ext_206364 ([identity profile] lawnnun.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] indeedsir_backup2013-11-08 07:03 pm

Weekly Drabble Challenge ("It's a hard world for a girl, Jeeves.")

Rules:
1) A drabble is, by definition, a 100-word story therefore all responses should be 100 words exactly, no exceptions.
2) You may also choose to respond to this challenge with a five-minute sketch.
3)PLEASE put the word DRABBLE at the top of your post. That way people can easily spot the drabbles in amongst any reader comments they receive.

RATING:I don't think this should be limited so reader beware that they could be any rating (you could put it in the subject line if you feel it needs it)

PLEASE try to remember to make each drabble a comment in response to the original post. That way, if the comments start to collapse, the drabbles themselves should remain visible.

This week:  Jeeves is actually female.  Cis-gendered, heterosexual, and wouldn't be a social outlaw of any kind except for the rampant transvestitism.  She's been living as a man for years for the clothes (as well as all those fringe benefits like being taken seriously and left alone), and is now wondering what on earth to do about the presumable invert she's in love with. 
ext_24392: (JW - Bertie Luv - me)

[identity profile] random-nexus.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 04:31 am (UTC)(link)
OMG THAT'S BRILLIANT!

OMG! How the hell am I going to keep to 100 words?

[identity profile] krisreinke.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 07:59 am (UTC)(link)
Feel free to expand as much as your muse wishes.

*crosses fingers*

[identity profile] haikitteh.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 08:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I'll second that emotion!

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 03:10 am (UTC)(link)
...think I might've overdone it just a tad :(
(deleted comment)

[identity profile] elpin.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 11:59 am (UTC)(link)
I can just see Bertie's face. :)

[identity profile] haikitteh.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 04:19 pm (UTC)(link)
A fate much much nicer than gaol, I'd say!

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 03:11 am (UTC)(link)
Oh my goodness... all Bertie's problems solved at once!

[identity profile] elpin.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 11:57 am (UTC)(link)
Plans could always fail, even Jeeves' plans, on occasion. It seemed particularly ill-sporting of Fate to make it fail in such a bloody fashion, however.

'Don't just stand there, Tuppy! Get help!'

His shirt was absolutely ruined.

'Let's get you out of these clothes, Jeeves.'

'Please, Sir, I would rather wait for the Doctor.'

'Nonsense, Jeeves, I'm a stout fellow. I want to stop the bleeding.'

Weakness washed over him. A coldness over his chest – as it was exposed.

'By Jove...!'

'I can... explain.'

'Yes, Jeeves, I am sure this is all part of the plan,' he said calmly.

[identity profile] haikitteh.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 04:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Nice! I like Bertie's calm response, too.

[identity profile] elpin.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 05:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks! I always like to imagine those moments when he's "finally" serious, and this is one of them.

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 03:13 am (UTC)(link)
Love it. Poor Jeeves...
ext_24392: (JW - Bertie - Sex-in-spats - Thirstyrobo)

[identity profile] random-nexus.livejournal.com 2014-01-27 04:49 am (UTC)(link)
I agree, I would pay money to see this as an episode of the old show, just to watch that reaction! Hee!
Well done, old thing!

Mod note

[identity profile] castalianspring.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 02:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Can you take out the bit about being "normal", please? The other explanations suffice just fine.

[identity profile] krisreinke.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 03:40 pm (UTC)(link)
"normal" is in 'scare quotes' - meaning it is what a character of the time might say. Not a comment of the current speaker.
Chill.
:-)

[identity profile] castalianspring.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 04:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Just so you know, I'm the owner/mod of this community, and it wasn't a suggestion. This community strives to not offend any of its members or make them feel unwelcome due to language used, and I would prefer to err on the side of caution.

[identity profile] schreckschraube.livejournal.com 2013-11-09 09:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, she's right: it's not very nice to call people "normal" just because they're cis-gendered and straight.

[identity profile] godsdaisiechain.livejournal.com 2013-11-21 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Am I wrong to feel mildly weirded out by this whole exchange?

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 02:45 am (UTC)(link)
I'm awfully sorry, but I seem to have produced the exact opposite of a drabble. viz. a mucking great long pile of incoherent words. Damn you, Muse.

This is jolly embarrassing. I'm going to see if it lets me post it as a reply.

