impudentsongbird: (i can fly)
Gabriel ([personal profile] impudentsongbird) wrote2012-08-20 08:38 pm

let me be the one you call / if you jump I'll break your fall

Book Four: Dark Days
1 | into the breach
2 | finding skulduggery
3 | retreat to the tunnels
4 | into the cacophony
5 | sanctuary in the cathedral
6 | reuniting old friends
7 | kenspeckle's new patient
8 | holy water and disinfectant
9 | objecting to china sorrows
10 | the roadtrip
11 | baffling guild
12 | shenanigans at the safehouse
13 | reassuring fletcher
14 | valkyrie's intervention
15 | solomon's revelation
16 | visiting the edgleys
17 | recalled to the sanctuary
18 | guild's confusion
19 | gabe is busted
20 | the psychic tattoist
21 | envisioning the cacophony
22 | angel's first migraine
23 | the morning after
24 | china and solomon
25 | detectives' council of war
26 | china's foolishness
27 | the collector dethroned
28 | finding crux
29 | skulduggery's vileness revealed
30 | sorrows in aftermath
31 | finding equilibrium
32 | the devil's number
33 | at the carnival
34 | meeting authorities
35 | solomon's confession
36 | the stray soul
37 | sanguine unsettled
38 | solomon's choice
39 | a cowboy underground
40 | in scarab's basement
41 | striking midnight
42 | craven contested
43 | emergency services
44 | on your feet
45 | and don't stop moving
46 | easy recognition
47 | a deuce of an evening
48 | engines roaring
49 | compromising judgements
50 | solomon's conflict
51 | axis turning
52 | thinking circular
53 | blasting the past
54 | reviling vile

Book Five: Mortal Coil
55 | sanctuary unsanctified
56 | shudder unravelling
57 | catching an angel
58 | layering dimensions
59 | dead men meeting
60 | when it rains
61 | power plays
62 | sing on gold
63 | the valley of death
64 | grand aspersions
65 | no evil feared
66 | new days rising
67 | angelic neuroses
68 | step-brothers working
69 | the many sorrows of china
70 | peacefully wreathed
71 | tarnished gold
72 | the secret in darkness
73 | magical intent
74 | scars worth keeping
75 | benefits of a beau
76 | grand magery
77 | lighting the darkness
78 | old dogs and new tricks
79 | flouting traditions
80 | drawing lines
81 | brothers and sisters in arms
82 | channelling angels
83 | return of the carnies
84 | the death bringers
85 | meriting agelessness
86 | knick knack, paddy
87 | give a dog a bone
88 | americans propheteering
89 | the right side of honour
90 | tailored shocks
91 | hosting angels
92 | elders anonymous
93 | rediscovered strays
94 | changings and changelings
95 | a state of reflection
96 | adding hope
97 | the devil's truth
98 | dead mens' hospitality
99 | lives half lived
100 | next to godliness
101 | devilish plans
102 | beached angels
103 | lights of revelation
104 | heroes worshipped
105 | new devilries
106 | angels under the yoke
107 | brains frozen
108 | father, mother, daughter
109 | parental guidance recommended
110 | driven round the bend
111 | ongoing training
112 | privileged information
113 | reasonable men
114 | passing the buck
115 | gifting magicks
116 | strengths and weaknesses
117 | immaturity's perks
118 | priests and prophets
119 | scaling evil
120 | blowing covers
121 | marring an afternoon
122 | lie detection
123 | five-dimensional pain
124 | reliving nightmares
125 | taking stock
126 | sampling spices
127 | sleeping prophets lying
128 | rueful returns
129 | dead men reunion
130 | medically-approved hugs


The life of an angel was a contradiction in changes and stability. On one hand, they understood very well the way the cosmos was shaped by events within it. On the other, they stood at one step apart from it—or at least had, for a very long time, up until their Master's recent wager with Lucifer. Changes in the recent past had, even for angels, been fast and turbulent, but there were none that concerned Raphael more than Gabriel's abrupt reserve.

In the aftermath of the wager Gabriel had been almost the only one to know where their Lord was at any given time, a fact which had put the Archangel very firmly under Lucifer's radar. Raphael had joked that Gabriel ought to arm himself with more jokes or worse clothes to drive the fallen angel away; Michael had offered the peace of the Garden Coast. (Rafe thought his idea was better.)

Either way, even though their Master was fair hidden, every angel knew that they had only to ask Gabriel and the Archangel would pass on a message.

Then Gabriel had simply blipped off the radar himself. Poof! Gone! No one had noticed at first, because, well, they weren't exactly in constant connection. It was just when Raphael had taken a whim to seek out his younger brother that he'd noticed it, and let it be, because there was absolutely a reason for it. Gabe did not just off and vanish, except that once with his self-exile, and that didn’t count.

But when Gabriel had come back, he had been strangely agitated and yet close-mouthed. The younger Archangel had vanished off to wherever their Master was hidden for a long chat Raphael was dying to have listened into, and yet couldn't (but only partly because it would have been rude). Now he was here, floating among the stars and examining a black hole with unnerving intensity.

For a time Raphael watched without letting on that he was there, but eventually Gabriel spoke. “I’d rather you came to join me instead of lurking, brother.”

Absolutely refusing to feel chagrined, Raphael let himself manifest with an arm around Gabriel’s shoulders and ruffled the younger angel’s hair. Gabriel threw a fond, longsuffering glance up at him, but there was something in his eyes, something distracted and sharp, which indicated that Gabriel still wasn’t truly present. Raphael only wished he knew where the other Archangel was.

“Just wondering what you’re doin’ all the way out here,” he said teasingly. “There’s a party going on down there on Earth, Gabe.” There was always a party going on down on Earth. “You oughta be down there bobbin’ for apples and switching up party-hats!”

“I can’t,” Gabriel said quietly, with a sort of seriousness Raphael had, for all Gabriel’s literalness, rarely heard from him. So Raphael fell into the same seriousness, lost his playful accent, and spoke directly.

“Why not, brother? You’ve been reserved of late. I conf—I’m worried for you.”

