to hold it. I've seen how you look at him when he enters a room. I've seen how he looks at you. And, by God, if you are, by some touch of the Devil, not the man I know, I pray you lie to me, for I want no part in souring Alexander's devotion to you. Now, for all that is holy, tell me if you are injured."
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I did welcome it, Burr wants to say and does, nearly. But Ned doesn't want to know, and in an instant Burr is nearly hysteric, heart hammering and struggling to swallow for all his outward demeanor remains placid.
"Oh, I may lie to you," Burr says, "if that is what makes it easier. But we know ourselves, already. How easily and neatly he has worked it out. Think you not his reaction would have been so, if some part of him didn't know?" That Burr liked it, that he's thinking about it still--the way Jefferson had commanded Burr's body effortlessly, drawn out those things Burr has long ago repressed, taught himself not to want. To not dare.
Burr is stretched somewhere in there: torn and threadbare and used. The place where desire meets disgust and helplessness in the brittle wasteland of a destruction that is not just his own. And he is daring Ned. Twisting some knife, deeper and harder and--he wants to hurt. He wants to hurt.
"You think you know me so well, then? Did you know the first time I saw you, you ignited fantasies? You look like him, but the desire was that you were not him, and that we might do some harm with our bodies, together, unable to resist. But I knew you would deny me, and I did not press the matter. But I am not--I am not who you think I am, Ned. I am sexed despite myself, and I want constantly. Those things they write about me--they are not untrue. And now--Jefferson has found it. And it is out, and it will never be tucked back inside me again."
The fervor fades, subtly and almost imperceptibly, into heartbreak. It isn't what he wanted, but he is--he is broken. And there is no going back. He can't even hold his husband's hand without--and. And Ned. He will leave now, won't he? And Burr can be alone. He just needs to be alone. And if he doesn't leave--Burr is on the precipice of shattering.
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He steps closer, projects calm in his body and his smell. "And you know as well as I do that if Alexander had any apprehension that you would leave your family for Jefferson, his rage would be towards you, and not towards his political enemy. Your betrayal would have been what mattered to him. Instead, he reacts as though you are one -- as though both of you have been wounded. So I can only think that there was a truth he glimpsed the moment you came home that shunted him into a frenzy, not towards you, but about you."
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He grabs Ned by the cravat and drags him down into a kiss. Sloppy and off center and knocking teeth, and before they've even connected for more than a moment Burr is shaking, pulling back, swallowing back panic, tears.
He can't. Not to Alexander. No apology. He closes his eyes, hands gripping the sides of the chair, forcing himself to be iron. His chest is heaving, and--
"I'm bleeding," he says. "I think I can feel it. I'm not--there isn't--"
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He crouches, before Burr, and covers Burr's hand with his own. "Where?" he asks.
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He clutches Ned's hand, too hard for anyone whose work relies on that appendage, clutches on like he is Alexander. Swallows hard, shudders back to himself. He has lived through worse. It is what it is.
"Not the passage a polite Alpha might take," Burr says, which is itself a confused double meaning. Had Jefferson been polite he should have confined such abuses to that second place. Yet a polite alpha would have no need for such discrimination. For a place so...what has Edwards said? A place so unproductive. "The other."
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"What quantity of blood?" asks Ned. "Equivalent to menses, more, or less?"
He reaches for his spectacles, ensuring they're present in case he must perform a physical examination.
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Hopes Ned won't have to examine him, even as he reaches for spectacles.
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His voice is gentler, then: "You must be confused -- if that's even the word for it. Your biology would naturally incline you towards attachment to any alpha who has you in heat, but the longer you are away from him, the more your natural bond will reassert itself. That, I can promise."
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But it doesn't feel like a lie now, far away from him. But. Imagining him. His elegance, the lithe gracefulness of his form, pushing Burr away with a foot. Reaching inside him with fingers. The things he'd said--Burr wouldn't stop him, if he found Burr now in a deserted hallway and bent to kiss him. Burr wouldn't be able to. Fear and arousal--he'd given up on either being intertwined. But now he's not so sure.
And he doesn't want to think about it.
"I'm tired," he says, "I need to rest," begging off Ned's company. He doesn't know how long they'll be here. But he'll have to take more, soon. Of the potion, to ensure nothing takes. And Ned needs rest too, if he is to see to Hamilton once he wakes. And Jefferson, too, if the man's own doctor has not yet been secured.
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It rankles. That Burr must go back, that he needs to. He wants to be alone. He needs to be alone. He is too vulnerable now. Stripped down. There hasn't been a moment to himself. Not since before--unless Theo sleeping outside the study door counted as alone.
