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Peggy Carter ([personal profile] aspeggysays) wrote in [community profile] all_inclusive2015-11-28 05:47 pm

Lost in Austen with Peggy Carter

From the nexus, it looked like an adequate setting for a rest cure. A big house, surrounded by a lot of land; sunny days, clear nights. A few more amenities than Merry Olde England, which she'd also considered for the purpose, but no shelling, no gunfire, and no planes flying overhead. Peggy stepped though the doorway with little hesitation.

"My dear Mr. Bennet," someone said from down the hallway, "how can you be so tiresome! You must know that I am thinking of his marrying one of them."

Peggy flinched and froze, her thoughts immediately jumping to Steve. But the conversation continued, Steve was still dead, and Peggy was done jumping at shadows. She continued down the hall and settled into a chair in the parlor. That proved to be a mistake.

The room soon filled with young women, chattering about a Mr. Bingley. They took Peggy's presence without blinking, but oddly, insisted on calling her Lizzy. She did her best to fade into the background as the conversation circled endlessly around the question of marriage. It hit her on a raw spot, all the talk of marriage when the only man she'd ever thought about in that way was dead, but she had endured far worse. Her smile never cracked, her eyes remained dry. She found the door back to the nexus with some relief.

The next time the nexus threw her into Longbourn, they family was about to leave to attend a ball. Peggy had never been to a ball; she tagged along. She even danced a few times, but she didn't mind that it wasn't more. Afterwards, the cozy talk with Jane was a nice bonus. Peggy found she enjoyed a little sisterly gossip.

She came back a few more times after that -- to talk to Jane, she told herself. To encourage Lydia in her little rebellions against the social limits. To run interference for Mary when she wanted to play the piano. Just to get a good night's rest. It was half way between the rest cure she'd been looking for and picking at a scab. The talk of marriage, the constricted choices reminiscent of the childhood she'd fled at the first opportunity -- but the sisterly chats, the quiet nights... and the knowledge that whatever troubles any of these people had, none of them were going to die. It was more than she knew about anyone back in the War.

And then, today happened. Peggy arrived, and as usual, no one noticed that she'd been away. "Have some fish, Lizzy," Mr. Bennet said, so Peggy did. It came as a complete surprise to her when Mr. Collins, the family guest, asked to speak with her.

Five minutes later, she found herself breathing harder than usual, her voice a low growl as she threatened to gut Mr. Collins with a fish fork if he didn't learn to listen to what a woman was actually saying instead of only to what he expected to hear. She was not going to put up with this.

She stalked out without looking back, trusting Mr. Collins to come up with some explanation for the rest of the family. He didn't seem like the type who'd admit that a woman had frightened him.

Peggy took a seat in the garden, feeling pleased with herself, and just a tiny bit guilty as well. Good thing she hadn't done that to any of the more annoying men at home. But when she heard someone approaching, she turned to greet them with the dangerous smile of a woman who had just let loose, and was willing to do it again. "I think the next step in this situation is Meryton. Steal a uniform. Find a war. Want to come with me?"



[The only thing I'm taking from the miniseries "Lost in Austen" is the basic concept. Peggy knows who she is, but none of the NPCs do, they think she's Lizzy Bennet and react to her as Lizzy Bennet, don't notice any discrepancies, etc. Replace any and all Austen characters in the same way (don't feel like you have to follow the Austen plot, either), arrive as as an era-appropriate version of your character (no Austen double required), or simply have them show up as themselves, no door changes (though for the sake of not getting stuck on details, let's just say that the NPCs aren't going to freak out about them not belonging or anything, these are some really accommodating NPCs!) Just please be clear about what choice you're going for, and feel free to drop me a line if it gets complicated :)]
ourselvesalone: (light up)

[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2015-12-13 11:54 pm (UTC)(link)
"I wouldn't necessarily call us friends," Victor says, trying to suss out the woman and whether she's a figure in the novel. The way people turn to her with such attention does bring to mind the protagonist, but Victor has been disappointed before. "I'm more the romantic poetry type," he says. "Wordsworth, Clare," he explains.

But then, if she is just a character, this will mean nothing to her. "And why is it you're after a war?" he asks. "Surely bloodshed should be avoided by such young ladies of the time?"
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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2015-12-20 11:50 pm (UTC)(link)
His manners may be fine from growing up in a rather large estate akin to Pemberley, but lately, London has been his gritty, dirty, unpleasant home and places like this are far more civilized than he's really used to. "Where are you from, then?" he wonders, seeking out clues in both her manner, her speech, and her ways.

