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: (please tell me more)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-07-31 01:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Erskine stared. "You what?"

Saracen stared right back. "You what?"

"That makes how many now, six?" Ghastly mused, almost to himself. "And that's only if you're counting those friends of ours who are actually sorcerers."

Ghastly's voice was low, but Saracen heard it nevertheless. "Why didn't anyone tell me about this?" he demanded.

"Probably for the same reason you weren't going to tell us," Erskine remarked. "It's not the sort of thing you just call someone up and tell them about. 'Hey, Saracen, guess who I bumped into today?' For one thing, you would have thought I was crazy, and for another thing, you would probably have answered correctly, and my ego just couldn't handle that."

"The matron of a strip-club?" Ghastly asked, gently prodding the subject back to what he thought was the most important bit. "What was He - She - doing at a strip-club? What were you doing at a strip-club?"

Saracen's face was growing red. Ghastly hadn't ever seen it do that before. It took a lot to embarrass Saracen even before he met the Dead Men, and after a couple of decades with them... well, the blush in his cheeks was very new. "I was giving a friend a birthday present," he said, "and getting very bored in a corner, and she came up and we got to talking. That's all."

"How did you know who it was?"

"I didn't. Not then. I just thought it was this really h- this really beautiful woman who was taking an interest in me, and I'd never met a dancer that interesting to talk to before. It wasn't until after I left that I found out."

"That you 'just knew?'"

"And thought my magic had broken, yeah. I haven't been back to that place since. And exactly how much do the two of you watch, anyway, you voyeurs?" Saracen directed the last bit at Descry and Rover, one of whom he was still sitting on and the other of whom hadn't stopped laughing yet.
scryinghope: (i will learn to love the skies i'm under)

[personal profile] scryinghope 2013-07-31 11:21 pm (UTC)(link)
"What? I'm not allowed to check up on my only son every now and then?" Descry's eyes were fairly dancing, and he ruffled Saracen's hair.

"We had several screens on constant playback," Rover added gleefully. "Just in case we missed anything."

"And as long as things didn't actually get personal, I had no excuse to make Rover not watch you go into a strip-club just for kicks and giggles," Descry finished. "Though you wouldn't believe how long it took him to realise Who you were talking to."

"It wasn't obvious," Rover grumbled.

"Rover, She was wearing a halo to end all halos. How do you miss that unless you weren't paying attention?"

"I was watching the stage."

"Yes, believe me, I know."

"Have you two actually met Him? Her?" Dexter blurted. "I mean--Upstairs? Or wherever?" Somehow it was a lot more surreal to know that his friends had met God in the afterlife than some of them having met Him while He was undercover on Earth.

Rover and Descry exchanged looks. "I think we should get to maintain some air of mystery," Descry said finally. Rover nodded.

"Definitely. I mean, you're all over Saracen every decade about his magic. Why can't we get harassed for information? I'm feeling left out."

"I think they might have forgotten us, Rover."

"That's a travesty, that is. We need to fix this. We need to make sure no one forgets us ever."

"If you go hula-dancing across the Ha'Penny Bridge, everyone will remember you against their will."

"Hey, there's an idea ..."

"Please don't," said Anton. Rover pouted up at him.

"Aw, but it'd be perfect!"

"No."
Edited 2013-07-31 23:38 (UTC)
skeletonenigma: (well now that's just amusing)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-08-01 03:52 am (UTC)(link)
"And on that note." Ghastly finally managed to raise himself up high enough to send Tanith tumbling off his shoulders, and that let him get properly to his feet. "Someone said something about dinner. We can always keep lounging in the Grand Mage's office and worry every single employee who walks into the room, but then we wouldn't have a chance to top Fletcher and Rafe painting Dublin red."

"We can't have that, can we?" Tanith muttered.

Ghastly looked down, murmured an apology, and offered her a hand. Erskine refused to get up without Anton in tow, Fletcher followed the more gentlemanly of the examples and helped Valkyrie up to her feet, and Saracen grudgingly rolled off Descry with a grunt as he hit the floor.

"If hula-dancing over the Ha'Penny Bridge is the best that you can come up with, Rover," said Skulduggery, "then I'm going to have to question whether Raphael brought you back with all of your mental faculties intact."
scryinghope: (shelter also gave their shade)

[personal profile] scryinghope 2013-08-01 05:58 am (UTC)(link)
"I dunno, I kind of like the idea of worrying every single employee who walks into a room--awww." Rover whined as Saracen rolled off Descry, removing his human pillow and making him flop down onto Descry's stomach. "I cuddle Descry all the time! You're all abandoning me!"