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 02:51 am (UTC)(link)
Fic: A gentleman and a scholar (1/4)
Rating: PG

My man Jeeves has my highest respect. My friends, I know, feel much the same, having depended upon his finely-tuned cerebrum at some time or another for strategic extraction from the bouillon. My aunts hold more nuanced views, for Jeeves is a free spirit who giveth not the battle to the strong, but they, too, recognise in my man the wit and wherewithal of a Solomon. That his name was sacred from the Drones’ Club to the Junior Ganymede I had no doubt.

Consequently, it afforded me no little satisfaction when, on one crisp November morning last week, Jeeves presented the customary poached egg and toasted soldiers with an unexpected side-order, consisting of a businesslike envelope that, upon inspection, contained a request from an Oxford Chair. Rummy, you might think, to receive correspondence from a man who styles himself as an item of furniture. Wonder no further. As I recall, for I myself went up to Oxford and barely escaped with a policeman’s helmet, these academics are of the first water in the matter of eccentricity.

Casting that to one side, the gist of the piece was essentially a summons. To wit., one Reginald Jeeves, gentleman scholar, was begged to attend an Enlightenment conference at Balliol, there to contribute to lively debate on the subject of the dualism of God and Nature.

I cannot say I did not blink. I blinked like billy-oh. “Jeeves,” I said, “Pack your Gladstone and a litre of fish-oil. We shall leave for Oxford on the morrow.”

“We, sir?”

“Indeed. I have many pleasant memories of the punting.... I see you glancing at the frozen skies. Punting in November is too cold to be entirely comfortable, but it is for this that the boatman’s tipple is so warmly recommended by the connoisseur. And besides - “

“Yes, sir?”

I don’t know whether you’ve ever felt the sensation of having taken a small bite of a hot, clingy substance – pommes de terre Dauphinoise, for example – and finding that, in fact, it is a larger bite than you had anticipated. You are left with the choice of swallowing it down, a process that always makes me feel like one of those reptiles that dislocates its jaw and swallows its prey in one lump and then sits around snoozing until the digestion has done its job, or spitting it out in an inglorious manner calculated to raise frowns from even the most placid of aunts.

In the end, I opted for, “I have friends in Oxford.” It wasn’t what I wanted to say, but I thought it better to swallow the blasted sentiment than spit it out.

Edited 2013-11-10 02:55 (UTC)

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 02:52 am (UTC)(link)
Fic: A gentleman and a scholar (2/4)
Rating: PG

In Oxford, we agreed that Jeeves would spend the days at the conference, returning at lunchtime. I felt it unnecessary; after all, I argued, I could put on the nosebag at the hotel with little expectation of salmonella, for the place was a haunt of gourmets. From the looks of our guide-book you couldn’t throw a bread roll without hitting a Michelin scout. But Jeeves insisted. I could see that it meant something to the chap, and on discussing the issue with Two-Sticks – Two-Sticks Boddington, a stout fellow of the Varsity who had soaked in his education so effectively that the blighters had given him a job and instructed him to think his socks off – it dawned that perhaps Jeeves simply wanted a little grounding.

For as Two-Sticks put it, “Wooster old boy, those philosophers are jolly heavy stuff. A morning’s worth of listening to them and your man is bound to want a little light relief.”

And it’s true, of course. In matters of no significance few come more highly rated than your humble correspondent. The explanation had everything to recommend it. Consequentially, I ceased to protest and allowed myself to enjoy the prandial return of my wandering valet.

It was a halcyon week. Each morning Jeeves donned civilian clothing and departed for the College. We lunched by the river. I said only as much as was required to encourage Jeeves to share with me the events of the morning. As Jeeves is loath to speak of himself, I nonetheless made most of the conversation during these sessions, although I heard quite enough to be able to assure you that these philosophers have an unwarranted reputation for gravitas. They get up to some pretty wild stuff. The drinking songs alone were an education.

At the close of the conference, Jeeves returned to the hotel room with a faint smile and a fainter odour of smoking-rooms and vintage brandy wafting around his person. “What ho!” I said, for I had run out of murder mysteries. A shot of Jeeves’ presence was a welcome antidote to the silence of the tomb, or the Castle Hotel, which in the absence of a sufficiently large number of mealtimes - and the presence of a large number of student essays which Two-Sticks was honour-bound to mark - had begun to feel very much like the same thing. Many of these severe and serious establishments suffer from a similar flaw, you know. Tastebuds may be satisfied, but what of the bonce?

I said as much to Jeeves. “Indeed, sir. In wine, it is said, one beholds the heart of another. A temple to Bacchus must show us the hearts of our fellow travellers...”

