“Questions don’t embarrass me, Dave,” Kurt assured him. “I want you to ask anything you want to know about anything. I’ll try to answer as best as I can.”
“Ooookay,” Dave muttered. “Well, uh. When you’re being… intimate, with two other people. Isn’t that… like, I can’t believe nobody ever gets stressed out or scared or jealous in the middle of things. If they’re doing things and you’re not involved…” He shook his head. “How do you handle that?”
“First of all, it depends on how involved all of you are with each other. I’ve mostly done this with people who are in love with each other. Even if you’re not touching anybody, there’s not a lot of not involved when you’re watching your two boyfriends together.”
“Yeah, I guess I can see that,” Dave said after a moment.
“As for being jealous, trust me, it sometimes comes up at the worst times.” Kurt had to roll his eyes at early memories of him in bed with Puck and Blaine, and before that, in the janitor’s closet with Finn and Puck. “So, then, you decide if you’re willing to be the center of attention while you have your freakout, or if you want to wait and have it later. But believe me, it comes out. You have to be willing to be selfish sometimes.”
Dave smiled, shaking his head. “How is it selfish to let your boyfriend be in a relationship with another guy?”
“It’s not a question of letting him,” Kurt said indignantly. “Any of them. They’re all autonomous beings. I’m not going to tell them they can or can’t do something they want to do, just because I love them.”
“Most people do, Kurt. You might not think that’s okay, but the rest of the world does work that way.”
Kurt sniffed. “Well, that’s up to them. I’m not saying people can’t be monogamous if they want to be. I’m saying I’m never going to be one of them. It’s just… way too good.”
Dave glanced furtively through the kitchen at the den, where Timothy and Jacob and his dad were sitting, watching football. “I get the feeling you mean more than the sex.”
“I mean the feelings. The—the good feeling you get when someone you love is happy because of someone else.”
He looked somewhat incredulous. “That’s a good feeling?”
Kurt cast around for a metaphor Dave would understand. “Okay, look… the woman who wrote the books about the armored bears. You love her books, right?” Dave nodded. “And I imagine there are other authors you like as much, or more. Imagine if the two of them wrote a book together. Would you be upset?”
“Upset?” Dave shook his head. “No. Especially not if the book was good.”
“Right. I imagine the book wouldn’t be the same as if they each wrote a book individually, but that doesn’t mean it wouldn’t be good. It might even be better.” Kurt smiled. “And, having a collaborative relationship doesn’t mean they wouldn’t ever write their own books anymore.”
Dave shrugged. “I do get a little jealous when I’m reading a really good book, because I wish I’d written it first.”
“Well, then, you call up the author and you ask if they want to write a book with them.”
He gave Kurt a wry smile. “You just think you can do whatever you want, don’t you? People don’t call up authors and ask them to collaborate on a novel. Who says I’d ever be good enough for that?”
“I do,” Kurt said. Dave cracked up laughing, but Kurt stood firm. “Who says you’re not? The worst they can do is say no.”
Dave snorted. “No, the worst they can do is to tell all their friends and then tease me mercilessly about it for years.”
“Well, then, I’d go and beat them up for you.”
“You know,” said Dave, grinning, “I think you actually might.”
-from Furt Part 6 in Any Minute Now, in the Donutverse
here's my entry to the @gg25zine! thank you so much to Jay for hosting such a fun project!! it turned out so beautiful and you know i'm always ready to show some love to my favorite baldie! <3
you can download the zine for free so please check it out- and if you are on the hunt for some faust merch i have a ton for sale on my etsy!
Jim Farrell moved to Brooklyn, at first he was there looking for Eilis but instead he fell in love with a girl named Bettie O’Malley. They got married and had a son, Gabriel, who took his mother’s maiden name as his professional name. Gabriel eventually got out of the hitman business, settled down and got married and lived under an assumed name to keep his family safe from gangster types who might want him pull him back into the criminal underworld. Gabriel had a son named Caleb Smith who was really good with computers.
Do you know of any fan fictions that are either inspired by the plot of the musical Rent, or have the Glee characters performing Rent (with Klaine in it obviously)?
I could only find one completed fic where they are in a production of Rent. Full disclosure: I haven’t read this one. Here are the FF.net search results that you might want to peruse (there wasn’t much on AO3). - HKVoyage
Dying in America (to Come Into Our Own) by knittycat99, nubianamy
When Blaine Anderson and Kurt Hummel both decide to audition for a summer production of RENT, they realize exactly how connected their lives already are.
Donutverse (polyamory, Dom/sub, discipline) with Kurt/Puck/Finn/Blaine, Will/OMCs, Kurt/Puck/Adam Lambert, Kurt & Dave friendship.
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/31W4r51
This is an automatic feed of all new stories posted to the Kurt Hummel tag on AO3. Because of that, it is not guaranteed that Kurt is the main character in the story. There is also no judgment made as to ships, length, or warnings. Please verify content upon clicking through to AO3.
