Fic: Till a Bullet Stopped His Song
Nov. 10th, 2008 08:58 pmThe title is taken from the last line of my prompt, which was the wonderful poem by Alun Lewis, All Day It Has Rained.
Till a Bullet Stopped His Song
The wind gusted, biting its way through the jacket he’d left unzipped. Bodie turned the collar up and hunched into it. His eyes were resolutely on the headstone in front of him as a drop of mist made its way slowly down his nose. Typical. Couldn’t have managed this in spring, could you, sunshine? It was a dark and inappropriate thought, but then as Doyle had loved to tell him, so was he. He let his lips curve at that. He could have zipped the jacket up, or worn something warmer for the time of year, but he didn’t. Ever. He’d turned up in the same outfit for the past three years now – black polo, black cords, and a black leather jacket. People in the small graveyard--and there were always people around on this day--exchanged tight, respectful nods with him as they passed. He knew it was because of where they all were, what day it was, and what he wore. He also knew they might think differently if they knew he wore them because Ray had told him, in an unguarded moment of pure lust and sentiment, that he looked fucking gorgeous in them.
“You what?”
“You heard. C’mere and let’s get you out of it all. It’s been three days and you turn up from Scunthorpe dressed like that. I’ve been wanting to ravish you since lunchtime.”
And he went, stumbling back like a conquest in a harem, laughing into Ray’s mouth as Ray pushed him towards the bedroom, peeling layers off and cursing how many there were.
“You and your bloody vests,” Doyle sighed later, his mouth on Bodie’s throat and the pair of them an inch away from sleep.
“Still wearing them, mate. Still... Hello there.”
His reverie was broken by a toddler who had suddenly come into view, homing in on him with an unsteady gait. She stopped and stared up in that solemn way all toddlers have, completely self-possessed and uninhibited about inspecting the stranger before her at close range. About three, Bodie guessed, she had short dark hair in a pageboy style, and was dressed up in a navy blue pinafore dress with a coat to match. Her chubby fingers were holding–-squashing–-a few long-stemmed red flowers, one of which she extended to Bodie. He crouched down to her level.
“For me? You sure?”
A fervent nod. Apparently she was.
“Well, isn’t this my lucky day?” He reached out to take it and noticed a smiling, heavyset woman making her way towards them. He straightened and gestured towards her with the flower.
“Are you making your mum wander about looking for you?”
“Jessica! I told you to stay close.” She smiled a little breathlessly as she caught up to them, and then took hold of the girl’s hand. “I’m sorry, she has a habit of wandering.”
“Quite all right, love. And she’s been nice enough to give me a present.” Bodie smiled down at the girl, who had suddenly gone shy and was wrapping her arms around her mother’s legs.
The woman gestured over her shoulder to where a small group of people were gathered on the other side of the graveyard. “It’s just... too many adults, I think, too much standing around for her.”
“Family?”
“Yes, a grandfather and two uncles actually. All joined up together, the same regiment. And all died together at Flanders. Their names are here so it’s somewhere to go, isn’t it? To lay a wreath and remember. And you?” It was awkward, but only a little. They were, after all, gathered there for the same reason.
Bodie swung back to the headstone, which couldn’t have been plainer if it tried. ‘Ray Doyle. In Loving Memory. June 5th 1953 to November 11th 1986’. Ray’s mother had not minded Bodie’s hesitant request to leave the ‘-mond’ out of Raymond at all. He’d been kissed on his cheek for it actually, if memory served.
He cleared his throat. “My partner. Ray Doyle.”
He saw the slight hesitation as she heard the words and took in their meaning. He usually qualified it, added the professional context to glide over any awkwardness, especially with strangers. But today he didn’t. He felt the weight of the words, savoured their truth tight in his heart and deep in his bones. As he always felt them on this day.
“I’m sorry.”
He nodded tightly, not sure he could speak, and the silence was loud in his ears.
Then the child tugged, pointed back, and asked her mum for sweets. The mother rolled her eyes heavenwards, and they both looked down at her in gratitude for a difficult moment saved. As mother and child walked off, Jessica turned back, and Bodie got a vigorous wave of the hand clutching the flowers, petals spraying everywhere. He waved his own in salute. Then he scanned the graveyard and turned back.
