aldersprig: (Beryl)
After B is for Beryl and her Boys, for my Third Finish It Bingo Card..

Her mother didn’t really want her to go out alone with Jake, but Beryl was, after all, a good girl, and there was the not-argument they didn’t quite say but talked around: If I’m good and want to be Aunt, I’m going to be Very Careful. If I’m not good, then you don’t have to worry about me being the next Aunt.
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aldersprig: (Beryl)
After A Locked Chest is Locked for a Reason, a story of the Aunt Family. To the Finish It! Bingo.


If it weren’t for the angry cat sitting on top of the chest — currently in the form of a juvenile marmalade tom — the chest would not have stood out in the Aunt’s attic. This corner of the attic, furthest from windows, chimneys, and the two entrances, was stacked to the roof with such chests, leather-clad and metal-bound, each of them locked and the keys all hung on a ring downstairs. Aunt Eva had been cataloguing and numbering them, one giant chest of diaries at a time.

Beryl studied Radar. She’d started thinking of him as her cat, foolish as she knew that was. He was an Aunt cat, and she was not the aunt.

“Can I move the chest?” she offered. “By the handles, I mean. Or on a cart?”
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aldersprig: (Beryl)

Lilac in Spring



“Hey, stop that, stop that. You’re my mother, yes, I fully acknowledge that, but what are you doing, no, no, not inside the ear...”

The cat often known as Radar was in the habit of ignoring voices that spoke in English. It wouldn’t do for anyone - not even the human that theoretically could call him as familiar - to get used to him being tame. He was a cat, after all, no matter what machinations had folded him into that shape....

read on...

Before Kitten troubles and after Charming, Kitten Switch, and Boy Trouble

Aunt Family have a landing page here.

This story is free for all to read!
aldersprig: an egyptian sandcat looking out of a terra-cotta pipe (Default)
From the Turn Left meme here: http://aldersprig.livejournal.com/1005760.html; off of this story: http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/260041.html in the Beryl/Damn Cat sequence, an AU.

They had gotten the cats distributed, gotten everything sorted out, all but one angry Siamese cat. The big old tom had clawed, bitten, and, when the vet had mentioned fixing, he drawn blood on four different people.

"Some cats," the vet mentioned, "you just have to put down. You can't leave him wandering, not knowing what he might have..."

She went quiet, because the cat had gone completely still. He wasn't looking at the vet; he was looking at Beryl. His eyes, she noticed, were blue.

"I think..." she said slowly "...as long as you don't try to castrate him, he'll behave just fine now."
aldersprig: (Beryl)
I asked for Non-Addergoole Prompts here; this is to [profile] kiarrith's request for More Cat.

Aunt Family has a landing page here.

This comes after Family Secrets & Cat Secrets, which itself is after Cats & Grannies. and Cat's in the Attic.





Beryl had the book now.

Radar found himself pacing, which was not common Radar behaviour, and possibly (he was no longer really certain) not really cat behaviour either. The family needed a strong, knowledgeable witch - Aunt, whatever - again. Eva did not want to be steered, which was good. But it meant that Radar was going to have to work sideways around things.

Radar was not good at working sideways, and he wasn't really certain if it was the best idea. But, while he had been instilled with certain values, he had not been given precognizance, which he felt showed a lack of foresight on his creators' parts. So he had to guess.

Guessing meant he'd put the most important book in the family's history in the hands of a teenager - not even definitely the next Aunt, no matter what the family thought, although she was definitely already a witch - and hoped that she wouldn't spill her soda on it or, possibly worse, spill the beans to all and sundry.

Beryl was proving good at keeping secrets so far. If he'd had fingers to cross, Radar would have crossed them.

Instead, he paced, while nearby, Beryl sat with the book, a laptop, a family dictionary, and a notebook open, taking precise notes on everything she read.

Finally, content that she was far too engrossed to notice him, Radar hopped up on the dresser and slid her cursed necklace over his own neck.
aldersprig: an egyptian sandcat looking out of a terra-cotta pipe (Sandcat)

This is wispfox‘s commissioned continuation of Cats & Grannies. and Cat’s in the Attic.

