ptahrrific: Jon and Stephen, "Believe in the me who believes in you" (fake news)
Erin Ptah ([personal profile] ptahrrific) wrote2007-09-02 01:15 am
Entry tags:

Fake News: Expecting, Epilogue

Title: Expecting, Epilogue: Whom Anchors Guard And Pundits Sing
Series: The Colbert Report
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: Heavy stuff. And, y'know, sex.
Words: ~3000
Disclaimer: Two.

For the Report characters: They and their universe are property of Stephen Colbert, the other Report writers, and of course Viacom. Not mine. Sue me not, please.

And for the real people, the poem:
Please, make no mistake:
these people aren't fake,
but what's said here is no more than fiction.
It only was writ
because we like their wit
and wisecracks, and pull-squints, and diction.
We don't mean to quibble,
but this can't be libel;
it's never implied to be real.
No disrespect's meant;
if you disapprove, then,
the back button's right up there. Deal.

Notes: This story has been a blast to write, and the feedback has been incredible. Thank you all for reading, commenting, encouraging, enjoying, and taking a chance on mpreg in the first place.

Here, at last, it comes to a close. Enjoy.

Clips referenced: Stephen and Steve's arrangement.

For the full table of contents to this story, click here.




Epilogue
Whom Anchors Guard And Pundits Sing


December 25, 2007
Six Months (And Counting)


Every wall on the ground floor was adorned with pictures: portraits, photographs, and paintings, of all shapes and sizes, in all types of frames.

At one time each of them would have been a variation on the same subject. And, it must be admitted, most of them still did; Stephen had enough images of himself to wallpaper the place. But the bulk of these were packed away, and in between the ones still hanging, new things were starting to appear.

After his father, George was the most common subject. He was in everything from professional portraits to glossy photos to hundreds of everyday photographs arranged in massive collages.

Other pictures included high-quality stills from the 2007 Emmys, the largest showing Stephen holding aloft the Report's first; a photo from Stockholm, featuring Dr. Moreau and colleagues accepting their Nobel Medicine Prize; that year's school pictures for Stephen's older children; and a portrait of Jon standing in front of a portrait of himself, in which each version of him was giving the other a dubious look, as if to say, "Why did I agree to this, again?"

Pictures were not limited to the walls. A desk in the den was crowded with little frames and Christmas cards. Foremost of these was the one with the family picture from the Fey-McGee household, and right behind it one with a photo of Tad and Bobby on a beach wearing Santa hats and colorful leis. It was a wonder there was any space for the Christmas decorations at all.

But somehow there were streamers, and baubles, and tinsel, and ribbons, and lights, and mistletoe (real mistletoe, not plastic, not holly), and the biggest fir tree Jon had ever seen. Until this morning, there had been space to walk around, but not much.

Now you couldn't take three steps without running into some of the debris that will inevitably be left by the opening of enough presents for four adults and three children, plus packages from thousands of eager fans across the country, plus all the extra gifts that Stephen had pressed upon Jon in his self-appointed quest to make up for every Christmas that Jon, as a Jew, had "skipped".

Rather than try to navigate the mess, Jon was leaning contentedly back in one of the plush chairs in the living room. Lights in the tree sparkled. Charlene, two chairs down, was in the midst of a story about the time she got lost in Aix-en-Provence.

She had moved in with Stephen, to the delight of the Colbert Nation. Even if her stories were as exaggerated as Stephen's usually were, she had had enough adventures that Jon could believe she was content to take care of a house for a while.

And the joint Christmas celebration had been Stephen's idea, because the Colberts and the Stewarts were exchanging so many gifts that it made sense to pile them under one tree.

"You all right, hon?" asked Tracey from the chair beside him.

"Hm? Yeah, fine. Sorry, did I space out?"

"A little." She was giggling a bit; Charlene must have ended the story on a joke. Jon had missed it completely.

And the story was over, because Charlene had stopped talking. She and Tracey exchanged a look as a slightly awkward silence descended.

"Hey," said Jon, "don't let me keep you two."

That had been Stephen's idea too.

("Steve and I used to do it," he had explained, when he realized that the other three were giving him slightly scandalized looks. "Except then Lorraine and Nancy decided they liked each other better, and that left me with Steve, and we had angry sex a few times but it didn't really work out, so we called the whole thing off."

This kind of arrangement had never occurred to Jon, but when he thought about the first thing his wife had said to him after meeting Charlene — "I think I understand what you see in Stephen now!" — it made a weird kind of sense. Still, everyone but Stephen was surprised when, after the two women had gone out a few times, it fell smoothly into line.