The small groups were thinning, fewer every year. The significance of the date for the rest of the world had not even struck Bodie until the second year. He had looked up and seen all those dark-clothed people crowded near a small regimental monument, and wondered if there’d been an accident he hadn’t heard about. Then he’d caught sight of a poppy, and the irony and the fucking poetry of it had hit him so hard he’d almost fallen to his knees and vomited.
This was the only anniversary he did. Not for them the sentimentality of firsts – first kiss, first fuck, first night, first anything really. But he did have a few lasts now. The last breath, sighed into Bodie’s neck as he’d screamed for Ray to hang the fuck on, the last time he’d said I love you and meant it, the last cock inside him as he’d held his breath and tried not to come, and the last time he had ever held a man’s face in his hands, and not seen it for the tears.
Bodie blinked and looked at his watch. A few of the old crew would be waiting for him at the pub. Murphy, Jax, Peterson. They never left him on his own on November the 11th. And he knew Cowley would be by later, with the perfect combination of scotch and silence.
He laid his flower on the headstone and let his fingers rest as a fist on the smooth stone awhile. Time to breathe in and out again for one more year, then. To put one foot in front of the other like the good soldier he’d always been.
“See you, sunshine. Keep it warm, eh?”
******
Title: Till a Bullet Stopped His Song
Author: Callisto
Slash or Gen: Slash
Archive at ProsLib/Circuit: Yes
Disclaimer: Sadly not mine
Notes: No puppies and daisies here, I’m afraid, it’s a death fic. The image of Bodie in this just took me by the throat and wouldn't let go. Huge hugs and thanks are due to
izzie7 and
jojosimco, who beta’d this incredibly quickly for me.
Till a Bullet Stopped His Song
The wind gusted, biting its way through the jacket he’d left unzipped. Bodie turned the collar up and hunched into it. His eyes were resolutely on the headstone in front of him as a drop of mist made its way slowly down his nose. Typical. Couldn’t have managed this in spring, could you, sunshine? It was a dark and inappropriate thought, but then as Doyle had loved to tell him, so was he. He let his lips curve at that. He could have zipped the jacket up, or worn something warmer for the time of year, but he didn’t. Ever. He’d turned up in the same outfit for the past three years now – black polo, black cords, and a black leather jacket. People in the small graveyard--and there were always people around on this day--exchanged tight, respectful nods with him as they passed. He knew it was because of where they all were, what day it was, and what he wore. He also knew they might think differently if they knew he wore them because Ray had told him, in an unguarded moment of pure lust and sentiment, that he looked fucking gorgeous in them.
“You what?”
“You heard. C’mere and let’s get you out of it all. It’s been three days and you turn up from Scunthorpe dressed like that. I’ve been wanting to ravish you since lunchtime.”
And he went, stumbling back like a conquest in a harem, laughing into Ray’s mouth as Ray pushed him towards the bedroom, peeling layers off and cursing how many there were.
“You and your bloody vests,” Doyle sighed later, his mouth on Bodie’s throat and the pair of them an inch away from sleep.
“Still wearing them, mate. Still... Hello there.”
His reverie was broken by a toddler who had suddenly come into view, homing in on him with an unsteady gait. She stopped and stared up in that solemn way all toddlers have, completely self-possessed and uninhibited about inspecting the stranger before her at close range. About three, Bodie guessed, she had short dark hair in a pageboy style, and was dressed up in a navy blue pinafore dress with a coat to match. Her chubby fingers were holding–-squashing–-a few long-stemmed red flowers, one of which she extended to Bodie. He crouched down to her level.
“For me? You sure?”
A fervent nod. Apparently she was.
“Well, isn’t this my lucky day?” He reached out to take it and noticed a smiling, heavyset woman making her way towards them. He straightened and gestured towards her with the flower.
“Are you making your mum wander about looking for you?”
“Jessica! I told you to stay close.” She smiled a little breathlessly as she caught up to them, and then took hold of the girl’s hand. “I’m sorry, she has a habit of wandering.”
