Roots Rain

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Fanfiction
Title: Roots Rain
Author(s): Kat Allison
Date(s): 2003?
Length:
Genre(s): slash
Fandom(s): Due South
Relationship(s): Fraser/Kowalski
External Links: online here
at kat allison's website (archived)
at AO3

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Roots Rain is a Fraser/RayK story by Kat Allison.

Reactions and Reviews

Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful! Images you won't soon forget, and she writes like an angel. [1]

I'm biased. Kat has never written a bad story in her life. You'll never convince me otherwise. That being said, can there be anything harder than getting inside Fraser's head and writing him in a convincing way? Well, Kat makes it look easy, and in fact, she captures that peculiar combination of formality and deep emotion that makes Fraser such a unique character. Such a beautiful story, and no warm fuzzies here...just...depth and angst and oh, how I *love* angst...*melt* [2]

This will probably be my last rec for the month, so I thought I'd end with a pimp for my very favorite first-person Fraser-voice fic. Fraser's got a tricky narrative POV to pin down. If you break out the thesaurus and go to town the result is pretty much a syntactical and grammatical train wreck, but if you don't nail those unique Fraser-isms (multi-syllabic words, references to literature and mythology, jokes about the RCMP Regulations Manual) well, then you're not reading a story about Our Favorite Mountie, you're reading about some guy who uses million-dollar words but doesn't have the heart to match. For me, no one handles Fraser better than Kat in this short story about a case gone wrong and how Fraser (and Ray) deal with the inevitable fallout.

The story relies on that old hallmark of crime fiction: someone is murdering prostitutes. In the midst of the resultign jurisdictional turf war between the Feds and the cops of the 2-7th Fraser is shuffled back to Canada (err, the Consulate) and cut out of the investigation. The case isn't solved so much as derailed and results in a particularily distasteful judicial compromise. Fraser, naturally, doesn't take kindly to this extreme miscarriage of justice, and I think this has to be one of the very few stories in the fandom to tackle the question of how Fraser copes when the real world robs him of the ability to make it right. After all, one of the many personality quirks that makes this character so compelling (and so difficult to write) is the conflict between Fraser's man-out-of-time sense of duty and honor and his occupation as a modern-day police officer. Kat writes Fraser as a person well aware of the shortcomings and compromises that inform so much of police work; she also reminds us that Fraser is the sort of person to expect more from himself and his fellow police. There is a heartbreaking confrontation between Ray and Fraser at the 2-7; Ray is torn up over the way the case was closed without the perpetrator being brought to justice and his bitter argument with Fraser ("You're a cop, right? Same as me. So where do you get off, where the hell do you get off, being so--so fucking innocent?") crystallizes the incompatibility of Fraser-the-cop and Fraser-the-man. It also illustrates something fundamental about the Fraser/Ray dynamic: Fraser is, or at least he's perceived as, superhuman in many ways. He's always the best cop, the best man, and the most noble soul in the room. Ray finds that standard as difficult to live up to as Fraser himself does, and the fight between them in the story has the feeling of a conflict long brewing. It's what I would have wanted to see in the episode "Mountie on the Bounty," although I doubt the conflict between Ray and Fraser would have been as complexly rendered even in the show as it is in Kat's story.

Oh, and the English grad student in me loved Fraser's stream-of-consciousness exploration of Gerard Manly Hopkins (author of "Victoria's poem" The Windhover) and the comparisons that can be drawn between Fraser's life and Hopkins'. I'm always a little nervous when an author attempts to include wank in their fanfics; usually it comes off as pretentious or awkward. But Kat does amazing things with Hopkins, poetry and Fraser, so much so that I can't even think of a published author who has done half as well with the same kind of material. So, this is all interesting stuff, and a refreshing change of pace from the plethora of romance/comedy fics that populate this fandom. Those stories are all terrific (and I love NC-17 dS stories as much as the next gal) but give this one a try. It'll make you see Fraser in a new light, and it's also educational! I mean...who doesn't want to know just a little bit more about late-Victorian poetry? [3]

I think this story is badly flawed, structurally, but it brought tears to my eyes and choked me up, and that gets Kat more of my undying admiration. [4]

References