He's a clever man, but at times, can be very oblivious to human nature. Science and ephemera are his wheelhouses more than people and it unfortunately does cause trouble at times.
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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-01-05 02:09 am (UTC)(link)
The only tyrant that Victor has ever known has been the fervent oppression of his passions, not to mention the ever-harsh poverty that follows him around because he's been unable to make his studies known. His wry smile is an echo of these thoughts as he regards the not-Elizabeth and affords her a proper nod of his head. "How do you do?" he properly greets her.

"I'm from a time when the world is only beginning to burn with gas lamps and electricity is a drudging thing in England, to my great disadvantage. But the exploration is possible and I am a man of science and poetry. There is much for me to do and much to discover."
ourselvesalone: (light up)

[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-01-13 12:50 am (UTC)(link)
Victor casts his head head to the side at the sound of a rather anxious woman bleating at his companion. Victor regards her with disdain as the voice grows nearer, speaking to his companion about a trifling affair and of proposals and of tedious items that he hasn't thought of in years. He fears that she will be spirited away, so Victor does the proper thing.

He bows and extends his hand politely. "May I extend my offer for a walk?" he requests. "I'm sure we could take a lovely turn of the property." And it will allow escape, if so wanted.
Edited 2016-01-22 03:27 (UTC)
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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-01-27 07:20 pm (UTC)(link)

Victor permits his arm, having been taught this much in manners. Unlike his brothers, he has always felt himself a more sedate sort, given to walks in the park and conversation rather than sport and more manly affairs. "I would never wish to cause unrest in her mind," he quips, sure he could do such damage with only thirty seconds of conversation, if given the opportunity.

"I believe she thinks you ought to secure my hand," he notes. "I'm partial to Shakespeare and the Romantic Poets, if you wish to woo me with gifts."

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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-02-05 04:13 pm (UTC)(link)

"You've little to concern yourself with over my virtue and hand," Victor is quick to assure, given that his own goals are lofty and do not include marrying, for it would only serve to slow down his progress within the sciences. True, his loneliness bears difficulty in living, but not enough that he would stop his plans. "I assure you I am not in good social standing, nor eligible in any manner of speaking. My bank account bears more resemblance to a threadbare cupboard than wealth of fortune."

Still, he does not mind saving this woman from her unbearable mother. There are far too many of them these days.

"It seems rather firm to consider yourself virtuous and unmarried for life at such a young age, though perhaps you're like me and have your career in mind to place focus upon."

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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-02-14 01:31 am (UTC)(link)
"The unmarried are not pressured to tea and dinners, to small talk and the aggressive necessity of asking how one's home is in order," Victor notes with mild disdain. He has seen what the married world has to offer and while the companionship might be a soothing balm to his loneliness, he cannot imagine the incessant drudgery of such tasks.

"You seem to be in the wrong universe if you're not in the line of work kind to relationships," he remarks. "Do you think it some kind of cosmic joke?"
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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-02-22 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
"If you've become as talented as I have, you can live without any of those things through sheer avoidance of one's brothers," Victor promises, for he bears no desire to see his father or his brothers, who mock him for his cerebral nature rather than the physical, but he pays no mind because he knows himself to be engaged in higher purpose.

"Have I tried relationships? Ah, no. Familial is complicated, friendship is few, and romance is...not for a man like I. Women do not want the poor penniless doctor."
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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-03-01 02:58 am (UTC)(link)
"My work comes first," Victor says simply, though a touch curt, "and where I come from, very few women could understand the work I do." Miss Ives has been the only one he's met with such experience and he feels more of a brother to her. It does not help, of course, that there is a demon that lives in her and knows all of Victor's secrets, every one more shameful until they reach the worst of all. "Unfortunately, I am never lonely," he adds, with a ruefulness that is begotten from experience.
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[personal profile] ourselvesalone 2016-03-08 02:41 pm (UTC)(link)

"I have somehow come into possession of a rather eclectic group of friends," he admits, "I assure you, I have no idea how I managed to come by them." Except, perhaps, he does, and can place the blame firmly on an Egyptian man with skin that peels off and hieroglyphics tattooed across his chest. "And before, I had company." Company of a sort he had run from, but he had been young and frightened, his creation a monstrous thing and so far from the poetry he had been expecting.

And yet, he still pursues it because he is older and knows he can do better. He had, had he not? Proteus had been a shining example, until the Creature had taken him from Victor.