Tumgik
#lollercakes
fth2020fanworks · 2 years
Link
11 notes · View notes
louezem · 2 years
Link
Swept Away (20357 words) by lollercakes Chapters: 3/3 Fandom: Hunger Games Trilogy - Suzanne Collins, Hunger Games Series - All Media Types Rating: Mature Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply Relationships: Katniss Everdeen/Peeta Mellark Characters: Gale Hawthorne, Primrose Everdeen, Finnick Odair, Haymitch Abernathy, Johanna Mason, Cressida (Hunger Games), Annie Cresta, Mags (Hunger Games) Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Modern Setting, Immigration & Emigration, Hurt/Comfort, Angst with a Happy Ending, Implied/Referenced Rape/Non-con, Implied/Referenced Abuse, Rescue, Somebody Lives/Not Everyone Dies, Minor Character Death
Summary:
Crossing the sea was never going to be easy but they had no choice. They had to cross. To safety. To the promise of something better. They would make it and her family would be safe - or at least that's what Katniss tells herself to make stepping onto the rickety old vessel worth it.
This is a story for the FTH2022 event and has been written for JHsgf82!
Tumblr media
10 notes · View notes
fth2022fanworks · 2 years
Link
0 notes
lollercakesff · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
IT'S HERE IT'S HERE!
The Fandom Trumps Hate auction 2023 is open for bidding!!
Come one, come all to this year's event where we gather round ye olde bidding table to win a chance to have a story written by me, for YOU.
As always, donations for the auction go to your choice of organization (from the participating list) and then I'll work with you to write a story you (hopefully) fall in love with. This year my bidding is open for Hunger Games, Rogue One and Anne with an E/Anne of Green Gables.
To bid, check out my auction page here and review some of my conditions - if we're on the same page, then:
BID HERE
After you bid, you can see if you're outbid here. Bidding is open until March 5 at 8pm EST.
If you have questions, please don't hesitate to ask! Previous stories I've written for the auction include: Swept Away, And So, The Conflict of Identity, Found and Burnout.
27 notes · View notes
Note
Do you have any good crossover fics? I love them but so many hunger game crossovers are just mislabeled and it’s the other fandom in a hunger games setting
Hello Anon!
Below is a masterlist of crossover fics! Hopefully some are new to you! I'll add this topic to future masterlists! Happy reading!
Alibi-JennaGill (ao3) Summary: He's charming, nervous, and completely captivated. She's alluring, mysterious, and handy with weapons. Successful novelist Peeta Mellark provides an alibi for a beautiful stranger, rescuing him out of a writing slump—but he soon finds out that he may need rescuing from her! Modernish Everlark AU. Trigger Warning: very minor pet character death. Crossover fic with the movie Her Alibi. Binary Sunset-Abagail_Snow (ao3) Summary: Their love was destiny, and it will spark a rebellion across the entire galaxy. Jedi Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark resist temptations during the rise and fall of the Empire. Set in the Star Wars Universe. Do You Want To Build A Snowman?-titania522 (ao3) Summary: A Katniss x Prim holiday drabble featuring Everlark and the toastbabies, Sophia and Rye. Even after all these years, the memory of Katniss's sister still has the power to undo her. Eclipse-Abagail_Snow (ao3) Summary: There's only one thing standing between Katniss and Peeta. Her fire. Inspired by the book The Darkest Minds. Fireflies in the Dark-titania522 (ao3) Summary: Loosely based on the Max/Liesel storyline in The Book Thief. Set in a town near Munich, Germany during World War II, Peeta Mellark appears on the Everdeen's porch in the middle of the night. The family soon finds themselves harboring a Jew at a time when doing so is punishable by death. Despite the odds, Katniss will risk anything to keep him safe. Frost-Alliswell (ao3) Summary: In the kingdom of Panem, authoritarian King Coriolanus is coveting an Heir, everything changes when Jack Frost falls in love with a human girl from the small District Twelve, and tries to prove himself in order to become human permanently and win the heart of his beloved. Heretics-titania522 (ao3) Summary: "Attachments lead to loss. Loss leads to suffering. Suffering leads to fear. Fear is the path to the Dark Side." But in a universe where Jedi are hunted and Good struggles to exist, it is Katniss and Peeta's uncommon connection that makes them powerful...and wanted. Based loosely on Star Wars: The Force Awakens and Star Wars: The Extended Universe. I Don't Want to Wait-Abagail_Snow (ao3) Summary: Peeta Mellark has been in love with Katniss Everdeen, the girl across the creek, for as long as he can remember, but her heart seems to belong to Gale Hawthorne, her best friend since childhood. How can a guy compete? A Dawson's Creek crossover fic. In Every Generation-msdisdain (ao3) Summary: Katniss is the Chosen One, recently back from the dead. Her drunken Watcher, Haymitch, has pushed the Council one too many times and now he's been replaced with a familiar face--ex-Sunnydale resident Peeta Mellark. Will his childhood past with Katniss keep them from saving the world, one vamp at a time? Jurassic Games-lollercakes (ao3) Summary: Who thought un-extincting dinosaurs was a good idea? A semi-crossover with THG and Jurassic Park/World.
As always, if you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, please feel free to shoot me an ask!
10 notes · View notes
everlarkficquestions · 7 months
Note
Hi! I read a few years ago a fic where Katniss was going through a period of depression, but I cannot remember the title for the life of me. I remember a few things: she and Prim used to go jogging and so Prim forces her to do it one day. They jog until they reach Peeta’s bakery. Unfortunately I can’t remember much else. Can you help me? Thank you!!
Hi! That sounds like  Lover’s Eyes by lollercakes
8 notes · View notes
Note
*crawls out of a swamp, hands you a paper that says "11, 16, 66, and 77 but you choose the fic" then gets dragged back in by vines*
*slaps herself on the forehead with the paper* the only ask I got out of this and I fucking forgot about it
11. Link your three favorite fics right now
But like my fics or the fics I'm reading? I'll go with the second option and rec some good stuff bc it's too hard to pick from my own stuff
First, two Prospect works from my prospie besties, both AUs, both brilliant!
At Your Service by @skoulsons - modern AU where 15 year old Cee starts working at a restaurant and their best employee, Ezra, takes her under his wing (and not only during work hours). Lots of angst and lots of love - and you get to see how restaurants work! How cool is that!
without you, without them by @channelrat - this AU is more in-world and poses a question: what if Ezra knew Cee's mom? What if they were best friends? It's so exciting to follow Cee as she uncovers her family's history and learns more about her mom
The third one is a Hunger Games fic that I've been following for quite some time and I can't wait for another chapter
Long Way Out by lollercakes - a story following the ups and downs (and mental breakdowns) of the relationship between Katniss and Haymitch. It's heavy, it's brutal at times, deals with depression, PTSD, alcoholism, suicidal thoughts and rage (to name a few) but ultimately it's a story about how two broken people can keep each other from falling apart because they are both too damn stubborn to let each other go.
16. How many fic ideas are you nurturing right now? Share one of them?
Realistically? Two. There's more saved in my docs but I'm not being pulled to start them or finish what is started already. One I can share, the one I'll probably be working on next, is a little extra scene for The Bad Batch series finale, where everyone gets a moment to breathe and take care of each other as they fly away from their final battle.
66. How do you deal with writing pressure (ie. pressure to update, negative comments, deadlines, etc.)?
Pressure to update? Deadlines? It's easy to deal with when you're convinced no one is reading your shit lol but seriously, I try to take it easy now. I used to work like a machine (still do sometimes), but not because I knew someone was waiting, but because there were so many ideas in my head that I just wanted to be done with the current one so I can start the next. I didn't want to lose any of them. These days I try to tell myself "there is no deadline". Fics don't have deadlines. You release them when you feel like they're ready, you work on them when you have time and energy to do so.
And as readers, we should know and respect that. I'm also a reader who's waiting for updates on her beloved fics - written both by strangers and by friends. But no matter how much I want to read what happens next, I won't pressure them to update. When they're ready and the story is ready, then I'll get to read it.
As for negative comments? I rarely get them, the ones I did were from fandom trolls that were pressed about stupid bullshit, or it was straight up AI generated comment. What I do? Read, delete, never think of it again.
77. Do you have a favorite scene you’ve written from [Fanfic Name] story/chapter?
Tumblr media Tumblr media
These two bits from The Art of Letting Go
Because it's so angsty!!! We see Hunter and Omega argue in the show but never to this extent! It never turns into a fight! I cried writing those. But it felt so good!
