Bull Moose and Butterknife [1900]
darthcourt10
Well worn.
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2018
- Messages
- 7,972
- Likes received
- 30,855
Yellowhammer
Bull Moose and Butterknife
Sagamore Hill, Oyster Bay, New York
March 5th, 1900
Spoiler: TR
"Hello Theodore, Edith." A woman's voice caused the middle aged man to turn and adjust his pince-nez glasses. A broad smile showing his white teeth underneath his bushy brown mustache split his face in a grin.
"Delilah de Breuil, as I live and breathe! Bully! What brings you out here?" Theodore's voice boomed out to fill the parlor where he had been writing while his wife taught his youngest son the alphabet.
Edith politely nodded, getting a return nod from Delilah, who was well aware of the woman's preference not to shake hands with anyone but the closest of friends. Which Theodore was to her, she mentally added as his firm handclasp and squeeze caused her eyes to water with the vitality and force in it.
Delilah returned the hand-grasp as best she could while wondering -- not for the first time! -- if Theodore one day would leave dents in her steel body with one of his handshakes.
She glanced briefly at Edith. "I just got back from handling some business in the Dakota Territory, and thought you would like to see a daguerreotype of my most recent trophy. Also I wanted to stop by and meet your youngest. Hello Quentin, I'm Delilah de Breuil. Your father and I met out in the Dakota Territory in 1883 and we have been friends ever since."
"Just so, just so!" Theodore exclaimed as his son looked at the auburn-haired woman. "I was surprised to meet someone from society out that way, much less an equestrian and crack shot. Those were the days, weren't they... our first buffalo hunt."
Delilah smiled wistfully as she accepted a glass of apple cider from the servant. "Indeed they were, Theodore, indeed they were. Days that made us all realize what a wild and wonderful country that we have been given by a gracious and generous God. A land that we are called upon to be good stewards of."
The adults nodded as Delilah leaned forward. "I know other members of the Republican Party have spoken to you about taking up the open Vice-Presidential spot on the ticket beside President McKinley since poor Hobart died of a weak heart in office four months ago. I know that you have publicly said that you shall not pursue or accept the nomination. And I know how stubborn you are about your word, you bull moose. All I shall ask of you as your friend is when you go to the Party Convention as a delegate, keep an open mind about events. Nothing more, nothing less. If you are called upon to serve by your fellows, well, God calls us to our roles and His ways are always to the benefit of us all."
Theodore Roosevelt stared into her eyes, bright blue meeting leaf green then nodded slowly. "'There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries. On such a full sea are we now afloat. And we must take the current when it serves, or lose our ventures.' I'll go with an open mind, Delilah."
Delilah's lips curled in a smug smirk. "Shakespeare has a way of cutting to the heart of matters. Now, you have to see the size of this she-grizzly that came out of the Black Hills to prey on my cattle...."
-------------------------------
Gardiner, Montana
February 19th, 1903
President Theodore Roosevelt stepped away from the cornerstone of the new entrance arch to the world's first national park that he had just laid. Flashes and smoke showed the photographers practicing their craft. He gave his patented broad grin underneath his graying mustache then walked over to the group of friends and dignitaries who had taken the new rail line to the entrance that was being constructed under his watch.
Delilah winced once again as he clasped her hand hard enough to produce a pained hiss. The man that the papers called the Human Dynamo, The Lion, and the Rough Rider grinned and leaned in. "A good start, Delilah. Those laggards in Congress will pass the bill to expand our conservation and protection programs of the wilderness and Mother Nature for generations yet unborn to enjoy and profit from as we have if I have anything to say about it. And I do!"
Delilah gave a matching smug grin as she thought of the talisman that she had persuaded Theodore to include as part of the time capsule that was now buried at the entrance to Yellowstone. A talisman that was not just a 'gift from an Indian friend who was my ranch manager in the Dakotas' but also the keystone of the wards that she was going to activate tonight to conserve and protect Yellowstone's magical places as well.
Another small step for MACUSA alongside the no-maj efforts that her friend was pioneering to one day make America the great and good nation that it had the potential to be. For all its people, black, red, yellow or white. Man or woman. No-maj and wizard. Human and nonhuman one and all.
Tears of joy filled Delilah's eyes and voice as she responded, "A good start indeed Theodore. A very good start on the great task remaining before us all that we so far have nobly advanced."
Theodore looked as if he was going to ask her a question, but then shook his head, gave her a smile filled with respect, and moved on to the next person.