I perceived that the good man remained in philosophical mood. “I don’t think much of this lot’s,” I said. “The man in the blue serge, who always takes the table by the pillar, spends all his time scribbling into a notebook – if that man’s a Bacchanalian then I’m a Dutchman.”

Jeeves was smiling now. I was almost sure of it. “The gentleman is a food critic, sir,” he said. “And I perceived from his regular ingestion of patent pills that he suffers from indigestion. For myself, I am quite satisfied as to the character of my fellow-traveller." He paused. "If you will permit me, sir, I shall resume my working attire and then perhaps - “

I stopped him. “Jeeves, I can be silent no longer. My pride runneth over. It is your week of triumph, and I“ - here, I stuttered - “I should like you to celebrate it with me. Come down to the river, Jeeves, and we shall hire a punt and drift to the Water-Rat, where the ale is of the finest.”

I thought he would refuse. I was kicking myself for making the suggestion, for the pride of a Jeeves is no small matter and I feared that I had wounded him. But at length, he said, “Under the understanding that, tomorrow, I resume my usual duties - “

“Of course, of course...”

“- then I would be most gratified, sir. As Dutchmen say, ‘Drink zonder zorgen, de kater komt morgen’”

Edited 2013-11-10 03:21 (UTC)

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 02:54 am (UTC)(link)
Fic: A gentleman and a scholar (3/4)
Rating: PG

We ate, we drank and Reginald Jeeves taught me a drinking song about Socrates. I expressed my pride in his achievements – that a man under my roof should be in demand by dwellers in the dreaming spires of Oxford, I marvelled! - and he winced a little and smiled a little more.

Outside, we piled back into the punt. Miraculously, we did not capsize. The punt was still firmly tethered to the pier. But we landed in a heap of elbows and knees, a symptom of a night’s soaking at the Water-Rat that I remembered with much fondness from the days of my youth. We moved to untangle ourselves, but the punt rocked alarmingly, so I desisted and lay back in the bottom of the boat, head and feet on cushions, left arm trapped underneath Jeeves, and stared up at the achingly crisp November sky. I felt Jeeves cease the struggle to right himself. The boat’s motion calmed.

“Jeeves,” I said at length.

“Yes, sir?”

“You should be a scholar. No, I don’t mean that. You are a scholar, blast it. What I mean is that you should be an Oxford don. You should have students and blackboards and one of those mortar-board things and go around dressed like a crow in mourning. They should pay you to think, not to buttle and fold clothes,” and as I said it I realised that I really did mean it, that this brainiest of men was wasted on my domestic affairs. “Why don’t you take a job at the varsity?”

He spoke softly. Stealing a glance, I realised that he was looking at the sky, too. “They would not take me, sir.”

“Is it finances? Dash it all, Jeeves, if that’s all I -”

“No, sir.”

His voice was full of sadness. I flopped around, sending the punt on another bout of bucking. His hat had come off and was lying on the stern. His hair, grown a little shaggy – I thought that he had not bothered to apply the hair-oil that usually calmed it, unlike my own unruly fuzz – flopped down towards his face. In the light of the distant gas-lamps and the half-grown moon, I saw his face as if for the first time. His cheekbones; his smooth skin; his dark eyes and full eyelashes.
Edited 2013-11-10 03:25 (UTC)

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 02:55 am (UTC)(link)
Fic: A gentleman and a scholar (4/4)
Rating: PG

A wild surmise flooded through me. Statuesque, perhaps, but – at last I thought I understood Jeeves’ shyness, his propriety, his reluctance to share items of clothing, and more - his gentleness, his need to withdraw from the public presence, from my company...

Those eyes were open, the pupils blown out in the half-light. I could not help but kiss those lips. He stiffened, then responded, his arms reaching up to pull me down to him, holding me as though I might be the only solid object left in his universe. I half-lay, half-knelt by him, waiting for the punt to calm. “Jeeves -“ I said. “Oh, Jeeves.”

He was silent.

“Why didn’t you tell me, Jeeves?”

Nothing.

“Reggie - “

His mouth twitched.

I said, “My dear Jeeves. I loved you as a man, and I love you as a woman. That is what you’re telling me, isn’t it? Don’t let old Bertie labour under a misapprehension.”

He – she, I suppose – gave a little nod.

“But you could go to Oxford,” I said. “There are womens’ colleges...”