Thank you for the ask! Sorry you had to wait so long.
3 notes · View notes
Text
The Thin Veil
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/YmlGHBV
by lollercakes
There's a thin veil between souls, one eroded by time and space and weakened by the connection of those fated together. It can't be explained but it's meant to bring people together, to show them that they're on the same path. The mirror hurts, they say, but it also heals, if you let it.
For Antifandor <3 for the Rebelcaptain Network's Secret Santa Exchange 2022
Words: 7170, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
Fandoms: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016), Andor (TV), Star Wars - All Media Types
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: F/M
Characters: Cassian Andor, Jyn Erso
Relationships: Cassian Andor/Jyn Erso
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Everyone Lives/Nobody Dies, Alternate Universe - Soulmates, The Rebelcaptain Network's Secret Santa Exchange 2022, Fluff and Angst, The mirror hurts but also heals
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/YmlGHBV
40 notes · View notes
tightropeflea · 5 years
Link
A collection of short (and not so short!) chapters following Jim and Joyce’s relationship post season 2. This one is fluffy as hell. Luckily, nothing else supernaturally creepy is going on in this one - Hawkins deserves a break - but that leaves plenty of room and time for some slice of life. :) 
11 notes · View notes
fth2018offerings · 7 years
Text
lollercakes - FTH Contributor Page
See lollercakes’s works here!
To contact the seller before bidding, please email [email protected]
If you have a very specific prompt and are not flexible, it’s best to contact the seller before bidding, even if it fits within their listed parameters. If you are asking for a specific kink, always ask first.
Charities these auctions benefit: Bidder's choice of any of the listed groups
(See full list)
lollercakes’s offerings:
lollercakes Auction #1
Type of fanwork: fanfiction Subtype(s): N/A Fandom(s): Stranger Things, Hunger Games Highest rating creator will work with: E (explicit) Length: I'm flexible, but can't take on big projects right now. I'll work with the bidder to find a happy balance. Especially interested in: Hopper x Joyce for ST or any pairings in THG. I typically write angsty stuff but can try to stretch my legs on other topics if the prompt is right. Unwilling to address: I'm not going to write above PG stuff for the kids of ST. Also not super into non-con situations. Notes: I'm flexible and am comfortable writing on pretty much anything. I'm really feeling a stride for Jopper right now, so if you're up for that, drop a bid!
Minimum Bid: $5
Auctions run from 8 January 2018 (Midnight, EST) to 14 January 2018 (Midnight, EST). Bids before or after this period are invalid and will not be counted.If you would like to bid on this auction:
Step 1: Check the bidding spreadsheet to find out what the current high bid is. (Note: It may take up to five minutes for a bid to appear.)
Step 2: Fill out the seller’s bidding form with a bid that is higher than the current high bid. If you want to make it harder for someone to outbid you, bid higher! You will NOT be notified if someone outbids you, so please bookmark this page and check frequently. You will only be notified if you are the high bidder after the auctions end.
Thanks for participating in Fandom Trumps Hate!
18 notes · View notes
antspaul · 5 years
Text
happy holidays @lollercakesff !!! I wrote you a fic! I hope you enjoy it ~ and have a wonderful holiday season! 
I am posting the fic here, as well as on ao3, as it’s a little long (~10k). 
charity (who is helping who?) 
Summary: AU in which Anne is a little more poor but just as vivacious while Gilbert is a lot more wealthy and a little more cowardly. 
Based somewhat loosely on the book Daddy Long Legs, written in 1912 by Jean Webster. There’s a movie with Fred Astaire and a wonderful musical based on the book. I always thought that Jerusha, the main character, was very reminiscent of Anne. The title comes from the song “Charity” from the musical. 
PART I.
13 July 1899
Dear Ms. Shirley-Cuthbert, 
I am pleased to inform you that you have been selected to receive a full scholarship to the University of Toronto. This scholarship allows deserving young men and women invested in the arts to attend college in pursuit of strengthening their craft. You were selected on the basis of your imaginative and enjoyable writing, which the University hopes that you will pursue once on campus. 
The scholarship will cover your tuition and board for the four years it will take you to earn your Bachelor of Arts, provided to you from a very generous benefactor. There is also a small account in your name that will provide for your books. The funds in this account are stable and will not be replenished, so you are advised to spend very wisely. All additional details about your award are on the attached page.
In order to keep your scholarship, you will write your benefactor letters, at least once per month throughout your tenure at the University of Toronto, informing him of your progress, both academic and creative. Your benefactor will remain anonymous, and you may only address him as “Mr. Smith.” The address is provided below. You may use your book account to purchase postage, if necessary. 
Congratulations once again. We at the University of Toronto will see you come fall. 
Alastair Pendleton 
Director of Financial Aid and Scholarships
University of Toronto
1 September 1901
To my magnificent benefactor, 
I am sorry but I cannot address you as “Mr. Smith”, not when you have changed my life for the better in such a profound way. I can hardly believe that scarcely two months ago I was lamenting my future stuck on the farm and now I am here at the University of Toronto, ready to learn all there is to know in the world! And I have you to thank. 
Please don’t think that I’m an ungrateful child. I truly appreciate everything that everyone has done for me. Until six years ago I lived the sorrowful life of the unwanted child that I was. You see, Mr. Smith, my parents died when I was only three months old. Does knowing I’m an orphan make you think less of me? I hope it doesn’t. I imagine a man as generous and kind as you wouldn’t care. Otherwise, you wouldn’t be giving charity to poor girls such as I. 
Anyway, I lived in an orphanage, among other places, until I was thirteen and the most wonderful people in the world adopted me! Their names are Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert and they are brother and sister. I lived with them on a farm on Prince Edward Island. Have you ever been to Prince Edward Island, Mr. Smith? If you haven’t, you must go. I am quite certain it is the most breathtaking beautiful and splendid place on the planet. 
I was told when I spoke to Mr. Pendleton in person that you don’t need to know anything about my life beyond my schooling and my writing. But since I will likely be mentioning Matthew and Marilla quite frequently, I thought that I would tell you who they were. 
Will you be reading these letters? On the long train ride to Toronto, I thought long and hard about what I would do if I were a mysterious, filthy rich old man giving heaps of money to farm girls who couldn’t otherwise afford college. After a while I just gave up because I am not any of those things and could simply not put myself in your shoes. Marilla always berates me for my vanity, which leads me to think that I could not remain anonymous for very long. My opinion doesn’t matter, of course, but I do hope you read my letters. I intend to pour every speck of gratitude towards you that I possess onto these pages.
What is there left to talk about? Classes don’t start until tomorrow. I know that you wanted to know about my academics, but there isn’t any to talk about yet. I wanted to draft my first letter to you before homework became too overwhelming. Would you like to hear about my friends? My friendships certainly count as personal, but since I will mention them in the future as well, I will introduce them now. 
My best friend and roommate is Diana Barry. Oh, how to describe Diana! She is the most dearest girl in the world. I met her when I had just arrived in Avonlea and immediately recognized her as a kindred spirit. Sharing a room with Diana is a dream come true! Her parents are rigid and close-minded. Perhaps I shouldn’t have written that because they are also very rich and seem to know every other rich person in North America. I don’t mean to be harsh but I’ve seen them make her cry enough times that I think I am entitled to my opinion of them. 
Ruby Gillis is my second best friend. She’s also from Avonlea. She’s a wonderfully nice girl, maybe too nice for her own good. Ruby lacks imagination, perhaps, but sometimes an imagination as big as mine, I have found, can be a burden, as when you can imagine a beautiful future it sometimes leaves the present looking grayer than ever. 
Who else is there to mention? Jane Andrews is the only other girl from home who also got in to U of T (University of Toronto, as I’m sure you know — writing it like that gives me such a thrill!) but I doubt I’ll be seeing her much, as she’s taken residence with her aunt and uncle in town. I’ve also met some new girls and we’ve become fast friends. Their names are Priscilla Grant, Stella Maynard, and Philippa Gordon. As I have just come to know them, I can’t tell you much except I can already tell they are kindred spirits. It’s just something you feel. I feel that we are kindred spirits, too, Mr. Smith. 
I apologize if this letter has gone on too long, or if it’s not the type of letter you wanted me to send you. The letters that come from my desk usually go to someone I know very well, like my friend Cole or Diana’s Aunt Josephine. 
