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Thanks to everyone who sent good thoughts. I’m still having my mini-‘Conversion’ moment, except I seem to be turning into a big pink bug instead of a blue one (is this ‘cause I’m a girl? That’s sexist!). Also, I have papers that I’m totally ignoring! But
yin_again said that if I wrote Julian/Emmett, she’d write McKay/Sheppard/Lorne/Parrish, so! I have priorities, you know. *g*
This is pretty crackish. And I can’t believe I’ve written Boa vs. Python fic now. *facepalm*
Title: Done and Done
Fandom: First Monday/Boa vs. Python
Rating: NC-17
Pairing: Julian/Emmett
Length: ~1550 words
Summary: In horror and disaster movies, there was always some uptight, pretentious guy who nobody liked, who died in a humiliating manner while everyone in the audience cheered.
A/N: This is for
yin_again, as a bribe to get her to write me...well, orgy!fic. I love fandom.
Done and Done
Julian had seen enough horror and disasters movies, little snippets caught flipping between C-SPAN and FOXNews, to know that there was always some guy, some uptight, pretentious guy who nobody liked who died in a ridiculous, humiliating manner while everyone in the audience snickered and cheered. They were often lawyers, like the one in Jurassic Park who abandoned the small, innocent children, hid in a toilet stall, and got munched on by the T-Rex. They were all supposedly smart men who made one stupid decision and got killed for it.
Julian thought those movies were idiotic and puerile, but they weren’t a bad metaphor for life. One mistake, one step out of line, and you were done. Julian knew better.
Yet when the giant snake rocketed out into the middle of a Pennsylvania country road and slammed its body down on the hood of Julian’s car, he did possibly the stupidest thing imaginable. He got out and ran.
As he stumbled down a ditch and broke toward the woods, Julian was dimly aware of the voice screaming in the back of his brain, the one telling him that he was being a moron, that he was done for. He felt his lungs burning and panic beating in his chest, and several bubbles of irrational thought, rising to the surface. Odd color for a snake and I’m going be late for the reunion and Ha, ‘late’ and even: Really doubt they’ll miss me.
It was over extraordinarily quickly. He heard the swish of the snake moving through the grass, and then his feet were swept out from under him and he was looking into a gigantic gaping maw and his whole life was not so much flashing as trudging dully by.
Then there was a shout, and he was flat on his back in the grass, and a man was looming over him, combat boots and cargo pants and tight black t-shirt, wide mouth turned down into a frown. “Are you all right?”
He was not all right. He was so far from all right. His lungs were on fire and his entire body was shaking. He’d gotten mud all over a $2,500 suit.
He’d almost died.
“I almost died,” Julian said. Saying it out loud made it seem realer than the actual near-death-by-snake experience had been. His life had almost ended. Terminated. Over, finis. He’d almost been Julian Lodge, deceased: eaten alive by a snake in Pennsylvania. Before he’d ever done anything.
“Yeah,” said the man. His lips quirked up. “Good thing you led him over to me, hm? Otherwise I don’t think I would have gotten to you in time. Oh,” he added, a moment later, and extended a hand to help Julian up.
Julian accepted. Or he meant to. His hand closed around the other man’s, and Julian found he was suddenly hyper-aware of a score of little details: the stretch of the muscles in his arm; the warmth and strength of the other man’s hand; the little patch of skin, pale along his side, that showed when he bent over, and that tight black shirt rode up.
He had almost died. A few seconds’ difference and he would have shuffled off this mortal coil. Julian had never really thought about death before. Not his own: he had thought himself too good for death. But he wasn’t. He wasn’t above death, or fear, or anything else.
His hand was still clasped against that of the man who had saved him, who had given one half-hearted upward tug and then gone still, staring at him. Julian stared back, taking in all the things he usually took care not to notice. Broad shoulders and strong biceps, intense blue eyes and clever-looking mouth. Firm curve of ass, accentuated by the rear-pockets of the cargo pants. He was leaning forward, stance welcoming; all Julian had to do was pull.