"Do I bore you, Rover?" Descry asked with a raised eyebrow.

"You heard Skulduggery. Hula-dancing over the Ha'Penny Bridge is peanuts. You have to be boring to come up with that, and it's obviously affecting me detrimentally."

"Just for that, I'm telling everyone about the time Metratron hung you up over the Pearly Gates with a megaphone announcing all your most embarrassing moments."

"... I wonder if I could manage that one in Dublin Castle ..."

Descry laughed and shoved him off. So did Dexter, climbing to his feet and hauled Rover upright. Anton stared, his brow furrowed, without trying to shake Erskine off from leaning on him now they were both standing. "What, exactly, did you do?"

"I was just borrowing--"

"Stealing."

"--borrowing his quills. For shame, Descry. There's no such thing as stealing in Heaven. Everything belongs to everybody."

"And yet, no one else would dare call him out, sneak into his office, and take all his quills."

"He needed reason to get out more."

"His office is the combined railroad switch and tollbooth for the universe. If anything, he's more 'out there' than anyone."

"Maybe that's the problem, then."

"The two of you are going to test me," Corrival said, shaking his head. "I can tell. Up you get." He gave Descry a heave, Dexter reached down and pulled up his arm, and then the mind-reader was on his feet, wrapping an arm around Dexter's shoulders in a sideways hug.

"You mean we have any other purpose?" Rover grinned down at his old general. "Don't get up. Generalissimo has earned a bit of the royal treatment. C'mere and give me a hand, guys."

Anton shook Erskine off and stepped forward to help, and between a group of them they helped Corrival to his feet with absolutely no effort, but quite a bit of amusement, on the new Grand Mage's behalf. In no time at all the only one still lying there was Solomon, not even having stirred.
skeletonenigma: (adjusting the hat)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-08-01 01:05 pm (UTC)(link)
"Hang on," Erskine called out, stopping the few who had made it to the doorway already. "We can't leave Solomon in here on his own. Someone's tried to kill him twice already."

"We can always leave Dexter to guard him," Skulduggery suggested, and just managed to continue making himself heard over a squawk of objection that promised to turn into a barrage of complaints. "For some reason, though, I don't think he's too enamoured with the idea. We'll have to take Solomon with us."

"You don't trust Tipstaff?" Ghastly asked.

"I trust Tipstaff to stay loyal to the Elders. I don't trust him to be able to fend off someone like Tesseract. Come to think of it, I shouldn't trust Dexter for that either. How are your ribs doing, Dexter?"

"Can we avoid waking him up?" said Erskine, circling around to Solomon's other side. "Is there anywhere safe we can leave - oh, look." Something in the Elder's voice turned teasingly soft. "He's still got his teddy bear."

"Why can't we wake him up?"

Erskine looked up at the skeleton detective and raised an eyebrow. "Because he's earned his rest. He went up against your armour, remember?"

If Skulduggery would have answered before, he certainly wasn't going to answer now. After a moment of awkward non-answering, Ghastly stepped over and picked up the sleeping Elder, leaving Erskine to catch the teddy-bear and place it proudly on the ex-Necromancer's stomach, a miniature little guardian.

"China," Skulduggery eventually said. "We can always leave him with China. Right now, there's nowhere safer."

"Nowhere safer than with China?" Valkyrie winced. "Do you realise how much of an oxymoron that is?"

"Yes, I do. It's also true, in this case."

Erskine snorted as he grabbed Solomon's coat off the head of the bed he'd been sleeping on. "Unless China decides to wear perfume again."

Skulduggery hesitated. "Why wouldn't China's perfume be safe?"

"Oh, never mind. You're probably right." Erskine deftly lifted the teddy, draped Solomon's coat over him, and put the teddy back in its place of honour atop the coat. "There you go, Ghastly. All set."

"I don't know how I would have managed without you, Erskine."
vexingshieldbearer: (and swallowed their pride)

[personal profile] vexingshieldbearer 2013-08-01 01:29 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's too bad he's not awake," Descry murmured. "He's probably earned a celebratory dinner for being initiated into the Dead Men."

"He what?" Dexter squinted at him. "When did this happen?"

"When Erskine decided that fronting up to the armour was more than enough to be classified as a suicide mission," Descry said, "even though he's still refusing to admit the part where he actually likes him. Is there any particular reason for that, Erskine?"

"He is a Necromancer," Anton pointed out.

