Summary: Ray thought he knew snow. He remembered the blizzard of '79. Hell, he was pretty sure he could remember the one in '67, too. This, though, this was ridiculous.
Basically this is a stream of consciousness from Ray's POV from the time they jump out of the plan in CotW until they ride off into the sunrise together. In the middle, it gets increasingly muddled due to the incipent hypothermia, but mostly it's just Ray being Ray.
I've always been on the fence as to when Ray realizes his feelings for Fraser have gone beyond, "Gah! What a ginormous FREAK," but for sure he's twigged to it when Vecchio shows up again, so a lot of it woudl probably be him trying to decide how he's going to *keep* Fraser since it's so very obvious how much happier and in his element he is when he's in the Great White North.
I also like to think about all the grisly ways he imagines Thatcher meeting her demise when she interrupts the conversation by the fire.
no subject
fandom: DueSouth
pairing: Fraser/Kowalski
Rating: NC17
Summary: Ray thought he knew snow. He remembered the blizzard of '79. Hell, he was pretty sure he could remember the one in '67, too. This, though, this was ridiculous.
Basically this is a stream of consciousness from Ray's POV from the time they jump out of the plan in CotW until they ride off into the sunrise together. In the middle, it gets increasingly muddled due to the incipent hypothermia, but mostly it's just Ray being Ray.
I've always been on the fence as to when Ray realizes his feelings for Fraser have gone beyond, "Gah! What a ginormous FREAK," but for sure he's twigged to it when Vecchio shows up again, so a lot of it woudl probably be him trying to decide how he's going to *keep* Fraser since it's so very obvious how much happier and in his element he is when he's in the Great White North.
I also like to think about all the grisly ways he imagines Thatcher meeting her demise when she interrupts the conversation by the fire.
Heh.