Brought to Life, part 6

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Here's my chapter. Let us know if you want to write the next one!

***

“Not one other word did Bradley utter all that night. Not once did he change his attitude, or loosen his hold upon his wrist. Rigid before the fire, as if it were a charmed flame that was turning him old, he sat, with the dark lines deepening in his face, its stare becoming more and more haggard, its surface turning whiter and whiter as if it were being overspread with ashes, and the very texture and colour of his hair degenerating.”
 
As the words rang out in Estella’s clear voice, they seemed to be reflected in the silent figure sitting before her. That lovely young voice might have been the voice of a magician working Bradley Headstone’s doom upon him, the words shriveling him into the gaunt shadow of himself.
 
“Not until the—” The voice broke off abruptly as the reader was jolted by a sudden bump from behind her. Dropping the book on the table, she whirled to face the man who had stumbled against her. Her delicate brows drew together in a look of scorn at the luckless fellow, who stepped back at the sight.

“Beg pardon,” he muttered in a thick voice. “Getting more wine . . .” He sketched a vague gesture in the direction of the bar at the front of the room, manned by a large, sleepy-looking man with a very red face.
 
Estella recognized the younger man who stood slouching apologetically before her as the stranger who had been sitting in the corner, whom she had glimpsed as he passed her on his way in. She also recognized that since that time, he had become very drunk. Her pretty lip curled and, without a word, she turned away again, drawing her skirts close around her.
 
“I beg your pardon, Mr. Headstone.”
 
The schoolmaster made no answer. Sitting in the exact posture in which she had last seen him—head bowed, fists clenched, and eyes fixed upon the table—he did not even seem to have noticed the little scene that had just taken place. With a shrug, Estella stretched out her hand to take up the book.
 
It was not there.
 
With a start, the girl stared at the table, glanced at the unnoticing Bradley Headstone, and then looked confusedly around her. Her gaze fell upon the man with whom she had just been speaking, now lounging in a shadowy corner by the bar, and upon a ragged but sprightly young boy who was just in the act of handing him a tattered book. The man slipped a coin into the boy’s hand, then looked up and met Estella’s astonished eyes, and raised the book as if in a small salute. She even thought she could make out an amused expression on his face.
 
The beautiful eyes narrowed. With a perfunctory “Excuse me, Mr. Headstone,” Estella swept across the room, descending like vengeance personified upon the man leaning against the bar. The boy took one look at her and, sensibly, darted off, but the man remained where he was.
 
What does this mean?” The tone of her voice might have frozen the contents of every jug and bottle behind the bar.
 
“Only that I should like a word with you, Miss . . . Estella, was it?” Though Sydney Carton was filling a new glass, the effects of the previous glasses seemed to have lost their hold upon him. His hand was steady and his voice no longer slurred, but the young lady’s expression was no less disdainful for that. With one long, eloquent look, she took in his outdated costume and rumpled appearance, then lifted her proud eyes to his again.
 
“What could you possibly have to say to me?” she asked, with an ever-so-slight emphasis on possibly. “And why approach me in this roundabout manner?”
 
“Ah! well, you see,” returned Carton, “I had to await my opportunity. Our host—” he glanced back to where he had been sitting—“was so very attentive to me, and solicitous for my comfort, that it took some time. I had to feign near-stupor to satisfy him, and even then I could not make my escape until he was distracted.”
 
Estella followed his eyes to the other side of the room, where Uriah Heep and Mr. Pecksniff stood talking with—or rather, listening to—a short, dark-haired, fierce-looking woman with a dagger at her belt and, incongruously, a piece of knitting clutched in her hand. The men appeared to be having some trouble understanding her voluble French, but Estella’s quick ear caught the words for aristocrats and revolutionary.
 
She looked back at Carton, who had the audacity to wink at her. “I don’t say that I may not have helped the distraction along, with a few words in her ear as she passed. Then I got hold of young Charley Bates over there, and explained what I needed him to do—and here we are.”
 