"Was," Dexter, Corrival and the angels corrected at once. Anton gave them all an unreadable expression before landing on Descry.

"Does it really change that much?"

"In terms of mentality?" Descry shrugged. "They're a cult of people who spend all their time being selfish, terrified and cloistered in an underground labyrinth. The real change in Solomon's mentality came when he left--after he stopped being selfish, terrified and cloistered in an underground labyrinth. So, yes, it makes a difference."

"Hm." Anton said nothing else, but he held open the door for Ghastly to exit first. He was still, Dexter noticed, blatantly ignoring any comments about the armour or Skulduggery.

"Aw." Dexter grinned down at Solomon, reaching for his phone. "He's all asleep and adorable. I think he's even snuggled into your chest, Ghastly. Hang on, lemme get a picture first."

Gabe was laughing. Rafe was grinning hugely. "Have fun, y'all," she drawled. "Gabe and I'll hold down the fort and work on that spell with Merlin. Don't get too drunk, now. I ain't gonna be holdin' a basin tomorrow morning."
neutralcollector: (resume photo)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-01 02:23 pm (UTC)(link)
In retrospect, China should really have expected people to start coming back from the dead when the Archangels started making themselves known. Known, settled, and stubbornly inserted into their lives despite Skulduggery's best efforts. Like old gum stuck to your shoe - or so China imagined, as she'd never been oblivious enough to actually step in old gum. But when she waved her door translucent that evening to see who was knocking, it was with no small amount of surprise that she saw Rover Larrikin standing right behind Skulduggery Pleasant.

He and Descry Hopeless were probably no more than souls, anymore than Skulduggery or Bliss were. It didn't change how solid they looked, or how Larrikin was clearly able to clap a hand onto Vex's shoulder without any concentrated effort.

China had no idea why they might be here. She didn't know anything that might help them - she wasn't even sure what it was they needed help with. She had, she was ashamed to admit, allowed her information-gathering to take a backseat to the work she was doing with the Sanctuary wards, and made no effort to stop it from happening.

Also noticeably new, though, was that China went and answered the door anyway. There were certain people she'd stopped minding being at a disadvantage with, and Skulduggery's little gang of cohorts was one of them.

As it turned out, all they wanted was an evening of babysitting.

China would have refused, were it not Solomon she was babysitting. A sleeping Solomon, moreover. A sleeping Solomon wrapped in a teddy bear blanket and a coat, with a little fluffy teddy bear held carefully under one of his arms. China had wondered what happened to him after the incident with the reanimated armour. She'd suspected Erskine and Corrival helped him outside of the public eye. She hadn't thought he'd fall asleep for the next several hours.

"Dare I ask what you're planning on doing this evening?" she asked Skulduggery just before they left. "Can I expect to see it on the news in the morning?"

Skulduggery shook his head. "I'll be honest with you, China. I have absolutely no idea, and I don't think anyone else does either. You'll just have to see."

"Promise not to make the morning traffic unbearable?"

"Why do you care? You have a chauffeur."

"But I care about my chauffeur's mental well-being, Skulduggery."

The detective laughed. "We'll do our best."

"Of that, I have no doubt."

And then they were gone, leaving Solomon on China's living-room couch and China with the distinct feeling that because of the teddy bear Erskine had left on the arm of the couch, one little paw propped up so it looked like it was waving, she was being watched.

Well, no matter. China went about her evening as usual, deviating from the routine long enough to apply some perfume before getting back to work. It was a little over an hour later when she went back into her living room and noticed Solomon stirring.

"Careful," she told him. "It would be a shame for that blanket to fall off."
peacefullywreathed: (just take one step at a time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 12:15 am (UTC)(link)
When Solomon started to rise out of sleep this time, the process was slower but more complete. He still felt groggy, still felt tired, but this time was stronger and more able to actually open his eyes of his own accord. He didn't, at first, because they weren't nearly as important to his measuring the world around him anymore.

The first thing he noticed was that his location had changed. It might have been harder to tell, except that this place was just as warded as the Sanctuary--just in a different fashion. The sigils were hard to miss.

The second thing was when he took his first truly awake breath, he smelled perfume.

"China," he mumbled, stirring again and turning his head toward her. He still didn't need to open his eyes, because he could sense the reaching strings of China's web arcing all over her apartment, but he did anyway simply because it was polite and he was at enough of a disadvantage without denying himself use of his blank gaze as a weapon. "You have me at a disadvantage."