Oh, those are two others I’m sure to mention a lot — Cole is an artist and is the kindest, most gentle soul I have ever come across. Aunt Josephine is a rich old lady who is a sort of parent to Cole. Perhaps you know her, though when I asked Aunt Jo if she was acquainted with an old rich man who sends orphan girls to college to be writers, she said she knew of none. 
All that is to say that I don’t know who you are or what sort of person you are but I vow with all of the strength in my heart to do my very best to write these letters well. 
Until next month!
Your eternally grateful friend, 
Anne Shirley-Cuthbert
P.S.: I know you insist on remaining anonymous, but if I were to receive some sort of occasional acknowledgement that you are getting my letters, that would be more than welcome. I only thought I’d let you know. 
FROM THE DESK OF ANNE SHIRLEY-CUTHBERT
21 April 1902
To my beloved benefactor, 
 I have not been able to stop smiling all week! Priscilla tells me I look crazed, with this Cheshire grin stretching across my face but I simply can’t contain myself and it’s all because of you! I don’t know how you found out that it was my birthday last week but your gift came just in time. My handwriting has never looked more beautiful than it does underneath the words “FROM THE DESK OF ANNE SHIRLEY-CUTHBERT.” Just seeing it on my table sends a thrill down my spine knowing you so thoughtfully ordered this for me yourself. How I wish you would have sent some sort of personal note with it. I know you have never answered my questions before, no matter how many I have asked. I am sorry to tell you that you’ll just have to deal with it as I can’t help but want to know you. Can you really blame me? 
Classes are going much the same as in my last letter. I retook my geometry test and did much better, I am happy to report, due to Phil’s untiring help with studying. I even started to draft some short stories that I have been thinking about, though I find it difficult to put aside the time to write them as my studies keep me more than busy. 
Here, Mr. Smith, is where I get more personal so if you still feel obliged to ignore ramblings about my social life skip to the end of the letter now. 
As you know my birthday was last Thursday. Priscilla, Stella, Phil, Ruby, and Diana decided to surprise me and take me out for dinner! They escorted me to the most charming and expensive restaurant within five miles of our boarding house. At first I felt overwhelming unprepared and underdressed for such a formal occasion, sure that I stuck out like a sore thumb around all of the elegant ladies and gentlemen dining nearby. But soon the waiter brought out course after course of wonderful, delicious food and we were having such a pleasurable time that any insecurity slipped my mind completely. For a moment it seemed that nothing at all could tarnish such an impeccable moment!
But of course as soon as this thought entered my mind Gilbert Blythe showed up to ruin the dinner. As I have not yet mentioned Gilbert to you (that I remember, at least) here is all you need to know about him: he did something terribly humiliating to me when we first met in school at age thirteen and I have never forgiven him for it since. If he had left it at that we would be on better terms now but soon after he left Avonlea and on the few occasions we’ve seen each other since he has made a routine of offending me similarly. So as you can see why his presence at my special birthday dinner was less than welcome. 
Perhaps, had I not known what kind of person Gilbert is, it would have offended me less when he sent a bottle of wine over to our table and offered to pay for my meal. But no doubt he only intended to flaunt his wealth before us like some peacock parading its feathers! He likely thought we would struggle to afford our meal. I have no aversion to certain types of charity, Mr. Smith, as you know, but his assumptions, and that inappropriate bottle of wine, nearly had me storming out of the restaurant in a rage. Diana and Ruby calmed me down and we politely but sternly declined his offer to the waiter. I didn’t see Gilbert’s reaction but I wish I had seen the smugness drop from his face. 
It was a thoroughly exhausting affair. Emotionally, of course. 
22 April 1901
I’m sorry for the interruption. I heard Diana call for me and it sounded quite urgent— a bouquet of flowers, it turns out, had arrived at the front door and were addressed to me. Thinking they were a belated birthday gift I readily accepted them. Imagine my surprise when the note inside revealed they were from Gilbert Blythe himself! I wanted to scream from the nerve of him and throw the flowers out but they were still quite beautiful so Ruby convinced me to keep them. The note on the inside wished me a happy birthday and apologized for his impertinence on my birthday. It almost made me regret writing those harsh things about him above. Almost. 
Anyway, Mr. Smith, this is where my personal ramblings end if you don’t care to read them. Oh, I almost forgot to tell you that I spoke to one of the instructors here about my stories and she said they sounded promising and recommended that I submit one to the University literary journal! I might get published before the end of the term, if all goes well! If you care to read my work, I’ve attached the first four pages of a recent story to this letter. 
Yours, 
19 year-old Anne Shirley-Cuthbert, soon-to-be published author
FROM THE DESK OF ANNE SHIRLEY-CUTHBERT
5 February 1902
To my dear but frustratingly mysterious benefactor, 
Can you believe it’s been a year and a half since I found out that you had selected me for the scholarship? I can’t. Since this letter will likely be incredibly short (examinations are upon us and will start soon, so I have little time to write) I wanted to start this letter by offering my undying thanks to you. So here it is: thank you, thank you, THANK YOU! And I’m so horribly mortified that I wrote to you in the manner that I did in my January letter. At the time I felt horribly unsympathetic to the wealthy and took out my frustrations on you. I wish every wealthy person were as kind as you. I suppose I really don’t know how kind you are but something tells me you are wonderfully nice. 
Classes here are going well. I’ve said it before but I love being a sophomore! I finally feel like I truly belong at the University of Toronto. As much as I love Avonlea— have you visited yet? — I’m equally glad to be exploring the world on my own. As stressful as exams are, I love being at school. Even though I’ve been to only a few places in my life living in a city as large as Toronto makes each new day an adventure. I could explore this city for years and still find new nooks and crannies. 
Since time is running short, here are several quick updates: 
Ruby is still considering dropping out. Diana and I desperately try everyday to convince her not to, but our pleas seem to have done nothing to change her mind. It will be sad but not totally unsurprising to see her leave. 
Ever since Aunt Josephine intervened with Diana’s parents, she has more confidently pursued her music. If you’re ever interested in hearing beautiful songs played on the piano then she plays a concert once a month. You could come and I wouldn’t even know you were there! It would be worth it, I promise. 
Stella, Phil, and Priscilla are doing fine as well! Priscilla gets herself into trouble for pulling pranks on our new house matron, but scoldings never seem to bother her. Beautiful Philippa frustratingly has no shortage of suitors willing to do anything for her. It’s maddening in a funny sort of way to watch them trip over themselves to impress her as she pays them barely any notice at all. 
What else? I have started to write for the newspaper! Just as I did in school. I will put in the envelope my very first story. It’s only a little book review but seeing my name in print gives me the same thrill as it did last spring when my story was published. I hope this time my writing will be met with less harsh criticism. 
Well, that’s all I can think of to say today. I’ll try to send a longer letter next week if I can. 
Faithfully, 
Anne Shirley-Cuthbert
P.S. I forgot to ask— if it isn’t too much trouble could you send me more stationery? I’m almost out of the paper that you sent me for my birthday. 
FROM THE DESK OF ANNE SHIRLEY-CUTHBERT
10 May 1903
My deeply appreciated benefactor, 
I deeply apologize for the time it took me to write you this letter. I'm also sorry for how many of my letters start out with an apology. I realize it's been more than a month since I sent my last correspondence. Can it be called correspondence if you never write back? You've sent me gifts, which I cherish with all of my soul, but never once have you sent me a single word back. After three years you'd think I would just resign myself to the fact that all you'll ever be to me is a mystery shrouded in enigma, albeit one I'm relentlessly grateful for. But if you know anything about me by now, Mr. Smith, as you should if you've read any of my letters, is that I am as stubborn as a mule. Every person I've ever worked for or belonged to has said as much. 
As I wrote that above paragraph I've realized that some of my words to you could be considered rude. Would you mind terribly if I apologized again? It's just that this week has been one of the worst I have ever experienced. May I tell you about it? I suppose one of the good things about never hearing back from you is that you will never tell me I can't. 
As I write this it's Friday, and the dreadfulness started Monday. What makes everything seem worse is that the weekend was so wonderful. Ruby came for a visit, sporting gifts for all of us from her and Moody's recent visit to America. Seeing her glowing face (I think she may be expecting but if she is, I doubt she knows herself) and hearing about how happy she and her new husband are softened the blow of her departure from school last year and everyone had a delightful time. Then she boarded the train back to the Maritimes Monday morning and everything seemed to put on a shade of gray. 
