AU: Armistice Day (Josh)
Apr 30, 2015 22:44:50 GMT -5
Post by Dr. Sean Neville on Apr 30, 2015 22:44:50 GMT -5
Sean Neville had met Joshua Bernstein at Columbia, three decades ago when both men had been students. Despite coming from a privileged background (or because of it, since he had come to study medicine at Columbia), Sean had lived on campus with the other students. He and Joshua had become fast friends despite their cultural differences – Sean was born and raised in New York while Joshua had been born in Prussia and emigrated as a child, Sean was Catholic and Joshua was Jewish, Sean’s family was Old Money and politically active, while Joshua’s family had needed to build themselves from the ground up when they had arrived in the U.S.
After graduating, Sean had invited Joshua to live with him in the townhouse that his parents had bought him as a graduation present. Each family thought that they were simply committed bachelors, too dedicated to their work and to their causes to find wives. Since neither was an only child, their families tolerated their behavior.
However, they had fallen in love, and couldn’t marry because they were committed only to one another.
Life had treated them well, as the Nevilles were above reproach in New York, and Sean’s family connections provided them with everything. Even their jobs were unnecessary, although that did nothing to prevent each man from following his passion and assisting those in need.
Then war had broken out, and Sean had found his services requested. They needed an expert to help the men fighting for freedom, and off he had gone.
What he had seen there changed him. When he returned home, he was quiet and withdrawn, and frequently ill. Joshua understood, even if he couldn’t relate. The rest of his family was less sensitive to the issue.
Sean’s parents had invited Joshua and him, as well as his sister and her husband, to the opera and then to supper. Despite dressing up for the occasion, he couldn’t make himself leave the bedroom when their carriage arrived outside.
After graduating, Sean had invited Joshua to live with him in the townhouse that his parents had bought him as a graduation present. Each family thought that they were simply committed bachelors, too dedicated to their work and to their causes to find wives. Since neither was an only child, their families tolerated their behavior.
However, they had fallen in love, and couldn’t marry because they were committed only to one another.
Life had treated them well, as the Nevilles were above reproach in New York, and Sean’s family connections provided them with everything. Even their jobs were unnecessary, although that did nothing to prevent each man from following his passion and assisting those in need.
Then war had broken out, and Sean had found his services requested. They needed an expert to help the men fighting for freedom, and off he had gone.
What he had seen there changed him. When he returned home, he was quiet and withdrawn, and frequently ill. Joshua understood, even if he couldn’t relate. The rest of his family was less sensitive to the issue.
Sean’s parents had invited Joshua and him, as well as his sister and her husband, to the opera and then to supper. Despite dressing up for the occasion, he couldn’t make himself leave the bedroom when their carriage arrived outside.