“Quite all right, love. And she’s been nice enough to give me a present.” Bodie smiled down at the girl, who had suddenly gone shy and was wrapping her arms around her mother’s legs.
The woman gestured over her shoulder to where a small group of people were gathered on the other side of the graveyard. “It’s just... too many adults, I think, too much standing around for her.”
“Family?”
“Yes, a grandfather and two uncles actually. All joined up together, the same regiment. And all died together at Flanders. Their names are here so it’s somewhere to go, isn’t it? To lay a wreath and remember. And you?” It was awkward, but only a little. They were, after all, gathered there for the same reason.
Bodie swung back to the headstone, which couldn’t have been plainer if it tried. ‘Ray Doyle. In Loving Memory. June 5th 1953 to November 11th 1986’. Ray’s mother had not minded Bodie’s hesitant request to leave the ‘-mond’ out of Raymond at all. He’d been kissed on his cheek for it actually, if memory served.
He cleared his throat. “My partner. Ray Doyle.”
He saw the slight hesitation as she heard the words and took in their meaning. He usually qualified it, added the professional context to glide over any awkwardness, especially with strangers. But today he didn’t. He felt the weight of the words, savoured their truth tight in his heart and deep in his bones. As he always felt them on this day.
“I’m sorry.”
He nodded tightly, not sure he could speak, and the silence was loud in his ears.
Then the child tugged, pointed back, and asked her mum for sweets. The mother rolled her eyes heavenwards, and they both looked down at her in gratitude for a difficult moment saved. As mother and child walked off, Jessica turned back, and Bodie got a vigorous wave of the hand clutching the flowers, petals spraying everywhere. He waved his own in salute. Then he scanned the graveyard and turned back.
The small groups were thinning, fewer every year. The significance of the date for the rest of the world had not even struck Bodie until the second year. He had looked up and seen all those dark-clothed people crowded near a small regimental monument, and wondered if there’d been an accident he hadn’t heard about. Then he’d caught sight of a poppy, and the irony and the fucking poetry of it had hit him so hard he’d almost fallen to his knees and vomited.
This was the only anniversary he did. Not for them the sentimentality of firsts – first kiss, first fuck, first night, first anything really. But he did have a few lasts now. The last breath, sighed into Bodie’s neck as he’d screamed for Ray to hang the fuck on, the last time he’d said I love you and meant it, the last cock inside him as he’d held his breath and tried not to come, and the last time he had ever held a man’s face in his hands, and not seen it for the tears.
Bodie blinked and looked at his watch. A few of the old crew would be waiting for him at the pub. Murphy, Jax, Peterson. They never left him on his own on November the 11th. And he knew Cowley would be by later, with the perfect combination of scotch and silence.
He laid his flower on the headstone and let his fingers rest as a fist on the smooth stone awhile. Time to breathe in and out again for one more year, then. To put one foot in front of the other like the good soldier he’d always been.
“See you, sunshine. Keep it warm, eh?”
******
Title: Till a Bullet Stopped His Song
Author: Callisto
Slash or Gen: Slash
Archive at ProsLib/Circuit: Yes
Disclaimer: Sadly not mine
Notes: No puppies and daisies here, I’m afraid, it’s a death fic. The image of Bodie in this just took me by the throat and wouldn't let go. Huge hugs and thanks are due to
no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 07:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 07:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 07:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 07:46 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 07:29 pm (UTC)How terribly sad!
no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 07:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 08:04 pm (UTC)I *never* read death fics -- with the current DIALJ theme I'm carefully reading the trailers before launching in to any stories here. The only thing that got me to even peek at this was your name Petal... and I'm glad I did although I'm now sat here at my desk on my coffee break with a lump in my throat so large that I can't drink my damn coffee...
I know logically that the odds on the lads both surviving CI5 aren't very good but fuck it hurts... and it hurts in large part because this is just SO Bodie, exactly what his response would be, his feelings, his reactions that the feeling is palpable and painful and just beautifully done you evil wench! ♥
The details of the toddler, this And he knew Cowley would be by later, with the perfect combination of scotch and silence and that last line from Bodie just push it all over the top.