“But there are no female professors,” he said. “And women are nothing – nothing at all – to the men. I suppose you have not met Wittgenstein, Russell’s favourite student; I met him in London, where he spoke of the Tractatus he recently completed... he told me that he had no use for women, reactive only as they are to emotion and the dictates of their own sexual organs,“ that last spoken in an angry, if hushed, snarl, “– forgive my language, sir - “

I tutted, too overwhelmed to risk a pshaw and fearing that it might be misunderstood. “Jeeves,” I said. “My dear Jeeves.”

“My name is Reggie,” he said. "I am Regina, but Reggie is safer; sir, we may be overheard -”

“It is a pretty kettle of fish,” I agreed. It wouldn’t do for us to go public. The only way to save my beloved’s academic career would be for both of us to be jugged as inverts, which probably wouldn’t play too well in the philosophy scene either. I held him in silence for a while, too shaken to amend the masculine pronoun. At length a thought occurred.

“Reggie?” I said.

“Mmmm...” he said distantly.

“Stay with me. I understand now. Things will be as they were.”

“I shall read Spinoza,” he said.

“And I shall play the piano and try to persuade you to help me with the choruses.”

“But it’s a lie,” he said, suddenly sounding despairing. “Everything I have - “

I tightened my arms around him. “It’s not a lie. Dash it, you’re not here because of your sex. You’re here because you’re the brainiest bird they could find. And – oh, Jeeves. I’m not here for Two-Sticks. I’m here with you because I miss you when you’re gone...”

We untethered the punt together and lay back down beneath the blankets that the boathouse owner had thoughtfully provided. As it drifted down the wine-dark river we lay, feeling a peace that we had perhaps never felt before, and watched the eternal stars.

[identity profile] krisreinke.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 06:32 am (UTC)(link)
Kudo with extra servings of kudos sauce.

[identity profile] haikitteh.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 07:04 am (UTC)(link)
What a lovely story! The final chapter in the boat is so great, the two of them in a heap and the rocking motion, lovely sense of place.

[identity profile] elpin.livejournal.com 2013-11-10 09:35 am (UTC)(link)
You have made me squee and aww. Thank you. That was perfect!
ext_24392: (JW - Bertie Luv - me)

[identity profile] random-nexus.livejournal.com 2014-01-27 05:01 am (UTC)(link)
Absolutely lovely! Oh, but you made such a wonderful little tale, here!
*applauds, throws bread rolls, an argyle sock, and flowers* (à la the Drones, don'tcha know)


EDIT: I feel almost ashamed to spork up my little bit of ficcery now, but I shall do, nonetheless.
Edited 2014-01-27 05:02 (UTC)
ext_442164: Colourful balloons (Default)

[identity profile] with-rainfall.livejournal.com 2015-08-28 12:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, this is fabulous and so perfectly in-character! Where are the rest of your J&W fics so I can read 'em all, please?

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2015-08-28 02:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Mostly displayed in filing cabinets in disused lavatories with a sign on the door that reads 'Beware of the Leopard'. I have been contemplating making an account on AO3 at some point. No time like the present... :)

Eep. And edited to add, glad you enjoyed it. Also, wow, indeedsir is still alive! Hooray!
Edited 2015-08-28 14:43 (UTC)

[identity profile] cherrypep.livejournal.com 2015-08-28 08:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Having found back my forgotten AO3 account, I've started pulling them together on http://archiveofourown.org/users/toodlepip/works
And found a folder containing half-finished J&W zompocalypses and things... :-D
ext_442164: Colourful balloons (stock: standing in sunshine)

[identity profile] with-rainfall.livejournal.com 2015-08-28 10:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, awesome! *proceeds to stalk*
ext_24392: (JW - Jeeves-cry)

[identity profile] random-nexus.livejournal.com 2014-01-27 05:05 am (UTC)(link)
DRABBLE: The Gentleman’s Gentleman Who Wasn’t One

Sitting on a low bench, sheltered by a waterfall of ivy, Jeeves had one arm wrapped around her knees, the other dangled before her, holding a cigarette. With the Brinkley Court household gone to bed, her master cozily tucked in, she’d gone for a stroll and a smoke.

Blowing smoke in lieu of a sigh, she contemplated how Wooster had gone from a ridiculous, empty-headed fop to a sweet, generous anachronism; one who’d stolen her heart, endangering the successful life she’d achieved via one perfect lie. If only he wasn’t an invert, or she was the man he thought her!

~~~

Psst... apparently there's more! Here (http://archiveofourown.org/works/1155929/chapters/2373158)!
Edited 2014-02-03 09:14 (UTC)