Radar appeared to approve of the center box of the nine – although, perhaps out of consideration to Aunt Bea, he wasn’t talking. Beryl, armed with the gloves the cat had suggested and a scarf tied over her nose and mouth, moved everything with the care usually taken by museum archivists.

(She wondered, very briefly, what a historian or archaeologist would make of the family archives, such as they were. Had anyone in the family ever studied archeology?)

“Aunt Bea…” Her voice was muffled by the scarf, but Aunt Bea’s hearing was still sharp. “Do we have any historians in the family?”

“Oh, the family doesn’t tend to go that way.”

“Aah.” Beryl noted the tone, and wondered what Aunt or pushy Granny had inculcated that idea into the family. “I think it might be fun to do a study of all this, that’s all.”

“Well, but who could you show it to?”

“Aunt-” She hefted the box out of its spot and set it, carefully, on a clear patch of attic floor “-Evangeline. Or maybe one of the cadet branches – hey, how come they’re the cad… never mind. Thanks for letting me take this, Aunt Bea.” That was Dangerous Territory. People Beryl’s age weren’t supposed to worry about Dangerous Territory.

“Don’t worry too much about the politics, honey. It’ll sort itself out, it always does. And be careful with what’s in those boxes – I mean, tell Eva to be careful.” Was that a wink, or just a trick of the light?

~

Beryl had earned the privilege of a locked door with her fourteenth birthday, and was very grateful for it as she and Radar sat down with the box. Not that she thought her mother would exactly object, but her mother would talk to her sisters, and her cousins, and they’d talk to their mothers, and their aunts, and so on, and soon Beryl would find herself buried in Grannies again.

She turned up the music nobody else in the house liked – just loud enough to be audible if one stopped to listen, not loud enough to get her yelled at by anyone else – triple-checked the lock, and made sure The Necklace was wrapped in silk and locked in a stone box. “All right, Radar.” She popped the lid and stared inside. “What am I looking for?”

“It’s going to be a journal.” Radar jumped into the box, growing smaller as he did in a show of power he almost never exhibited. The kitten-size fit much better among the paperwork. “If I recall, it was bound in leather – brown and green – and wrapped in ribbon.”

“There’s so much stuff here.” She lifted out a folder labelled Family Photographs, 1910. The handwriting was a long, spidery script she’d seen more than a few times before. “And what’s dangerous about photos?”

“In your family? Everything.” The cat pushed aside a yellowed book of sheet music; Beryl had never heard of the composer, but she could smell the magic still coming off of it like dust. “Here it is. Careful, girl, it’s old.”

Old didn’t begin to cover it. Beryl stared at the cover of the book, with its flaking gold-embossed name. “Is that…”

It had to be. The family, for reasons of clarity, did not repeat names. But she had to ask again, anyway. “Is that…”

“The secrets have been lost for a long time indeed, child. Take it.” Radar pushed the book towards her. “You’re going to need it.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/810539.html. You can comment here or there.

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Mirrored from Alder's Grove Fiction.

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aldersprig: an egyptian sandcat looking out of a terra-cotta pipe (Default)
This is [livejournal.com profile] wispfox's commissioned continuation of Cats & Grannies. and Cat's in the Attic.

Radar appeared to approve of the center box of the nine - although, perhaps out of consideration to Aunt Bea, he wasn't talking. Beryl, armed with the gloves the cat had suggested and a scarf tied over her nose and mouth, moved everything with the care usually taken by museum archivists.

(She wondered, very briefly, what a historian or archaeologist would make of the family archives, such as they were. Had anyone in the family ever studied archeology?)

“Aunt Bea...” Her voice was muffled by the scarf, but Aunt Bea's hearing was still sharp. “Do we have any historians in the family?”

“Oh, the family doesn't tend to go that way.”

“Aah.” Beryl noted the tone, and wondered what Aunt or pushy Granny had inculcated that idea into the family. “I think it might be fun to do a study of all this, that's all.”

“Well, but who could you show it to?”

“Aunt-” She hefted the box out of its spot and set it, carefully, on a clear patch of attic floor “-Evangeline. Or maybe one of the cadet branches - hey, how come they're the cad... never mind. Thanks for letting me take this, Aunt Bea.” That was Dangerous Territory. People Beryl's age weren't supposed to worry about Dangerous Territory.