For the rest of the day both me and Diana were terribly irritable in our sadness to see her go. Our crossness culminated that night when Diana and I had a horrible argument. I can barely recall how it started— I think that I made some offhand comment disparaging Gilbert and she jumped to his rescue, and everything devolved from there. We were shouting horrible things at each other that should never be said out loud, things we didn't truly mean but hurt regardless. We haven't spoken since and though I know we are both regretful I don't know how to approach her and I think she feels the same. Our friendship isn't over, at least, but I yearn for normalcy. Concentrating in class has proved near impossible, even in the classes Diana and I don't share, because I'm so distracted by my guilt and shame. 
To make matters worse, yesterday I checked my mail at the post office and what would be there but not one, but TWO rejection letters from literary magazines. I was reading them up in a secluded tree behind the library, thinking I was alone. The first was firm but polite in their rejection. We regret to inform you that we will not be accepting your work at this time, but please submit more work in the future. The kind of dismissal that comes with an impermanent sting. The next, however, was clearly more personal. The letter described my writing as infantile, superfluous, and shallow— I starting crying on the spot. In my twenty-one years of life, I've been on the receiving end of much harsh criticism, coming from my peers, my teachers, even those I considered my friends. I often turned to writing as a way of comfort and solace in those moments. The thought that I wasn't even good at my one talent was too much to bear. So in my privacy I sobbed harder than I had in years. 
But apparently my spot in the tree was not as concealed as I originally thought. Just as I was about to collect myself and climb down, I heard a man clear his throat and call up to me, "Miss, are you alright?"
I looked down and almost fell off the branch as I realized who it was. "Gilbert?" I exclaimed. 
He looked surprised to see me, a wonder since that day I wore a bright yellow dress and my hair is as red as ever. "What are you doing up there?" he asked me, knitting his eyebrows together in that infuriating way he always does. "Have you been... crying?"
I shook my head but I'm sure it did nothing to hide my frazzled state. 
"Do you need help coming down from there?"
"No," I said but he offered me a hand anyway and I accepted it. 
As I brushed the leaves and bark from my skirt he asked me, "Would you like a cup of tea?"
My meltdown had caused me to miss lunch so I accepted. At the tea house, he as always volunteered to pay for everything which I found frustrating but I've gotten more used to Gilbert over the years.
We talked idly for a while. I asked him about his classes. He's a medical student, did I tell you that? Not in medical school yet, but in a pre-medical program. With all of his money, I don't know why he needs a career but I suppose you have to do something to fill your days. Anyway, I knew this term he's had a number of terribly strenuous courses and I was curious how he was handling them. Everything was going well, he said but didn't appear that interested in talking about himself. 
"Do you want to talk about why you were so upset earlier?" he asked me suddenly. "I would understand if you don't, of course, but perhaps if you told someone you'd... feel better."
I sighed and pulled the letters from my pocket, handing them over to him. He scanned them quickly, raising his eyebrows. 
"Wow," he said once he finished reading. "How could they be so..."
"Blunt?" 
"Wrong," he finished. "These people clearly know nothing. "
I was a bit nonplussed at his reaction. "I should have worked harder on the stories, instead of rushing to send them in. I'm more angry at myself than at those who rejected me."
Gilbert shook his head. "Your work is far from shallow, Anne. If you wrote it, then I'm sure it was amazing." He scoffed at the letter. 
“I didn’t know you had read any of my writing,” I said. 
“I read your articles in the newspaper,” he was quick to reply. 
“Oh. Well, I wouldn’t judge my writing on those little book reviews in the newspaper.”
“No— I meant the newspaper back home. In Avonlea. Bash would send them to me here, and I always loved what you wrote. Everything you wrote carried so much meaning. That stuck with me.”
"Well, thank you, Gilbert," was all I really could say. I felt a strange burst of affection towards him at that moment and it struck me that we are truly friends. Close friends, as close as I am to Priscilla, Phil, and Stella. 
Gilbert has changed these last few years, too. It's the strangest thing. When I first met him and he was a boy of fifteen, he was much like every other boy I met back then— confident, rowdy, foolhardy. Then his father died and on the rare occasion he came back to Avonlea, he seemed to have retreated into himself. We blamed it on the grief and all of the money he came into with his father's inheritance (and, reportedly, that of a wealthy aunt). But recently traces of the old Gilbert, the one who defended me from Billy Andrews and called me Carrots, have resurfaced. I don't know really how I feel about all that. I just know that I was incredibly thankful to have him as a friend yesterday in the tea house. 
Anyways, I know that all of that might have been too personal. I'll stop myself now as I hear Diana coming up the stairs and writing this letter has motivated me to mend things with her. I’ll write more to you in a few days with updates on my courses and all of that (everything is well, don’t worry) but I simply wanted to tell someone. 
Thankful as always, 
Anne Shirley-Cuthbert
P.S. It’s Saturday now and Diana and I are on good terms again. I showed her the letters and she too thought they were preposterous. Diana has read the stories I sent in and liked them a lot. Because of her confidence and my talk with Gilbert on Thursday I’ve decided to send you one of my stories. I know you at least like my writing so perhaps someone will enjoy them. 
PART II.
“It still doesn’t feel real,” Anne told Diana as they walked, arm-in-arm, through the front doors of the lecture hall. “Can you believe that it was three years ago that we first walked into this building for our first class?”
“We were terrified, if I recall,” said Diana. “Look at us now— tall, beautiful, intimidating senior girls!” She struck a pose, silly and exaggerated and the two dissolved into giggles. 
They found seats, two right next to each other near the front of the room. Twenty minutes early as they liked to be to every class on the first day, only a few other students had yet arrived. 
“I remember being frightened of the older girls when I was a freshman,” Anne said, pulling out her notebook and pen and placing them squarely on the table in front of her. “Now that I am one, I don’t know what there was to be frightened of. I scarcely feel older than I did back then.”
“Do you think that there will be many lower-years in this class?” asked Diana. 
“I don’t know. If this course was offered my first term here, I would have stopped at nothing to take it.” Anne breathed out dreamily. “To think we’ll be studying only contemporary women writers— this is exactly the kind of course I envisioned taking when I first thought about going to college.” 
“It’s too bad that the others couldn’t fit this into their timetables.”
Anne sighed. “Such is the busy life of a senior. Everyone says that we’ll have loads and loads more coursework this term but I think that I’ll hardly notice if the extra work is something I enjoy. Don’t you agree?”
Diana nodded firmly, and the room started to fill up with other students, mostly girls but a few boys showed up as well. Their instructor, the soft spoken but kind Professor Abbott, arrived five minutes prior to the class’s scheduled start time. He walked through the front door, trailed by none other than Gilbert Blythe, and the two seemed to be engaged in conversation. As they approached the chalkboard and instructor’s desk, Gilbert thanked the man and they shook hands before Gilbert left him. 
“Hello Anne, hello Diana,” Gilbert said, standing in front of their table. “May I sit next to you?”
One of the only free seats in the room was right next to Anne, so she nodded, then asked, “You’re in this class?” 
Gilbert sat down. “I’m here, aren’t I?”
Diana gently elbowed Anne for her rudeness. “We’ll be glad to see you at least twice a week now,” Diana said. “Last term we could barely catch a glimpse of you once a month.”
He chuckled. “Yes, the medical faculty keeps us quite busy. If this is how rigorous pre-medical program is, I can’t even begin to imagine the real thing.”
“You’ll get used to it, I’m sure,” Diana said. 
“I have no choice,” replied Gilbert, sardonic but Anne could tell he was in a good mood. 
Up front, Prof. Abbott ordered a red-faced sophomore boy to hand out papers with the reading list. He had prepared one paper for every three students, so Anne, Diana, and Gilbert shared a paper.
“Oh no!” Anne exclaimed as she read one title on the list. 
“What happened?” asked Diana. 
“I forgot to bring a book with me from home. This one here— Elizabeth and Her German Garden— I read it last summer and meant to bring my copy from home so I didn’t have to purchase another. But now I realize that I forgot to pack it, and we’re reading it next week.”
“Don’t despair, Anne, you can borrow mine when I’m done reading the assigned sections,” offered Diana. 
Gilbert cleared his throat. “Actually, I happen to have an extra copy, if you wanted it, Anne.”
Anne perked up. “Really? Thank you, Gilbert!”
After class ended, Gilbert and Anne said goodbye to Diana and started the walk to Gilbert’s nearby apartment. Gilbert leading Anne, they reached his street only a few minutes later, as Gilbert lived only a street or two away from the main campus of the University of Toronto. The houses that lined the road embodied wealth and luxury. Though she had never been there, Anne knew that Gilbert lived in a small but ridiculously comfortable apartment at the top of one of these red bricked buildings. 