In the Donutverse, while at Dalton (in the story To Touch is to Heal, to Hurt is to Steal, which takes place during season 2 between episodes 2x08 Furt and 2x18 Born This Way), Kurt provides discipline to five different boys.
Ellison Rowley (he/him) is a senior who will attend Dartmouth for political science in the fall. His roommate Ingram is one of the only other people at Dalton he has told about being trans. While for years he’s been convinced he would have to remain stealth to get through high school, Ellison suddenly finds himself dating Teague.
El comes to Kurt to talk about meeting Teague’s needs before they negotiate their own contract. He’s impressed with Kurt and they form a good bond. Kurt talks him through shibari and eases him into skin to skin contact. He’s impressed with El’s intuition and self-control, and even suggests he might consider finding his own boys to Top once he gets to Dartmouth.
Case in point; a wonderful school, filled with a caring a supportive staff that 4 weeks into the school year is facing two huge obstacles that have been struggles since our first day back late August. (Busing and Before & After School care)
2. Murphy was an optimist
So too I must be. In the words of a dear friend. "Things suck, and they'll get better."
When Kurt Hummel transfers to Dalton to rescue his boyfriend Blaine Anderson from the mental instability imposed by his controlling father, he establishes a reputation for himself as a professional Dominant.
Words: 3638, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
Series: Part 45 of The Donutverse
Fandoms: Glee
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: M/M
Characters: Kurt Hummel, Blaine Anderson, Burt Hummel, Carole Hudson-Hummel, Noah Puckerman, Finn Hudson, Puck's Sister (Glee), Original Characters, Jeff Sterling, Beth Corcoran
Relationships: Blaine Anderson/Kurt Hummel, Finn Hudson/Kurt Hummel/Noah Puckerman, Kurt Hummel/Original Male Character(s), Jeff Sterling/Original Character(s)
read it on the AO3 at http://bit.ly/2WvL8yE
This is an automatic feed of all new stories posted to the Kurt Hummel tag on AO3. Because of that, it is not guaranteed that Kurt is the main character in the story. There is also no judgment made as to ships, length, or warnings. Please verify content upon clicking through to AO3.
I'm listening to Adam's new EP of covers, which is fucking fantastic by the way, and all I can think about is that he's singing about Secret Agent Finn in the Donutverse. Adam, you're great, but I will never not read Donutverse subtext into your songs.
Can't wait to hear the rest of the album - it comes out just after my birthday!
I really had no plans for the Missing Piece to be an essential aspect of the Donutverse, but of course, as so many things did, it emerged over time. Most importantly, it became a symbol set to Puck's development.
Throughout the series, there are several scenes in which Puck recalls his father reading him and his siblings the two books about the missing piece. We discover in a flashback in Any Minute Now that the book was a gift from his uncle Samuel. Kurt encounters the first book when Toby reads it aloud to Duncan and Cory in chapter 24 of Bending in the Archer's Hand. Puck recites the entire second story, The Missing Piece Meets the Big O, to Adam in chapter 9 of The Breath Before the Phrase. And, in an extremely creepy way, it was subverted by Cy Lucis at Adventure Camp in Oregon as a method to persuade Puck to give up his attraction to men. In general, Puck feels positive about both the idea that one might find a person who fits so perfectly, and the idea that one might wish to roll on one's own.
There is a location in the Donutverse, a place called Half Moon Bay, which Puck has visited in his dreams and visions, and also now in real life. Lauren has a cottage there, on Lake Erie, and Toby and Will and his friends spent many summers there riding the carousel (there are many important references to Half Moon Bay in the Toby/Will story Just That Side of True, and also in Dance on a Narrow Ledge). While Half Moon Bay is a real place in California, it is a fictional place in the Donutverse. I have located it on Catawba Island, north of Sandusky Bay, on Lake Erie; you can see it on the Donutverse maps.
Half Moon Bay is a pivotal location in many ways for Blaine, for Puck, for Kurt, for Will, and for everyone in the story. I cannot underscore enough how much this imaginary place means to the events I have not yet written.
I had never been to Catawba Island before last summer, but I figured I should go and check it out. I drove around with my cowriter Flynn (the creator of Tessera) and we stayed at Port Clinton, OH while investigating the area. It is not a remarkable location in real life, and while it does afford a pretty nice view of the lake, there is nothing special about it.
One morning on this trip, while walking down the sidewalk to get coffee, I stopped. In the middle of the sidewalk was a rock, large enough to fit comfortably in the palm of my hand.
It was somewhat spherical, with a pointy edge, as though it had been rolling on its own for a while. I have no idea how it came to rest in the middle of the sidewalk, but you can bet I picked it up. It now resides in my car. I take it everywhere, and I pick it up frequently when I need a reminder that even when life feels especially challenging, I can make my own way—and I never have to do it alone. There are plenty of others who can roll along with me.