-------------------------------
Rio da Dúvida ("River of Doubt"), Amazon Rain Forest, Brazil
March 17th, 1914
"In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree; In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree; In Xanadu...." The words spilled forth in a broken endless torrent of phrases from the rail thin man who thrashed by the dying campfire. A jaguar's scream from the darkness of the rain forest punctuated the feverish babble of maddened words. Another thrash of his gaunt body in the throes of the fever that was eating him alive showed his injured leg, the gash crudely bandaged with angry red and purple streaks runnign the full length along with the myriad of mosquito bites from that had given him and the others malaria and yellow fever.
Delilah de Breuil, equally haggard, exhausted, starved, and sick wearily crawled over and grasped Theodore Roosevelt's skeletal hand. She choked out in a hoarse croak. "I'm here Theodore. Just as I promised you and your son Kermit when you decided on this expedition." Her thin fingers squeezed the burning feverish flesh loosely hanging from the bones of the near-dead man.
Delilah's tears filled in her eyes as Theodore Roosevelt gasped out once more, "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree; In Xanadu..." An endless stream that was all that he could comprehend as the fever baked him alive as it had for the last nine days. Even her subtle spellcasting and her last healing potions could do nothing more than give her great friend a fighting chance as he wrestled with Death.
She pulled out a canteen of water from the uncharted river that they were mapping and tapped her wand to it to purify the life-giving fluid, before raising it to his lips. "Here, drink, Theodore." She whispered. "Please, do it for me, old friend. Please."
Automatically he swallowed and his hand squeezed hers briefly in wordless thanks as fresh tears trickled from her eyes. Then his hand relaxed as she tore a strip of cloth from her tattered safari uniform to dab warm water on his forehead to try to cool him.
He coughed and then fever-bright blue eyes focused on her face. "D-- Del?" His hand grasped hers with a tithe of his normal crushing grip and she gasped.
She wept in relief and covered her mouth with one dirty hand as his fever finally broke. "H-hoow..." he gasped out as he looked at her. "It was... wasn't it?"
She hesitantly nodded.
He nodded once in understanding then grasped her hand with all the strength in his body. "W--when you go f-f-f-orward..." A gasp and he pinned her with his stare. "Remember me."
She squeezed back in an unbreakable grip. "Always, Theodore. Always."
-------------------------------
Roosevelt Family Cemetery, Oyster Bay, New York
January 6th, 1947
"Edith." A quiet voice from one of the two veiled women approaching the elderly lady in a wheelchair sitting alone next to a tombstone.
"Delilah." A nod from Edith Kermit Roosevelt as the black wool of her mourning garb rustled. "Who is your friend?"
Delilah knelt and laid a bouquet of lilies on the grave. "Zamarad. She is... well..." A brief hesitant smile. "Special to me."
The Ifrit nodded politely and laid her own bouquet down on the snow-covered grave.
"Ahh..." Edith said. "How Progressive of you. That explains a few things. I always wondered why..." she trailed off.
Delilah nodded and spoke in an emotion-filled hushed voice. "This is part of why. Also I knew him when his first wife died. I was -- am -- unsuited to fill the hole in his heart that he had then. But you did what I never could do for him."
Edith spoke quietly in turn, "So you brought her to meet him then?" She shook her head with a small fond smile."Twenty-eight years gone today and yet he looms large over all our lives."
Delilah wiped tears from her eyes. "You, and he, deserved to know the truth about me, or as much of it as I can reveal without breaking my oaths. Zamarad came over to America after the War, and I'm teaching her to love it as I do, as you do... as he does. We honeymooned at Yellowstone and I explained about his dream there when I showed her what we all saw."
Edith spoke reminiscently with a smile that illuminated her aged face. "He dreamed large and well and then surpassed his dreams. The saying about him was right. 'Death had to take him sleeping because if Theodore was awake, there would have been a fight.'"
Delilah laughed in agreement. "Just like the Old Lion fought off Death in the Amazon before my eyes."
Edith looked at Zamarad as her maid approached to wheel her inside the house. "It is pleasant to meet you, dear. Take good care of Delilah when we are gone into the dust."
Zamarad nodded. "I have been exceptionally blessed to know her, Edith."
Delilah linked her hand with Zamarad's, their wedding rings glinting and looked at the grave of the 26th President of the United States. "and I am exceptionally blessed to know you and Theodore, Edith. Rest assured you will be remembered for all that you were and did."