The four of them ran on basically the same model that Stephen and Steve had used, except that with this group there was no pot involved, and when they were all in their own homes Stephen and Charlene did not actually sleep together. Most of the world assumed that they did, and that was fine with Jon. It drew attention away from the fact that, when they all spent the night at one house or the other, Charlene was Tracey's, and Stephen was his.)

"We can't just take off," protested his wife. "You'd be left by yourself."

"He's right in the next room. It's no big deal. And besides, if it doesn't go well, he might not want a crowd around."

"That's true," agreed Charlene.

"If you're sure," said Tracey. "We're on Nate duty tonight, right?"

"I think so. Yeah."

All three children were in their respective bedrooms, which for Jon's kids meant guest rooms permanently reserved for them. The adults could have been guaranteed full nights of sleep on occasion if one couple had been responsible for all of the kids at once, but Stephen refused to to let anyone else be responsible for George, so the women were generally in charge of Maggie and they switched off on Nate.

This, too, had been working remarkably well.

"Got it." She climbed out of her chair and waded through drifts of wrapping paper to his, where she leaned over and gave him a light kiss. "Merry Christmas."

"Merry Christmas, Trace."

He watched the two shuffle through the mess towards the hall. As they were turning the corner he saw Tracey's arm curl around Charlene's waist and squeeze; then he closed his eyes entirely and listened to the muffled voice of Stephen from the next room.


♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦



It wasn't long before Stephen came out, grinning in that helpless way he had when he was happy about something completely innocent.

"How'd it go?" asked Jon, grinning back.

The news poured out of Stephen as he waded over to sit down on the arm of Jon's chair. Sally had been in the Christmas pageant, and Mary had gotten an A on her last test, and John Paul was speaking in complete sentences now, "and they all loved their presents, Jon, they never used to do that, but I sent the things Lorraine suggested and they loved them!"


Jon let his arm rest around the other man's waist. So rarely seen in public without a tie and a pressed collar, tonight under his robe Stephen was wearing only his favorite flag boxers and an Alpha Squad 7 T-shirt. Jon himself was in khakis and a blue patterned shirt, which was one of those presents from Stephen, "because you can't wear solid grey all the time, you need to branch out a little."

"That's great," he said every time Stephen paused for breath, which wasn't often. "Wonderful. Fantastic."

"And I got to talk to them, Jon, all of them, even..."

He trailed off at last, smile fading a little.

"Even Ty?" prompted Jon.

"Yeah. Even...Ty."

Stephen looked at the floor. "I can't call him that, Jon! He hates it when I call him Stephen, or Steve, or Junior, but he's not a Tyrone!"

Jon didn't push the matter. He understood all too well why the name set Stephen off, more so even than Caesar salads and the collected works of Edgar Allen Poe.

On their first few nights together Jon had found it hard to remember his own name, let alone pay close attention to Stephen's emotional state — for while Jon admittedly hadn't had much to compare it with, he could tell the man was talented — but eventually he had started to notice that, during what you might call key moments, Stephen was simply not there.

They talked about it, because if Jon had learned anything in the past year it was that he and Stephen had to talk about things. At last it had come out that Stephen had dealt with those behaviors that he was ashamed of by cutting them off from himself. He didn't just use the name "Tyrone Hunnibi"; he became Tyrone Hunnibi.

It was, as defense systems go, brilliant. After he moved into mainstream industry, every so often he would turn into Tyrone again and log on to a certain type of web site or hook up with someone in the restroom of an Outback Steakhouse, and it didn't matter what happened next because when it was over he would turn back into Stephen T. Colbert and it wouldn't have been him.

And so he surrounded himself with that name, the respectable name. He carved it into the studio set, he wrote it into his segments, he shouted it to his audience every night. It was his way of building a wall, a shield, to fortify his role as a man beloved by the people and respected by himself, to block out all those undesirable things that belonged not to him but to Tyrone Hunnibi, or even to little Stevie Colbert-with-a-hard-T, the boy who couldn't even get his parents' attention, much less their approval.

It had all fallen apart in those first few months with Jon. He was only just starting to come back together.

"Why couldn't he be called something else?" moaned Stephen.

It was a discussion they'd had several times. There wasn't much Jon could do except repeat, "He doesn't know, Stephen. He has no idea."

"But I know!"

"Doesn't matter. None of it has touched him. Listen to me, Stephen. None of that has touched your kids."

He squeezed gently. It was the wrong thing to do; Stephen froze.

(He would do this in bed, too, when Jon inadvertently touched him the way someone else had touched him, during some past encounter that was ultimately unpleasant. Stripped of his armor, he would freeze up, falling back into that memory, until Jon could bring him out of it.

And there was only one way to do that...)