“Don't worry too much about the politics, honey. It'll sort itself out, it always does. And be careful with what's in those boxes - I mean, tell Eva to be careful.” Was that a wink, or just a trick of the light?

~

Beryl had earned the privilege of a locked door with her fourteenth birthday, and was very grateful for it as she and Radar sat down with the box. Not that she thought her mother would exactly object, but her mother would talk to her sisters, and her cousins, and they'd talk to their mothers, and their aunts, and so on, and soon Beryl would find herself buried in Grannies again.

She turned up the music nobody else in the house liked - just loud enough to be audible if one stopped to listen, not loud enough to get her yelled at by anyone else - triple-checked the lock, and made sure The Necklace was wrapped in silk and locked in a stone box. “All right, Radar.” She popped the lid and stared inside. “What am I looking for?”

“It's going to be a journal.” Radar jumped into the box, growing smaller as he did in a show of power he almost never exhibited. The kitten-size fit much better among the paperwork. “If I recall, it was bound in leather - brown and green - and wrapped in ribbon.”

“There's so much stuff here.” She lifted out a folder labelled Family Photographs, 1910. The handwriting was a long, spidery script she'd seen more than a few times before. “And what's dangerous about photos?”

“In your family? Everything.” The cat pushed aside a yellowed book of sheet music; Beryl had never heard of the composer, but she could smell the magic still coming off of it like dust. “Here it is. Careful, girl, it's old.”

Old didn't begin to cover it. Beryl stared at the cover of the book, with its flaking gold-embossed name. “Is that...”

It had to be. The family, for reasons of clarity, did not repeat names. But she had to ask again, anyway. “Is that...”

“The secrets have been lost for a long time indeed, child. Take it.” Radar pushed the book towards her. “You're going to need it.”

Aunt Family has a landing page here (and on LJ).
aldersprig: (tea3)

This is [personal profile] anke‘s commissioned continuation of Cats & Grannies.

“Oh, hello, dear. And you brought a… a cat. Oh, you brought That Cat.” Aunt Beatrix was attempting to sound friendly. Mostly she sounded that she was terrified and stressed.

Beryl smiled as nicely as she could manage. She’d wanted to bring Chalce or Stone along, or, better yet, Mom, but Chalce had been busy, Radar was getting weird about Stone, and Mom sometimes forgot she wasn’t a Grandmother yet, so she might not endorse Beryl learning verboten information.

“I’m sorry, Aunt Beatrix. But Radar gets up to trouble if I leave him alone, and I heard that you might have some family records in your attic.”

“Aah, Evangaline finally noticed things were missing, did the girl? Come in, I suppose, as long as your cat there doesn’t get up to any trouble.”

“You hear that, Radar?” Beryl stared at the cat for a moment. “No trouble. You be nice to Aunt Beatrix.”

“Oh, no, not you, too, sweetie.” Beatrix tch’d. “Well, come in. The papers are up in the attic, like you said. They’re all boxed up. Carron and Katherine boxed everything up, before… Before.”

Before before? Beryl would have to ask Radar or Mom when she was alone. “Thank you, Aunt Beatrix. How have the cats… been?”

“Well, with That One out of the way, they’ve been… better. They’re still Family cats, and why I ended up with them this time around, I really don’t know. But they like the park you built them.”

“The park? Ah, the cat run.” That had been quite a bit of work, half of it Beryl and half of it Stone. “I’m glad they like it.”

“It does keep them quiet. Well, come on, you and That Cat. The attic is this way. Although I’ve managed to keep the cats out of there, up ‘till now.”

“Ha.”

The noise was stifled, a little snort of dry amusement, but Beatrix still heard it. She stared at Radar for a moment, then shook her head as if clearing it. “I never should have – well, that’s for another time. Come on, girl. ‘twere well it were done quickly.”

“Coming.” Aunt Bea was… different. Clearer-headed, and yet somehow she sounded even more insane. Well, she was family, after all.