I would thank you as I usually thank a writer but that's not quite right. Instead I'm going to compliment you again on a great piece of writing as stories don't usually manage to push me to tears and here I am choked. ♥
no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 08:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 08:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 08:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 08:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 04:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 08:20 pm (UTC)I really loved this. It's beautiful and it hurts - just like the brilliant war poetry out there.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 04:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 09:01 pm (UTC)But having read Drayce's rec on her journal, I came over to see for myself, and I'm so glad that I did. This is so heartrendingly beautiful that it's quite difficult to type through the blurry eyes. I don't know how you've done it, but despite the awful, aching sadness of Bodie's loss, I still feel like I've got my, if not happy, then comforting ending. That the CI5 lads and Cowley are looking out for him makes me so glad that Bodie still has his 'family' round him.
I don't know what else to say - and I've got to go find a hanky now - except thank you for writing it, and proving to be the welcome exception to my rule ♥
no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 04:55 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 09:07 pm (UTC)... the irony and the fucking poetry of it had hit him so hard he’d almost fallen to his knees and vomited. A absolute pearler of a line.
Thank you.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 04:58 am (UTC)Spoilers
Date: 2008-11-10 09:26 pm (UTC)*Very* nice writing. Thank you!
Re: Spoilers
Date: 2008-11-11 05:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 10:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 05:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 10:18 pm (UTC)Now, occasionally, when I'm feeling maudlin, I do enjoy a good death fic... Usually, it's a poor afair, though, designed to provoke a certain sort of reaction from the reader.
This, though, was something else entirely. It was beautifully written and really, really struck deep. Also, it was so completely Bodie - he would live on like the good soldier, no matter what he felt, and that was completely implicit in this. And what was so frighteningly sad.
and the last time he had ever held a man’s face in his hands, and not seen it for the tears.
This line caught me completely off-guard and made me cry, and the ache is still there as I write this... The mark of an extremely good fic which stays with the reader. Thankyou for being so completely brilliant! ♥
no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 05:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 10:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 05:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 10:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 05:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 10:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 05:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 11:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 05:58 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 11:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 05:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 08:28 am (UTC)It is very Bodie though, wearing the clothes that Ray loved on him and we know he has his other mates waiting for him so that he can soldier on.
Thank you.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 12:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 11:49 am (UTC)Having just come back from our 11/11 ceremony, I can so easily picture this. The toddler and her mum are a lovely touch. Thank you.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 12:54 pm (UTC)this is kaye
Date: 2008-11-11 02:19 pm (UTC)Just a gorgeous thing - and I do love Alun Lewis, btw.
Just bask in the fb, girl - you deserve it!
kaye
Re: this is kaye
Date: 2008-11-11 02:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 02:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 02:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-11 07:05 pm (UTC)But I had to finish it because a) it's a Callisto fic, and b) it's so fitting for this challenge.
Beautifully written, as always with your stories, and absolutely heart-shredding.
Thank you.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-12 11:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-12 12:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-12 11:33 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-11-12 06:32 am (UTC)He felt the weight of the words, savoured their truth tight in his heart and deep in his bones. As he always felt them on this day.
This is where my tears started, with Bodie acknowledging everything Ray meant to him, with the physicality of the remembrance, the aching inside.
Wonderful story - thank you.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-12 11:37 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2008-11-12 05:38 pm (UTC)I'm another one who almost never reads death fic, and I'm such a wuss that it's taken me two days to read yours; but I'm so pleased I did, even if I am sitting here with damp eyes. (And I never cry, dammit!)
I was fine right up to the end, and then you got me with: Time to breathe in and out again for one more year, then. To put one foot in front of the other like the good soldier he’d always been.
The thought of Bodie going on, finding the reasons to live each day... ouch, that hurts. But you've written it so beautifully - understated and calm, and bringing it together with the date so subtly that I almost didn't notice for a moment...
Fabulous, luv. A real keeper. ::blows nose briskly::
no subject
Date: 2008-11-13 04:35 am (UTC)