Icon ficlet #6 - Julius Caesar
Apr. 27th, 2004 10:59 amYes, there are more of these. The remaining ones aren't HP, so they're taking longer to do. This one is for
chresimos, and yes, it is Shakespeare fic. Julius Caesar, to be specific, so I guess it's technically RPF as well.
G, 478 words, slashy if you squint.
Accents Yet Unknown
Cassius lets his fingers brush against the dry stucco of the cobbler's shop, not wanting to cut across the middle of the busy square. As he rounds the corner, the hazy urban sun glares into his eyes; he squints against it. Two children play a chasing game around the fountain, darting in and out among the legs of indifferent merchants. They throw cupped handfuls of water at each other, shouting and laughing, their sandals kicking up the dust.
The little girl dodges and knocks into Cassius' hip, spilling her water all down his thigh. He lets out a sharp curse and seizes her by the sleeve-- she looks terrified.
'Watch where you're going,' he hisses.
'Have a care, brother.'
Cassius turns, and there stands Marcus Brutus, wearing a faint smile. The girl struggles out of his grip and dashes away after her playmate.
'The bite that pops inflated senators
is over-sharp to chide a careless child,' Brutus says, offering his arm.
Cassius takes it after a moment's hesitation. Some kind of warmth blossoms in him, even compared to the stifling heat of the day, and emerges as a restrained smirk.
'The frail are as apt to be corrected,
think you not?'
Brutus shakes his head in an amused, helpless shrug, and wipes his wrist across his reddened brow. There's something of Junia about him in that. Cassius shakes off the odd twinge he feels at the thought, and draws a breath through his nose-- the humid green smell of the fountain, water evaporating from stone.
'I hope there is no blood between us two,' Brutus says, waving his hand absently as if to fan himself, or maybe to dispel the whiff of drying manure from the farrier's across the square.
'Had Caesar asked my thoughts on your good name...'
Yes, Brutus is first praetor now. (Cassius remembers Caesar's knowing smile, the way his fingertips lingered over Brutus' broad wrist in the cool, airy Senate chamber.)
'Ah... no. The-- the fault was not your own.'
Brutus frowns a bit, but it passes. 'That's good.' He takes Cassius lightly by the elbow (in this heat, how can his palm be so dry?) and leans in closer to his ear. 'Take care,' he says, 'with my dear sister.'
'Ay,' Cassius says, and it comes out voiceless.
Cloth brushes past Cassius' shins as Brutus turns to go. Cassius watches as he disappears among the shouting fishmongers, and the soles of his feet itch as if to press him forward. A busker squeezes by with his cithara slung over his shoulder and knocks into Cassius' arm; he barks out a laughing apology as he passes.
Cassius merely rubs his eyes and ducks under the cobbler's awning into the faint shadows-- not really cooler than being directly in the sun. He has a house to dine at this afternoon, and he cannot be late.
end.
This is my first wee attempt at Shakespeare fic, so it's pretty experimental. Feedback would be much appreciated.
spican is next.
EDIT: Almost forgot -- thanks to
keladryb for knowing more about Rome than me.
G, 478 words, slashy if you squint.
Accents Yet Unknown
Cassius lets his fingers brush against the dry stucco of the cobbler's shop, not wanting to cut across the middle of the busy square. As he rounds the corner, the hazy urban sun glares into his eyes; he squints against it. Two children play a chasing game around the fountain, darting in and out among the legs of indifferent merchants. They throw cupped handfuls of water at each other, shouting and laughing, their sandals kicking up the dust.
The little girl dodges and knocks into Cassius' hip, spilling her water all down his thigh. He lets out a sharp curse and seizes her by the sleeve-- she looks terrified.
'Watch where you're going,' he hisses.
'Have a care, brother.'
Cassius turns, and there stands Marcus Brutus, wearing a faint smile. The girl struggles out of his grip and dashes away after her playmate.
'The bite that pops inflated senators
is over-sharp to chide a careless child,' Brutus says, offering his arm.
Cassius takes it after a moment's hesitation. Some kind of warmth blossoms in him, even compared to the stifling heat of the day, and emerges as a restrained smirk.
'The frail are as apt to be corrected,
think you not?'
Brutus shakes his head in an amused, helpless shrug, and wipes his wrist across his reddened brow. There's something of Junia about him in that. Cassius shakes off the odd twinge he feels at the thought, and draws a breath through his nose-- the humid green smell of the fountain, water evaporating from stone.
'I hope there is no blood between us two,' Brutus says, waving his hand absently as if to fan himself, or maybe to dispel the whiff of drying manure from the farrier's across the square.
'Had Caesar asked my thoughts on your good name...'
Yes, Brutus is first praetor now. (Cassius remembers Caesar's knowing smile, the way his fingertips lingered over Brutus' broad wrist in the cool, airy Senate chamber.)
'Ah... no. The-- the fault was not your own.'
Brutus frowns a bit, but it passes. 'That's good.' He takes Cassius lightly by the elbow (in this heat, how can his palm be so dry?) and leans in closer to his ear. 'Take care,' he says, 'with my dear sister.'
'Ay,' Cassius says, and it comes out voiceless.
Cloth brushes past Cassius' shins as Brutus turns to go. Cassius watches as he disappears among the shouting fishmongers, and the soles of his feet itch as if to press him forward. A busker squeezes by with his cithara slung over his shoulder and knocks into Cassius' arm; he barks out a laughing apology as he passes.
Cassius merely rubs his eyes and ducks under the cobbler's awning into the faint shadows-- not really cooler than being directly in the sun. He has a house to dine at this afternoon, and he cannot be late.
end.
This is my first wee attempt at Shakespeare fic, so it's pretty experimental. Feedback would be much appreciated.
EDIT: Almost forgot -- thanks to