She had never been on his street, either, but still the name— Sherbourne Street— felt familiar. As the two ascending the stairs of Gilbert’s building, Anne realized why: somewhere on the street, among its seven miles of fancy house after fancy house, live Anne’s mysterious benefactor. 
Anne laughed out loud. 
Gilbert turned around and threw up an inquisitive eyebrow. “Is something funny?”
“Oh, nothing,” said Anne. “It’s only that the world of the rich is so remarkably tiny, don’t you agree?”
“I suppose so,” answered Gilbert. “Why do you say that?”
They reached the top step and Gilbert pulled out his key to open his door. 
Anne told him, “I’ve realized that you live on the same street as someone I know.”
Gilbert paused, his key only halfway in the lock. “Oh? Who?”
“Well, I’ve never met him. This might sound strange, but he’s— are you going to open the door or not, Gilbert?”
“Oh. Sorry.” Gilbert let them in. “You were saying?”
“He’s an old rich man who’s been paying for my education. I’ve never seen him in person, you see, but I’ve written him letters for the last three years so I feel like I know him quite well.”
Anne followed Gilbert through his apartment, which was quite larger than it appeared on the outside, until they ended up in a large library room with a fireplace and massive chairs with vast, soft-looking cushions. It was exactly the kind of library Anne yearned to possess herself, where she could sit with a warm cup of tea on a cold winter’s day. 
“The book is over here,” Gilbert said, pointing to a shelf and directing her there. “So… your… old man has written you back often, then?”
“Well, not exactly. But I believe that you don’t have to know a person to know them.”
“That doesn’t make much sense at all, Anne.”
She pouted. “Never mind then. Maybe it isn’t meant to be understood by anyone else but me.”
He laughed, then, a soft chuckle that surprised Anne in its clarity. He pulled a book off the shelf. “Here it is,” he said, handing over his copy of Elizabeth and Her German Garden. 
As Anne took it graciously, she couldn’t help but notice that he didn’t have another copy on the shelf but decided not to mention it. 
~
The rest of the course was as enjoyable as Anne and Diana had hoped. Tuesday morning before class often brought Anne, Diana, and Gilbert together to a nearby tea house to eat lunch and discuss the week's readings. Anne looked forward to their meeting more than almost anything else. Gilbert seemed to appreciate the literature as much as Anne and Diana, even though the books were by women. He was able to offer both a male and medical opinion, the latter of which being particularly valued in their discussion of The Yellow Wallpaper. Both Anne and Diana thought his enjoyment curious, but their instructor was also a man after all. It wasn't so strange, and to have a man appreciating the words of a woman rather than the other way around was empowering to Anne as a writer herself. 
Anne had never seen Gilbert so relaxed as he was during their Tuesday morning book discussions. Usually, in most other occasions when their paths crossed, Gilbert always seemed to be in such a rush, stressed out about business, or class, or some other small thing. Anne had always felt sad for him because of this, but to see him truly at ease painted him in a different light in her mind. His presence became something welcome, more soothing than it had ever been. She had realized they were good friends less than a year ago, and she wondered if Gilbert's father had never died, if business had never kept him away from Avonlea, they would be as good of friends today. 
The term flew quicker than Anne had anticipated, as it was want to do, and soon Christmas was over and exam season was upon them. Anne barely caught sight any of her friends for those two weeks, as everyone boarded themselves in their rooms to study and write essays. The only person Anne saw with any sort of regularity was Diana, which only happened because the two shared a room. 
The Monday of the second exam week, Anne and Diana decided to take a much-deserved break, going for a stroll in a nearby park to clear their minds. 
"Have you seen Gilbert lately?" Anne asked Diana. 
"No," said Diana. "I imagine he is incredibly busy with his own exams. Studying for our exams is hard enough. Can you even imagine what his must be like?"
Anne shuddered. "I would rather not. While I find the human body and all its functions endlessly fascinating, I've caught a glimpse of his more complicated textbooks. I won't be joining the pre-medical program any time soon."
"At the very least, we'll see him at the exam for women's literature," said Diana. 
But when the day came, Gilbert did not show up. Diana and Anne showed up their usual twenty minutes early, expecting to see their friend, but he was nowhere to be seen. 
As the minutes to the exam's start passed, Anne became nervous for her friend. She rose from her chair and said to Professor Abbott, who was seconds away from starting the test, "Excuse me, sir, but shouldn't we wait until Gilbert is here?"
Professor Abbott fixed her with an odd look. "Mr. Blythe won't be sitting the exam."
Had something happened? Had Gilbert dropped the course last-minute? That couldn't be right. He had attended every class. 
Anne badly wanted to ask why, worried about her friend, but Professor Abbott gave her no room to do so, starting to read the instructions for their timed essay. She wrote a fine essay, though it took her longer than it would have had she not been so distracted by the empty spot next to her. When the exam finished, Anne wasted not a second to ask her instructor what he had meant. 
"Mr. Blythe was only auditing the course," was his answer. "Therefore, he did not have to take the exam. I thought you knew that, him being your beau." 
Heat rushed to her face. A younger Anne might have argued that Gilbert was not her beau in the least, but today she thanked him and left with Diana. 
On their walk home, Anne clung to Diana's arm and asked, "It seems very strange that Gilbert would audit a course." 
"It's not so strange," replied Diana. "Gilbert has always been interested in literature, and likely wanted an excuse to read more without having another exam to prepare for."
"Why do you think he didn't tell us?" asked Anne. 
Diana peered at her, a curious glint in her eyes. "I have a suspicion." 
When Diana didn't elaborate immediately, Anne stopped them in the middle of the walkway. A disgruntled set of girls behind them rolled their eyes to wind around them. 
"What is it?"
With a small grin, Diana answered, "I think Gilbert took the class because of you."
"Me?!" Anne said incredulously. "Why would Gilbert do that?"
"You really don't know?" 
"Know what? What is there to know?"
"Never mind," Diana said slyly, pulling them back into motion. 
"Diana, quit messing with my head and tell me." 
Diana laughed. "Are you saying that you really don't see the way he looks at you? He obviously loves you."
Anne didn't say anything, trying to wrap her mind around Diana's words. 
Sighing, Diana continued, "If you don't believe me, just ask him yourself."
Anne huffed, confused at her irritation. "I think I will."
It took a few days to pin down Gilbert, as his exams kept him busy and occupied at the few moments he was usually reliably free. But finally Anne managed to catch him at their favorite tea house, reading a newspaper and sipping a cup of coffee, and sat down without invitation. 
Gilbert looked surprised to see her there. "Anne, hello." He folded his newspaper and set it down in front of him. "Not that you're unwelcome, but what are you doing here?"
"Stella said she saw you here," Anne said.
"Oh," said Gilbert. "Well, do you want something? On me, of course."
"No. Actually, I have a question. An important question. Well, maybe it's not so important, but it could be. Depending on your answer."
"Anne— just... ask the question."
Gilbert looked a little nervous himself, shifting in his chair. 
Anne took a breath. "Right. Sorry. I was only wondering... why did you take the Women Authors course?"
"Oh." He was quiet for a moment and Anne studied his face. "Well, I wanted to educate myself, I suppose, about literature written by women. I felt I didn't know much about the subject."
Unsatisfied, Anne shot back, "You decided to take an extra class for no reason in your last year of the pre-medical program?"
"I wanted to read something other than dry medical books. I'm sorry... did you want another answer?"
Anne sighed and stood up, more dejected than she thought she'd be. "No. I was just being silly. I'm sorry for bothering you, Gilbert. I should go."
"You don't have to."
"No, I should. I have a letter to write."
~
FROM THE DESK OF ANNE SHIRLEY-CUTHBERT
1 May 1904 
Dear Mr. Smith, 
It felt right to address you in a more formal manner today because we have formal matters to discuss. As I graduate in three weeks, I imagine that this will be my last letter to you for some time. Don’t worry, I intend to tell you as soon as something big happens with my writing. You’ll be the first to know, before Marilla or Matthew or even Diana. I could never forget that you are the reason I was able to go to school and reach my full potential. Because of you, I’m not stuck at Green Gables, shoveling hay alongside Jerry or teaching at the small Avonlea school house and never seeing the world for the rest of my life. 
You’ve already given me so much, Mr. Smith, and it doesn’t feel right to ask for more but I can’t help it. It would feel even less right to graduate without you in the audience, watching me. 