Aunt Bea’s house was almost as old as Aunt Evangaline’s. The family liked to hold on to property. The family liked to hold on to everything, to be fair. The stairs were tight and narrow, old wooden stairs covered with at least three archival layers of carpeting. (Beryl and Chalce had vacuumed and washed those carpets, back before Thanksgiving. The stained floral pattern of the bottom layer still haunted her.) But Aunt Bea hopped up them as quickly as Beryl did. Age – age, in the family, seemed like it had more to do with getting stronger than with getting frail.

“I moved these boxes up here when Asta – when she had her little spell, although I figure you probably don’t remember that. It just seemed like some things ought to stay safe. And then That Cat moved in, and I forgot right about the papers, you know? Everything got a little fuzzy, if you’ll pardon me saying so.”

A little fuzzy would explain a lot. Beryl shot Radar a glare; he endeavored to look completely innocent, going so far as to start grooming himself.

“I, ah, I can understand that. Is that,” Beryl gambled a bit, “the spot in the guest room at Aunt Eva’s That We Don’t Talk About Period?” The spot was black with char, and the rug did not like to stay over it.

Aunt Beatrix snorted out a laugh. “That’s not your Aunt Eva. Is that your mother, then, Hadelai?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“You were, I think, just a small baby, although that might have been your sister, one of your sisters. We never did figure out what happened, but we think it has something to do with Asta being a weak vessel.”

Beryl had already learned the trick with the grannies: keep listening & you learn a lot more than if you ask questions. She made a noise that she’d learned sounded like she agreed – she’d picked it up from Aunt Rosaria – while making a mental note to ask Radar about weak vessels when they were alone.

“And well, she decided that the family had, I suppose, too much power, as if such a thing was possible, and she started… trying to eliminate it. But you know as well as I do, child, that power does not like to be threatened.”

The same could be said for the family. “No, it doesn’t.”

“Well, it was quite a mess, and I’m rather surprised the backlash didn’t kill Asta.”

“That… that sounds like quite a mess.” And quite a backlash, if it had left a spot so tainted that no rug would cover it.

“Well, Asta was always a bit daft. I told Rosaria and Margaret, I did, that – well, here are the boxes.” Aunt Beatrix looked a bit guilty as she gave Beryl a little push. “And don’t worry your head about that stuff about Asta. She’s gone now, and can’t do any harm to anyone, not even herself.”

“Thank you, Aunt Beatrix.” Aunt Bea might be a little silly, but she was still a Grannie, and there was no going around her once she’d decided Beryl didn’t need to know something. “Are they safe to move, or should I look over them here and-” at the last minute Beryl remembered that she was supposed to be getting these boxes for Aunt Eva – “take notes for Aunt Evangaline?”

“Oh, they should be inert by now. And if not, I trust that you’re a clever girl. Just be careful of dust. They’ve been sitting here quite a while, and they were sitting there even longer.”

“Thanks, Aunt Bea.” Beryl studied the pile of boxes – three deep, three tall, three wide. The one in the center would probably be the proper one, if family tradition held. “I think I’ll move them a bit at a time, if you don’t mind the intrusion?”

“Oh, I don’t mind at all, dear, don’t mind at all. But I wouldn’t mind some of Hadelai’s lemon bars, either.”

Beryl smiled. “Thanks again.” Looked like she was reading old papers and making lemon bars this weekend. Having a normal dating life had never really been in her cards, she supposed. “I’ll get started right away.”


Next: Family Secrets & Cat Secrets

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/807010.html. You can comment here or there.

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aldersprig: (Beryl)
This is [personal profile] anke's commissioned continuation of Cats & Grannies.

“Oh, hello, dear. And you brought a... a cat. Oh, you brought That Cat.” Aunt Beatrix was attempting to sound friendly. Mostly she sounded that she was terrified and stressed.

Beryl smiled as nicely as she could manage. She’d wanted to bring Chalce or Stone along, or, better yet, Mom, but Chalce had been busy, Radar was getting weird about Stone, and Mom sometimes forgot she wasn’t a Grandmother yet, so she might not endorse Beryl learning verboten information.

“I’m sorry, Aunt Beatrix. But Radar gets up to trouble if I leave him alone, and I heard that you might have some family records in your attic.”

