i did my research and new hampshire reportedly didn’t have any drinking age laws until 1933. i’m not saying that jesse tuck was drunk 100% of the time but that’s exactly what i’m saying

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i did my research and new hampshire reportedly didn’t have any drinking age laws until 1933. i’m not saying that jesse tuck was drunk 100% of the time but that’s exactly what i’m saying
Everlasting Roses - March 21, 1810 (on Wattpad)
You've heard the story of the Tucks. But they weren't the first people to discover the spring; on the contrary, far from it. Zakinerose Witherman was born into a life of privilege. Her father gave her anything she ever wanted. Sadly at the age of 16, she was left to her whiles and wondered the shores of England when pirates took her captive, leaving behind her basket and wrap. After many years, she escaped and wandered lost and confused in a foreign land to her. Loss and tragedy followed her, and she was finally at her end. Zakinerose decided to lean against a tree and wait for death to take her. Death didn't come for she heard a trickle of water, and upon looking down, she discovered a small spring, and her thirst overcame her, and she instantly cupped her hands and began drinking some of the glorious liquid. As soon as the water touched her lips, she knew something had changed.
(Modern times... I guess this could be a side effect of the spring, sort of AU/angst...) The doctor remained silent, moving his eyes from the Tucks to Mae's medical records as Mae and Angus didn't dare to breathe. Wasn't the water supposed to protect them from getting sick? Was Mae going to be all right? Finally, the doctor spoke. "I'm not sure how to tell you this... but you're pregnant."
Mae felt as if her heart stopped as the doctor’s words left his mouth. She had started feeling ill a few weeks before. Indigestion wasn’t uncommon, even with the spring, but becoming sick was. And pregnancy was impossible.
She looked to Angus, a look of pure terror flashing across her face as her hand brushed against her abdomen for a brief second.
“Angus–?” she said softly, words scarcely audible. What did this mean? Was the spring wearing off? Was it a false pregnancy? Questions flooded through her mind, none of them offering any answers.
Angus took Mae out fishing once, but she wouldn't stop talking and didn't understand that finishing was more of a silent activity. She hasn't been out since.