filbert wrote:Lunan wrote:DAVID. DON'T YOU DARE. YOU CAN KILL ANYONE IN YOUR BOOKS, EVEN HONOR HERSELF BUT YOU DO NOT KILL NIMITZ AND LEAVE HONOR ALIVE OR VICE VERSA. IF ONE OF THEM DIES SO DOES THE OTHER. KILL HAMISH, KILL EMILY, KILL BETH, KILL RAOUL, BUT NIMITZ AND HONOR ARE 1, IF ONE DIES YOU DO NOT LEAVE THE OTHER. ARE WE CLEAR?
See now, one thing you never, ever do is tell The Author to NOT do something . . .
(shudders)
runsforcelery wrote:I make no promise about Honor and Nimitz's ultimate survival. I did not, however, intend to tie this post to that specific relationship. Or to those specific characters. It was simply an entry in the thread, intended to move the conversation along, and really shouldn't have quoted any previous post. Any implication about the demise of those specific characters was, of course, totally unintentional, accidental, and coincidental. I would
never troll my beloved readers into leaping to unwarranted conclusions! Oh my goodness gracious,
no! Somewhat more seriously, however, I do warn all of you that some of the characters who have been around for quite a while won't be around for the final credits. This is military science fiction, and I have always refused to write the kind of splatter porn in which beloved good guys don't also get killed in the senseless cruelty which is part of war. Or die even without combat in the tragedy which is part of life, for that matter.
RFC, I think most of us have already learned that lesson the hard way -- painfully. Poor rose. Poor me!
My lesson is Ragnhild Pavletic... I loved that girl.
Why'd ya have to go and pick on her? sob sobShe should have had such a bright and promising future ahead of her. Such a sweet girl. Dammit, I was in love with her. Hers was one of the hardest single deaths, thus far, I had to endure in the Honorverse. (Mueller School Dome deaths withstanding.)
Secondly, I'd say Howard Clinkscales. That Old Dinosaur truly loved Honor and she him.
Thirdly, Timothy Meares. The fact that
Honor had to kill him was (doubly painful)
³.
Oh yes. The lesson is etched on my heart.