“Aah, Evangaline finally noticed things were missing, did the girl? Come in, I suppose, as long as your cat there doesn’t get up to any trouble.”

“You hear that, Radar?” Beryl stared at the cat for a moment. “No trouble. You be nice to Aunt Beatrix.”
Read more... )



Next: Family Secrets & Cat Secrets


Aunt Family has a landing page here (and on LJ).

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aldersprig: (Beryl)
To [livejournal.com profile] eseme's prompt

The Grandmothers, as Aunt Eva tended to call them, had been on Beryl's case recently about The Cat.

They didn't all have the Spark, they didn't all know first-hand what The Damned Cat was, but they all knew, and they all seemed to think that, since Beryl could talk to (or hear) the Cat, then it was her sacred duty to do whatever it was they wanted her to do about the Cat.

She's stopped listening after a while, and when that had gotten her full-name-scolded (and reminded that she was not currently the Aunt, no matter what the cards seemed to hold, and would thus be respectful, thank-you-very-much), she had tried dodging questions.

When that hadn't worked, she'd decided to take the problem to the source and ask Radar and Lam what she should do.

Lam was, predictably, no help at all. "Bite them." The tiny Siamese kitten groomed herself between answers. "Then growl and hiss until they go away."

Radar, more surprisingly, gave the matter some thought. "They want to know what I am, and why Lam exists, yes?"

"What you want, yes, and 'why you made Lam.'" Beryl petted Radar behind the ear, where he best liked being petted. "They don't listen when I say that you didn't make her."

"They wouldn't want to. It means someone else is doing something they've forgotten how to do." The orange tabby (today, at least, he was an orange tabby) sighed, an angry huff. "Well, child-kitten, I suppose we're going to have to go into the attic."

"Aunt Eva's attic?" Aunt Eva's attic was a terrifying place.

"No." At least this time, he didn't sound as if she was being stupid. "Aunt Bea's attic. I'd suggest you bring gloves."



Next: Cat's in the... Attic

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(the tip jar is a kitty for reasons)
aldersprig: (Beryl)
This is to [personal profile] anke's prompt (on twitter) to my December OrigFic Bingo Card. This fills (for the second time) the "Then and Now" square.

That Damned Cat (Radar) and his Kitten have their own tag here - Kitten Tag. They are part of the Aunt Family setting, which has a landing page here.


Radar had been a kitten once.

It was a distant memory, a fuzzy memory he didn't often examine.

He had not been, as this kitten was now, a sentient kitten. He had not been a sentient anything back then.

He sat grooming the kit, holding her down with one paw while he cleaned her behind the ear. You know what it was like, Beryl had said. You can help her. Under that assumption, she'd convinced the mother cat to let Radar close to his daughter. Joint custody, she'd joked.
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aldersprig: (Beryl)
To [livejournal.com profile] rix_scaedu's prompt and [livejournal.com profile] kelkyag's prompt.

After Kitten Troubles and Auntie Kitty

Aunt Family have a landing page here.


"Well?" The Siamese kitten sat primly down on the edge of Beryl's bed and began grooming a paw.

"Well?" Beryl stared at the kitten. Physically, she looked like any other kitten. But her voice, such as it was...

"Well?" Radar echoed. He seemed as uncomfortable with the whole thing as Beryl was.

::Well?:: Her necklace wanted to get in on this, too, and that was just too much. Beryl took the necklace off and put it - him? - in the silk-lined box she'd found for moments like this.Read more... )
aldersprig: an egyptian sandcat looking out of a terra-cotta pipe (AlphaZed)
To [livejournal.com profile] ellenmillion's prompt, with a side of [livejournal.com profile] stryck's prompt.

Zenobia is an Aunt from the Aunt Family; her stories are here. Prompting her was [personal profile] kelkyag

Zenobia was taking an interest in zoology.

She hadn't done this solely, or even primarily, to irritate her family, although it served this purpose admirably.

It entertained her to speak to the relatives about other species that might exhibit the spark. "And what about octopuses? They have so many hands, can you imagine them reading a tarot? It would have to be a waterproof tarot, of course..."

