Bookshop crack by caitri
Dec. 14th, 2011 08:34 am![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
Title: Bookshop crack
Author: caitri
Rating: G
Pairings: Steve/Tony (pre-slash), Erik/Charles (background), Kirk/McCoy (further background)
Word Count: 1,440
Summary: Steve and Tony have an eventful afternoon at The Common Reader. A printer!verse ficlet.
Universe: AU
Disclaimer: I know this may come as a shock, but I am not, amazing as it may seem, Stan Lee, Avi Arad, or Marvel Pictures. Just so you know.
A/N: Um, so this takes place somewhere in a couple of WIPs, but suffice to say in this universe, Erik Lehnsherr has a bookstore where Raven works (inspired by Laurence Cosse's A Novel Bookstore), and he’s totally space-married to Charles Xavier who is an English professor with Steve Rogers. (Tony Stark is that annoying guy from Digital Humanities.) Just…roll with it, okay? (bonus for Supernatural walk-ons.)
“Huh,” Tony says as he peers at the shop window. The Common Reader is emblazoned across the glass in gold letters with the silhouette of a figure peering into an open book. It looks comfortably old-fashioned. “I think I might’ve gotten kicked out of here once.”
Author: caitri
Rating: G
Pairings: Steve/Tony (pre-slash), Erik/Charles (background), Kirk/McCoy (further background)
Word Count: 1,440
Summary: Steve and Tony have an eventful afternoon at The Common Reader. A printer!verse ficlet.
Universe: AU
Disclaimer: I know this may come as a shock, but I am not, amazing as it may seem, Stan Lee, Avi Arad, or Marvel Pictures. Just so you know.
A/N: Um, so this takes place somewhere in a couple of WIPs, but suffice to say in this universe, Erik Lehnsherr has a bookstore where Raven works (inspired by Laurence Cosse's A Novel Bookstore), and he’s totally space-married to Charles Xavier who is an English professor with Steve Rogers. (Tony Stark is that annoying guy from Digital Humanities.) Just…roll with it, okay? (bonus for Supernatural walk-ons.)
“Huh,” Tony says as he peers at the shop window. The Common Reader is emblazoned across the glass in gold letters with the silhouette of a figure peering into an open book. It looks comfortably old-fashioned. “I think I might’ve gotten kicked out of here once.”