For a very long time Gabriel said nothing and stared into the slow-turning swirl of the black hole. Raphael waited patiently, his arm still companionably across the other Archangel’s shoulders. Eventually Gabriel spoke. “Did you know, Raphael,” he said, “that the universe you see around you here isn’t the only one our Master has created?”

Raphael was so startled that he couldn’t answer. That wasn’t what he was imagining. He hadn’t been sure what he’d been imagining, but that wasn’t it. “I’m not sure what you mean, Gabriel,” he said after a moment. “Our Lord told me the story of Creation not all that long ago, and he never mentioned anything of the kind.”

Gabriel nodded. “He told me that story as well. And then He asked if I really wanted to know details.” He hesitated. “I … admit, I declined. It’s something He said—about faith. I decided I didn’t need to know details. But it’s true, nevertheless. Just beyond this …” The Archangel reached out his hand and touched that gossamer and unbreakable fabric that supported reality. “There are other universes, even with different versions of us.”

“Different versions of us?” Raphael repeated, appalled and uncertain and entirely confused. How could that be possible? What could their Master want with more than one of any of them? What was going on? Where had Gabriel gone in that time he’d vanished? Then something occurred to him and he smiled with relief. “This is a joke, right?”

Gabriel looked up at him and smiled back with such a gentle understanding that for a moment Raphael felt very small indeed. “No, Rafe. I’m not joking. It was a shock to me too. That isn’t the point, though.”

“Isn’t it?” Raphael asked, feeling as dazed as an angel possibly could, especially when he wasn’t even inhabiting an actual physical body.

“No.” Gabriel returned to watching the black hole intently. “I met some people from other realities. One of them is in a kind of Hell, and he very much does not deserve it. I promised him that, if I could, I would save him from it.”

Which did not in the least explain why Gabe was staring at a black hole, let alone a million other questions Raphael would have liked to ask and for which he couldn’t find the words. Finally he found one. “How?”

“First,” Gabriel said with a sort of tranquillity Raphael had heard in his brother’s voice a million times but never after delivering so turbulent a piece of news, “I’m going to jimmy open a crack in the door through this hole.”

Raphael stared at Gabe, and then at the black hole, and then back at Gabe. He opened his mouth to ask whether their Master knew he was planning this and then closed it, because that was a stupid question. He opened it again to query if Gabriel had asked whether he could go around lifting the sheets and then realised that was also a stupid question, because whether he had or not, their Master probably would have told him to do what he felt was best.

It was equally clear that Gabriel very much planned to go through with this, no matter what Raphael said, and really, did Raphael have the right to object? Surely if this carried a risk, their Master would have already forbidden Gabriel from making the attempt?

“I’ll come with,” Raphael said at last, and this time when Gabriel glanced back the younger Archangel’s expression was startled. A moment later that expression shifted into grateful apology.

“I’m sorry, Rafe, but I’m not entirely certain I’ll make it through, and we can hardly leave Michael here alone.” He grinned. “Did you see what he was wearing last festival day on the Garden Coast? He hasn’t moved out of the eighteenth century yet. How would he possibly handle the rest of the world?”

Raphael laughed out loud, warm but startled, and the sound of it rang through space. Gabriel chuckled quietly beside him, and for a few minutes there was just companionable humour that faded into an equally comfortable silence.

Still, Raphael had a lot of questions. How did Gabriel plan to find his friend, let alone the universe he was in? How was he going to get back? What would he do if he met another version of himself? Or, worse, Lucifer? Finally the Archangel just asked, “Have you figured out how to crack open the door?”

“I think so,” Gabriel said, considering the black hole. “Once I figured out what to look for. I wouldn’t have gotten even that far if it weren’t for some things our Master said.”

Which meant that, in some fashion, this expedition was sanctioned by their Master, Raphael translated, and something tense in him relaxed. “Something do to with this drain here, I’ll bet,” he said, falling into his casual accent once more. “Gonna rip out the kitchen sink, li’l brother?”

“Just to see what’s hiding underneath,” Gabriel said with a grin.

“I’ll try’n keep it open for ya,” Raphael promised, and Gabriel sent him a smile which lit up the very space around them with its brilliance.

“Thank you, Rafe,” he said, and straightened. Raphael took his arm away as Gabriel lifted his hands, not exactly stepping back so much as giving Gabriel space. The youngest Archangel didn’t often reveal his power, but it was always a sight to see, a song to hear, when he did.

As it was now. Gabriel’s voice started deep, lifted high, split and wove and became more melodies than one would think a single being could possibly sing at once. The sound of it made Raphael’s heart soar, made him want to fly and laugh. It was so deep, so light, so resonating that it was physical; it touched the slow turn of the black hole and made it, for just the briefest of moments, still. In that moment Gabriel sent a carefully-aimed bolt of energy into the heart of it.

It was the kind of sight Raphael hadn’t seen in thousands of years, a play of physics and metaphysics which he hadn’t thought possible, let alone imagined. There was an eruption in the centre of the black hole, where gravity was condensed; the cascade of energy plumed upward and was dragged back down as quick, a tear in the fabric of the reality not allowed the time to widen or become a danger.

Raphael didn’t even know Gabe had moved until the younger Archangel was gone, he was so busy staring in awe. With a start the Archangel stretched out his senses and just barely managed to catch a glimpse of his brother shooting toward the hole at speeds few angels could have achieved through such a gravity well. Raphael certainly couldn’t have.

How, he suddenly wondered, was he meant to keep that open if he didn’t even have the speed of thought to track Gabriel’s movements through it?

Desperately the Archangel cast about for something to jam in the door, as it were. There was some dark matter nearby and with a thought he fashioned it into a spear and pitched it toward the centre of the black hole. It struck just as Gabriel flitted through the crack nearly wholly collapsed in on itself; the star’s gravity caught it, pulled it in, and plugged the opening like a metaphysical sink.

Slowly Raphael made every part of himself relax. For good or ill, Gabe was gone on this quest of his, and now Raphael should probably go and round up some of their younger siblings to guard the area. Just in case.


