A Brand New Sky [for whenfearlosespower]
As George had hoped for all of them:
Now that he was more or less recovered from being shot and at back at work again; Harry and Adelaide were married and home from their honeymoon; nearly all of the awkwardness between him and Harry had resolved itself; and no one was dying, returning from the dead, showing up announced to cause drama, being cheated on or kidnapped, starting scandals, or otherwise causing a disruption in their lives--they were finally able to start settling into a routine. Having a life together, instead of just weathering an endless chain of events together.
Which was basically what the past year or so had felt like. Events, one after another, tripping them up and holding them back and running them over and leaving them tangled in the wreckage, hardly able to catch their breath before the next calamity hit. His mother would say God was testing them--or testing him, since she didn’t know it was a journey all three of them had been on. Him, Harry, and Adelaide. Together. (Or not at all. He was fairly certain that still held true.) Maybe God was testing them. He shouldn’t even be here, sharing this life with them; they shouldn’t have ever invited him to share it, so they were all being punished as a result. Well, the joke was on the good Lord above, then. They’d made it through the proverbial storm. They’d made it through and they were all the more stronger and--dare he say--happier for it.
Adelaide resumed her work at Scotland Yard, having made it clear to Chief Inspector Merring that she expected to be treated just the same as she had been before her marriage. When she was in uniform, she was still Constable Stratton. She would put in the same hours with the same dedication as she always had--the first to arrive, and the last to leave. For his part, Merring informed the bullpen that anyone caught addressing her by her married name would find themselves written up. Mrs. Houdini did not work with the London Metropolitan Police. Special considerations, malicious jokes, and any form of harassment would not be tolerated either. (Harassing Adelaide Stratton was his job, thank you very much.)
George continued on with desk duty. Merring had taken to pairing him with Adelaide on assignments, even before the wedding; he’d come around to accepting that she was actually competent at her job--shutting down an anarchist cell tended to have that effect--as well as recognizing that she and George worked well together. (If he believed that was due to George having stepped in on enough of her cases with Harry and Doyle, and having warmed up to her after she helped save his life, well... they didn’t disabuse him of that notion.) She did the interviewing and evidence collecting, he did the analyzing and hard thinking. It was almost funny that Merring didn’t even see it as handing Adelaide the real bulk of the cases; in his eyes, pounding the pavement was drudge work, and it kept her out of his hair to boot. George accompanied her when he could, which wasn’t nearly as often as he would like.
It was still more than a little humiliating, having to admit that he really wasn’t capable of much exertion beyond the degree of, say, a brisk walk. (That non-shag with Harry? Had ended up doing him in for the rest of the day.) It had been over six months since that horrible night in Spitalfields, and George was still a shadow of the man he had been. Physically limited, easily tired, in constant pain. He almost didn’t even notice the pain anymore, not unless something happened to make it flare up--it had become a part of his existence like his heartbeat, or breathing, or blinking. Just there. Always there. Hovering around the edges of his consciousness, wearing him down. The doctors had repeatedly emphasized the fact that his recovery would be a very long one--in their estimation, he was still only just getting started--but it was still very disheartening at times.
George kept all this to himself. He’d made the choice to throw himself in front of that bullet, and he’d done so accepting whatever consequences came of it. (Up to and including his death.) That meant he didn’t get to complain about the disabilities he was now living with. It was difficult at times, and he hated being so limited, but he would still make that choice all over again if he had to. No question. He had vowed to do everything in his power to keep Harry and Adelaide safe, and regardless of Harry’s thoughts on that vow, George had every intention of keeping it. For as long as they would have him, and even beyond that.
This was his life now, and despite the hardships, he was the happiest he’d ever been.