"I will return before he wakes," Burr says. "I just need rest, first. Truly." Thinks he will panic without it, if he is pushed anymore. He'll just sleep a few hours, then steal back to that chair at Hamilton's bedside. Though he doesn't want to. He wants to book a carriage and go.
"You might take something--here," unwinding his cravat and shoving it clumsily into Ned's hands. The smell won't be right--not after Jefferson and the potions. It will have to do.
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"Remember: it is not only that he will take comfort in you, but that you take comfort in him. He has a responsibility to care for you that he takes very seriously."
He squeezes Burr's hand, and releases him.
"I'll ask the servants," slaves, "not to disturb you."
Later, Hamilton awakens still in a partial daze, smelling his husband, though the smell is wrong, and faint -- and he starts weeping, over Burr's absence, over the distance he can imagine creeping into their bond, over his simple exhaustion and pain. Ned rubs his back, and Hamilton presses his face into the cravat, like it will close some unutterably agonizing gap within him.
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He thinks he is fevered, when he finally sleeps. His body aching and his stomach roiling. And somewhere there in the half space of dream and wakefulness he is sure, if there is a way to be sure, that beyond all hope he is pregnant. Something latching on inextricably, draining life and leaving behind petrification.
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The voice is low, not just in volume but in pitch: a rumble felt in the pit of the chest. It is Washington who laboriously steps inside. He is still feeling some of the injuries that Hamilton inflicted on him, in his frenzy, and it makes him move with deliberation.
Or maybe it's his latest hemorrhoids.
"I think," says Washington, "that, perhaps, he is being foolish. But I decided to ask him, before I pass judgment." He takes a seat across from the chaise where Burr has slept, and offers a handkerchief, ever the gentleman.
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He has his own handkerchief, refuses Washington's, dabs off sweat and damp.
"Sir, I apologize for not asking. I needed only some rest from the excitement of last night--" Hamilton's excitement, not Burr's "--I will return to Alexander if I but have a moment to gather myself."
This is easier, pulling himself together to be Colonel Burr, whom has not been ravished, and who is not heat sick. Who is not fighting nausea, and who does not need to take more abortifacient.
He doesn't want to return to Alexander. He feels sick at the thought of seeing him. But he also can't bear the guilt at being away. Everyone has to do what they don't wish to, when the occasion comes. He has a duty. Even as his eyes burn and his head pounds.
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Washington's eyes are sympathetic.
"You don't need to stand on formality. I consider you and Alexander to be like sons -- and Theo to be like a granddaughter. You both are welcome here."
He seems unfathomably old, suddenly. Pained. He looks away. (He is thinking that he is glad Jefferson's doctor has set up his sickbed elsewhere -- though he is conscious it will still have the appearance of playing favorites. He is thinking that he hopes the Union survives this disaster. He is thinking that he needs James Madison on his side.)
"At least take a bed-chamber," he suggests. "If an old man can offer some comfort to one who has been so wounded, perhaps it can be that."
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"I thank you, I shall ask a room to be prepared," Burr says. "You should to your own rest as well," Burr says. "I can see already how Hamilton's struggles have injured you," and Washington already was not in the best health, before. He doesn't know to what extent Hamilton has been restrained. But he feels that guilt keenly--to be the center of such an upset, and to have called on Washington to resolve it, aware even of Washington's recent fragility.
Maybe the guilt shows. But it is better that than shame.
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A hint of a smile.
"You are very strong," he says, "but I cannot forget a young omega, mere days after childbirth, insisting he could ride a horse. That he must ride a horse, to go and find his mate." There is something like fondness, in this memory. "Whenever you are under threat, Alexander does something foolish... Ah, but it had to be me. He is a headstrong man." He sighs. A headstrong man -- that's an understatement. Alexander does not submit to authority. "Yours are narrow shoulders for our Atlas -- but I fear the weight of the union will rest upon you, in the days to come."
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Washington is right, though. Burr, who would at risk of his own death, ride to attempt to rescue Hamilton. And Hamilton, who would at risk of his own death and Burr's, ride out to avenge his own dignity.
He doesn't think there will be a way to mend the gap between them. But Hamilton needs him now, and Washington is tired. So Burr excuses himself, and knocks tentatively at the door to that sick room, light enough to be nearly unheard.
If he is granted entry--he will hit a wall of scents. Bad, desperate ones, that wrap around him like led. His face will pale, and he will be shaking, when he takes that seat again at Hamilton's side and offers his hand. And is Hamilton is feverish it will burn to the exclusion of Burr's own. One heat lost in another. And Burr won't have anything to say. But offer himself, in this little capacity he can. Because Burr's body is not his own. Because Hamilton has been so defrauded.
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