Book Four: Dark Days

into the breach | finding skulduggery | retreat to the tunnels | into the cacophony | sanctuary in the cathedral | reuniting old friends | kenspeckle's new patient | holy water and disinfectant | objecting to china sorrows | the roadtrip | baffling guild | shenanigans at the safehouse | reassuring fletcher | valkyrie's intervention | solomon's revelation | visiting the edgleys | recalled to the sanctuary | guild's confusion | gabe is busted | the psychic tattoist | envisioning the cacophony | angel's first migraine | the morning after | china and solomon | detectives' council of war | china's foolishness | the collector dethroned | finding crux | skulduggery's vileness revealed | sorrows in aftermath | finding equilibrium | the devil's number | at the carnival | meeting authorities | solomon's confession | the stray soul | sanguine unsettled | solomon's choice | a cowboy underground | in scarab's basement | striking midnight | craven contested | emergency services | on your feet | and don't stop moving | easy recognition | a deuce of an evening | engines roaring | compromising judgements | solomon's conflict | axis turning | thinking circular | blasting the past | reviling vile

Book Five: Mortal Coil

sanctuary unsanctified | shudder unravelling | catching an angel | layering dimensions | dead men meeting | when it rains | power plays | sing on gold | the valley of death | grand aspersions | no evil feared | new days rising | angelic neuroses | step-brothers working | the many sorrows of china | peacefully wreathed | tarnished gold | the secret in darkness | magical intent | scars worth keeping | benefits of a beau | grand magery | lighting the darkness | old dogs and new tricks | flouting traditions | drawing lines | brothers and sisters in arms | channelling angels | return of the carnies | the death bringers | meriting agelessness | knick knack, paddy | give a dog a bone | americans propheteering | the right side of honour | tailored shocks | hosting angels | elders anonymous | rediscovered strays | changings and changelings | a state of reflection | adding hope | the devil's truth | dead mens' hospitality | lives half lived | next to godliness | devilish plans | beached angels | lights of revelation | heroes worshipped | new devilries | angels under the yoke | brains frozen | father, mother, daughter | parental guidance recommended | driven round the bend | ongoing training | privileged information | reasonable men | passing the buck | gifting magicks | strengths and weaknesses | immaturity's perks | priests and prophets | scaling evil | blowing covers | marring an afternoon | lie detection | five-dimensional pain | reliving nightmares | taking stock | sampling spices | sleeping prophets lying | rueful returns | dead men reunion | medically-approved hugs
peacefullywreathed: (tread careful one step at a time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-08 02:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Solomon shrugged. "I used to be evil. I probably deserved it."

"Nobody deserved that," Gabe said quietly.

"You're ridiculously kind and loving, Gabe. I'm not sure I can trust your opinion."

Melissa was actually starting to feel a bit sick. Sick and dizzy. She hadn't eaten dinner, and between revelations and imaginings, the adrenaline was starting to have its toll. She tore her gaze away from Solomon's eyes, trying to banish the image of him without them, and took a breath.

"Here you go, Madam Edgley." Dexter at her side made her jump and turn, just in time to catch him patting an armchair out of midair. "Take a seat. Since it seems like we're gonna be here for a while."

"Thank you," she said numbly, taking the seat and tugging Stephanie down onto her lap. "You really changed your name?"

"It's a good thing she did," Dexter said, twirling his wrists and shaping something in midair. Melissa watched as another armchair fizzled into existence, and a moment later Dexter took Solomon's arm and tugged it to the side so his cane hit the chair. "Right there, Sol. Names have power, you see. Given names are gifts, but it means a person can be controlled by them. Taken names aren't legally binding, but they're magically binding, so you can't be controlled. It's like a locked door. An extra layer of defence. Every sorcerer has one. Some mortals, too."

"Have you been controlled, dear?" Melissa asked Stephanie, hugging her.
skeletonenigma: (please tell me more)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-08 06:31 pm (UTC)(link)
And Dexter could conjure armchairs out of thin air.

What could Gordon do? Did he have magic? Magic he hid from everyone else in his family? Could he conjure things, or was he an Elemental? How important was he? One of the leaders of Irish sorcerers knew who Gordon was without needing to be prompted. Just how deep into this world did Gordon get? Did Gordon change his name, too?

Why didn't he say anything?

"Well..." Stephanie didn't try to wriggle out of her mother's embrace. She hadn't complained once this evening, in fact. Not that she had a right to, but there was still something disconcerting about her uncharacteristic behaviour, piled in with all the shocks. She'd saved the world. She'd saved the world. And she'd never even given them a chance to be proud of her for it. "Once, sort of. For an hour. It broke as soon as I changed my name."

Desmond really wanted a chair. "Who was it?"

"No one," Stephanie answered a little too quickly. "Just, uh... they're not important. They're reformed, too. They're actually the reason we have these angel statues."

As far as assurances went, Des wasn't too comforted by this one. The angel statues were every bit as unnerving to him as they were to Melissa. He wasn't exactly enamoured with anyone who thought making them was a good idea, even if making them was a good idea. "Who was it?"

"You probably won't meet her," said Stephanie. "She's reclusive. And she had good intentions even back then. She was really just trying to stop a war."

"Stop a war?"

"Um - "

"How did controlling you stop a war?"

Stephanie's face fell. "I wasn't going to say anything else. Why did I say anything else? Skulduggery, why didn't you stop me?"

"I didn't know you were going to incriminate yourself."

"I always incriminate myself. You should just stop me from ever talking again."

"If you say so." Skulduggery cleared his throat. "She was trying to find a way to rescue me. In her innocent youth and general ignorance of magic, she made the wrong choice in who to trust. Also in her innocent youth and general ignorance of magic, she got herself out of it. The only war involved was in the imaginings of a woman with questionable loyalties."

"She wasn't - "

"Valkyrie, don't talk."

Stephanie closed her mouth and glared at him.
vexingshieldbearer: (confusing stars)

[personal profile] vexingshieldbearer 2013-05-09 12:16 am (UTC)(link)
Fortunately for Desmond, he was next on Dexter's list. Silently the Adept conjured a chair next to Melissa's, and without attracting Desmond's attention he pushed the man gently back into the seat. Then he eyed the others critically. He supposed he could conjured one for Erskine as well.