He paused thoughtfully. “It’s fortunate that our genial hosts have had time only to skim our books, or they’d have known it would take much more wine than they provided to reduce me to the state they desired.”
 
A trace of bitterness flavored his last few words. He stared down into his glass, turning it slowly in his fingers.
 
Estella was watching him with a frown. “That still doesn’t explain why you wanted to talk to me,” she reminded him impatiently.
 
“Have you not wondered why they might be so eager for you to read that young man over there into a state of homicidal rage? Or why they should want to goad me into a drunken fury, for that matter?” As she started to reply, he held up a hand. “No, I’m sure you haven’t wondered about me. But think about yourself. For what purpose might they be using you?”
 
Observing her carefully as he spoke, Carton did not miss a small flicker far down in Estella’s eyes at the word using. But her voice was as frosty as before. “I suppose they have told you about this Mr. Dickens?”
 
At his nod, she went on. “Then you know their purpose. And know this as well—no one uses me, sir. I chose to help them of my own accord.”
 
“Because they convinced you that this man has too much control over you. But if they destroy him, what then? These men aren’t interested in anyone’s freedom, only their own power. Do you think your life would be better under their control?”
 
For the first time Estella looked faintly uncertain. Her gaze slowly, almost reluctantly traveled back to the undulating Uriah Heep, his hands writhing over and under each other like a nest of snakes as he carefully attempted to enunciate some French phrase or other for the benefit of the fierce-looking woman, who appeared unimpressed. A shudder ran through Estella’s slender frame.
 
Her voice had lost a little of its coldness when she finally responded. “And so what are you suggesting I do?”
 
Carton leaned close and spoke rapidly in a lower tone. Though the girl’s expression did not change, her eyes never left his face as he talked.
 
***
 
The shouts and entreaties that had accompanied Mr. Guppy’s precipitous exit faded into silence—a silence exceedingly profound and ominous to Mr. Dickens, as five pairs of eyes sought his.
 
It was Jenny Wren who broke it. “Mr. Dickens!” she snapped, “these children of yours show an alarming tendency to run off and gather in taverns. I should think a little discipline is called for. Naughty children must be kept on a short leash, as I know too well.”
 
Her words shattered the spell that seemed to have descended on the dazed author. Mr. Dickens blinked, like a man waking from a long sleep.
 
Looking around at his anxious characters, he felt suddenly and deeply moved. These people—people that he had made and brought here, however it had happened—were ready to risk everything for his sake. Finding themselves among strangers in a situation unutterably strange, they had quickly adapted themselves to the inexplicable and banded together to help their creator. The rapidness with which all these events had developed made him wonder if perhaps a spark of his own boundless energy had been planted inside each of them.
 
But in any event, they had given him their loyalty, and he owed them his aid and his leadership. Never mind that he still felt himself groping wildly in the dark for some way to make sense of this incomprehensible muddle—he must do his best for their sakes, and trust in Providence to bring them all through.
 
Mr. Dickens drew a long breath, pulled himself together, and turned to Esther Summerson.
 
“My dear,” he questioned her, “the man you met said his name was Nicholas Nickleby? Are you sure?”
 
“Yes,” faltered Esther. “I hope . . . oh, Mr. Dickens, it was safe to leave the boy with him, wasn’t it? Ought I to have gone with them?”
 
“No, no, you did quite right,” Dickens assured her. “Otherwise we should not have known of
the Dodger’s situation, or found out about the tavern. But I am worried about the boy, nonetheless. It sounds as if his wound was severe indeed. Mr. Pickwick—you know where Nicholas lives?’
 
“Oh, yes. It is not far at all.”
 
“Then, if you would, I should like for you and Miss Summerson to go and ascertain that the Dodger is all right, and see if he has any idea who might have followed and shot him. You might take Miss Clare with you as well. And Jenny.” Mr. Dickens disliked the thought of gentle Ada being anywhere near the violence that might erupt once his villains saw him. As for Jenny Wren—his lips twitched as he acknowledged to himself that he was a little afraid for those same villains, should they find themselves facing her wrath.
 