Say you’ll come, won’t you? I know you wish to remain anonymous. Your decision to hide your identity has been my constant turmoil for the last four years and I don’t think I could bear to go out into the world without putting a face and a name to the man who has changed my life completely. 
Please don’t be afraid that you’ll disappoint me. Is it presumptuous to tell you that? For all I know, you don’t care about me one bit and haven’t read a single one of my many, many letters. But if you have, and if you have found any meaning in them at all, please tell me you’ll come. I already love you with all my heart. 
If you are brave enough to come, I have included in this envelope the invitation. Matthew and Marilla regrettably can’t make it so if you come, you’ll be the only one there specifically for me. If you aren’t, then I’ll try to forgive you. I’m not sure I’ll be able to, but I’ll really, really try. 
Hoping to see you soon, 
Anne Shirley-Cuthbert
~
“Perhaps he’s running late.”
Anne slumped against the stage wall. “There’s no use. He isn't coming." 
Diana pulled back an inch of the stage's curtain once more. She must have seen the same empty seat as before, as she said, "I'm very sorry, Anne."
"What are you two up to?" 
Anne and Diana turned to see Gilbert, dressed in the same black and white graduation robes as them. 
"We're trying to see if Anne's benefactor has shown up," Diana informed him.
Gilbert adopted a pained expression, a crease forming between his eyebrows. "No luck so far, then?"
"The ceremony starts in five minutes," said Anne miserably. "He isn't coming. I don't know why I expected any different. I've written him for four years with barely any response. I'm a fool for thinking today would be any different."
Diana crouched next to her, placing a reassuring hand on her back. "You're not a fool, Anne."
"Perhaps he got called away on urgent business," said Gilbert, with a tone perhaps meant to be reassuring but that came out with a slight irritation. "You never know."
"He's a coward," Anne declared, crossing her arms. "He never cared about me at all."
"You can't possibly know that," Gilbert said. 
"Yes, I can. I can just feel it."
Gilbert infuriatingly pointed out, "Just last month you could feel that he was a kindred spirit."
"Would you stop taking his side?" 
"I'm not taking his side," Gilbert insisted. "But perhaps your day wouldn't be ruined if you tried to consider things from his perspective—" 
"I'm glad to graduate. Then I can finally wash my hands of rich men trying to control my life!"
Gilbert was quiet for a moment. "Is that all you think of me? Just another rich man controlling your life?"
Anne huffed but before she could respond, the professor organizing students called for graduates with B last names. 
Diana stood up next to Anne. "We should probably go line up, Gilbert." 
As they walked away, Diana turned around to shake her head at the other girl, sympathetic but disapproving, a look Anne had been on the receiving end of many times over their nine years of friendship. 
Anne tried to compose herself after that, tried to still enjoy the moment she had anticipated for all her life. But as she walked across the stage, she couldn't stop her eyes from stinging or her heart from aching. 
~
After the ceremony, the University arranged for a banquet of sorts for the recent graduates and their families. When picturing the moment in her head in the weeks prior, Anne had imagined her and her benefactor, who showed up perfectly on time for her graduation and had instantly turned into a grandfather of sorts, walking arm and arm through the crowd so she could introduce him to all of the people she had mentioned in her letters over the years. But in the face of the actual thing without any new friend or grandfather figure, Anne wished to skip the ordeal altogether. 
Still, she had watched the graduations of other students older than her with jealousy for three years, anticipating her own shining moment. So Anne changed out of her robes, put on the new dress Marilla sent her as an apology for not being able to attend, a beautiful, soft blue thing, and resolved to enjoy herself. If she had to avoid Gilbert, then so be it. 
Anne, Diana, and Diana's family sat at a large table under the largest white tent that Anne had ever seen. The sunset cast a pink and orange glow about everything and the faintest chill of evening air had begun to take hold, bringing a divine atmosphere to the banquet. Anne had almost started to relax when Gilbert approached their table. He had something in his hand which he seemed insistent on hiding behind his back.  
He first greeted the Barrys, who always loved Gilbert Blythe, and then turned to Anne. "I was wondering if we could talk." 
Anne swallowed and nodded. Gilbert led her to a bench under a tree, away from the crowds of people. 
"Look, Gilbert, if this is about earlier today, before the ceremony..." Anne was quick to say, "I'm sorry. Really, I am. I had a horrible moment and ruined the day for you, too."
Gilbert shook his head. "I was trying to comfort you, but I only made things worse. And truly I am sorry that you were disappointed so sorely today."
"You aren't to blame," Anne told him. "It's Mr. Smith that I'm the most angry with."
"Right." He cleared his throat. "Well, I didn't bring you here to apologize. I mean not just to apologize. I mean— these are for you."
He held out a bouquet of flowers, beautiful pink camellias, which Anne only now noticed were the object he hid behind his back. 
"Oh, Gilbert, these are beautiful," she told him, eagerly taking the bouquet from his hands. "This is the most lovely apology I've ever received."
Gilbert looked down, a small smile forming on his mouth. "It's not just an apology. It's also a thank you." Then he looked at her, the smile growing to fullness. "You don't know how... valuable your companionship has been these last four years."
Heat rushed to Anne's cheeks as she thought of her reprehensible behavior towards Gilbert the first few years of her time at the University of Toronto. "Even after how horribly I treated you freshman and sophomore year?"
"I probably deserved that," Gilbert said, laughing. "After I left Avonlea, I barely spent any time with people my own age who didn't own at least three homes. I'm afraid I often forgot to act around normal people."
"Still, I could have been a little less harsh." 
"Perhaps that's true."
"So I'm a normal person, then?"
"You're anything but, Anne Shirley-Cuthbert." 
They were quiet for a moment. The wind rustled the leaves of the tree above them as the final few rays of sun sunk below the horizon. 
Suddenly, Anne had to ask a question with an urgency that surprised her. "Gilbert," she said. "This isn't a goodbye, is it?"
He looked at her in surprise. "No. Never." 
"Oh. Good," Anne said, relieved. 
Gilbert looked like he was about to say something, but at that moment a little girl with light brown skin and curly black hair ran up to him. She couldn't have been more than four. He laughed, picking the little girl up.
"Who is this?" asked Anne, not thinking about how disappointed she felt in that moment. 
"This is Delly, my friend's daughter," Gilbert said. He stood up and sighed. "I should probably get her back to her family."
Anne stood up as well. "Yes, probably." 
He walked a few steps away before turning around. Again, he looked like he wanted to say something. Instead, he picked up Anne's hand with his free one and kissed it. "I'm really proud of you, Anne."
Her heart beating loudly in her ears prevented her from making any response, and she was only able to watch him walk away, back to the crowds of people, as she tried to reckon with her own feelings. 
~
A | S | C
1 June, 1904
To my forgiven benefactor, 
I know I said that the last letter would be the last letter. I had thought that because I had imagined the last week would go a lot differently than it has. 
If you had come to my graduation, there would have been no reason to continue sending letters in this manner. As I intend to stay in Toronto for the foreseeable future, I had pictured us having tea once a week and discussing books and my writing and the weather or any number of other things. But, as we both know, you did not attend. Before it happened, I had thought that I could never forgive your absence. I know I said that I would try but I was already certain that I wouldn't be able to forgive you. But I have surprised even myself. 
I have realized that I don't know you at all, Mr. Smith, and have made my peace with this. I didn't come to this conclusion easily, that much is certain. I haven't the faintest idea why you never wanted to write back to me, or why you didn't come to my graduation. Perhaps you were busy. Perhaps you have not read a single letter I've sent. Perhaps you were as scared to meet me as I was to meet you. Whatever the reason, I'm afraid I have lost sight of everything you've given me. If our relationship, however one-sided it is, ends with scorn, then every time I think about University and all of the opportunities it has afforded me I would have to think about my anger. A younger Anne would have been content to live that life, but I certainly am not. So there you are, Mr. Smith. This young, foolish girl forgives you. 
I've only now realized how valuable writing these letters has been for my personal development. You are my closest confidant. You know things about me that even Diana doesn't know, which is saying a lot. Had you responded, then I doubt that I would have been as honest as I was. If you'll allow me to be honest one more time, I have quite the dilemma. You see, these letters have allowed me to sort through confusing feelings and I feel more confused right now than I had ever been. 
You see, Mr. Smith, I think I am in love. I wish you could help me. I could use some wisdom right now. As much as I have longed to be in love my whole life, I never thought to think about what it would actually be like. 