"China, not important?" Solomon said in amusement. "Don't tell her that. To be fair, she stopped being on the evil side of the scale some time ago. And if all accounts from that particular debacle are true, a war would have been imminent, if rather one-sided, if not for Skulduggery and the others." He shrugged. "Her only oversight was believing controlling Valkyrie could actually stop it from happening, if she ever did believe it. Mostly likely she was just buying time until she could get all her affairs in order."

"You're not a very encouraging man, you know," Melissa said to him, and he grinned.

"Formerly evil."

"I'm noticing that, yes. What was this war about?"

"Religious zealots trying to take over the world so they can summon their evil gods back into the universe. The same stalemate that's been going on for the last three centuries, really."

Dexter almost clapped a hand to his face, but didn't, only because that would have interrupted Erskine's chair. "If I didn't know any better I'd say you're doing that deliberately," he said with a grumble. "Just a random question here, Solomon, but do you have any understanding of the concept of fragility?"

"She asked. And if you think a woman who would kick a skeleton in the groin and actually cause pain is fragile, I have to question what kind of women you pursue."

Melissa didn't know whether to be grateful for Solomon or not. He did seem to be enjoying dealing out shocks in a blandly deadpan sort of way, but at the same time, he was right now the most honest of the lot. The way he simply dismissed every horrifying thing he said as matter-of-fact was simultaneously calming and chilling.

"May we see the Grand Mage now?" she asked, choosing calm over horror.

"You can if he stops lurking in the doorway," Solomon answered.

"A man can't even hover invisibly anymore," said a gruff voice from behind them, and Melissa jumped, craning her head. An older man approached across the floor, carrying a patchwork old coat over one arm. "Tipstaff told me you were all in here. Haven't you finished that paperwork yet, Erskine?"
skeletonenigma: (oops he smiled anyway)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-09 01:40 am (UTC)(link)
Erskine might have turned around and ripped Corrival a new one, but he was honestly too tired and too frustrated to do more than sink into the armchair Dexter just conjured, glaring at his former general and current superior. "No. No, I haven't finished that paperwork yet, Grand Mage sir. Because I fired the last employee less than an hour ago, I didn't realise we would need to record everything we ever do for posterity, and it's going to take me all night, Corrival."

"You probably shouldn't be offering it up as target practice, then," Skulduggery pointed out - quite reasonably. Quite annoyingly reasonably.

"Oh, I'm hoping Tipstaff will eventually take pity on me and either give up or just take over paperwork from now on." Erskine shrugged and sat back, closing his eyes. "Solomon needs the practice more than we need eternal reminders. Corrival, Valkyrie's parents. Valkyrie's parents, Crossword Puzzler Extraordinaire Corrival Deuce. Otherwise known as the Grand Mage."
vexingshieldbearer: (if everyone loved)

[personal profile] vexingshieldbearer 2013-05-09 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
"All night?" Corrival asked in amusement, stepping up to the armchair and picking up the sheaf of papers to rifle through them. "You do realise it's easier if you actually use the spells they're imbued with, right?" He held out a set of three which had quite obviously been copied, three times, by hand. "Didn't Wreath tell you about the triplicating spell?"

"Oops," Solomon said, completely deadpan. "Silly me. It plum slipped my mind."

"Are they always like this?" Melissa asked the air quietly, not minding exactly who answered.

"Always," Dexter agreed with a longsuffering sigh, and then grinned as he moved around the growing circle of chairs to press his hands down on midair again. "On the other hand, Erskine's payback is going to make things interesting around here."

"Children in charge of a nation. I'm ... actually not all that surprised. Sounds like every other government. Excuse me, Crossword Puzzler Extraordinaire." She would have stood up, but that meant moving Stephanie off her lap, and possibly not being able to hug her as easily, so Melissa shifted her a little so she could peer around the teenager. "My husband and I need to talk to you about your child-labour laws."

"Child-labour laws?" To his credit, he looked genuinely confused. Confused and willing to listen, completely ignoring the brewing argument across the circle as he sat in Dexter's newest chair. His gaze was on Melissa, his brow furrowed. "What child-labour laws?"

"The ones that state you can hire minors in the life-threatening capacity of detectives," Melissa answered, less shortly than she might have just because he was so confused.

"Minors as--Valkyrie Cain, just how old are you?"
skeletonenigma: (well i am very impressive)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-09 03:18 am (UTC)(link)
"Triplicating spell?" Erskine's voice wasn't incredulous so much as it was almost resigned. Almost, but not quite. There was an edge to his tone, the same edge that was in his eyes as he looked at his fellow Elder. "There's a triplicating spell? You've listened to me complaining for the last hour, and it slipped your mind?"

Like Corrival, Skulduggery decided to leave the pair to it. Unlike Corrival, Skulduggery shifted his attention because he knew that he was going to have to explain himself again, and very soon.

"Fifteen." Valkyrie shifted, uncomfortable under the scrutiny. "Almost sixteen. Meritorious didn't - "

She cut herself off, possibly knowing her intended defence wasn't the sort of thing that would satiate her parents at the moment. She was wrong, besides. Meritorious had minded. He'd just figured it wasn't his place to tell her what to do, any more than Skulduggery considered it his.

Before Valkyrie could say another word, Skulduggery decided he might as well head things off, and stepped forward. "Before you decide to fire me, I realise mistakes were made." Melissa's act of violence, if nothing else, had at least convinced him of that. "I'm perfectly willing to scale Valkyrie's involvement back - or to let her go completely, if I don't have her parents' permission to continue. This is, of course, with the full understanding that her parents would then be the ones responsible for her constant sulking, and not me."

As if to demonstrate his point, Valkyrie was already sulking. And glaring, pointedly, at Skulduggery. If he didn't know any better, he'd think she was trying to avoid looking at Corrival. "I don't get any say in this?"

"No." Desmond was the one who answered her, gently but firmly. "You've had your say. We all know what your say is. You didn't let us have our say, and it's high time that changed, and high time you know what it feels like not to have any input on major decisions."

"This is my life we're talking about!"