The man landed on top of him with a shocked little huff, not nearly as shocked as Julian was to have done it, to be doing it, to be putting a hand on the back of this stranger’s neck and kissing his wide, clever mouth. It was a brief kiss: all Julian had the courage for. He released the man and sat back, waiting for the punch of the kick or whatever it was strapping snake-killers did to skinny little—
Then man was eyeing him curiously. He licked his lips. “Was that just adrenaline or did you really want...?”
For once, Julian had no idea what he wanted. He was lying on the ground next to a dead snake and his pants were muddy and his dick was hard. He wanted a long, long shower, and he wanted to push up his rescuer’s shirt with his nose and lick his stomach.
His fingers jerked.
“Not that there’s anything wrong with adrenaline,” the man said, lowering himself down, putting his stomach in perfect range of Julian’s thumbs if not his mouth. “You’re really hot.”
No one had ever called Julian hot before, at least not to his face. He’d been called handsome a few times and “annoyingly pretty” an awful lot. But hot people were people with greasy chests and tans who wore tight shirts and too-tight trousers. People like the man who was currently kissing him, opening up his mouth, and Julian was opening, greedily sucking on the other man’s tongue—and sure, blame it on adrenaline. The only other explanation he could think of was that he actually had died, and this was heaven (couldn’t be) or hell (didn’t seem like it). All he knew for sure was that living had never felt like this.
It had never felt like strong male fingers sliding underneath the buttons of his suit jacket, opening him like a piece of fruit, peeling the layers back. They were kissing, hips rocking together; Julian threw a leg over the other man’s thigh and pulled him tighter. “I suppose this is one benefit of getting out of my lab and doing government jobs,” the man was saying, and at the word government, Julian went still, but the comment wasn’t really directed at him. Not like the man’s kisses, his stubbled cheek brushing across Julian neck as he undid Julian’s tie and ripped open his shirt collar; Julian would have been surprised to learn that he was baring his throat, offering it up. The other man took it with a gentle sweep of tongue and guided Julian’s hands to the top button of his fly.
“I’m Emmett, by the way,” the man said. “I figured you should know, since you’re going to be touching my dick.”
Julian shuddered. The man was trying to remedy their lack of proper introduction, and the polite thing to do would be to answer with his own name. But he didn’t, Julian didn’t...
“Or not,” the other man—Emmett—said, sensing Julian’s hesitance, drawing back. Julian thought he saw the sense coming back into his eyes, the adrenaline leaving—which really wasn’t fair, since Julian’s vision was still cloudy with it. Mutely, he clutched at Emmett’s shoulders, holding him down. “Ju—Julian,” he stuttered, “I—”
He found Emmett’s fly again, freed his cock. It felt huge in his hand, weighty; it felt good, really good, reacting to his touch. Emmett moaned and Julian moaned, and then his cock was in Emmett’s hand, and their cocks and hands were pressed together, they were moving, Emmett’s body rippling over his. Time had slowed the second the snake had slithered out of the grass, and it still hadn’t snapped back to normal: every motion felt slow and liquid and drawn out. Emmett’s thumb flicking over the head of his cock; and the rolling of their hips; and the suck and sweep of Emmett’s tongue; and Emmett’s shirt riding up, revealing a stretch of stomach that wasn’t bronze and toned, after all, but pale and soft over the clenching muscles, and Julian still wanted to kiss it.
Julian kissed Emmett like each new press of lips, every slide of tongue against tongue, would be the one to kill him. But he lived. He lived.
It was Emmett shuddering, Emmett coming all over their hands and over Julian’s cock and his chest, that made Julian follow him over the edge. His head fell back against the dirt—hard, except that Emmett reached out and cupped the back of his neck. Thanks, he felt like saying—horribly inadequate, considering that the man had saved his life—and brought him off in the middle of a field in Pennsylvania. But he still wasn’t sure that the emotion he felt was gratitude.
That blind, heady feeling was receding—adrenaline leaving his body. He lay back against the grass, Emmett beside him and half on top of him. He felt sleepy and drained and still somewhat shocked: he was alive. There were leaves in his hair and come on his chest and he couldn’t find his tie and he had almost been killed by a giant snake and he’d had sex with a man and he was alive.