When I'm with him, time doesn't exist anymore. And then he leaves, I'm aware of how quickly time passes by and I want to sob. I want to share everything there is. I want him to be there in the morning when I make porridge and I want to be there with him when he's doing the most boring business possible. Every time I read a good book, or think a funny thought, I wish he was next to me so I can tell him about it. At night I hate the moonlight because it's beautiful and he isn't here to see it with me. Do you understand what I mean? I really, really hope that you do. I think anyone who has ever been in love would understand. 
Here is my problem and the source of my anguish: the man I am in love with is Gilbert Blythe. This may come as a shock to you, since I have frequently spoken ill of him in my letters. For this very reason, I am afraid I preemptively damaged my relationship with him permanently. We have since become close friends, but how could he forget how horrid I was to him, enough to love me back? I'm sure he'll also want to be with a distinguished woman from wealth, like that beautiful Winifred Rose I spotted him walking arm-in-arm with last February. I will forever be the red headed orphan girl who slapped him with a slate when I was thirteen. 
I know you won't respond, but I still have to ask you. What do you think I should do? If you could just read this letter and think your answer really, really hard then I am certain I will feel better. 
I will miss writing these letters and I will miss you, Mr. Smith. I will continue to think of you every day of my life. 
Sending you all the love in my heart, 
Anne Shirley-Cuthbert
P.S. In this envelope I have included my final transcripts as well as a check for $100. The check is not for much compared to all that you've given me but it's a start and I intend to pay you back every penny that you have spent on me. I received a small sum of money for a short story that will be published soon, and it's a start. 
P.P.S. Did you notice my new stationery? I bought it myself also with the money from the advance. 
A | S | C
6 June 1904
Dear Mr. Smith, 
YES! I will be there— Saturday at noon. I can’t believe that I am finally going to meet you. It doesn’t feel real. 
Love, love, love, 
Anne
~
Once Anne arrived at the address told to her by Mr. Smith, she recognized the building as the tea place she, Diana, and Gilbert went to nearly twice a week during the Fall term. Had her and her benefactor ever been there at the same time? Had they ever crossed paths before, said hello to each other on the street without knowing each others' identity? For the first time in nearly four years, how close they lived to each other truly struck Anne. She knew he lived in Toronto, even knew what street he lived on thanks to the return address on the stationery he sent her every birthday. But they knew about the same businesses, ate at the same places! 
All that time being so close and yet he still never made an effort to visit. Anne wondered if she would come to regret her choice to meet Mr. Smith here today. But she was too curious and had come so far. So she pushed her shoulders back in resolve and entered the tea house with as much confidence as she could muster. 
A waiter in a nice blue jacket greeted her immediately. 
"I'm here to meet with Mr. Smith," she told him.
Comprehension bloomed on the waiter's face. "You must be Ms. Shirley, then. Follow me."
He escorted her past large rooms with tables full of people eating lunch, past the kitchen door, past the restrooms, to a private tea room with a large window facing the park across the street. A large table sat in front of the window, meant to accommodate a large party of people. A single figure stood in the window, a silhouette in the face of the bright sunlight that streamed inside. This was it. She would finally meet her benefactor. Anne's heart stopped as the man slowly turned around. Only, when he did, he wasn't Mr. Smith. He wasn't even an old man. 
He was Gilbert Blythe. 
"Gilbert?" Anne cried. "What are you doing here? 
"Hello, Anne." He swallowed visibly. 
"You must leave now. I'm meeting someone very important and undoubtedly he'll be here soon, so if you could—"
"I know," Gilbert said. 
"If you know, then you know why you must leave," Anne told him, irritation setting him. She approached him to try and push him towards the door. "How you could possibly know is another thing. Did Diana tell you? I told her not to tell anyone."
"No, Anne—" He paused, firm in his footing and grabbed her gently by the shoulders. "I know why you're here because you're here to see me. I sent you that letter."
"Did you impersonate Mr. Smith?" 
"No, what I'm trying to tell you is..." he dropped his hands from her shoulders and moved one to scratch at the back of his head. "I couldn't impersonate Mr. Smith. Because he's me."
Well. Anne wasn't expecting that. She stopped in her tracks, mouth agape. 
"Please, say something," Gilbert begged, a tremor to his voice. 
"You?" was all that she could get out. 
"You're Mr. Smith." 
Blood rushed to Anne's face and she felt her heart and breath speed up dangerously. She grasped the back of a chair, tightly clutching the wood. 
Gilbert pulled out another chair. "Perhaps you should sit down." 
She did take a seat, but it wasn't the one he offered. "You're my mysterious, anonymous benefactor."
He gave a feeble laugh. "One in the same." 
"I don't understand. How can you be Mr. Smith? You're not even old."
Sitting next to her, Gilbert said, "I never understood why you always wrote about my old age. I certainly never said that." 
"Rich men who give orphan girls enormous scholarships are old. That just makes sense," Anne told him, nearing hysteria. She didn't know whether to laugh or cry. "They aren't pre-medical students I hit with a slate when I was thirteen!" 
"I owe you an explanation. That's why I—"
Anne's hands flew to her mouth in shock. "My goodness, the letters! Every horrible thing in the world about you I wrote in those letters!"
"You said a lot of things to me in person, too," Gilbert pointed out dryly.
"That's different! I didn't know I was insulting my benefactor to his face!" If it were possible, Anne felt her face growing even warmer. She surely looked like a tomato, with her face red enough to match her hair. "And you read my letters?"
"Every single one. They were the best part of my month."
"Every single one?" Anne echoed. "I suppose there's no hope that you skipped the last one, then?"
"I meant every one." 
She buried her face into the table. "If Mr. Smith had been my matron from the orphanage, it would have been easier to take."
He patted her back awkwardly. "Well, I'm not so bad, am I?"
Anne wanted to scream, taking a deep breath to avoid doing so. "Could you just promise to forget about the last letter and never mention it ever again?"
"I'm afraid I could never do that, Anne." 
"And why not?"
"Well, I— I just couldn't." 
"Why would you do this, Gilbert? I can't wrap my mind around it. I just don't understand."
Leaning back in his chair, Gilbert paused a moment before saying, "You wouldn't have let me pay for your education any other way."
"You still should have asked."
"Maybe so," Gilbert said. "But come on, Anne, I've known how stubborn you are since we were kids. I had the bruises to prove it. And when I heard that you had been accepted into the U of T but couldn't go because of money, well, I had to help."
"But why me?" Anne asked him. 
"You deserved it. And, well, maybe I was selfish."
"Selfish?"
He took a deep breath. "Maybe because I knew I was also going to Toronto. And maybe I wanted you there, too."
Anne didn't know at all how to respond to that. Her mind raced, replaying every moment they shared over the last few years. How her benefactor happened to know her birthday, when Gilbert had bumped into her at her own birthday party. How her benefactor didn't come to her graduation, when Gilbert was graduating himself. They even lived on the same street. Of course Gilbert was her benefactor. It made sense. 
"Why did you agree to meet now? Why not before?"
Gilbert exhaled loudly. "You don't know how many times I almost told you, or how many letters I started to draft but threw away before I could. I didn't know if I should be Mr. Smith telling you I'm Gilbert, or if I should be Gilbert telling you I'm Mr. Smith."
"Mr. Smith doesn't exist," she said. 
That made Gilbert go quiet. "I suppose he's not," he said finally. "Are you terribly mad at me?"
Anne sighed. "You lied to me and betrayed my trust for four years. I don't know how I could ever forget that."
"And yet?"
"And yet..." Anne was surprised to feel a smile forming and at last she laughed. "It's you, it's really you."
Hope or something like it bloomed on Gilbert's face. He grabbed her hand.
Anne told him, "You never answered my question."
Gilbert took a shaky breath. "Because," he said, "When I read your last letter, I realized you needed to know everything before I did this."
"Did what?" she asked, but she knew he was already leaning in. 
Gilbert kissed Anne, and while Anne had imagined her first kiss much more chaste, she put all of the emotions she felt into it. When they pulled back, Gilbert had a goofy grin adoring his mouth that she was sure matched her own. 
"Anne," he said urgently. "I love you."
"I'd tell you the same," she said, "but something tells me you already know."
~
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED 
TO THE WEDDING OF 
ANNE SHIRLEY-CUTHBERT
and
GILBERT BLYTHE
Saturday, October 4, 1904
3 o’clock in the afternoon
At the St. Andrew’s Church
Toronto, Ontario
Reception to follow.
 / fin
18 notes · View notes
royalcordelia · 3 years
Note
Ummm is there Anne and Gilbert smut fics? With the kind of beautiful words that Anne loves to use?? Thank you sm for doing this for us!!!!
