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
skeletonenigma: (writtenname)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 03:19 am (UTC)(link)
Ghastly glanced over at Gabriel in surprise. "No, it's... fine. You'll just have to give us a little time to get used to the idea." He'd been actively trying to keep his unease under wraps, but... well. Maybe he needed to rethink his idea of what Archangels were instinctively able to sense. Gabriel had known about Tanith very quickly, after all.

~~

"The Baron," China answered Gabe's question, "is fortunately now dead. He was killed just over two years ago. He and the Grotesquery are no longer anything to worry about."

Skulduggery, to China's surprise, didn't jump in and immediately claim the credit for Baron Vengeous's death, as she'd been expecting. She had been rather looking forward to a quick debate, seeing as the Grotesquery had been the one to deliver the killing blow. Perhaps Skulduggery was focused on more important things. Or perhaps - did she dare even consider this? - perhaps he was worried about the impression Gabe would get. The great skeleton detective, concerned about what someone else thought of him at last. China might have pointed it out, but if it was true, then Skulduggery would be worried for a good reason. Best to let that one slide.

She was, however, burning with curiosity - now more than ever.

Skulduggery was, for lack of a better phrase, looking thoughtful. "It was a good hideout. It had a lovely view."

"It was underground."

"Was it? Maybe I'm thinking of after it wasn't."

"It is again." It had taken China far too much money to do it, but having backup plans was never a bad idea, and escape routes would never be too expensive. "The entrance is slightly different, too. I think you'll appreciate it."
skeletonenigma: (skulblue)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 05:15 am (UTC)(link)
Skulduggery nodded to Gabriel. "We left the van back at the cinema, but that shouldn't be a problem. I've been missing my car."

"It won't fit all of us," Valkyrie objected. "It'll only take five, and even that's a tight squeeze."

"We'll manage." Skulduggery went quiet for a moment, contemplating the best course of action. Ghastly would want his van back, no doubt, but Guild and the Cleavers would be waiting there. An agent might be stationed at Skulduggery's house - which, if he'd taught Valkyrie anything, would be the Bentley's location - but that agent would mostly be for reconnaissance, and should be easy to shake. Which meant... "Tanith, Ghastly, if you two could stay behind. You have the most plausible deniablity if Guild finds you."

"That's comforting," Ghastly murmured. "Maybe he'll just lock us up then."

"Nonsense. He doesn't have any evidence of anything." Of course, that hadn't stopped the Grand Mage in the past, but Skulduggery continued on before either Ghastly or Tanith could argue that particular point. "Once we get there, Fletcher can teleport the two of you to us. I assume it's in the same place as before," he directed at China.

"The same tree, yes," she nodded. "But a different sigil. Much more sophisticated, for one thing." Her tone made it clear that whoever had placed the last sigil was far from satisfactory, though Skulduggery had a sneaking suspicion that China herself had crafted it back in the early days of the war. "It's also in a different place. But I imagine you'll be able to find it without my help."

"You imagine correctly." Skulduggery turned to Ghastly. 300 miles, putting the journey at just under three hours, if he remembered correctly. "Meet Fletcher here in three hours?"

Ghastly smiled wryly. "If we're able to, we'll be here."
skeletonenigma: (darkfirewind)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 06:29 am (UTC)(link)
Right. If they needed help, just... pray. Tanith could do that. She'd done it before, honestly; she'd just never expected an answer. Or a potential rescue. It would definitely be the most efficient backup plan Tanith could ever count on having.

"Excellent," Skulduggery finished cheerfully. "Fletcher, if you'd do the honors?"

A few seconds later, the group of four had teleported. There was something mildly ironic about having no trouble watching four people disappear into thin air, when Tanith had just jumped at one man losing his temper a little bit. The fact that he wasn't exactly a man notwithstanding. Or that he could very probably kill them all with a stray thought... Schoolgirl crushes really were illogical things.

Silence permeated the library for a brief moment, before China released a breath she'd apparently been holding. "Who was-"

"Don't," Ghastly cut her off gruffly. "Trust us. You don't want to know."

Tanith gave China a beaming smile in turn as the librarian looked towards her. "What? Don't look at me. Ghastly's right. You really don't."

