13 Works in Edmund Pevensie/Lucy Pevensie
Listing Works
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Summary
Edmund and Lucy try to bake and it gets out of hand. Incest, although both characters are above the age of consent.
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Will you Stay with me, my Love? by SolanumTuberosum
Chronicles of Narnia - All Media Types, Chronicles of Narnia (Movies)
15 Jan 2013
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Summary
“Not goodbye, Lucy love.” He murmurs softly, not quite quiet enough as Lucy can tell their siblings overheard, “A promise to come back.”
“Hopefully I’ll be back before the battle starts.” She muses, kissing the tip of her twin’s nose as he strokes her cheek with his thumb, his hand having moved up from her armoured waist to cradle her face, “We all know you’d be lost without me in a fight.”
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An alternative version to Prince Caspian where Edmund and Lucy had established a relationship during the Golden Age.Series
- Part 1 of I'll Come Back (When you Call me)
- Words:
- 22,939
- Chapters:
- 1/1
- Kudos:
- 3
- Hits:
- 222
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Summary
Lucy and Edmund put Caspian's cabin on the Dawn Treader to good use. Caspian likes to watch.
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sing a song about the room we're in by millepertuis
Chronicles of Narnia - All Media Types, Chronicles of Narnia - C. S. Lewis
20 Oct 2012
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She knows Lucy can’t remember their mother’s face, but Susan looks at Peter and can’t forget.
- Words:
- 1,017
- Chapters:
- 1/1
- Kudos:
- 3
- Hits:
- 349
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The maps of Narnia ended above the Wild Lands.
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I Thought I Lost You Somewhere by Clockwork_Sky (failsafe)
Chronicles of Narnia - C. S. Lewis, Narnia (Movieverse)
27 Jan 2011
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extrinsic
ex·trin·sic
–adjective
1. not essential or inherent; not a basic part or quality; extraneous: facts that are extrinsic to the matter under discussion.
2. being outside a thing; outward or external; operating or coming from without: extrinsic influences.Eustace hears them whispering at night. He keeps meticulous record of what he sees, what he understands.
The only problem is, he could never hope to understand.
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Peter wondered sometimes whether it hadn't all been a little too easy. He always felt guilty afterwards, because of course it hadn't been easy at all: Edmund had planned for years so that he and Lucy could run away together, and if it had all worked out, that was more a testament to Peter's brother's spectacular strategic skills than his luck. But it was still a little odd that everything had worked out, and worked out so well, and when Peter was feeling unhappy and existentialist, he liked to think that it was proof that something beyond mortal comprehension was looking out for the Pevensie children, whatever names and guises they took.
Series
- Part 5 of Where Have All The Flowers Gone?
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Queen Lucy the Valiant stood on her balcony, staring out at her beautiful, wonderful, eternal kingdom. A stranger might have assumed that, with such a vista, she would naturally be in the happiest of moods, but King Edmund the Just had known her all her life, and also was not an idiot.
Series
- Part 4 of Where Have All The Flowers Gone?
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Lucy skipped down the street, laughing to herself. It was so strangely easy to be happy this summer, though she was keeping even more secrets than ever. But Susan was happy, because Lucy had stopped nagging her about Narnia and Peter and started asking about skirts and haircuts, and Mother was happy, because Lucy had stopped moping around the house and started going out with her friends, and Lucy, well. Lucy was happy because every week she went out and stopped being Lucy Pevensie, and became Valentine Kirke: Val Kirke went dancing and to the movies and was wildly in love with Edmund Pevensie, and nobody batted an eye.
Series
- Part 3 of Where Have All The Flowers Gone?
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"For heaven's sake," Susan snapped, her patience exhausted. "It's all very well to play at houses with your brother when you're a little girl, but sooner or later you have to grow up and leave him behind! And that means going out and dancing and doing things you can't with boys you're related to!"
"I wouldn't want to grow up if I had to do it alone," Lucy said. "I don't know how you could."
Series
- Part 2 of Where Have All The Flowers Gone?
- Words:
- 1,293
- Chapters:
- 1/1
- Kudos:
- 3
- Hits:
- 884
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When the Pevensie children return from the land of Narnia, Lucy is a little girl again, but she remembers being a woman. She remembers that in Narnia, it didn't matter that Edmund was her brother.
Series
- Part 1 of Where Have All The Flowers Gone?
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In the Golden Age Terebinthia makes a visit of state, and Susan reaches for a new mythology.
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daughter of adam by Elendraug
Chronicles of Narnia - C. S. Lewis, Chronicles of Narnia (Movies), Chronicles of Narnia - All Media Types
5 Aug 2008
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Summary
There's nothing girlish about her movements, about her; not anymore.