No one at the reunion was going to believe him. Maybe he wouldn’t go.
Hmm. I actually really like the idea of DH playing the hero and JF playing the annoying-guy-who-nobody-likes-but-who-is-actually-adorable. I may want to play more with this. Dammit.
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This is pretty crackish. And I can’t believe I’ve written Boa vs. Python fic now. *facepalm*
Title: Done and Done
Fandom: First Monday/Boa vs. Python
Rating: NC-17
Pairing: Julian/Emmett
Length: ~1550 words
Summary: In horror and disaster movies, there was always some uptight, pretentious guy who nobody liked, who died in a humiliating manner while everyone in the audience cheered.
A/N: This is for
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Done and Done
Julian had seen enough horror and disasters movies, little snippets caught flipping between C-SPAN and FOXNews, to know that there was always some guy, some uptight, pretentious guy who nobody liked who died in a ridiculous, humiliating manner while everyone in the audience snickered and cheered. They were often lawyers, like the one in Jurassic Park who abandoned the small, innocent children, hid in a toilet stall, and got munched on by the T-Rex. They were all supposedly smart men who made one stupid decision and got killed for it.
Julian thought those movies were idiotic and puerile, but they weren’t a bad metaphor for life. One mistake, one step out of line, and you were done. Julian knew better.
Yet when the giant snake rocketed out into the middle of a Pennsylvania country road and slammed its body down on the hood of Julian’s car, he did possibly the stupidest thing imaginable. He got out and ran.
As he stumbled down a ditch and broke toward the woods, Julian was dimly aware of the voice screaming in the back of his brain, the one telling him that he was being a moron, that he was done for. He felt his lungs burning and panic beating in his chest, and several bubbles of irrational thought, rising to the surface. Odd color for a snake and I’m going be late for the reunion and Ha, ‘late’ and even: Really doubt they’ll miss me.
It was over extraordinarily quickly. He heard the swish of the snake moving through the grass, and then his feet were swept out from under him and he was looking into a gigantic gaping maw and his whole life was not so much flashing as trudging dully by.
Then there was a shout, and he was flat on his back in the grass, and a man was looming over him, combat boots and cargo pants and tight black t-shirt, wide mouth turned down into a frown. “Are you all right?”
He was not all right. He was so far from all right. His lungs were on fire and his entire body was shaking. He’d gotten mud all over a $2,500 suit.
He’d almost died.
“I almost died,” Julian said. Saying it out loud made it seem realer than the actual near-death-by-snake experience had been. His life had almost ended. Terminated. Over, finis. He’d almost been Julian Lodge, deceased: eaten alive by a snake in Pennsylvania. Before he’d ever done anything.
“Yeah,” said the man. His lips quirked up. “Good thing you led him over to me, hm? Otherwise I don’t think I would have gotten to you in time. Oh,” he added, a moment later, and extended a hand to help Julian up.
Julian accepted. Or he meant to. His hand closed around the other man’s, and Julian found he was suddenly hyper-aware of a score of little details: the stretch of the muscles in his arm; the warmth and strength of the other man’s hand; the little patch of skin, pale along his side, that showed when he bent over, and that tight black shirt rode up.
He had almost died. A few seconds’ difference and he would have shuffled off this mortal coil. Julian had never really thought about death before. Not his own: he had thought himself too good for death. But he wasn’t. He wasn’t above death, or fear, or anything else.
His hand was still clasped against that of the man who had saved him, who had given one half-hearted upward tug and then gone still, staring at him. Julian stared back, taking in all the things he usually took care not to notice. Broad shoulders and strong biceps, intense blue eyes and clever-looking mouth. Firm curve of ass, accentuated by the rear-pockets of the cargo pants. He was leaning forward, stance welcoming; all Julian had to do was pull.
The man landed on top of him with a shocked little huff, not nearly as shocked as Julian was to have done it, to be doing it, to be putting a hand on the back of this stranger’s neck and kissing his wide, clever mouth. It was a brief kiss: all Julian had the courage for. He released the man and sat back, waiting for the punch of the kick or whatever it was strapping snake-killers did to skinny little—
Then man was eyeing him curiously. He licked his lips. “Was that just adrenaline or did you really want...?”