That hadn't been the one that had really irritated them. Zonkey, Zonkey had really gotten to her nieces and nephews. They already thought that she was more than a little zany, and, of course, she was stubborn in her refusal to die or otherwise give up her position, but zonkies? Really? Worse was when she added two to the family stables.
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aldersprig: (Beryl)
To [personal profile] kelkyag's prompt.

Aunt Family has a landing page here

After Sister Help.

My Giraffe Call is open! Leave an alphabetical prompt!
.



As much as it galled Beryl to admit it, Chalcedony was right.

Getting out - going to the mall, first, with Chalce and Stone and Jake, and then to miniature golf a few days later, and then to the park for a Moose Lodge picnic the next weekend - made her feel better than she'd felt since Aunt Asta had died.

Getting out with her brother and sister was pretty cool; Chalce wasn't a bad sort, for a big sister, and Stone was pretty awesome, especially for a guy in their family. But getting out with Jake felt better than anything, which was just about like being in Heaven. Getting out with Jake was awesome in ways Beryl had never before felt.

And, just for good measure, hanging out and acting like herself again ticked off her cat and her necklace.

Radar spent most evenings glaring at her. Joseph - well, she felt bad leaving him in the drawer all the time, so she'd started wearing him on Mondays. The first time she'd put him back on, he'd spent a full thirty minutes berating her.

She'd gone into the bathroom and carefully explained to him that if he did not shut up, she was going to flush him down the toilet and let the alligators have him.

After that, he kept his complaining to a sort of dull roar, which, in turn meant that Beryl could listen to Jake and her friends.

And the other boys - now that was a revelation. The more she talked to Jake, the more other boys started to talk to her. Beryl wasn't sure what to do with that.

Until Radar grumbled to her one evening: "I hope a cute set of eyes, or whatever this latest one has, is worth giving up your legacy."

Then Beryl knew exactly what to do.

Next: http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/1298352.html
aldersprig: (Beryl)
To [personal profile] kelkyag's prompt.

Aunt Family has a landing page here

After Courting.


"Bear-bear." Beryl's older sister stuck her head into Beryl's room without knocking. "Take off the damn talking necklace, leave the crazy cat here. We. Are going shopping." She wrinkled her nose. "Ugh, and put on a real shirt."

Beryl didn't even know where to start. "Shopping?" That seemed like a good place to start.

"Jake's agreed to drive us to the mall."

That didn't help. "Jake?"

"Look, you're getting a bit weird lately." Chalcedony barged the rest of the way in and started digging through Beryl's clothes. "Here, wear this. This one is good." She tossed a green shirt at Beryl. "You haven't worn it since you got that stupid necklace. What does it disagree with him?"Read more... )

next: http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/510365.html
aldersprig: (Beryl)
For [livejournal.com profile] kelkyag's prompt

After Kitten Troubles.

Aunt Family have a landing page here.


The mother cat wouldn't stop meowing, but neither would she get close enough to Radar to take her kitten back. The kitten, having spoken once, was going back to upset mewling. And Radar looked immensely lost.

"You've never fathered a speaking cat before?"

"Never."

"In all of your unspoken years?"
Read more... )

Next - http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/529730.html
aldersprig: (Beryl)
For [livejournal.com profile] dahob's prompt

After Charming, Kitten Switch, and Boy Trouble

Aunt Family have a landing page here.


Beryl didn't worry when Radar wandered off. He was a cat, for one, a tom cat (who would dare get a magical cat neutered? Besides, he knew better than to mark in the house), and he was a magical being on top of that.
Read more... )
aldersprig: (Beryl)
Continuing flash series! I'm going to write one flash for every Icon I have, over 4 LJ accounts, 1 DW, and a whole bunch of not-currently-in-use, until I get bored or run out of icons.

Today's icon:

Beryl and That Damn Cat/Radar

Icon & Art by [livejournal.com profile] djinni

The Aunt Family has a landing page here See Boy Trouble for an earlier piece about the cat and the necklace.


Beryl's cat didn't approve of her new boyfriend, but her necklace did.