He paused, sensing out more of his immediate surroundings. Like the fact that he was, indeed, covered with a blanket when he hadn't been before. His fingers curled over the edge. It was a construct, one of Vex's constructs. His eyes narrowed. "Whyever would it be a shame for this blanket to fall off?"
Edited 2013-08-02 00:20 (UTC)
neutralcollector: (drawn)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 01:24 am (UTC)(link)
"Because this room is a little cold," China explained dismissively. She gave no indication that there was anything wrong with or unusual about the blanket, having realised very quickly that Solomon wouldn't know and, if the Dead Men had anything to say about it, probably hadn't been told. "That, and I only got about halfway through changing your clothes for you. I apologise for that. I was distracted."

She made no effort to hide her smile, and hoped that Solomon's grogginess would be enough to hide her lie - at least long enough to make him wonder, if only for a moment. She made her way over to the kitchen while Solomon gathered his thoughts, passing over the carpet Larrikin had twirled her around only an hour before. "Do you want some water? You've been out for quite a while. You must be parched."
peacefullywreathed: (and you seem to break like time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 01:38 am (UTC)(link)
It was more than that. She had said that blanket, as opposed to 'the' or 'your'. There was something about this blanket in particular. Especially because it was one of Vex's constructs. Solomon eyed it warily, wondering what was on it before deciding he didn't want to know. He might find out accidentally, but frankly, it was a warm and soft blanket and he was too tired to be inclined to throw it off because of a veiled taunt.

He laid it back down and blinked at her for a moment, watching the amused vibration in the strands of the web. Really, China. The very idea of her changing his clothes for him was ludicrous enough that he didn't have to wonder. She'd lie about it sooner.

"Please." Now she mentioned it, his voice was hoarse, and the dryness in his throat probably had something to do with that. "I wasn't aware you moonlit as a nursemaid. How selfless of you."
neutralcollector: (blue eyes)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 01:56 am (UTC)(link)
"I wouldn't have thought you'd need one before today," China replied evenly, pouring out two glasses of water. "But, only the best for our nation's Elders, I suppose. If you're not careful, you'll grow soft."

She brought the water back over to the couch and held one of the glasses out for Solomon. If she'd been deliberate about any double meanings in her words, Solomon was the only person in the world who would know. Nevertheless, something about her tone still grew serious as she continued speaking. "I didn't volunteer. Skulduggery promised me a substantial favour in exchange for this. You have a nasty habit of attracting assassins, remember?" She shrugged. "They seemed reluctant, but whatever they were planning, they couldn't bring someone who was fast asleep."
peacefullywreathed: (cos you seem like an orchard of mines)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 02:10 am (UTC)(link)
Those moments were very handy in catching up, remembering that he didn't like being too tired to keep up, and cursing Skulduggery for putting him in this situation when he was exhausted to begin with. Which was probably why the skeleton, and the others, had done so--for the amusement of knowing Solomon was under China's thumb.

Once he had caught up, part of Solomon wondered if she was being so obvious because he was so groggy, just to make sure he could participate in the game.

He managed to lift himself up to rest back against the sofa's arm and arranged the blanket around his waist. "You're being exceptionally unsubtle today, China," he observed. "If I didn't know any better I might think you'd been deprived in recent days."

He couldn't see the glass, but she was next to the sofa, so he put put out his hands to find hers and the promised water. He paused for a moment at the reminder that he was, essentially, defenceless. "Ah. In my defense, Marr was the one who attracted Tesseract. I was an afterthought. I'd be happier if I weren't even on the list."
neutralcollector: (yes?)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 02:57 am (UTC)(link)
"Only exceptionally?" China arranged herself in the armchair alongside the couch with her second glass, elegantly making sure not to spill a drop. "I need to try harder, then."

She'd heard about the attack at the Sanctuary. She'd heard about how close Tesseract had gotten to achieving his goal. She'd heard far more than even the closest Sanctuary employees had, and so Solomon's defending statement came as no surprise to her. Marr was dead; she knew that too. It was faintly surprising to China how many people weren't sure of that fact, even though the Sanctuary had made no effort to hide it.

There was only thing China herself didn't know. And that was the second reason she'd agreed to hosting Solomon for the evening, on the slim chance that he'd tell her - assuming he woke up at all. "I'm sorry you were an afterthought," she consoled him. "But that did turn out to be his downfall. Was that what reanimated Vile's armour? Tesseract's death?"
Edited 2013-08-02 03:13 (UTC)
peacefullywreathed: (like weights strapped around my feet)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 03:13 am (UTC)(link)
"It would have been nicer if I'd been enough of one that he hadn't broken my hand." His hand which he was now using to hold that glass, for which he was grateful. Any pangs he hazily remembered from Corrival waking him up were gone.

