http://deputychairman.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] deputychairman.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] crack_van2013-11-27 02:44 pm
Entry tags:

Five Confessions, by Kindkit (explicit)

Fandom: due South
Characters: Benton Fraser/Ray Kowalski
Length: 4,570 words
Author on LJ: http://kindkit.livejournal.com/
Author on AO3: http://archiveofourown.org/users/kindkit
Why this must be read:

I love post CoTW fic. I love first time post CoTW fic, I love established relationship post CoTW fic, I love are we actually in a relationship if we are in different countries? post CoTW fic. And while due South is my happy place, I especially love fic that acknowledges that even though they obviously, indisputably, luminously love each other these two people might find it difficult to be in a relationship, even more so if they are doing it long-distance. There are practical obstacles and emotional obstacles for them to cope with, and these are different from the sort of challenges they were so good at facing as cop partners.

So I love this fic because it looks at all that, and steers them through to a convincing happy ending. Warning: it's an infidelity fic, and I know not everybody wants to read that. But this one deals with real, messy, human emotions. Ray is lonely and he makes a mistake and he suffers for it, and this story is how he deals with that and how he tries to make it right. It's nuanced and realistic, and even though we can't (and aren't supposed to) condone what he did, we can understand and empathise with how it came to happen, and the choices he makes later to try to not hurt Fraser.

So yes there's some angst here, but it finishes in a happy place. That's what I love best - fic that acknowledges real world problems, and then solves them convincingly, so that I can whole-heartedly believe that Ray and Fraser are real and they sledded off into that sunrise and lived happily ever after. (I told you, it's a coping strategy, ok?)


Five Confessions
desireearmfeldt: (cloak)

[personal profile] desireearmfeldt 2013-11-27 02:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Huh. I'm pretty sure when I first read that story (a while back), I didn't think it had a happy ending. But I didn't actually remember the details, so when I read your rec I went back and looked and... I can't actually tell whether I think that's a happy ending or not. I can make an argument for either, and they both sound equally convincing to me.

It's...uncomfortable, at the very least. (Which is what makes it such a powerful story.)
desireearmfeldt: (Ellen & Geoffrey "Me Too" scene)

[personal profile] desireearmfeldt 2013-11-27 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Ambiguity indeed.

Hope....or rationalization and self-deception?

A relationship built on dishonesty...or sparing them both not just pain but potentially the destruction of a relationship that doesn't have to be destroyed?

Owning one's mistakes and moving on...or pushing them under the rug and evading punishment and taking the easy way out?

I think you can read the story any of those ways.

The question of "how important is honesty, and is it better to know the painful truth or to be spared it?" is something I kind of obsess over, both in life and in fiction. :)

(See all the plays Oscar Wilde wrote that were not The Importance of Being Earnest, for a manifesto in fiction about why honesty is not always the right thing to do.)