China's eventual smile was as worrying as it was beautiful. "I've never regretted learning anything before," she informed them gently. "Skulduggery's just unintentionally offered me a challenge. What kind of person would I be if I didn't at least try to meet it?"

~~

When they reappeared in Skulduggery's living room, the detective made a beeline for the nearest front window, purposely ignoring everything else as he glanced through the curtain. Nothing was outside except for those two funeral homes, situated quite hilariously across the street from each other. No strange cars, no strange people. Still, Skulduggery didn't quite allow himself to relax until he turned back around and saw his own living space.

It wasn't exactly like he'd left it. Valkyrie had been spending a lot of time here, he imagined. Maybe Fletcher. They would have gotten more mileage out of that television in one year than Skulduggery had gotten from it since he bought it brand-new. But it still felt familiar. The air settled over each piece of furniture in a comfortably peaceful way, perfectly known to Skulduggery. If he concentrated hard enough, he might have been able to tell where each small animal in the house was. And that armchair, right over there... that was the last place he'd used to meditate just before all the business with Batu.

"I'm home," he voiced aloud, slowly and with an edge of surprise. He'd thought it before, heard it from Gabe after they'd first torn through into Guild's office. This was the first time Skulduggery truly believed it.

Valkyrie had stumbled into the back of a couch from the teleport, but recovered her balance fairly quickly; she smiled at Skulduggery as he looked around. "Yes. You are."

Just a few hours ago, Skulduggery had been talking to an imaginary version of Valkyrie while he searched for his right arm, wandering through a reality he was supposed to have been lost in forever. That he should have been lost in forever.

Gabe had never given up on him. Not back at Landel's, not after learning about the war or what Skulduggery had descended into, and not now. The Archangel's words directly after Skulduggery's confession had been simple, but they still rang through his skull even now.

Are you sorry?

To Gabe, it was just that simple. Skulduggery couldn't quite agree with that, but he had to admit one thing - he was grateful the Archangel had come back for him.
skeletonenigma: (snap)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 11:57 am (UTC)(link)
"Oh, he knows," Valkyrie answered Gabriel when Skulduggery didn't look like he was going to. "I've told him to get at least a bathroom, but..."

It hadn't really mattered over the past year. Even if Valkyrie had cared about stupid things like that, Fletcher was always there to make sure they both had food and access to a bathroom when they needed it. But Valkyrie was savoring this moment. She was savoring that there were jokes again, savoring the look she imagined on Skulduggery's face. She'd been waiting for it. She was looking forward even more to when Skulduggery finally laid nonexistent eyes on his Bentley. This was what she had been fighting for.

When the detective finally seemed to remember that he wasn't alone, he tilted the hat on his head to a more jovial angle and started walking toward the garage door. "I'm thinking of putting some in."

Valkyrie frowned. "Really?"

"You spend half your time here complaining about not having food, and the other half complaining about bathrooms. Yes, I've been thinking of putting some in." Skulduggery turned just before opening the garage door, stopping them all in their tracks. "Gabe, about China. I don't say this very often, but I wasn't thinking. I should have warned you."

"You didn't warn me," said Valkyrie. "You pretty much just told me not to say my name."

"Well, yes, but I knew you could handle it. Not that I think Gabe can't, but... well, his struggles are slightly more unique." Skulduggery opened the garage door behind him. "I'm sorry."

Fletcher frowned behind Valkyrie. "Did he just... did he just say you're stronger than an angel?" he whispered into her ear, dumbfounded.

"No," Valkyrie answered firmly. "No, he just..." Pride swelled in her chest before she could squash it. "He was just saying that..." That what? That he had faith in Valkyrie, but not in an Archangel? That was ridiculous. "What kind of struggles?" she asked them curiously.
skeletonenigma: (pencilskul)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 12:41 pm (UTC)(link)
No wonder Gabriel trusted Skulduggery so much. The detective was sort of the embodiment of free will.

Valkyrie couldn't even begin to imagine what the life of an angel was like, or what disobeying someone for the first time in... what, thousands of years?... might do to them. And Falling, of course, was just a story. Just... angels were just stories, but one was standing here in front of her, and she believed him, and that terrified her. The fact that he was talking so evenly about Lucifer and God having wagers didn't exactly help.