"Always."
Bull Moose and Butterknife
Sagamore Hill, Oyster Bay, New York
March 5th, 1900
Spoiler: TR
"Hello Theodore, Edith." A woman's voice caused the middle aged man to turn and adjust his pince-nez glasses. A broad smile showing his white teeth underneath his bushy brown mustache split his face in a grin.
"Delilah de Breuil, as I live and breathe! Bully! What brings you out here?" Theodore's voice boomed out to fill the parlor where he had been writing while his wife taught his youngest son the alphabet.
Edith politely nodded, getting a return nod from Delilah, who was well aware of the woman's preference not to shake hands with anyone but the closest of friends. Which Theodore was to her, she mentally added as his firm handclasp and squeeze caused her eyes to water with the vitality and force in it.
Delilah returned the hand-grasp as best she could while wondering -- not for the first time! -- if Theodore one day would leave dents in her steel body with one of his handshakes.
She glanced briefly at Edith. "I just got back from handling some business in the Dakota Territory, and thought you would like to see a daguerreotype of my most recent trophy. Also I wanted to stop by and meet your youngest. Hello Quentin, I'm Delilah de Breuil. Your father and I met out in the Dakota Territory in 1883 and we have been friends ever since."
"Just so, just so!" Theodore exclaimed as his son looked at the auburn-haired woman. "I was surprised to meet someone from society out that way, much less an equestrian and crack shot. Those were the days, weren't they... our first buffalo hunt."
Delilah smiled wistfully as she accepted a glass of apple cider from the servant. "Indeed they were, Theodore, indeed they were. Days that made us all realize what a wild and wonderful country that we have been given by a gracious and generous God. A land that we are called upon to be good stewards of."
The adults nodded as Delilah leaned forward. "I know other members of the Republican Party have spoken to you about taking up the open Vice-Presidential spot on the ticket beside President McKinley since poor Hobart died of a weak heart in office four months ago. I know that you have publicly said that you shall not pursue or accept the nomination. And I know how stubborn you are about your word, you bull moose. All I shall ask of you as your friend is when you go to the Party Convention as a delegate, keep an open mind about events. Nothing more, nothing less. If you are called upon to serve by your fellows, well, God calls us to our roles and His ways are always to the benefit of us all."
Theodore Roosevelt stared into her eyes, bright blue meeting leaf green then nodded slowly. "'There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries. On such a full sea are we now afloat. And we must take the current when it serves, or lose our ventures.' I'll go with an open mind, Delilah."
Delilah's lips curled in a smug smirk. "Shakespeare has a way of cutting to the heart of matters. Now, you have to see the size of this she-grizzly that came out of the Black Hills to prey on my cattle...."
-------------------------------
Gardiner, Montana
February 19th, 1903
President Theodore Roosevelt stepped away from the cornerstone of the new entrance arch to the world's first national park that he had just laid. Flashes and smoke showed the photographers practicing their craft. He gave his patented broad grin underneath his graying mustache then walked over to the group of friends and dignitaries who had taken the new rail line to the entrance that was being constructed under his watch.
Delilah winced once again as he clasped her hand hard enough to produce a pained hiss. The man that the papers called the Human Dynamo, The Lion, and the Rough Rider grinned and leaned in. "A good start, Delilah. Those laggards in Congress will pass the bill to expand our conservation and protection programs of the wilderness and Mother Nature for generations yet unborn to enjoy and profit from as we have if I have anything to say about it. And I do!"
Delilah gave a matching smug grin as she thought of the talisman that she had persuaded Theodore to include as part of the time capsule that was now buried at the entrance to Yellowstone. A talisman that was not just a 'gift from an Indian friend who was my ranch manager in the Dakotas' but also the keystone of the wards that she was going to activate tonight to conserve and protect Yellowstone's magical places as well.
Another small step for MACUSA alongside the no-maj efforts that her friend was pioneering to one day make America the great and good nation that it had the potential to be. For all its people, black, red, yellow or white. Man or woman. No-maj and wizard. Human and nonhuman one and all.
Tears of joy filled Delilah's eyes and voice as she responded, "A good start indeed Theodore. A very good start on the great task remaining before us all that we so far have nobly advanced."
Theodore looked as if he was going to ask her a question, but then shook his head, gave her a smile filled with respect, and moved on to the next person.