For once, Julian had no idea what he wanted. He was lying on the ground next to a dead snake and his pants were muddy and his dick was hard. He wanted a long, long shower, and he wanted to push up his rescuer’s shirt with his nose and lick his stomach.
His fingers jerked.
“Not that there’s anything wrong with adrenaline,” the man said, lowering himself down, putting his stomach in perfect range of Julian’s thumbs if not his mouth. “You’re really hot.”
No one had ever called Julian hot before, at least not to his face. He’d been called handsome a few times and “annoyingly pretty” an awful lot. But hot people were people with greasy chests and tans who wore tight shirts and too-tight trousers. People like the man who was currently kissing him, opening up his mouth, and Julian was opening, greedily sucking on the other man’s tongue—and sure, blame it on adrenaline. The only other explanation he could think of was that he actually had died, and this was heaven (couldn’t be) or hell (didn’t seem like it). All he knew for sure was that living had never felt like this.
It had never felt like strong male fingers sliding underneath the buttons of his suit jacket, opening him like a piece of fruit, peeling the layers back. They were kissing, hips rocking together; Julian threw a leg over the other man’s thigh and pulled him tighter. “I suppose this is one benefit of getting out of my lab and doing government jobs,” the man was saying, and at the word government, Julian went still, but the comment wasn’t really directed at him. Not like the man’s kisses, his stubbled cheek brushing across Julian neck as he undid Julian’s tie and ripped open his shirt collar; Julian would have been surprised to learn that he was baring his throat, offering it up. The other man took it with a gentle sweep of tongue and guided Julian’s hands to the top button of his fly.
“I’m Emmett, by the way,” the man said. “I figured you should know, since you’re going to be touching my dick.”
Julian shuddered. The man was trying to remedy their lack of proper introduction, and the polite thing to do would be to answer with his own name. But he didn’t, Julian didn’t...
“Or not,” the other man—Emmett—said, sensing Julian’s hesitance, drawing back. Julian thought he saw the sense coming back into his eyes, the adrenaline leaving—which really wasn’t fair, since Julian’s vision was still cloudy with it. Mutely, he clutched at Emmett’s shoulders, holding him down. “Ju—Julian,” he stuttered, “I—”
He found Emmett’s fly again, freed his cock. It felt huge in his hand, weighty; it felt good, really good, reacting to his touch. Emmett moaned and Julian moaned, and then his cock was in Emmett’s hand, and their cocks and hands were pressed together, they were moving, Emmett’s body rippling over his. Time had slowed the second the snake had slithered out of the grass, and it still hadn’t snapped back to normal: every motion felt slow and liquid and drawn out. Emmett’s thumb flicking over the head of his cock; and the rolling of their hips; and the suck and sweep of Emmett’s tongue; and Emmett’s shirt riding up, revealing a stretch of stomach that wasn’t bronze and toned, after all, but pale and soft over the clenching muscles, and Julian still wanted to kiss it.
Julian kissed Emmett like each new press of lips, every slide of tongue against tongue, would be the one to kill him. But he lived. He lived.
It was Emmett shuddering, Emmett coming all over their hands and over Julian’s cock and his chest, that made Julian follow him over the edge. His head fell back against the dirt—hard, except that Emmett reached out and cupped the back of his neck. Thanks, he felt like saying—horribly inadequate, considering that the man had saved his life—and brought him off in the middle of a field in Pennsylvania. But he still wasn’t sure that the emotion he felt was gratitude.
That blind, heady feeling was receding—adrenaline leaving his body. He lay back against the grass, Emmett beside him and half on top of him. He felt sleepy and drained and still somewhat shocked: he was alive. There were leaves in his hair and come on his chest and he couldn’t find his tie and he had almost been killed by a giant snake and he’d had sex with a man and he was alive.
No one at the reunion was going to believe him. Maybe he wouldn’t go.
Hmm. I actually really like the idea of DH playing the hero and JF playing the annoying-guy-who-nobody-likes-but-who-is-actually-adorable. I may want to play more with this. Dammit.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 07:52 pm (UTC)How do you do that?!