"Stephen," said Jon. "Stephen. Stephen. My Stephen."

Nothing happened at first; and then Stephen drew a shuddery breath and said, "Don't stop."


♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦



"Stephen," gasped Jon as they crashed into their bedroom, "Stephen, Stephen, you're Stephen, the one and only Stephen, the Emmy-winning Stephen, Time's influential Stephen, my Stephen, Stephen, he's a handsome man his name is Stephen, Stephen..."


The Emmy winner and handsome man in question was writhing in his arms, breathing hard, covering his face and neck with kisses, and every time his lips came near one of Jon's ears he would whisper Don't stop, and Jon would focus anew on the chant.

They tumbled onto the sheets, Stephen pulling back for long enough to shrug off his robe. Jon took the opportunity to slip his glasses off of his face and toss them onto the nightstand before reaching for the T-shirt; Stephen beat him to it, and Jon found his hands stroking bare skin, which was, except for the scar, nearly good as new. As fingertips brushed up his sides Stephen gasped — but it wasn't out of fear of a memory, it was a gasp of pleasure at the here and now — and then he pounced on Jon and fell to it again.

"Stephen, Stephen," it was too much, too good, "you are still Stephen, aren't you?"

"Jon, it's me, I'm here, don't let me go, don't stop!"

He obliged instantly. "Stephen, Stephen, my — ah — Stephen, wonderful Stephen, dear Stephen, Stephen, lovable — oh — Stephen!—"

Stephen had left Jon's shirt on and was going straight for the khakis, which was just as well, they couldn't have stood to get much tighter anyway—

"Stephen, God, Stephen—"

And then a wail, crackly with static, split the air.

Stephen sat up. Jon shut up.

There was another squall from the baby monitor, and an instant later Stephen had snatched his robe from where it had fallen and was pulling it on as he ran out the door.

Jon flopped back against the pillows and suppressed a groan.

Stephen had an almost supernatural ability to shut everything else down when the six-month-old needed something. Jon was not so lucky. Heart still pounding, he forced himself to take slow breaths, and thought very hard about Ann Coulter.


♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦



The problem, it turned out, was the diaper.

Fixing it was a dirty job, but someone had to do it, and Stephen felt as though he could swim through a swamp in a new designer suit if George needed it. Of course, swimming was easy, while diaper-changing had lots of steps and all these complicated little tabs to hook up in the right order. But Stephen, to his own surprise, had been determined to learn; and by now he'd even gotten the hang of it.

Unfortunately, being clean and dry did not by itself make the baby go back to sleep again, so Stephen cradled the fussing George against his shoulder and rocked gently around the nursery, which had eventually been decorated around the very simple theme of "ducks". Eagles were rather scary and fierce for an infant to deal with; Stephen had reasoned that George ought to start with something easier and work his way up.


He'd tried singing in Korean, but he only knew one song in the language and it was all addressed to "girl", so he switched to an old standard.

"Hush, little baby, don't say a word
Daddy's gonna buy you a mockingbird
And if that mockingbird don't sing
Daddy's gonna buy you a diamond ring
And if that diamond ring turns brass
Daddy's gonna buy you a looking glass
And if that looking glass should break
Daddy's gonna buy you a chocolate cake
And if that cake should be too dry
Daddy and some feminists will bake a pie
And when that pie is eaten up
Daddy's gonna buy you a...

Jon, what comes after the pie?"

He didn't have to look to know that Jon had appeared in the doorway.

"I don't know. I think you got away from the usual lyrics at some point."

"I guess so."

George had stopped crying, but he was still fussy, and without knowing what (if anything) came after the pie there was nothing for Stephen to do but pick another song.

"What child is this who laid to rest
In Stephen's arms is sleeping?
Whom Nations greet with cheering sweet
While eagles watch are keeping?
"


♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦ ⋅ ◊ ⋅ ♦



They really had to pitch a Christmas album to someone, Jon thought, as he thought every time he heard Stephen sing a carol. Stephen's voice was rich and clear, and as he hit each note it resonated with love and belief.

"This, this, is George the king,
Whom anchors guard and pundits sing;
Haste, haste, to bring him laud,
The babe, the son of Stephen!
"

At last George drifted off; switching out the lights, his father placed him gently back in his crib and drew the fluffy duck-patterned blanket over his slumbering form. Only then did Jon approach, wrapping his arms around Stephen and standing on tiptoe to rest his head on the taller man's shoulder.

"Did you make that up yourself?" he asked gently.

"No, Jon, it's a traditional Christmas song, probably hundreds of years old..."

"I know, I know. I mean the new lyrics."