But now she at least understood the earlier outburst. China's magic relied on eradicating the free will of other people. It was a new gift for the Archangel, and he didn't want to lose it - the same way Valkyrie didn't want to lose Skulduggery or her newfound powers. She could understand that, at least. She could also see why Skulduggery had been so calm, and why he answered the way he did. Valkyrie didn't even know how the two met, but she could already see how they were bringing out the best in each other.

China had observed that once about her and Skulduggery. Was this what other people used to see in them? Valkyrie felt another pang of jealousy, but quickly shoved it down. This was not the time for it.

"So..." Valkyrie struggled to find the right words as Skulduggery silently led the way into the garage. "If you don't actually choose him, does that mean you're automatically going to Heaven?"
skeletonenigma: (yes?)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 02:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Skulduggery heard and understood Gabe's pointed comment as well as the implication behind it, but he chose to ignore that. Again, this was a well-worn argument they'd had many times before - even once before Skulduggery knew Gabe was an Archangel - and restarting it now would just waste valuable time. Besides, he was much more interested in his car.

Underneath the tarp, it gleamed just like the day he'd gotten it. They'd taken good care of her while Skulduggery was gone. It even looked like Valkyrie had been paying enough attention during Skulduggery's explanations to know exactly how to keep it in tune - or at least who to take it to. Skulduggery laid a hand on the bodywork. He could nearly imagine it humming with synchronization.

"Oh, I almost forgot," Valkyrie piped up, doubling back past Gabe to the garage doorway. "Give me a minute."

Skulduggery waved her away with his free hand, then glanced up at Gabriel. "Did I ever tell you about my car? It's a 1954 Bentley R-Type Continental. One of only 208 ever made."
skeletonenigma: (closeup)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 03:22 pm (UTC)(link)
"Only a car?" Skulduggery could almost have been sputtering and stumbling over his words, if he ever did such a thing. It didn't matter that Gabe probably wasn't being serious; it was the principle of the thing. "Only a car? You could wander the Earth for the next century, Gabe, and you still wouldn't find another one that even comes close. It has a six-cylinder, 4.5-liter engine. It's retrofitted with power locks, climate control, and satellite navigation." Fletcher was silently laughing, but that didn't stop Skulduggery. "This is not just a car. This is an ideal. This is half of my paycheck every other week these days, thanks to a certain danger magnet."

"Are you talking about me?" Valkyrie asked sweetly. She'd come back holding a wooden box, which she immediately handed to Skulduggery. "I kind of figured you'd have lost the one you had."

Skulduggery opened the box to see one of his spare guns, Smith & Wesson, inside, matching the gleam of the Bentley. Six bullets were nestled alongside it. He would have given up a lot to have this gun in his hands back at Landel's, but it was good to have it now. He snapped the lid back shut with a gentle click, and nodded to Valkyrie. "Thank you. The one I had was stolen."

Well, not exactly stolen, in the strictest sense. He still had no idea where it was. But who knew where half their possessions had ended up when Landel dragged them into his reality?
skeletonenigma: (fightfire)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-14 10:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Skulduggery instinctively tried to put the box into an inside jacket pocket before he realized he wasn't wearing a jacket. He sorely wished he had time to run back and change out of these priest's robes, but every moment they wasted here was a moment Tanith and Ghastly might get into trouble. The gun was essential. Nice suits, unfortunately, were not.

At least he still had his hat.

"Don't be silly," Skulduggery contradicted Gabe as he slipped into the driver's seat. "Cars are inanimate objects. They don't have feelings. They might have a certain degree of driver recognition, but my driving is flawless." What did Archangels think they knew about cars? Or about driving, for that matter?

"Wait a minute," Valkyrie frowned as she joined Skulduggery in the front passenger seat. "Cars can tell when you're driving them?"

"Mine can tell when I'm driving it," Skulduggery told her. "That's good enough for me."
skeletonenigma: (darkfirewind)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-15 12:30 am (UTC)(link)
If Skulduggery didn't know Gabe very well by this point, he might have thought the Archangel had been reading his mind, especially since the detective was fairly sure he hadn't been praying to anyone. Either Gabe was just that observant, or it was a coincidence. Either way, Skulduggery was pleasantly surprised.

Valkyrie, who didn't know Gabe nearly as well, twisted in her seat with a wide-eyed stare. "You can do that?" she and Fletcher both exclaimed at the same time.