-------------------------------
Rio da Dúvida ("River of Doubt"), Amazon Rain Forest, Brazil
March 17th, 1914
"In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree; In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree; In Xanadu...." The words spilled forth in a broken endless torrent of phrases from the rail thin man who thrashed by the dying campfire. A jaguar's scream from the darkness of the rain forest punctuated the feverish babble of maddened words. Another thrash of his gaunt body in the throes of the fever that was eating him alive showed his injured leg, the gash crudely bandaged with angry red and purple streaks runnign the full length along with the myriad of mosquito bites from that had given him and the others malaria and yellow fever.
Delilah de Breuil, equally haggard, exhausted, starved, and sick wearily crawled over and grasped Theodore Roosevelt's skeletal hand. She choked out in a hoarse croak. "I'm here Theodore. Just as I promised you and your son Kermit when you decided on this expedition." Her thin fingers squeezed the burning feverish flesh loosely hanging from the bones of the near-dead man.
Delilah's tears filled in her eyes as Theodore Roosevelt gasped out once more, "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree; In Xanadu..." An endless stream that was all that he could comprehend as the fever baked him alive as it had for the last nine days. Even her subtle spellcasting and her last healing potions could do nothing more than give her great friend a fighting chance as he wrestled with Death.
She pulled out a canteen of water from the uncharted river that they were mapping and tapped her wand to it to purify the life-giving fluid, before raising it to his lips. "Here, drink, Theodore." She whispered. "Please, do it for me, old friend. Please."
Automatically he swallowed and his hand squeezed hers briefly in wordless thanks as fresh tears trickled from her eyes. Then his hand relaxed as she tore a strip of cloth from her tattered safari uniform to dab warm water on his forehead to try to cool him.
He coughed and then fever-bright blue eyes focused on her face. "D-- Del?" His hand grasped hers with a tithe of his normal crushing grip and she gasped.
She wept in relief and covered her mouth with one dirty hand as his fever finally broke. "H-hoow..." he gasped out as he looked at her. "It was... wasn't it?"
She hesitantly nodded.
He nodded once in understanding then grasped her hand with all the strength in his body. "W--when you go f-f-f-orward..." A gasp and he pinned her with his stare. "Remember me."
She squeezed back in an unbreakable grip. "Always, Theodore. Always."
-------------------------------
Roosevelt Family Cemetery, Oyster Bay, New York
January 6th, 1947
"Edith." A quiet voice from one of the two veiled women approaching the elderly lady in a wheelchair sitting alone next to a tombstone.
"Delilah." A nod from Edith Kermit Roosevelt as the black wool of her mourning garb rustled. "Who is your friend?"
Delilah knelt and laid a bouquet of lilies on the grave. "Zamarad. She is... well..." A brief hesitant smile. "Special to me."
The Ifrit nodded politely and laid her own bouquet down on the snow-covered grave.
"Ahh..." Edith said. "How Progressive of you. That explains a few things. I always wondered why..." she trailed off.
Delilah nodded and spoke in an emotion-filled hushed voice. "This is part of why. Also I knew him when his first wife died. I was -- am -- unsuited to fill the hole in his heart that he had then. But you did what I never could do for him."
Edith spoke quietly in turn, "So you brought her to meet him then?" She shook her head with a small fond smile."Twenty-eight years gone today and yet he looms large over all our lives."
Delilah wiped tears from her eyes. "You, and he, deserved to know the truth about me, or as much of it as I can reveal without breaking my oaths. Zamarad came over to America after the War, and I'm teaching her to love it as I do, as you do... as he does. We honeymooned at Yellowstone and I explained about his dream there when I showed her what we all saw."
Edith spoke reminiscently with a smile that illuminated her aged face. "He dreamed large and well and then surpassed his dreams. The saying about him was right. 'Death had to take him sleeping because if Theodore was awake, there would have been a fight.'"
Delilah laughed in agreement. "Just like the Old Lion fought off Death in the Amazon before my eyes."
Edith looked at Zamarad as her maid approached to wheel her inside the house. "It is pleasant to meet you, dear. Take good care of Delilah when we are gone into the dust."
Zamarad nodded. "I have been exceptionally blessed to know her, Edith."
Delilah linked her hand with Zamarad's, their wedding rings glinting and looked at the grave of the 26th President of the United States. "and I am exceptionally blessed to know you and Theodore, Edith. Rest assured you will be remembered for all that you were and did."
"Always."