"Oh. No, they're from someone on the Colbert Nation forum. Some of the heroes write these things for fun, and Avery sends me the best ones." He paused. "Except the bit about 'anchors guarding'. They don't know about you, so that was mine."

"'Anchors', plural? How many do you have?"

"Just you. But it wouldn't fit the song otherwise."

Jon kissed him, just below the ear, and he began to tense.

"Stephen...."

"It's okay, Jon, it's okay. I know who I am in here."

So for a while he just held Stephen, silent in the moonlight, and together they watched George sleep. At last he said softly, "Would you like to stay here all night?"

"No. Oh no. Definitely not. The things I'd like to do...." Stephen laughed a short, knowing laugh, and covered Jon's hands with his own. "I can't do them in here, that's for sure. But a little bit longer, Jon. Let's just stay here for a little bit longer."



THE END,
or, rather,
THE BEGINNING.

[identity profile] volvagia-one.livejournal.com 2007-10-05 01:46 am (UTC)(link)
I found this last night when I was looking for pictures of Colbert/Stewart/Carrell at the Emmys...
I started reading at 11 last night and besides a small break for sleep, I actually read this during my 3 classes at school (yay for wifi!) and didn't stop.

BWAH IT'S SO ZOMGAWESOME <3 I love it. You're so talented at writing too!

[identity profile] volvagia-one.livejournal.com 2007-10-05 03:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I found it through the Colboard (I'm totally a member of the [Canadian] Nation but not a member there...for some reason) - I'm doing a project for my writer's craft class that involves making a cover for a story I'm writing, and a couple of my characters look like Carrell, Stewart and Colbert so I figured using some awesome pics from the Emmys would be cool, and that lead me to the Colboard and I started going back through the archives and found the chapter Backstory in Black and then...well the rest is history ^_^

I knew TDS fanfic existed, but never really read anything of it before. I dunno why, but I think ya just got me hooked. I don't really use my LJ much anymore (I just really use it for checking for friends and comms) but I'll definately keep watch here, if you'd allow me to friend you? XD

[identity profile] bananapizza.livejournal.com 2007-10-06 04:43 pm (UTC)(link)
This story seriously rocks on so many levels! My favorite scene from the whole fic is when Jon and Stephen get caught kissing by Tad and Bobby and then discuss how many kisses they have shared.

"Fourth," Stephen finished.

Jon turned to look at him, puzzled.

"You were asleep for one of them."

"Uh, well, fourth then." Jon turned back to the men at the door. "The point is..."

Haha, this made me laugh out loud. This story has so many of these sweet little moments, I had to actually read it twice just for the butterflies & the laughs :)

I never thought I could like, let alone love an mpreg story. Oh and the illustrations, just freaking awesome *has a heart attack* - long story short: YOU ROCK!

Great Job

(Anonymous) 2007-12-04 11:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Incredible!

Don't ever stop writing--you are very talented. =)

You also bring a lot of joy to a lot of people.

[identity profile] dark-samu.livejournal.com 2008-03-03 07:11 am (UTC)(link)
I really, really loved this whole thing! The story was actually believable, which becomes an issue in some fanfics. I've always liked the Stewart/Colbert dynamic, and you've really got it down. I really can wait to read the next part!

[identity profile] raggedyanndy.livejournal.com 2008-05-13 02:02 am (UTC)(link)
I would like you to know that I'm going to fail my astronomy final exam tomorrow because I spent most of today reading this fic, AND IT IS SO VERY WORTH IT!
deepad: black silhouette of woman wearing blue turban against blue background (Default)

[personal profile] deepad 2008-11-23 03:44 am (UTC)(link)
Wow. There probably should be a special handbasket to hell for loving RPS MPreg so much, but I'm happy to take it.

That, sir, was some high quality fic. The very highest, sir, the very highest. I salute you.

(Anonymous) 2008-12-04 01:19 am (UTC)(link)
Okay, I have been forced to comment. You have broken my silence.

First, let me explain: I was looking online for a poster of Stephen and accidently stumbled across The Thing with Feathers. Read it. Loved it. Thought to comment, but decided not to. Then went back and read others of your works, in no particular order (I loved the Christmas Carol one!). I just finished this, and well, simply HAD to comment. On several points.

This was incredibly well-written. I mean that.

No one's straight in the TCR-verse! This amuses me.

I was telling my friends about this fic the other day (they were humoring my gushing) and I was like, "And his wife left him for Tina Fey! Which I find hilarious. And the author put in one of the comments: 'she's attracted to snarky people with glasses'!" To which one of my friends responded: "Well, sounds like you'd be perfect for her." My response to this was to glare at her over the rims of my glasses, therby both scolding her with my eyes, and confirming her description of me.

