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amrev_intrigues2022-04-22 04:14 am
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Private Storyline 2
Things seem to stall for a month, or rather slip into a routine, a delicate balance that teters on the edge of a tension difficult to dissect.
Hamilton won't stop feeding Burr, stealing him bits of food, watching at mealtimes to ensure Burr eats some incomprehensible measure from the table.
Burr had tried to take advantage of the public nature of that tradition, to eat bare scraps while Hamilton glared, beneath Washington's gaze, but when they had been once again alone Hamilton had refused to leave until Burr embibed enough food to make his stomach ache.
His sickness eases, but does not vanish. Mornings bent low over a basin and heaving while Hamilton attempts to cover for him to an increasingly agitated Washington. Underperforming--that is what Washington says. Disgraceful. He thinks these morning spells of illness the results of intemperance with ale, no doubt.
But the nights--those are the worst. Because he cannot stop aching for them. For the moments when he can curl against Hamilton's skin, close his eyes and pretend it is another body, if only the scent were not so different.
Even if he is not Monty, Burr aches for those scraps of affection, clinging to him the way one might cling to a rock in a storming ocean. Grows terrified that Hamilton might leave as much as he tries to convince himself he does not need him. But the emotions, once allowed to be felt, cannot be easily stopped up again. It is too easy to find himself drifting towards Hamilton during the day. Wanting to touch him, be touched. Held. Perhaps even groomed, though the thought makes him blush with shame and embarrassment.
His bedroom becomes too comfortable, allows them to slip too close to intimacy. Burr had nearly cried, when Hamilton presented him that blanket. Not enough for a real nest, but enough to fuss with on the bed for long minutes, make something resembling a nest. Burr had lost everything, in the retreat from quebec--but at least now he had a blanket.
He can't look at Hamilton's face, each night he fusses with the bedding, every stereotype he every rallied against. Any inadequacy of that nest quickly erased by the warmth of Hamilton's body.
Too close to hide the swelling, the changes. Close as a lover. Burr doesn't think of what they are--can't. Takes these liberties as they are--stolen and shameful.
With all the food, the extra smuggled bits, Burr is starting to show. And his hunger isn't leaving, never sated, but he is growing ravenous, and each day the question of what to do is more and more urgent. Soon Hamilton won't let Burr put it off anymore, and what then?
For all of it, his worrying about propriety, he balks in the face of some lie. Burr's reputation matters, is vitally important, but at the same time, he cares not for manufactured conventions. Would have no problem being seen as a loose omega, if only he were established enough for such things to not ruin him.
Even so, he is nearly unable to fasten his breeches, and the skin around his stomach, stretched, begins to grow sores, from the too tight waistband, the chaffing. Built for soldiers losing weight, not gaining, and Burr has always been slight. He takes to binding his stomach, tight beneath bandages, but then he is wracked with cramps, which grow worse each day.
It doesn't occur to him that this might hurt the child, this last bit of Monty, which has grown so dear to him. Finds himself clutching his stomach unconsciously in stolen moments, on the verge of tears. Watches the rise and fall for long moments, in the morning and at night, as if at any moment the slight bump might disappear entirely.
Now he is dressing again, binding his stomach once more, to force himself into his breeches, another day of Washington's disappointment. Burr snorts--at least in this there is some bitter mercy--Washington probably thinks Burr is growing fat from drink, if he's noticed at all.
Hamilton won't stop feeding Burr, stealing him bits of food, watching at mealtimes to ensure Burr eats some incomprehensible measure from the table.
Burr had tried to take advantage of the public nature of that tradition, to eat bare scraps while Hamilton glared, beneath Washington's gaze, but when they had been once again alone Hamilton had refused to leave until Burr embibed enough food to make his stomach ache.
His sickness eases, but does not vanish. Mornings bent low over a basin and heaving while Hamilton attempts to cover for him to an increasingly agitated Washington. Underperforming--that is what Washington says. Disgraceful. He thinks these morning spells of illness the results of intemperance with ale, no doubt.
But the nights--those are the worst. Because he cannot stop aching for them. For the moments when he can curl against Hamilton's skin, close his eyes and pretend it is another body, if only the scent were not so different.
Even if he is not Monty, Burr aches for those scraps of affection, clinging to him the way one might cling to a rock in a storming ocean. Grows terrified that Hamilton might leave as much as he tries to convince himself he does not need him. But the emotions, once allowed to be felt, cannot be easily stopped up again. It is too easy to find himself drifting towards Hamilton during the day. Wanting to touch him, be touched. Held. Perhaps even groomed, though the thought makes him blush with shame and embarrassment.