This was not a problem she'd imagined herself in, a few short months ago. Then again, she hadn't really imagined herself en-boyfriended at all, much less also en-catted and en-jewelled with a talking specimen of all three.
Read more... )
aldersprig: an egyptian sandcat looking out of a terra-cotta pipe (Default)
For Friendly Anon's continuation prompt, after That Damn Cat (LJ), Bless the Cat (LJ), and Passing the Cat (LJ)

Aunt Family has a landing page here on DW and here on LJ



Elenora and The Cat regarded each other on what had been, until yesterday, Zenobia's kitchen table.

"Well," she said thoughtfully. "I have a cat." And a house, and a legacy, and a title, and perhaps a decade or two in which to enjoy it. Zenobia had hung on for a ridiculously long time, out of, as she'd admitted, spite and, Elenora suspected, just a general cussedness of character.
Read more... )
aldersprig: an egyptian sandcat looking out of a terra-cotta pipe (Default)
For [livejournal.com profile] rix_scaedu's commissioned prompt, after That Damn Cat (LJ) and Bless the Cat (LJ).

Aunt Family has a landing page here on DW and here on LJ


Zenobia had held on to a hundred and ten, not because she really was enjoying life anymore, not even with every charm she could come up with, but simply to irritate her family.

This also meant that her niece was not young and, possibly, Zenobia considered, rather irritated as well, which hadn't really been her point. Of the seventeen potentials, Elenora had always been her favorite niece for the position, and she'd made an effort, as much as she did with anyone, at least, to be friendly with the girl.
Read more... )


Next: Legacy Cat (LJ)
aldersprig: (Evangaline)
For [livejournal.com profile] rix_scaedu's commissioned prompt, after That Damn Cat (LJ).

Aunt Family has a landing page here on DW and here on LJ




"You should hear what they're saying today," the Damn Cat told Zenobia, as she set out his evening chicken.

"Indeed?" The cat, she'd discovered, loved to gossip, was completely incorrigible and occasionally very interesting. "More to do with Maude's beau-they-don't-approve of?" Zenobia had had a couple of those herself, back in the day. One of them still wrote her monthly; she wondered, sometimes, what his wife thought about that.
Read more... )

Next: Passing the Cat (LJ)
aldersprig: (Evangaline)
For [livejournal.com profile] rix_scaedu's commissioned prompt.

Aunt Family has a landing page here on DW and here on LJ


Zenobia didn't give the cat a name, but she did leave a bowl of cream out for him every morning, and a bit of her dinner meat every evening.

Her Aunt Beulah had left her the cat, along with the property and the title, when she vanished into the mist one late-November evening. He was, at that point, already an elderly cat, if family memory held, but, in this case, family memory, generally a very reliable thing, seemed to falter.

That was to say, that while family memory seemed to agree that the cat had been around for quite a while, it seemed to falter horribly, no matter which particular family member one was talking to, if pressed on the details. When had Beulah gotten the cat? Well, she'd gotten it from her Aunt Mary.
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Next: Bless the Cat (LJ)
aldersprig: (BookGlasses)
For Friendly Anon's prompt

Aunt Family has a landing page here on DW and here on LJ

Zenobia is just-after-the-US-Civil-War
.
"It should not be nearly this difficult," Zenobia muttered, staring at the glass furnace. "The principles are sound, the materials are pure..."

"And your hands are shaking." She paid no heed to the voice; if she turned to look, the darn tomcat would be grooming himself or something. "The caster must be as strong as the casting."

"You're not helping," she snarled. "You're making me angry."

"And what is it you are trying to make?" He sounded, today, like a man in his fifties. Sometimes he sounded like a child. He was always rather irritating.
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aldersprig: an egyptian sandcat looking out of a terra-cotta pipe (Default)
For [livejournal.com profile] wyld_dandelyon's prompt

Aunt Family has a landing page here on DW and here on LJ

Beryl-modern-era. After What to do about Auntie X (LJ) and Cleaning House (LJ)


Beryl, Stone, and Chalce spent the day - along with Stone's friend Jake, with the truck (and also some amazing blue eyes) - distributing Aunt Beatrix's cats among family and friends. They had agreed with Aunt Beatrix that three was a reasonable number for her to keep, and then agreed with her that they'd stop in once a month to check on her and her cats.
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