TITLE: An Equal Temper
AUTHOR: Lamia Archer
RATING: PG-13
FANDOM: Angel/Bones
PAIRING: Cordelia Chase/Seeley Booth, Cordelia Chase/Angel
SUMMARY: She had to survive until happily ever after.
SPOILERS: The entirety of Angel, especially season five. I’ve taken liberties; here, Cordelia wakes up in “You’re Welcome” and then does not go gently into the night. Through season one of Bones.
AUTHOR’S NOTES: For [profile] mjinaspen, as per her generous [profile] fire_fic donation. Thanks so much to [personal profile] myhappyface for the wonderful beta, and also for the title.


TITLE: Foul
RATING: PG
FANDOM: Bones
PAIRING: Brennan/Booth, non-shippy
SUMMARY: “Bones is . . . very literal.”
PROMPT: Written for the first [community profile] twicetoldfandom ficathon. This was my prompt.

Foul )



TITLE: Five First Kisses That May (Or May Not) Have Saved Angel’s Life
RATING: PG-13
FANDOMS: Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Bones
PAIRING: Buffy/Angel, Cordelia/Angel, Fred/Angel, Angel/Oz, Angel/Seeley Booth
SPOILERS: BtVS: “The Gift,” “Life Serial;” AtS: “The Prodigal,” “Through the Looking Glass,” “Fredless,” “You’re Welcome”
SUMMARY: Love’s first kiss. Awaken.
AUTHOR’S NOTES: For [profile] kita0610 and [personal profile] myhappyface, who really want Angel to get . . . kissed.


TITLE: Nocturne
RATING: PG-13
PAIRING: Angela/Booth, some Rebecca/Booth
SUMMARY: So, a guy and a girl meet at a bar.
PROMPT: a sidecar, a tavern, coffee; written for the [profile] bones_alt_ships ficathon #1.
AUTHOR’S NOTES: A million thanks to my phenomenal beta reader, [personal profile] myhappyface. You’re uniquely gifted at giving me direction and focus and – most importantly, sometimes – telling me where to cut. I cannot thank you enough.


Nocturne )



“This has always been one of my favorites.”

Booth peered intently at the canvas, eyes narrowing, and Angela smiled, holding her tongue on several squint jokes.

“It’s . . . what is it?”

Angela gently pulled Booth upright; he was getting so close to the painting that Angela was afraid museum security would intervene, and they’d spend the rest of the afternoon in a jurisdictional measuring contest.

“It’s a dog barking at the moon.”

“And you can tell this how?”

“For one, it’s the title,” Angela said, indicating the plaque beside the painting. “Plus . . . look at it.”

Booth frowned. “It looks like a clown humping a pudding mountain.”

“Pudding mountain?”

Booth motioned helplessly. “Well, it’s all . . . puddingy. And what’s with the ladder? Does the clown need help to get to the moon, or . . . ?”

Angela grinned. “How would you get to the moon?”

Booth abandoned his scrutiny of the painting and turned on Angela, his charm smile in full effect. He slipped his hands around her waist and pulled her close.

“I have some . . . alternative methods.”

“Jackie Gleason methods?”

Booth pinched her bottom, and she giggled.

“No,” he purred against her ear. “Like maybe we cut the museum trip short and—”

“Nice try, mister,” Angela said, and smoothly disengaged herself from his grasp. “But you promised me a full day of fine art.”

Booth sighed and followed her into the next room. He perked up considerably as he focused on one of the prints.

“Hey! This is—should this be in a museum?”

Angela smiled. “The human form is one of the hallmarks of art.”

He cocked his head, studying a charcoal silhouette. “Well . . . good. I mean, you know I try to . . . support the arts . . .”

Angela rolled her eyes. “Uh-huh. You’re a real aficionado.”

“A what?”

Angela smiled and took his hand, leading him further into the room. “I tell you what. If you’re good the rest of the afternoon, tonight I’ll see if we can’t make a few of these of our own.”

When Booth caught up with her train of thought, he smiled and picked up the pace.

“Really?”

“Really. I think you’d be a good model, all muscly and—”

“You want me to . . . ?”

“What? You’re an artist now? I saw that map you drew with the directions to the museum—”

Booth chased her into the next exhibit.


* The painting in question is Joan Miró's, "Dog Barking at the Moon"



Booth brought her chocolates. Her day was about to get really irritating.

Caroline glanced at the dull sheen of the chocolate box’s pressed-cardboard, then raised her take-no-prisoners gaze to her visitor.

“What do you want, Booth?”

Booth flashed his charm smile and rocked back on his heels a bit, his huge hands stuffed into his $1200 pockets. The paws on that boy.

“You always assume the worst, Caroline. I was in New Orleans, and I thought – hey! – my friend Caroline is in New Orleans; I should drop in and say hello. You know, be neighborly and all that.”

Caroline didn’t blink. Booth’s smile wavered a bit. “And then I thought, you know, as long as I’m here, I might ask you for a tiny favor. Since we’re friends and all.”

“A tiny favor? Seeley, I know I don’t have to tell you that prosecuting a federal case is not a tiny anything—”

“No! I promise, it’s not a federal thing. It’s just a tiny, local misunderstanding . . . a little jurisdictional dispute, that’s all.”

Caroline crossed her arms over her ample bosom. “Uh-huh. You need a parking ticket cleared up or something, cherie?”

The charm smile had all but faded; he had switched to his innocent schoolboy face. Caroline was in big trouble now. “No, just a little . . . as I may have stated, there was a misunderstanding . . . and my partner was arrested. A little.”

“You want me to pry a prisoner away from the NOPD? What’d she do, cher, forget to feed the meter?”

Booth squirmed under Caroline’s unwavering gaze. “She’s been falsely accused—”

“You know damn well I don’t care how she was accused. What’s the charge?”

Booth tongued his cheek. “Murder. But it’s—”

“Honey, you’ve got no good sense. A murder charge is a little misunderstanding and a tiny favor? I should—”

Booth grinned. “I brought you chocolates.”

“You brought me trouble. As usual.”

Booth just kept smiling. That boy could smile paint off a wall.

Caroline sighed. “Let me get my coat. You owe me, Seeley.”

“I already owe you, Caroline.”

“I know it,” Caroline said, letting Booth help her into her coat. “Don’t think this’ll slip past me, either.”

“Nothing gets past you,” Booth said amiably.

“Don’t you forget it, cher.”

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