"This is our daughter we're talking about, our daughter whose life could have ended any time these last few years and we would never have known. I'm sorry, Stephanie, but you forfeit your right to have a say in this when you decided not to tell us what was going on."
Edited 2013-05-10 01:56 (UTC)
peacefullywreathed: (tread careful one step at a time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-09 10:30 am (UTC)(link)
"Of course. I assumed someone as intelligent as you would have figured out that no other Elder would have wanted to triplicate paperwork by hand either, and therefore there must be a shortcut."

With a groan Corrival buried his face in his hands. "Skulduggery--what have you been thinking?" Back in his day, fifteen practically was the age of majority, but it wasn't now and Corrival approved of the change. He lifted his head, his tone filled with sarcasm. "Why, thank you for being so magnanimous, Detective. It isn't as if I have the authority to scale back her activities on my own. It isn't as if I don't need your permission."

With a deep breath, as if bracing himself, Corrival got to his feet and crossed his arms, and there was a definite glare directed at Skulduggery. "Didn't we just talk about you acting as though you're graciously bestowing answers to us lesser men while you swan about saving the world? You might not have gotten this through your thick skull, but Valkyrie isn't your daughter. You still made a choice, Skulduggery. You still chose to essentially take her away from her parents with their knowledge or consent. Inaction is still a choice, and you made it for them without any right to do so."

He pointed at his chair. "Sit down, Detective Pleasant. You screwed up--again. You don't get any say in this either. The most I expect to hear out of you for the rest of the night is 'Yes, sir'."
Edited 2013-05-10 03:57 (UTC)
skeletonenigma: (doing his detective thang)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-10 01:05 pm (UTC)(link)
"You don't think of Elders as being human," Erskine insisted. "I always thought Elder Tome just... wrote things out all day. You didn't think to maybe mention it, oh, I dunno, after the third hour of me complaining and not using it? No." Erskine barely waited for an answer. "No, of course you didn't. I hope you know what this means, Solomon."

Valkyrie didn't regret not telling her parents right at the beginning, if she was being brutally honest with herself, which... she kind of had to be. But still, her father's words rang in her ears, and wouldn't lave her alone. "Our daughter whose life could have ended any time these last few years and we would never have known."

She was tearing up again, and in front of the Grand Mage, to boot. Valkyrie hastily wiped those tears away. The last thing she wanted to appear right now was weak. Or like a child. Because she wasn't.

To her utter surprise, though, instead of arguing or calmly explaining anything - or even just staying quiet and letting Valkyrie defend herself - Skulduggery bowed his head. "Yes, sir."

She'd seen that before. At the stadium, when Corrival Deuce tore into him and all Skulduggery did was exactly what the man told him to do. Back then, it was to act like nothing had changed, but it was the same basic principle. And it surprised Valkyrie just as much now as it did while they were chasing Scarab. She'd never seen Skulduggery just back down like that. He avoided conflict where there didn't need to be conflict - or at least, what he perceived to be conflict - but he didn't just back down.

She should have liked Corrival for that, and she wanted to. Badly. But when she looked at him now, all she saw was the man who might condemn her for the next three years to not seeing the Sanctuary again, and not even Skulduggery would try to overturn the verdict.

Her dad gave one of those melodramatic gasps - halfheartedly, sure, but still very melodramatically. "Finally. Someone reasonable. You see that, honey?" Desmond didn't seem to care that Corrival was right there, and could hear every word. "I'm not sure whether to be reassured or frightened."
peacefullywreathed: (of life so incomplete)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-10 01:31 pm (UTC)(link)
"Perhaps you didn't, but having been an elder cleric for the Temple, I can assure you I've thought a great deal about paperwork." Solomon smiled lazily. "Do tell me what it means, Erskine."

"I see it, dear," Melissa agreed, and her smile at Corrival was filled with relief and gratitude. She got the impression Mr Pleasant didn't often get told 'no', let alone get dressed down, but right now she was glad there was someone willing to do so. Someone he apparently listened to, given how easily he'd folded.

Corrival managed a tight grin at Des. "Sometimes we have our moments. Sir, Madam, on behalf of the Sanctuary I apologise for the danger your daughter has been in without your knowledge."

Dexter, looking torn between watching Solomon and Erskine's battle of wits and paying attention to the Grand Mage in case he exploded, hastily conjured another armchair for the man. Corrival gave him a nod of thanks as he sat, leaning forward with his elbows on his knees. (His coat was still over the back of Skulduggery's chair.)

"Now, let's get all this straightened out. After the last four years it would be in Valkyrie's best interests to continue her training in magic, if only for the sake of self-protection. And in spite of her age--" His tone and expression were remarkably impassive at these words. "--she is very resourceful and intelligent as an apprentice detective. So let's do this properly this time. I realise the two of you will have your own ideas about her schooling and whatever punishment you see fit for her indiscretion, but I'd still like, at some point in the future, to offer her a real apprenticeship as a Sanctuary detective--details to be worked out once I decide what to do with this idiot over here."

He jerked his head at Skulduggery.
skeletonenigma: (trying extremely hard not to smile)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-11 11:40 am (UTC)(link)
"It means," Erskine informed Solomon, with all the tone and demeanour of someone very much issuing a challenge, "that I may have to get you back somehow. The ball's in my court. The war's on. You're blind. Expect a rebuttal."

Valkyrie blinked in confusion. She'd all but resigned herself to the inevitable, and now the Grand Mage - the Grand Mage - was telling her parents she was perfect for the job? People were flip-flopping all around her, reacting in ways she would never have expected and hardly dreamed of, and... and far from being happy about it, Valkyrie found herself a little annoyed. She was going to get rewarded for all of this? Why couldn't someone have told her that sooner?

Of course, she still had her parents to consider. If they ever said yes to the apprenticeship, it definitely wouldn't be right away.

Skulduggery, who had actually been sitting quietly up until his acknowledgment in the conversation, nodded in response to Corrival's head jerk. "Yes, sir."

Valkyrie couldn't help it. She giggled. Des shot the detective a quick look, but what was actually in that look, Valkyrie didn't notice in time. Skulduggery, for his part, would have looked perfectly neutral if it weren't for a small telltale twinkle in his eyes Valkyrie had learned very quickly to look out for. He was on the verge of smiling. Whether it was over his half-joke or Corrival's words was a mystery.

