would you let daniel kessler come down your throat (
mumblemutter.livejournal.com) wrote in
crack_van2010-07-30 12:01 am
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What It Is and What It Is Not by mandysbitch (NC-17)
Fandom: HEROES
Pairing: Nathan Petrelli/Peter Petrelli
Length: ~23,000 words
Author on LJ:
mandysbitch
Author Website: N/A
Why this must be read:
This story starts with Peter in college and ends shortly before the first episode. It's long, satisfying and frequently hot (that's what she said), while never shying away from the unfortunate truth: with all the love and devotionand inappropriate touching between them, Peter and Nathan are exceptionally bad for each other. It about sums up the appeal of the pairing for us and will be our last rec this month. Thank you for reading, and if you liked a fic, don't forget to tell the author! -A.
"I wish I'd been around more," Nathan says. "When we were kids."
"I would have liked that," Peter says. When Peter was growing up, Nathan was an enigmatic stranger who made messiah-like appearances at Thanksgiving, Christmas and summer vacations at Cape Cod. Peter has vague memories of throwing his arms around Nathan's leg and begging him not to leave.
"Must have been lonely," Nathan says.
Peter shrugs. "I had Grace," he says. "And Leah, and Darlene, and Shandra, and Ilsa." Peter had nannies whose names he can't remember. His mother didn't want him to become attached to one nanny in case she left and broke his heart. As it turned out, he became attached to all of them, and they all left.
What It Is and What It Is Not
Pairing: Nathan Petrelli/Peter Petrelli
Length: ~23,000 words
Author on LJ:
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Author Website: N/A
Why this must be read:
This story starts with Peter in college and ends shortly before the first episode. It's long, satisfying and frequently hot (that's what she said), while never shying away from the unfortunate truth: with all the love and devotion
"I wish I'd been around more," Nathan says. "When we were kids."
"I would have liked that," Peter says. When Peter was growing up, Nathan was an enigmatic stranger who made messiah-like appearances at Thanksgiving, Christmas and summer vacations at Cape Cod. Peter has vague memories of throwing his arms around Nathan's leg and begging him not to leave.
"Must have been lonely," Nathan says.
Peter shrugs. "I had Grace," he says. "And Leah, and Darlene, and Shandra, and Ilsa." Peter had nannies whose names he can't remember. His mother didn't want him to become attached to one nanny in case she left and broke his heart. As it turned out, he became attached to all of them, and they all left.
What It Is and What It Is Not