China's question, however, revealed what she'd truly wanted when she agreed to host him for the evening. Solomon sipped at his water, slowly until the ache in his throat had gone away, but also to try and think over his answer. Or whether he wanted to answer at all. China Sorrows was not a woman one tended to trust--or hadn't been, two weeks ago.

Yet now, to Solomon's vague surprise, he found he had very little cause not to tell her the truth. China was bound up in far too much now to simply go about blurting the Sanctuary's secrets. That wasn't even taking into consideration the shallow weaving around her soul, like a cocoon--an intent to be discreet. And, again, assuming she didn't already know enough details to figure it out herself. In that case, the surprise was that she hadn't.

"Yes," he said at last, "and no. Tesseract's death triggered a craving in Skulduggery. It was him resisting the urge to use Tesseract's soul which activated the armour. The power had to go somewhere, since Skulduggery refused to use it."
neutralcollector: (color)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 03:47 am (UTC)(link)
The surprise at a full and honest answer gave way quickly to fear.

She'd been wary of Skulduggery when he was here, but the detective hadn't acted like anything ever changed. He'd joked with her. It had taken China a few minutes, but then she was even able to joke back.

Now, she knew why. If Skulduggery was rattled by what might have been a very close encounter with Lord Vile, then it made sense that he would try harder after the danger passed. Work harder. Face head-on the things that made him angry and change them. It should have been comforting, that fact, since he was historically so good at keeping control of his emotions. It wasn't.

It wasn't, simply because it could apparently happen even when Skulduggery resisted it outright. And he would never not blame China for the deaths of his family.

China felt a chill traveling down her back. She fought it. No matter what had happened to Skulduggery after he disappeared through that yellow portal, he hadn't spent centuries fighting himself just so he could fail at the first stressor. There was something more. "Tesseract's death?" she asked again, putting one elbow on her knees to help her feel the unconcern she was so used to conveying. "Just Tesseract's death, or the manner in which he died?"
peacefullywreathed: (don't taint this ground)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 04:11 am (UTC)(link)
No matter how China tried to pretend otherwise, none of her reactions were hidden. Solomon wasn't quite able to parse them as well as usual, because even this brief bout of relative activity was exhausting enough that trying to unravel the layers in China's words and her reactions both wasn't worth the effort. Except when her reactions were honest.

Like with the fear.

Solomon didn't answer for a moment in favour of looking at her. Finally he said, "The manner in which he died. I can't use Necromancy anymore, but I don't have to. Souls and the manner in which they're bound into a body ... are more accessible to me now than they ever were when I was a Necromancer."

His voice, not gentle but resigned, and soft, and almost as tired as he still felt. Being able to kill on a whim wasn't a talent he'd wanted even as a Necromancer.
neutralcollector: (librarian)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 12:33 pm (UTC)(link)
China didn't have to ask. She'd already known, really. She just hadn't wanted to believe it.

It was a naive viewpoint she generally looked down upon, but like so many others before her, China's judgement tended to grow cloudy when it grew personal. That was why she very rarely let things grow personal. Business transactions were so easy to keep neutral. Relationships, platonic or otherwise, were... not.

She had to wonder, now. Had Skulduggery been so adamant about being polite with her for his own sake, or because some part of him wanted to reassure China that he wasn't seeking revenge?

She couldn't pretend to understand this strange world Skulduggery and Solomon had both found themselves in, and to be brutally honest with herself, she didn't want to understand, either. From Solomon's tone, it appeared she wasn't the only one. China sat back and took a thoughtful sip of her water, absentmindedly staring out at Dublin through her large window.

Well, since she'd already asked. "And the armour? How did you manage to fend that off?" It was easy enough to guess that an angel had something to do with deactivating it completely, but Solomon still had to hold it off for a bit, and China had never known anyone successfully able to do that before. Well, no one who lived, anyway.
peacefullywreathed: (of life so incomplete)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
The brief silence was enough for Solomon to debate sliding back down into the sofa and going back to sleep. At the very least he found the edge of the sofa to put the glass on the floor and then rested his head back against the arm with a sigh. The sigils were too bright, China's presence too close and curious, for him to fall asleep quickly, so he was still aware enough to stir when she spoke again.