"What does that mean?" Des asked - nearly demanded. "An apprenticeship? How much danger would she be in?"
peacefullywreathed: (and you seem to break like time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-11 12:17 pm (UTC)(link)
"All that means is that I already have a handicap. I had to even the odds somehow." Solomon suspected what that rebuttal might be. Probably some furniture shifting. He wondered if Dexter would turn on him; possibly. He might have to bribe him not to give in to Ravel's flirtations.

Gabe also had a hand over his mouth, completely failing to hide the smile behind it, though it was hard to tell who he was laughing. Probably all of them.

Corrival chose to ignore Skulduggery's sass. He waved a hand. "What I mean is whenever the pair of you sanction it. This could mean in fifty years, if you want. Either way, as an apprentice Valkyrie would learn the mechanics of things first. The paperwork, the leg-work, the Sanctuary workings which apply to her, the self-defence. Knowing Skulduggery, she hasn't had a whole lot of experience in anything other than 'barge in and beat the bad guys by the skin of your teeth through sheer talent'."

He said the words so blandly, very obviously not looking in Skulduggery's direction. "Since she's not exactly starting from scratch there might also be some fieldwork, but more the talking-to-informants or examining-non-horrific-crime-scenes kind, not the 'barge in and beat the bad guys by the skin of your teeth through sheer talent' kind." He shrugged. "But as I said, all that's up to you."

Melissa looked at Des. It sounded, she thought, a lot like the best solution. Or almost the best solution. She wasn't sure she wanted Valkyrie to give up all her daily schooling. For one thing, being around people her own age was more important now than ever before. For another, 'ordinary' things like math and science might not be glamorous, but they could still be important in every-day life. Especially for a detective. A detective should know something about everything, shouldn't they?

There were still things to work out, but she wasn't ... entirely opposed to it. Maybe not yet. They had things to sort out first. But Stephanie wanted to continue magic. Why not this way?
skeletonenigma: (just sitting)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-11 01:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Erskine gasped. "I am offended. Or possibly flattered. You went and got yourself captured and tortured to within an inch of your life just so you could even the odds? I'm going with flattered. It's a fuzzier feeling."

Des almost missed his wife's look at first. He was a little too stunned to notice it. Barge in and beat the bad guys by the skin of your teeth through sheer talent... Corrival may not have meant it seriously, but all Des could do for a minute was stare at Stephanie, trying to imagine her as that sort of person. It didn't work. She'd never been peaceful, exactly, but she wasn't... she wasn't a fighter. Imagining her with fire in her hands did surprisingly little to make the image any easier to swallow.

If the solution was as simple as a safe apprenticeship, why hadn't it been the solution from the beginning? She was twelve when all this started.

Stephanie noticed him staring at her and managed a weak smile. Des didn't smile back. Instead, he looked up just in time to catch Melissa's look.

It couldn't be that simple. He wouldn't let it be. "That all sounds grand," Des started, "but it wouldn't mean in fifty years. It can't. We have no more authority over her after she turns eighteen." They couldn't even hold her over with financial dependence, because thanks to a certain rich enabling uncle, Stephanie would never have to worry about money. "We only have her for another two and a half years."

Which, he realised belatedly, meant they should agree to this sooner rather than later. Stephanie - Valkyrie? - was going to return to this world and this life the instant she could. The sooner they let her do it, the sooner they could make sure she was actually safe while she learned the ins and outs. That wasn't fair. It wasn't fair that in order to keep their daughter, they had to let her do precisely what he'd promised himself he would never believe in.

"At the very least," Desmond decided, looking to Melissa for support, "she's finishing out this year of school." Whether she learned magic alongside that or not, he refused to budge on that particular issue. Maybe they could figure out some sort of homeschooling after that, when Des was feeling more generous and less angry, and all of this felt less like some type of reward. "You are not dropping out of high school, Stephanie."

Stephanie nodded mutely.
peacefullywreathed: (tread careful one step at a time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-11 01:22 pm (UTC)(link)
"A man of such charm and grace has to think about these things," Solomon said mildly. "You should feel honoured I put this much thought into it."

Dexter shook his head. "Just so long as you bozos keep in mind that I'm a neutral party here."

"Definitely not dropping out," Melissa agreed. She pursed her lips, regarding Stephanie. "Homeschooling after this year, maybe, but you're finishing highschool. And you're grounded until you're eighteen. It's not quite three years, but it will do." Since she'd been lying to them for three years, it seemed like a nice round number. "A lot of young people nowadays go into apprenticeships and trades instead of university. There's nothing odd about that."

Just about the nature of this particular apprenticeship. Then again, it probably wasn't odd to these people.

"I'm thinking no more apprenticing of any kind until this semester is over," she said to Corrival. "So she can focus on wrapping up her studies. Her magical studies as well, to keep on top of that." If it was a self-defence issue, Melissa had no issue with her continuing those. "But under supervision. In our house. So we can see every single thing she's learning. Then a break over summer while we figure out how her schooling should continue. Everyone needs a holiday." She got the distinct impression Stephanie hadn't had a real vacation in ... years. The thought made her hug Stephanie a bit closer as she looked at Des. "What do you think, dear?"
skeletonenigma: (sit down and let me tell you a story)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-11 01:54 pm (UTC)(link)
"Should I?" Erskine's grin turned sardonic. "Funny, but I don't. You've apparently taken my partner-in-crime from me. Just how insecure about your odds are you?"

Grounded until she was eighteen. Valkyrie sighed; she supposed she shouldn't have expected anything less. Or more. And really, she wasn't about to complain. With everything she'd done to her parents over the last three years, she was honestly amazed they were even considering the idea of an apprenticeship as far as they were.

The thing was, Valkyrie had no idea how to be grounded. School was a given, but what about everything else? What about magic? What about swimming? What if she just wanted to go and get something to eat? What about learning how to drive? What about Fletcher? Her stomach twisted as she realised she never even thought about not being allowed to see him again.