“Rick can come with me to investigate this tavern,” he went on. “I don’t know if we can catch up with that foolish young man, but at all events we must follow him. Rick, go find a couple of carriages—and I shall inspect the drivers carefully this time, to make sure they include no characters who wish us harm.”
 
“But that is only two of you!” Ada exclaimed, sending a nervous glance after Richard as he ran to obey. “We don’t know how large their numbers may be by now.”
 
“I shall stop at Mr. Woodcourt’s, if Mr. Pickwick will give me directions. We know from Mr. Wrayburn’s note that there are at least three men there who can go with us—I think.” Mr. Dickens could not remember whether his Our Mutual Friend reading had included an injured or an uninjured Eugene. If he had been read out of the book in his maimed state . . . well, there was no time to worry about that now. They would have to see when they got there.
 
“And Mr. Pickwick, if you know of any other characters of mine who live along the route and might aid us, will you write down their names and addresses? We can collect them as we go. But we must hurry!”
 
“Wait one moment,” Jenny broke in. “If it’s all the same to you, young man, I prefer to make one of your party.” She stepped to his side and looked up at him with eyes that were simultaneously defiant and trusting. “I should like to be with someone who knows for certain whether the people we see on our journey are innocent bystanders or Assassins in disguise.”
 
Mr. Dickens hesitated, then remembered that there was no time to argue with her. “Very well, Jenny.” He patted her shoulder soothingly, reflecting that perhaps she could be persuaded to remain in the carriage when they reached the tavern.
 
With their arrangements all made, Mr. Pickwick’s group departed and Mr. Dickens’s group prepared to follow suit. Jenny was just making sure the door was locked behind them when a tall woman in an imposing bonnet came sweeping towards Dickens, who was standing by the carriage, with a force that nearly knocked him to the ground. A stout, gray-haired gentleman, clutching a large kite, panted in her wake.
 
“If you please,” this lady demanded, “I was told to come to you for news of my nephew, David Copperfield. Have you seen him, sir?”
 
The harried Mr. Dickens restrained an impulse to clutch wildly at his hair. “My dear Miss Trotwood,” he expostulated, “I am very sorry, but we are in a great hurry—”
 
“Then Mr. Dick and I shall accompany you,” Betsey Trotwood declared. “Mr. Dick, please to get into the carriage.”
 
The man with the kite obediently climbed in and Miss Betsey followed, the two of them crowding Richard so far into the corner of the seat that he was scarcely visible at all. By this time Jenny’s little foot was tapping an impatient tattoo on the pavement.
 
“That must have been a very long reading of yours,” she observed tartly, as Dickens moved to lift her into the carriage, “to bring all these dozens of people here. One might guess that you were rather too fond of the sound of your own voice, young man.”
 
Mr. Dickens had the grace to blush.
 
***
 
Still intent upon their conversation, Carton and Estella both failed to notice that Bradley Headstone had finally risen slowly from his seat, one hand pressed to his head as if it ached intolerably. Swaying a little, the ashen-faced schoolmaster crossed the room to where Uriah Heep stood in close conference with Mr. Pecksniff, the two of them having pacified Madame Defarge. (Or so they thought, not realizing what was in the pattern she now knitted as she sat calmly at a nearby table.)
 
“Why should any of this matter to you, Mr. Carton?” Estella was saying, curiously. “You look as if you had little enough satisfaction out of life, under anyone’s direction. I suspect that you could hardly be worse off without Mr. Dickens than with him.”
 
Sydney studied his wine again for a long moment. “Let us say,” he answered heavily, at last, “that there are temptations that it is better I never have to face on my own.”
 
The haughty air that Estella had managed to maintain throughout most of the conversation had now faded into an air of open perplexity. “I don’t understand you,” she said bluntly.
 
“It doesn’t matter.” Sydney drained his glass and set it back on the bar. “What matters is this. These men have anything but our best interests at heart. They would use you far less scrupulously than Mr. Dickens ever has, and to worse ends. Are you willing to act in your own defense against them?”
 
