Someone wrote in [community profile] concrit_x 2022-07-24 11:56 pm (UTC)

Hello! I read Crossing the Arkaig (https://archiveofourown.org/works/22245244), your Flight of the Heron Ewen/Keith story. (I'm not familiar with canon, so I apologize in advance for any of my questions/comments that are addressed in the books.) Enemies to friends to lovers, huddling for warmth, and sharing a bed are all things I love, and your execution is excellent.

To answer your specific questions:

Style and language: I'm unfamiliar with canon so unsure if this is a pastiche, but I love your style - straightforward, precise and economical, which I thought was fitting for a military man, and I thought Keith's character voice came across well in the narration (see below).

Plot (combining with Structure since my comments are similar): This reads like a fairly straightforward 'circumstantial enemies meet in trying conditions and have to rely on each other to get out of it; maybe forced intimacy and feelings realizations in the meantime' and I am delighted by your execution. The implied olive branch extended in having a meal and sheltering from the rain together, then they have to huddle for warmth, then it comes up that Ewen is injured and Keth's first instinct is 'What can I do to help', then they have to share a blanket to sleep and the proximity is of course unbearable to Keith, it's all very wonderful. The progression of trust and intimacy is excellent.

Characterization: I love how both Keith and Ewen understand rationally that they're circumstantial enemies, and it never quite leaves Keith's mind at least, but they can't help feeling goodwill for each other and being drawn to each other nevertheless.

For Keith, I get the sense of a man of duty who places the greater good over himself (if he remembers himself at all), who has found something worth respecting and valuing in this person who is supposed to be an enemy, and now is discovering Feelings(TM) (and correspondingly has very little idea how to deal with it). 'For years he had been cynical, eschewing any pursuit of human affection and turning to military ambition instead, but those defenses were now crumbling.' sums up well how his character came across to me in this.

Setting: I thought this had a good sense of place, and I imagine someone familiar with canon might be able to chart Keith's journey on a map. The description of camping by the stream feels real and evocative, and I especially love this line describing them settling in for a meal: Ardroy sank down on a rock and Keith went to his saddlebags, taking out bread and cheese and meat and filling his pewter mug in the stream. The weariness is palpable on both their parts: there's a sense of having travelled very far before they met up here, and much further to go once they part ways.


Some parts I especially enjoyed:

I love the heron references and sightings - going by the series title, I am guessing they're significant to the story? Independently of that, I think they're a beautiful and elegant visual too.

Keith knew he would not willingly have shown such weakness
Love the sense of how well they know each other. This was the point I noticed that even though they're on opposite sides of some conflict, they also have some personal history and probably goodwill built up between them.

Keith's heart went out to him, but he could find no words of comfort. Finally he said, and it sounded stilted to his own ears, 'Ardroy. I am not in the habit of criticizing my superiors. But I have no stomach for the punitive measures on this campaign.'
Tfw you don't have the slightest clue how to comfort but manage to convey 'I am sorry that happened to you' nevertheless. Love it.

There was nothing strange about soldiers sharing blankets for warmth, damn it.
Nothing strange unless one has a guilty conscience, Keith!

He found that his face was in Ewen's hair, which had come fully loose from its queue in the night.
<3 What a lovely and intimate image.

Keith glanced at Ewen and was startled to see the emotion on his face. 'I never thought I would see this again,' he said simply.
I love the strong emotion here, how Keith is seeing this moment of vulnerability and how Ewen is letting him see it.

'I suppose I have no choice but to let you go, then, since you are holding me at pistol point,' said Keith. 'And while you are at it, nothing would stop you from taking my horse as well.'
Yessss excellent strategic move, of course Ewen makes a break for it exactly like this, no collusion here at all, nope

I liked this story a lot, and I hope these comments help a little! All the best with your writing from here on out.

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