"I sincerely hope that isn't true," Skulduggery said, ignoring them and glancing at Gabe in the rear view mirror while he backed out of the garage. "We've put her through enough pain. Seat belts, everyone." He backed onto the road, turned the car, and put the Bentley in gear. "Although, we may as well ask the expert. Do cars have souls, Gabe?"
skeletonenigma: (skulnoname)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-15 01:07 am (UTC)(link)
"Ah, but is it a quirky sense of humour?" Skulduggery questioned thoughtfully. "Can it be called quirky if it's the sense of humour upon which every other one is based? Doesn't that make every other one quirky?"

"Skulduggery-" Valkyrie tried to cut him off before he could get too far along that train of thought. She was still having trouble thinking of God as an actual being, rather than a concept - she really didn't feel like arguing the finer points of his humour. Or... His humour? Although she was kind of enjoying imagining him - Him - with a teddy bear.

"Valkyrie, would you say I have a quirky sense of humour?"

She stopped. "Um..." Now she was imagining Skulduggery as God, and that image would never go anywhere good. "I'd say you have... a sense of humor?"

"I'm sorry," Fletcher interrupted, "but are we just ignoring Skulduggery's new suit now? Seriously? How did you do that? I thought everything was painful for you now."
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[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-15 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
Gabriel's laugh was just a little too well-placed. Valkyrie turned to stare at him, less offended that he might have been reading her mind and more wondering what sort of image he'd gotten; she still couldn't even decide on one. Right now, it was sort of a cross between a skeleton with a long white beard, and then Skulduggery wearing a cowboy hat and holding a teddy bear. At least Gabriel was laughing, so... maybe it was okay? She quickly dug the bottle of holy water out of her pocket and handed it to the Archangel, not sure whether she should try to hide her smile or not.

Fletcher shook his head in disbelief, eyes still amusingly wide. "If that's what you can do when you're hurt..."

"But He would have created the greater sense," Skulduggery argued, seemingly oblivious to every other interaction in the car, silent or otherwise. "And all of the humour that's based off of it. Wouldn't that make His own the primary one? At the very least, if He were common knowledge, it would be the one everyone aspires to. Like sheep." Skulduggery hesitated. "I think I can see why He likes to stay a mystery."
Edited 2012-09-15 02:26 (UTC)
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[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-15 11:06 am (UTC)(link)
"There are a lot of things He chooses not to reveal," Skulduggery murmured. "But I'll admit, that's what makes life fun."

"Well, I'm not, either," Fletcher retorted, and if Valkyrie didn't know any better she would say he sounded jealous. "And I can't make stuff like that happen. What, do you just teleport the clothes?"

The car sped up as he talked, and Valkyrie glanced over to watch Skulduggery smoothly taking the Bentley around each bend like the car wasn't even on wheels. If ever there was someone who didn't seem to have physical limitations, it was Skulduggery when he was driving. Driving anything, really, but especially the Bentley. Seeing him proudly behind the steering wheel was one of Valkyrie's earliest memories of him, and it was one of the small things she had missed the most.

She smiled at him. "You didn't miss her at all."

"Was that sarcastic?" Skulduggery tilted his head towards her. "I hope that was sarcastic."

"It was sarcastic."

"Well, good.
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[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2012-09-15 12:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Fletcher frowned. "So does that mean I'm manipulating the top layer? Moving it around and stuff?" He paused, trying to wrap his mind around the new idea, trying to figure out if that's what teleportation actually felt like. "But I'm the one moving through space. I'm not moving the Earth under me or anything."

If he actually thought about it too long, Fletcher would have been slightly unnerved by the fact that an Archangel was explaining his own power to him, on top of how angels worked. But the teenager wasn't thinking about it too long. Being the last Teleporter was cool and all, but Fletcher couldn't deny that over the last year, being forced to work with other sorcerers had made him regret that there wasn't anyone around to teach him how things worked. As long as he didn't think too hard about the teacher, Fletcher was strangely happy to learn from him.

The Teleporter hadn't really thought too hard about what Gabriel was from the beginning. Things just seemed easier that way. Excessive worrying was for other people.

Valkyrie was, once again, twisting around in her seat. "Are you saying the suit is basically a really good illusion?"