The girl surveyed him doubtfully. Though she was ready enough to consider her own interests, she still could not see why this stranger should care about them; and it was evident, as she had remarked, that he cared but little for his own. She wondered briefly if he might be protecting someone else from the hypothetical dangers of a world without Mr. Dickens—some woman, most likely. Men and their odd obsessions, Estella thought, refraining with difficulty from rolling her eyes. She was certain she would never understand them.
 
As she opened her lips to reply, the noise of the door being thrown open hard enough to bang against the wall made them both look up. A hush fell over the entire room as everyone beheld the agitated young man standing upon the threshold.

Responses

  1. Nina Avatar

    Wow Gina, you did a terrific job! Your best fanfic yet, I think! I love the way you are tying together several loose ends so skilfully – and also, for having Jenny acknowledge Mr. Dickens’ long reading, lol.
    I think, though, that everyone has had a turn in writing the fic now. In my opinion, it’s almost over – maybe 2 chapters left. I could write the last chapter, if someone took the next chapter. How does that sound? Or if someone else has an idea for the ending, by all means, they can write it (I have, after all, had two turns already)!

  2. Gina Avatar

    Thanks very much, sweetie!
    You really think we can wrap it up in two chapters? Wow, I was thinking it would take WAY more than that, with all we’ve got going on now. But if you have an idea of how to do it, perhaps it can be done! 🙂 I would kind of like a chance to write one more time, but I hadn’t planned on doing the next installment. Maybe a short epilogue or something . . .

  3. Nina Avatar

    Well, maybe it would take three chapters. ^_^
    See, we need Dickens to save Mr. Guppy and the heroes to contact Wrayburn and Co., Bradley to stalk Dickens (maybe a face-off between Wrayburn and Bradley, like payback?), and a big showdown between the villains and the heroes. I think that if the chapters were a bit longish we could fit all that into three! So maybe Christy (just a thought) could write the next chapter, then you could write one after that, then I (or someone else) could write the last one?

  4. Gina Avatar

    Oooh, a Wrayburn/Bradley showdown! I’ve got chills. 🙂 AMAZING idea. We’ve got to check in on the Dodger, too, and if possible, I’d rather like to have Dickens have a one-on-one with a few of the characters as we’re finishing up. And are we going to figure out a way to have them get back into their books?

  5. Nina Avatar

    It looks like you’ve posted another comment, Gina, but for some reason it isn’t showing up?! Would you mind posting it again? (And you can delete this one if you like.)

  6. Gina Avatar

    Yes, it was giving me all kinds of trouble. Can you see it now?

  7. Nina Avatar

    I kind of had an idea on how to get them back into their books, actually, though I don’t know if I should share the idea due to spoilers…

  8. Nina Avatar

    Dang I’m a chatterbox, but I just had another idea – what if Madame Defarge leads a revolution that splits the villains into two factions? Like she could either team up with Uriah or Pecksniff and rebel against the other (sort of what I alluded to in Part 4), or she could break off her own group with herself as leader.

  9. Gina Avatar

    That’s okay, you don’t have to. I’m just glad you have one, because I don’t. 🙂
    Well, I think we may be able to wind all this up in three chapters, but let’s hear what some of our other authors have to say. . . .

  10. Gina Avatar

    Whoops, I think we simulposted! My last comment was in response to your 3:41 comment.

  11. Christy Avatar

    Hmm. Not sure how I feel about a Bradley-Wrayburn showdown. Half the impact of that book was what happened to them both when they weren’t facing each other. It would be kind of like rescuing Sydney Carton from the guillotine.
    I’m up for another chapter. I say we just write until it looks like an end. I know from personal experience that it can seem like you’re really close to the end and then you don’t get there for ages. And it doesn’t even seem like we’re close to the end at the moment (prior to reading this chapter, which I haven’t yet).