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-21 03:46 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 07:55 pm (UTC)(quick typo nitpick, Julian would have been surprised to learn that he was bearing his throat, offering it up. - um, baring)
Jesus, I just realized - Julian is Flan!Kavanagh.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:03 pm (UTC)You must see BvP! Look:
*happy sigh*
Julian is Flan!Kavanagh.
OMG, you're right! The bowtie is meant to be his bad ponytail! Aww, poor boy.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 07:55 pm (UTC)****mmmmmn, happy thoughts!****
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:01 pm (UTC)*giggles*
Yeah, turning up and going, hey, sorry I'm late - I nearly got eaten by a giant snake, I can see why he'd find the prospect unappealing.
I like the way he's so bemused by still being alive. Adrenaline beats all kinds of character barriers when you know how to use it *g*.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:08 pm (UTC)there's a catch here, right? someone wants my first-born child?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:12 pm (UTC)(BTW, can I thank you hugely for suggesting that idea in the first place? Sheer brilliance.)
The only catch, I think, is that at the rate I'm going, I'm going to fail out of college in my last month. Eeep.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:10 pm (UTC)But then there was this:
“I’m Emmett, by the way,” the man said. “I figured you should know, since you’re going to be touching my dick.”
And a lot of hotness.
Also, I really, really love the idea of Emmett being a hero for Julian. He should do that more often. ;)
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:11 pm (UTC)Action!Hewlett and clueless!bow-tie!Flanigan!
That was very cute, and the dorky reference to the lawyer of Jurassic Park *dies* please do go on playing along <ith this, that's kinda cute, really ;-)
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:13 pm (UTC)Do it. Do it!
This was great. I think I may have made an undiginified noise when I saw the pairing. More please?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:15 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:17 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:26 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:26 pm (UTC)Oh, that was... yeah. Btw, I hold you solely responsible for this intense repression kink I seem to have developed overnight. And the recasting of DH and JF into these roles, with this kind of dynamic, is mind-numbingly hot. Or maybe your writing makes it hot; I don't know.
More, please?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:29 pm (UTC)you've read her priest fic, right? because to me, at least, it's hot in a similar way.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:28 pm (UTC)They are hot together, absolutely.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:35 pm (UTC)*cough*
Anyway--thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:43 pm (UTC)I cannot believe you write it. It... it... it made me laugh out loud and do a little happy dance around my desk chair. Yes, the dogs think I'm crazy now. Thanks for that.
You're brilliant.
And now I have to write a m/m/m/m foursome without killing myself over the pronouns.
Stupid sense of fair play.
OMG, this is the best thing ever. I really do hope you continue with it.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:50 pm (UTC)That was very cool! I'm so in love with Julian fic right now...
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:56 pm (UTC)I may want to play more with this.
By all means! *g*
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 08:57 pm (UTC)Please, ma'am, can we 'ave some more?
::sigh::
The OM and I actually tried to watch "First Monday" when it first aired. I mean, it had James Garner in it! Sally Fields! Joe Montegna! It was going to be *good*!! It sucked so **bad**. I only very vaguely remember the interns, though I kind of remember thinking Julian was "annoyingly pretty". *g*
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 09:15 pm (UTC)You are my hero.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 09:53 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 09:53 pm (UTC)I like that reversal, too.
And DH was totally hot in that movie. It's really fun to see him written that way. REALLY fun. /g/
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 10:10 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-20 01:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 11:12 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 11:21 pm (UTC)I am actually watching Boa vs Python at this very moment! (am inflicting it on a friend) Before even I checked my flist as well. :g:
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 11:21 pm (UTC)lovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelovelomglove.
secondly:
The perfect song for this pieces doesn't exist, but would be called "Snakes and Hurricanes" and be a mashup of Bellx1 and Muse
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-20 01:08 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-19 11:26 pm (UTC)Oh my god, I LOVE you for that line. And this:
Julian kissed Emmett like each new press of lips, every slide of tongue against tongue, would be the one to kill him. But he lived. He lived.
You're right. You do need to play more with these two, because it works.