"I don't need a holiday," she blurted without thinking. "Magic isn't work, it's... it's fun. It's not something I need a break from. It's probably not something I should get a break from."

"And yet," Des told her, "you will anyway. It's only for a few months, and that's... what, a second to a sorcerer? You are going to spend time with us, Steph, whether you want to or not. Maybe we should take a family vacation. I've heard France is lovely this time of year. And we have a villa."

"I thought you guys sold the villa."

"We talked about it. Never ended up actually happening. The point is... the point is that you are not leaving the house for anything except school and other parentally-approved activities until school's over this year. Your... magical studies are just going to have to come to you. That's what I think we'll do." He glanced up at Skulduggery. "And you had better never come around without that skin on."

"Yes, sir."
peacefullywreathed: (cos you seem like an orchard of mines)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-11 02:10 pm (UTC)(link)
"Taken? If I recall he said neutral party. I don't need to steal anything from you to win, Reveller."

"It's just as well China doesn't get jealous," Dex muttered, "and that I know better than to get in the middle of a relational spat."

"Everyone needs holidays," Melissa corrected, giving her a steely look. "When people don't get holidays they burn out and start doing silly things. Like your father after he did those six big jobs one after another, and spent three days wired on coffee and looking like Einstein. I'm not talking about never doing magic over the summer, Steph. I'm talking about lessons. Especially lessons which include how to--" Her voice faltered and softened. "How to use a deadly weapon. Because that's what it includes, doesn't it? You'll be learning how to use magic to defend yourself. As a weapon."

That was the worst thing about it. The idea that her little girl needed to learn it, to protect herself, because of a man who was so irresponsible that he--what had the Grand Mage said? 'Stolen away someone else's daughter?' Why would he do that? Why would he--

A thought occurred and her face went blank. She looked at Skulduggery, but he wasn't allowed to say anything other than 'Yes, Sir', so she asked Corrival instead. Asked him, without her gaze moving. "What did you mean, before, when you said Stephanie wasn't his daughter?"

The Grand Mage didn't answer right away, but something in his voice and bearing softened. "Skulduggery had a wife and daughter once, a long time ago. They were both murdered by a madman. He saw it. Then he was murdered himself. How he's still, for lack of a better word, alive, is complicated, but that's how he became a skeleton."

Melissa's throat closed up so tightly that she felt tears in her eyes. The problem was that she wasn't sure if it was fury or sympathetic grief. She couldn't imagine having her family murdered in front of her, and then not be able to die and join them. But at the same time, he'd tried to take her daughter as a replacement. And he'd probably known what he was doing. How could he not?

No. A thousand times, no. She hugged Stephanie tighter, glaring but with wet eyes. "I see."
skeletonenigma: (you okay?)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-11 05:02 pm (UTC)(link)
"Neutral party? When you're paying him to lead you around like a dog on a leash? Paying him for being a glorified dog walker?" Erskine glanced very pointedly towards Dexter. "I wonder where his loyalties lie?"

"What on..."

"Lilliya. Listen to me. I need you to stand up."

"What happened?"

"Serpine. I don't know what they've done to you, but you need to focus. Stand up."

"But..."

"Lilliya, please."

"We were eating. We were eating, Skulduggery. How did I get here?"

"I don't know. There's a sigil on the wall behind you - "


Skulduggery forcibly dragged himself out of the memory, slightly surprised he'd slipped into it at all. It wasn't very often he did, because it wasn't very often anyone else brought up what happened - at least, without him predicting the change in topic. This was the last place he expected it to get brought up. The last place Skulduggery thought he'd have to deal with it.

He was almost grateful now for the imperative of only being able to use the words 'Yes, sir.' He had no idea what his face looked like, but judging by the way Valkyrie was looking at him, it wasn't blankly neutral. Skulduggery had the nasty suspicion that if he tried to say anything at the moment, his voice would come out husky.

Desmond saved him, in much the same way Gordon would have. And actually did, once. With no knowledge, and barely any idea of what was going on, Gordon basically went back to what he knew - saving people from having to talk or think about things that made them uncomfortable. And he didn't know that very well, either. It was the consequences of his attempt that made them fast friends, and Desmond... Desmond was his brother's brother. "He's a skeleton? How come that never came up?"
peacefullywreathed: (like weights strapped around my feet)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-12 10:47 am (UTC)(link)
"Now, now, Reveller. There's no need to be insulting." Solomon followed the shifting regard in Erskine's soul to look at Dexter himself.

"What, don't you trust me to stay a neutral party in the face of my first paycheck in a century?" Solomon was fairly sure the man pouted. "Erskine, I'm hurt. Just for that I may have to be biased. Just a little. In favour of said paycheck."

"His words," Solomon said with a shrug. "Not mine."

The look on Mr Pleasant's face enabled Melissa to keep quiet in spite of the many, many things she would have liked to say. Silently Gabe had stepped up beside Skulduggery to lay a gentle, understanding hand on his shoulder. He didn't do anything with it; simply left it there, a grounding action, in case Skulduggery needed it. And even if he didn't. If he didn't, then it could just be friendly sympathy. Everyone could use some of that.

For a moment Corrival looked almost nonplussed, looking at Desmond all startled as if he hadn't expected the man to not know at this juncture. Then he caught the dryness behind the apparent surprise, and snorted. "It just did, obviously. Are we all sorted?"

"I think so, for the moment," Melissa said. "Des?"
skeletonenigma: (Gabe-specific smile)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-12 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
"All you'll do is prove my point," Erskine answered with his own shrug. "Oh well. I'm more than capable of taking the pair of you on."

"Sorted?" Des asked in a highly affected flabbergasted manner. "Sorted? We're in the presence of sorcerers, and a living skeleton, and I still don't know everything! How can you say we're sorted?" He stopped, and looked down at Stephanie still sitting in her mother's lap. "Oh, you mean about Stephanie. Yes. Yes, we're sorted."

Erskine glanced over, possibly anticipating the end of the conversation, and frowned. "We are?"