I'm gonna continue this in another comment, because I'm not sure what the word limit is...

(Anonymous) 2008-12-04 01:39 am (UTC)(link)
Me again. lol, anonymous commenter-person.

Anyway, where was I?

Oh, I wanted to say you've inspired me: I watch a lot of crime shows, and I started picturing what would happen if there were a murder on TCR set, and who would investigate it, and (I was half-asleep at the time, I beg your indulgence here) concluded that of course, it would be investigated by the CSI: New York team. Sadly so far the crossover is rather heavy on CSI:NY and not much TCR. But that may be for the best, as I can't really capture Stephen's voice with the skill you can, but I seem to be able to write a pretty decent Mac Taylor. Suffice it to say, there's a Threatdown: Murder! where Stephen basically complains about how his set is a crime scene and how inconsiderate that was of the murderer; he and Jon are having an illicit affair (of course); and there's a lot of "evidence" collected from a broom closet. I'm having fun.

Oh, forgot to say, re: The Thing with Feathers. I had known I had a crush on Stephen Colbert, but that fic seriously made me dig down and question whether I had a crush on "Stephen Colbert" or Stephen Colbert. Conclusion: I have a crush on Stephen Colbert as he plays the satirical character "Stephen Colbert". That took some pondering, it really did.

Also, I lovingly suggest that you include in some upcoming story: A. The kiss on the cheek from Rahm Emanuel as Stephen beamed with joy/giddy half-drunkeness (a good-looking, gray-haired liberal Jew? Who does this remind us of?) B. The adorable-ness between him and Jon in A Colbert Christmas (the fact that he went from insulting his religion to wanting to kiss him under the mistletoe in a matter of seconds is very consistent with some of your portrayals) C. His comment last night about having a long-lasting relationship with another man, when a picture of Jon popped up.

One last gushy comment/clever reference: Your writing makes me attracted to gay Stephen! And if I'm attracted to a gay man, what does that make me? No really, what does that make me? (I have no doubt you'll get this reference, but allow me to pat myself on the back a little for coming up with it.)

I will continue to go back and read old stories, perhaps I shall even comment on them now, who knows.

~Ann Onymous Fann

(Anonymous) 2008-12-04 10:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Delicious?? Oh, no, you want to eat me!

The great thing about combining "Stephen"'s world with the CSI world is that the people in the CSI world take themselves a bit too seriously, and that makes for an even starker contrast with "Stephen"'s ridiculousness. They're doggedly trying to catch a murderer and he's complaining that he can't get to his Emmy because his studio is blocked off by caution tape. (He proclaims during the ThreatDown: "Thou shalt not kill. But thou shalt especially not kill in MY studio!")

As for Rahm Emanuel, I saw a (poorly filmed) video of the roast, but it did not clear up the context of this kiss. Which is all right by me, because as the old song goes, it can "never match my sweet imagination".

Oh. Thanks for clearing that one up.

~A. Fann

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[identity profile] altogetherisi.livejournal.com 2009-02-07 06:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I realise you wrote this about a ear and a half ago, but I just wanted to leave a quick comment to say I just read the entire thing and I adored every moment of it!
ext_1512: (Default)

[identity profile] stellar-dust.livejournal.com 2009-03-24 05:32 am (UTC)(link)
Yay! ♥! (First AND last comment! I win! Or something.)

We got the Christmas album! Of sorts. I would still love one with *only* Stephen, singing mostly traditional carols, a few original, maybe a Jon cameo or two. *sigh* It doesn't even need to be a TV special, just a CD would do fine!

I'm gonna think about Tracey and Charlene - they seem to fit *really* well here right off the bat, but it's not too developed, and it was not quite so easy throughout SoG, IIRC. Shall keep them in mind when I reread it sometime soon (not tonight. I was supposed to go to sleep *early*. Oh well).

♥! Hope you enjoyed my comment spam this evening. XD
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[identity profile] stellar-dust.livejournal.com 2009-03-24 05:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes. Hmm. Might be something to revisit after SoG revisions. :D

Yay! I'll read it after work (if I can manage to wait that long).
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[identity profile] gaudy-night.livejournal.com 2010-07-01 04:02 am (UTC)(link)
What a journey you took us through! I read 'State of Grace' first so I got the order backwards, but on second thought, I think reading it first was actually better. Here we truly rest on such a sweet, sweet note of hope and peace. Beautiful.
green_grrl: (js_orly?)

[personal profile] green_grrl 2010-11-07 02:36 am (UTC)(link)
OH EM GEE! Such a fabulous story! *smishes close* Absolutely adorable. :D

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