His bedroom becomes too comfortable, allows them to slip too close to intimacy. Burr had nearly cried, when Hamilton presented him that blanket. Not enough for a real nest, but enough to fuss with on the bed for long minutes, make something resembling a nest. Burr had lost everything, in the retreat from quebec--but at least now he had a blanket.
He can't look at Hamilton's face, each night he fusses with the bedding, every stereotype he every rallied against. Any inadequacy of that nest quickly erased by the warmth of Hamilton's body.
Too close to hide the swelling, the changes. Close as a lover. Burr doesn't think of what they are--can't. Takes these liberties as they are--stolen and shameful.
With all the food, the extra smuggled bits, Burr is starting to show. And his hunger isn't leaving, never sated, but he is growing ravenous, and each day the question of what to do is more and more urgent. Soon Hamilton won't let Burr put it off anymore, and what then?
For all of it, his worrying about propriety, he balks in the face of some lie. Burr's reputation matters, is vitally important, but at the same time, he cares not for manufactured conventions. Would have no problem being seen as a loose omega, if only he were established enough for such things to not ruin him.
Even so, he is nearly unable to fasten his breeches, and the skin around his stomach, stretched, begins to grow sores, from the too tight waistband, the chaffing. Built for soldiers losing weight, not gaining, and Burr has always been slight. He takes to binding his stomach, tight beneath bandages, but then he is wracked with cramps, which grow worse each day.
It doesn't occur to him that this might hurt the child, this last bit of Monty, which has grown so dear to him. Finds himself clutching his stomach unconsciously in stolen moments, on the verge of tears. Watches the rise and fall for long moments, in the morning and at night, as if at any moment the slight bump might disappear entirely.
Now he is dressing again, binding his stomach once more, to force himself into his breeches, another day of Washington's disappointment. Burr snorts--at least in this there is some bitter mercy--Washington probably thinks Burr is growing fat from drink, if he's noticed at all.
no subject
Hamilton is rubbing at Burr's scalp, and Burr can feel himself melting, hurt dripping out to be replaced with lingering pleasure, the buzz of their release not long ago.
He feels pleasantly used. Sore, ruined, as he had wanted to be. And something unfurls inside him, some desperate, needy, delicate thing, drinking in each small attention with a pain not unlike something verging on tears. Hamilton kissing his face, rubbing thumbs over his cheeks, like Burr is something precious. Like Burr is wanted.
His shoulders shake, his chest heaves. Burr shifts, pulling at the knot, stills and hisses. He's not sure he'll be able to walk after this, and even so his bindings are ruined, and he won't be able to fasten his pants. Maybe Hamilton planned all this for that reason, and he is still hollowed out enough for that to strike him with a jolt of fear, even as he knows it is ridiculous.
no subject
He rallies his strength one more time, and, as he originally intended, he carefully lifts Burr up against his chest and then turns them over, so Burr doesn't have to hold his legs around Alexander's waist and Alexander doesn't have to prop himself up anymore. He also grabs at the blanket he acquired, most of a month ago, and sort of shoves it at Burr for Burr to decide what to do with it.
And then he's back to the relentless campaign of petting and praising, stopping only to breathe in Burr's smell at the crook of his neck.
"You took all of that, I can't believe you, everything I had for you and you just took it," in little murmurs with the occasional brushed kiss. "Beautiful, and you're so strong, so graceful, you bend but you don't break," and similar idiotic nonsense. He wants to ask did I hurt you and are you all right but he's afraid the answers are yes and no in the wrong ways, and so he doesn't ask.
no subject
'I could take more,' Burr wants to insist, 'from you,' but if feels the wrong thing to say, and Burr has always been more prone to silence over words.
Easy to fall asleep here, exhausted, aching. But the realities of their positions are too pressing to ignore. Washington will be wondering where they've been, likely had already been wondering. How long have they been here, how long have they been fucking?
"We need to report for duty," Burr slurs, even as he knows they will be trapped until the knot goes down. Does not want the knot to go down. Experimentally tightens those muscles to feel it still inside him, wiggling and shifting.
no subject
"I was back a little early." This is true, but they've definitely blown through that time by now. Heh; blown.
The movement makes him give a little gasp, a little twitch. Not of pain. God, he wants this to last. "It won't be long." Already, he can feel the fierce throb starting to fade as the knot just starts to soften.