  12. Christy Avatar

    Ooh! How about a Mortimer Lightwood/Bradley Headstone confrontation? I’m not sure that Mortimer was quite as reconciled to Eugene being half-killed as Eugene himself was, and Eugene made him promise never to do anything about Bradley, but what if rescuing Dickens from Bradley was a way to get around that?
    I wanted to bring in Mortimer with Jenny Wren in the first place, but I was beat to it. 😛

  13. Gina Avatar

    That could work, especially if Eugene is already incapacitated when Dickens & Co. get to him. I couldn’t make up my mind about that, which is why I left it open. But that would be an excellent motive for Mortimer.

  14. Christy Avatar

    I think I’d like to write that chapter. I love Mortimer.

  15. Gina Avatar

    Do you want that to be the next chapter, and you go ahead and write it?

  16. Christy Avatar

    I vote that Nina does the next chapter, since she does Mr. Guppy better than anyone. But she has to promise to leave Mortimer to me.

  17. Nina Avatar

    I’ll be glad to do the next chapter, especially since we think we’ll be carrying it on for a while. But the only thing is that I’m actually hesitant about the Mortimer/Bradley showdown, myself. We’d have to bring another character in (and we’re kind of saturated as it is!), and I honestly don’t think Mortimer would be angry enough at Bradley to have a good, impacting “showdown” with him – he was kind of a forgiving guy (remember, he just stood and watched him during the whole tense moment between Eugene and Bradley at their flat). Maybe we could just abandon the idea of any Bradley showdown.

  18. Gina Avatar

    This is getting tricky. We may have to start co-writing chapters. 🙂
    I can barely do Mr. Guppy at all — it’s been too long since I last did a good thorough reread of “Bleak House,” alas.

  19. Gina Avatar

    Simulpost again! We could do some sort of scene with Bradley and Mortimer AND Eugene, I suppose. Even if Eugene isn’t in great shape, he could still come along for the ride, and participate in some way.

  20. Nina Avatar

    Maybe I can take care of Guppy in the next chapter so you won’t have to do too much with him, Gina. 😉

  21. Gina Avatar

    Should we do this, then? Nina next, then Christy, then . . . well, let’s see where we are then. Might be better not to think TOO far ahead.
    Aren’t you glad I brought in Aunt Betsey, by the way? 😉 I had to pretty much shoehorn her in, but I just HAD to have her.

  22. Gina Avatar

    Oh, and Marian and Lydia, if you’re reading this and are burning to help some more, please weigh in! You’re part of this too!

  23. Christy Avatar

    I want my Bradley-Mortimer showdown! *insert temper tantrum*
    Ahem. Excuse me.
    I think that we should continue writing as we have been, not having the slightest idea what other people are going to insert and just carrying on from where they leave off, as long as we do actually come to a (very generally agreed-upon) end in a few chapters, or else we could just go on piffling for a million years (I know I could). That is, rather than telling each other what we should or shouldn’t write. ?

  24. Christy Avatar

    I was glad to see Aunt Betsey. You know, I think Jenny Wren is shaping up to be an Aunt Betsey when she gets old. I don’t think the two would get along well, though.

  25. Gina Avatar

    They might come to blows. 🙂 But it would be pretty funny. You’ve got a point about just carrying on without clearing things first — it’s worked so far. And I have faith in everyone here to come up with ideas that work!

  26. Christy Avatar

    I’m leaving for an hour or two on some errands, but if Nina wants to take the next chapter, I’d be glad to do the one after that. (I can’t wait to read your Mr. Guppy again, Nibs!)

  27. Marian Avatar

    I’d love a Bradley-Mortimer showdown! And someone should put Arthur Clennam in the story. =) I’ve been really busy and haven’t been able to read this part yet, but I’ll read it as soon as I can. Unfortunately, I can’t promise to write another chapter, but maybe near the very end I could write another part!

  28. Marian Avatar

    ‘“That must have been a very long reading of yours,” she observed tartly, as Dickens moved to lift her into the carriage, “to bring all these dozens of people here. One might guess that you were rather too fond of the sound of your own voice, young man.”’
    😀
    I really like the way you write Sydney Carton; it sounds just like him!

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