There absolutely are! Here are the ones in my bookmarks! There will be AUs probably thrown in there because sometimes it's easier to write them banging it out in a setting that won't land them married lol. (There are varying levels of smut in these, so heed the tags and warnings listed by the authors. All the E stuff is the second half of the list).
we can follow the sparks (i'll drive) by peterpan_in_neverland
Hot Men in Kilts by Jacqualine
Ineffable Chemistry by jacksparrow589
cardigan by h0lyheadharpies
you and I, let's make the headlines by the_strangest_person
Flashover (n.) by peterpan_in_neverland
your loving is gold by Anonymous
Little Gifts by The_lazy_eye
The Mile High Club by xxPrettyLittleTimeBombxx
The Balm to my Weary Soul by orayofsunshine
Your Best Look by Electric-amp (Ohmygodnighttroll),
Confined by The_lazy_eye
A Summer Storm by WeirdTea
I Wanted To Kiss You Goodnight by xxPrettyLittleTimeBombxx
love is a uniting and binding force by illuminatiny (fleurdelilitu)
my girlfriend, who lives in canada by botanyclub
Willow by coffee666
Thunderstorms by coffee666
step into your skin (i'd rather jump in your bones) by swishandflickwit
Dear Mrs Gardner by BeckyBubbles
the hottest scandals don't always make the front page by the_strangest_person
i just want you (to take me where your heart is) by strayycatss
there's too much love by Anonymous
better than I do by Anonymous
In The Empire Of Thy Heart (Where I Should Solely Be) by RosalieBlack
For Your Eyes Only by xxPrettyLittleTimeBombxx
The Anatomist by botanyclub
The First Rule of Retail by The_lazy_eye
Moonlit, Starstruck by jacksparrow589
thy love is sweeter than wine by illuminatiny (fleurdelilitu)
Mercy by The_lazy_eye
disasters in modern comings-of-age (the party don't start till i walk in) by brothmobile
I Love Thee to the Depth My Soul Can Reach by cherry_knots
Milk by lollercakes
136 notes · View notes
fth2022fanworks · 2 years
Link
1 note · View note
lollercakesff · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
The first thing - the only thing really - that Cassian does when he's pulled into the stolen ship that Bodhi has dropped before them on Scarif's beach, is buckle Jyn in.
She isn't conscious.
She took the brunt of the soundwave's blast impact and it shows, in her limp frame, in the charred clothing that frays out from her wounds and the way her head rolls helplessly against her chest.
But she's alive.
Melshi had helped pull them in and within seconds they were lifting free from the sand, Bodhi's shout for help riddling through Cassian's brain as he double - triple - checked the safety straps.
"I need a pilot up here!" Bodhi calls and Cassian's hands shake as he clips the buckle closed over her slowly rising chest.
"Go, go!" Melshi orders, pushing Cassian to his feet. He stumbles a step, reaches back to double check the latch is firmly in place, and Melshi pushes him again.
"Don't touch me," he seethes, the memory of Aldhani flickering like it was only minutes ago and not years.
"She's secured - go," Melshi urges again and Cassian pulls away, dragging himself towards the cockpit through the pain that courses through him.
When he collapses into the seat he sees then why the pickup had been more of a crash than a controlled landing. Bodhi is pale, bloody, and one of his arms is currently belted with a tourniquet making it hang uselessly at his side. He'd landed the bird one handed, half drained of blood and clearly reeling from whatever had happened to him while they'd been in the data tower.
"I can do the calculations but you have the controls. We need to go now, before that reaches us," he orders, motioning wildly toward the tsunami that seemed like it was going to engulf them at any minute.
Cassian doesn't hesitate to spark the engine, instantly forcing the ship up off the sand with a growl of its engines.
"Is she secured?" Cassian calls back to Melshi, his hand hovering over the accelerator.
"Just go!" Bodhi screams and Cassian can't help himself - he takes the second to look back behind him just to be sure. He has to be sure.
Jyn won't be Nemik.
She won't be killed by his urgency.
He won't do it again. Can't.
"She's secured!" Melshi returns and Cassian hits the thrusters, propelling them with a vicious jolt up from the sand, from the planet and into the air. They climb and he hears Kay. He hears Nemik. The ghosts coming back to haunt him as he pulls the ship further into a vertical trajectory until they're above the wave and about to break atmo.
Bodhi calls the calculations and Cassian pushes the engine until only the gravity of a collapsing planet is pulling them backwards.
"I'm going to jump," he barks and Bodhi shakes his head.
"I haven't finished - "
"Hold on!"
It barely escapes his throat before he's lurching them into hyperspace and the view outside turns to streaks of light against the darkness.
It reminds him of The Eye and everything he'd lost for the Rebellion.
But it also reminds him of the hope that had brought him here. The hope that had saved him.
48 notes · View notes
thgfanfictionlibrary · 9 months
Text
Active Authors Masterlist (7)
Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4 / Part 5 / Part 6 /
***Active (on this blog) is defined as a blog/writer who has updated within the past year. Inactive (on this blog) is defined as a blog/writer that has not been updated at all in the past year+. On THG Writing Hiatus (on this blog) is a blog/writer who has updated within the past year but has not posted a fanfic in the fandom in the past year BUT they may return to writing in the future. Lists will be updated as needed based on activity. ***
Created: November 17th, 2023
Last Checked:-----
justme-kt (justmekt)-ao3, ff.net, tumblr
Popular Fic: One Night, Forever Maybe giving a false name to that beautiful blonde boy with the blue eyes wasn’t the best idea Katniss Everdeen had ever had. Modern Day AU.
Kiwiwriter47-ff.net
Popular Fic: Interview With The Mockingjay Here's a slightly different take on the events after "Mockingjay." A journalist from the Capitol's newspaper goes to District 12 to find out the real story - and come to terms with his own role in the Second Rebellion and his own lost love. Author's note: This story has become increasingly about the folks who fought the revolution and are building the post-war world.
lollercakes-ao3, ff.net, tumblr
Popular Fic: Swingsets I found out after that there are worse things than being Reaped. Worse than dying in the Arena trying to save the one you love. They don't tell you that the worst thing is to live after. It's not simple for a Victor. It's never that simple. (@lollercakesff)
marblesharp-ao3, ff.net, tumblr
Popular Fic: Something of Our Own Hazelle wants to rebuild, Haymitch tries not to tear everything down, and there are embers in ashes. or, Haymitch and Hazelle find themselves after the war. (@districtunrest)
mdr_24601-ao3, tumblr
Popular Fic: Best Laid Plans Finnick and Annie stood on the reaping stage, hands clasped protectively in each other's, District Four's tributes for the 75th Hunger Games. Or: Mags dies just a little too early, and not even Annie is safe from the Quarter Quell.
NotAnIslander-ao3, ff.net, tumblr
Popular Fic: Caged Bird After the trial for the shooting of Alma Coin, Katniss Everdeen is sentenced to five years labor in District 10. What happens when it's time to go home again?
Picabook82-ao3, ff.net, tumblr
Popular Fic: Privacy Modern Day AU: Peeta, Katniss and Gale have always been the best of friends. They're now in college. Peeta and Katniss have finally started dating. (Secretly) They are thinking of taking their relationship a step further. But they could really use some privacy to take it to the next level. Will they find it?
ThornFromARose-ao3
Popular Fic: Black Panties There are some things you can't change; and he'd always assumed hating Katniss Everdeen would be one of them. Little did he know that all it would take to change his mind was some little black panties....
tomorrowwillbekinder (StardewPeachy)-ao3
Popular Fic: Our Love Will See Us Through Based 10 years after the second rebellion, Katniss is having a bad day, so Peeta decides to bake her some cookies to cheer her up
walking-in-the-wind-ff.net, tumblr
Popular Fic: Still Learning To Love After Peeta discovers Katniss faked her feelings for him during the Games, will he ever be able to look past that? Katniss realizes Peeta is the missing piece in her life and wants to be with him, but things get tough as they return back to District Twelve after the Games. Edited, re-posted, previously titled Mending Broken Hearts.
12 notes · View notes
Note
Hello!
Was wondering if you could help me find a fic I read a long time ago where Katniss gets depressed. I think it’s a modern day one where she tries to attempt suicide but peeta is on the other side of the door telling her about a camping trip. Prim is involved and goes on runs with her I think
Hi, @sophdogga97
That sounds a lot like Lover's Eyes by lollercakes.
14 notes · View notes