"We are." Des looked around. "Does the Sanctuary have... a phone number, or something? So we can keep in contact?" His eyes fell on Gabe, whose hand rested on Skulduggery's shoulder, and then on Skulduggery, whose expression had almost instantly cleared. Des wondered again why Gabe had made the man a skin, and then decided he still didn't want to know. It probably had more to do with magic than anything else. Gabe had a calming effect on people. That's probably all it was. Magic.
skeletonenigma: (Default)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-13 11:22 am (UTC)(link)
Des froze. Magic, or -

No. It was a figure of speech, that was all. There had to be boundaries of logic, even for sorcerers. Gabe was certainly pretty enough to be nicknamed an angel. Figure of speech, that was all it was. Someone would have mentioned it by now if he actually was an angel.

Instead, Des looked after the other two with an air of puzzlement. "A priest?"

"Not a sorcerer," Erskine assured him. "Just a friend. Taking in a refugee for us."

"A refugee from what?"

"Probably best to ask Solomon that question. She followed in his footsteps, after all. Not mine. Corrival, you're not leaving until you show me how to do this triplicating spell you were talking about."
skeletonenigma: (Default)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-13 11:51 am (UTC)(link)
Erskine stared for a moment in dumbfounded awe at the words magically appearing on the spare pages, then laughed and shook his head. "He must have had such fun watching me struggle. We'll see who's laughing when I'm through with him."

"They're not usually like this," Valkyrie tried to reassure her parents. "Well, they are, sort of. But they get things done too. Sorcerers don't elect people who don't get things done."

"I'll be able to get a lot more done, now." Erskine gathered the rest of the papers together and put them aside. "I may even manage to get some sleep tonight. Now, since Skulduggery's not allowed to say anything, Mrs. Edgley." Erskine grinned. "Did you really kick him in the groin, and if so, what happened? Valkyrie," he added, since the question had made the teenage girl burst into laughter, and made Skulduggery adopt an expression remarkably close to pouting. "How did he react?"
peacefullywreathed: (just take one step at a time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-13 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
This really should have been done earlier. It really should have, except that Solomon had been putting it off--not exactly consciously, but without making an effort to actually stop it. It had been easy, since John had shown Saffron the medical wing and Corrival had wound up asking her to stay to give them a hand. The part Solomon hadn't liked was where she glanced at him before agreeing.

Part of Solomon wanted to say he didn't know why he was putting it off given it would have gotten Saffron out of his hair faster. It would have been a lie, and he tried not to lie to himself anymore. He just didn't want to speak to Paddy and possibly wind up actually taking spiritual responsibility for people he couldn't possibly help.

But they were there, now, at the church--actually, at the small manse behind the church--and Solomon didn't wait for Dexter to come around to open his door. He opened it himself, using the cane to guide him. Thank God he finally had that cane. He felt more autonomous now. He could actually get out of a car and onto the street without help.

Saffron exited too, glancing around with wary confusion and fascination. It was too dark to see much detail in the streets--or at least it would be, at this time of night--so Solomon wasn't worried about her reporting the address back to the Temple. She probably had barely left the Temple. There was no way she would have been able to keep track of where they went to get here. (A fact he wouldn't have relied upon, if he hadn't known just from looking at her that it was true.)

Unfortunately, Solomon did need the help to get to the door. "Nice place," Dexter said as he guided Solomon to the manse, Solomon at one arm and Saffron at the other. "Dark. And old. Really, really old. And hidden behind a church. Great hiding spot, really. Who's going to burn down a church? Oh, wait ..."

Solomon ran his hand across the door-front, alerted by Dexter's description of the house, to find the door-knocker, and used it. Then he lifted his eyebrow at the man. "When did you burn down a church?"

"Oh, a while ago. You know. During the war."

"Why?"

"Evil cherubs. We were trying to hide there and those damned evil cherubs just wouldn't stop bombarding us with golden arrows and harps."
skeletonenigma: (Default)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-05-13 12:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Paddy answered the door just in time to hear the last part, and he blinked at Dexter with a greeting smile momentarily frozen into place. "Evil cherubs?"

Solomon was the only one of the three he recognised, but Solomon was the only one he needed to. The ex-Necromancer looked much better than he had even a few days ago, emotionally if not quite physically. And even physically, there was some definite improvement. The grey in his hair was dignifying, and he no longer walked like he was just trying to find the next solid surface. He held a cane, stood more upright, clearly trusted whoever the man guiding him was. In contrast, the woman with them looked much more like Solomon had when Paddy first met him. Shifty, wary, full of confusion.

With the way she was dressed, it didn't take a genius. Paddy's smile slowly faded. "This isn't exactly the best time. I have company over for dinner."

He wasn't sure what mentioning that would accomplish, other than perhaps banish the feeling of surrealism he'd been nursing since he opened the door. It didn't quite work.
peacefullywreathed: (don't taint this ground)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-05-13 01:18 pm (UTC)(link)
"They kept trying to force us together!" Dexter protested without missing a beat or seeming to care who he was talking to. Or maybe he was just being deliberately himself because Paddy was a priest. Solomon bet on that one. "Who would have thought that cherubs would have a thing for all-male orgies? We objected."

Something almost wistful in the turn of the man's soul told Solomon that he, perhaps, might not have objected nearly as much as he claimed. The way that wistfulness was equally faded, like an old photograph, also told him that the desire was long-since set aside. Solomon didn't really want to know, but part of him couldn't help but wonder just how many of those rumours about the Dead Men had been true after all.

He really should have seen this coming, though. He hadn't been able to tell with the door closed, but with it open he could see the tendrils of other souls inside. One of them looked very young. At some point, Paddy couldn't be ready at their whim.

Still he didn't move. "I'm sorry," he said quietly, and the regret and resignation was real. "I--we didn't know how else to ask. We can wait in the church until your company leaves, if you'd prefer."

They couldn't very well leave again. Dexter had made sure to take a roundabout route, to shake off anyone who might be watching--and there had been some, Solomon was sure. Tenebrae would be keeping an eye on him. They might already know for certain where Saffron was. Tenebrae couldn't retaliate against him, but he could certainly take vengeance on Saffron. It was petty and cruel, and Solomon wanted to tweak the High Priest's nose enough to defend her from that, at least.