"I have string," he murmurs. "Can run it around your trousers, do up your jacket all the way. Go in to town. Hercules is at the shop where he apprentices." He has been thinking about that problem, too, in the last few minutes.
no subject
He doesn't know what version of the truth he'll tell, because it won't be long before he must say something, the distribution of that swell not enough to be accounted by simple overindulgence. Well, overindulgence of food and drink, that is.
He shifts, feels Hamilton begin to slip free, and with it the rush of warm liquid between his legs, grimacing at the mess running down from him and dripping onto Hamilton.
What a mess. Both of them, a mess. He begins to pull off those bindings. Useless now for their original purpose, at least now they can be used to mop of the mix of liquids. The sheets will have to be washed, though. They smell too much of sex.
Oh, but he's rushing again, and Hamilton looks so beautiful, laying beneath him, hair tangled around his head and still flushed from exertion. Burr leans down and kisses him, slow--dragging lips against Hamilton's own and licking there at the seam.
no subject
He does feel a bit bereft as Burr starts to pull away -- but then he's distracted just by watching Burr, the lean lines of his body as he starts to clean himself up. He can look now. If he was allowed to touch, he has to be allowed to look his fill.
It's a pleasant surprise when Burr ducks to kiss him, and Hamilton opens to him, meets his tongue.
"And if Hercules does find out?" Hamilton asks, returning to the previous topic. "You shouldn't be ashamed." He hesitates, and presses on: "General Montgomery was a hero, too. His reputation is honorable."
no subject
But he says none of these things. Instead he rises from the bed, wincing once and stumbling at the burn between his legs, leaning against the dresser to find a new pair of smallclothes, a shirt, stockings.
Hamilton did fuck satisfactorily, but perhaps they should talk about gentleness in future engagements, and not listening to Burr when he was half out of his mind with want. Future engagements, there might not even be future engagements. Burr will be swollen large enough soon to be grotesque, that affliction no longer ignorable.
"And I suppose there will be no consequences when I tell Washington his most disappointing and dislike aide is nearly four months along with a wedlock, bastard child?" Burr stops, looks at himself in the mirror, looks at Hamilton behind him, looking at Burr. Something swells in him, thicker and more acute than shame, deeper. He doesn't know why he says what he says, but the words fall numbly. "oh, I suppose I forgot he quite likes bastards."
no subject
"Honestly, I'm loathe to break it to you, Burr," says Hamilton, "but you literally hate working for him."
And why should Burr? Washington is a great leader, but he has a temper, and his mistakes have been severe.
"And if you played the game," Hamilton tells him, "you would be fine. But, as it is, he can tell you don't want to be there, and he's worried he'll have another Joseph Reed on his hands."
It is possible, of course, that Burr doesn't know the whole story with Joseph Reed, writing letters to Charles Lee behind Washington's back.
The remark stings, its purpose fulfilled. But Hamilton is accustomed to pushing its like out of his mind. He sits up, watching Burr. "Please," he dismisses, "he only has eyes for his very precious Lafayette, whom he truly wishes was his son instead of that useless stepson that's been kicked out of two boarding schools now for idling, whoring, and gambling."
Again, entirely possible that Burr doesn't know about the second boarding school yet.
He reaches for his shirt, and has to puzzle out how he managed to get one half inside out and twice twisted around the other.
"And," he emphasizes, "I've already said there are obliging alphas everywhere." He doesn't meet Burr's eyes when he says: "The child doesn't have to suffer for the circumstances of its birth."
no subject
He buttons his shirt, sits on the edge of the bed to pull his pants up, struggling and wincing. God, he supposes he will have to see Mulligan, as embarrassing as that is. Will have to walk the whole of the way into town feeling the evidence of Hamilton's enthusiasm. But maybe he can buy another blanket as well, if there are any. Supplies have been disasterous the whole of the campaign, but the thought of a pile of blankets fills him with a kind of wild joy. Hormones, reducing him to a tottering idiot.
"Very well," he says, avoiding Hamilton's eyes. He doesn't know why the thought of finding an alpha has made him so depressed, but he doesn't want to be in the same room as Hamilton any longer. "I'll go into town, and you do whatever it is you do to gain me such leeway with the old fool."
no subject
"I hope I didn't hurt you," says Hamilton, suddenly, as he tucks the trousers into the tops of the boots. Glances up to Burr. "Or, at least, that it did not displease you." He takes Burr's hand in both of his. "I meant what I said -- you have only to ask. I would not leave you unsatisfied." He holds Burr's gaze long enough to emphasize the words, and then, this time, kisses Burr's palm, and takes his leave.