"Necromancy and the lifestream are directly opposite to one another," he explained without opening his eyes, "and Necromancy is the shadow, the lesser side. I threw up a barrier of magic the armour couldn't break through." His mouth quirked ironically. "Unfortunately, I'd never done that before. I had to pour everything I had into it just to keep the armour contested, and I was going to be drained dry long before the armour would have been if Gabriel hadn't come back when he did."

The mere memory made his head ache and a chill run down his spine. Contesting the armour had been so much weight he hadn't even had the metaphorical space to breathe. It couldn't always be like that, surely. Gabe had said he didn't have the strength yet. Maybe it would be something he could develop, but if fighting things like the armour was what it took to do that, he wasn't sure he wanted to.

"You must be thankful," he said, opening his eyes and lifting an eyebrow. "You finally have an excuse to have an Elder laid out in your apartment, at your complete mercy. Well done."
neutralcollector: (drawn)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 01:27 pm (UTC)(link)
China laughed, as startling as it was bright. "Yes. I'm just working on the ransom note now. 'If you'd ever like to see the more questionable Elder of your triage again, you will send me the full contents of your Repository by midnight tonight.' It doesn't sound very threatening, does it?"

Nor would it ever have been China's method. Kidnapping wasn't her style. She'd only done it once, when it hadn't even been her idea, and she was still paying for that. Never again.

"Having the full contents of the Repository here in my library would be a tad dangerous, besides," she continued quietly. "You kept Lord Vile's armour there, and the Grotesquery before that. Who knows what other forgotten dangers might be lurking? Dragon eggs, for all I know, and fire is very bad for a library. Oh dear." She hesitated. "I think I'm about to start rambling again. I've gotten into a distressing habit of doing that lately. I apologise."

It was actually somewhat annoying. China had always been perfectly content with her own company. But, ever since a couple of weeks ago with Saint Gabriel in the safehouse, she'd found that long spans of time by herself in her apartment grew really rather boring after a while. She'd taken to talking calmly at nothing, just to fill the space. It was a habit China intended to break - she just wasn't sure when.
peacefullywreathed: (so fragile on the inside)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 01:46 pm (UTC)(link)
"Questionable?" Solomon's other eyebrow joined the first. "I think I may have to object to that. There are many things which are more questionable about Ravel than there are about me. For one, I was never the subject of any rumours about sleeping with a pile of men."

Whereas the Dead Men at large were a never-ending run of gossip about their conduct with each other. Solomon had always dismissed most of it. Most.

"Again?" Solomon smiled in spite of himself. China Sorrows wasn't predisposed to being, in any way, endearing, and yet the idea that she might have started talking to herself was oddly charming. She did have her weak points. "Have you started on the Repository wards, yet? I may have to ensure someone catalogues everything so you don't get away with slipping something into your pocket while you're there."

Come to think of it, he had the authority to make exchanges of those exact items. The irony of that was that China had less desire for them. Oh, of course she would still delight in adding any of them to her collection--but she had more perspective as to what was important now. "I would offer to listen, but I'm afraid it may shatter your self-esteem to have me fall asleep while you're still talking."
neutralcollector: (librarian)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 02:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Solomon brought up a good point, but as China had always known for a fact that the multitude of rumours surrounding the Dead Men were never anything more than rumours, she didn't believe any of it made an upstanding Elemental mage any more questionable than an ex-Necromancer. Solomon's attempt at defending himself, though, still made her smile.

"Yes," she admitted with a sigh. "Again." Though it would be the first time in the presence of someone else. "Solomon, you're offending me. Do you really think that I wouldn't be able to outsmart whatever Sanctuary grunt you put in charge of cataloguing everything? You're very lucky I have a renewed sense of right and wrong. Although I suppose you wouldn't have asked me if I didn't."

The Repository wards were still the last on her to-do list. The sensitive nature of the items inside and the classified nature of the people allowed into the recesses of the room made it one of the lower-priority areas in the Sanctuary. That, and one of the angel statues was always guarding the entrance these days, and even though China created them - even though she could see, quite clearly, how to deactivate them in an instant - it still made her uncomfortable to see one of them watching her every move.

The comment about her self-esteem made her laugh again. "You have a very inflated opinion of your influence over me, Elder Wreath. Feel free to go back to sleep if I'm boring you. I daresay the others would prefer a sleeping package to bring home again."
peacefullywreathed: (tread careful one step at a time)

[personal profile] peacefullywreathed 2013-08-02 02:36 pm (UTC)(link)
"That depends on which Sanctuary grunt it is. Apparently Rue can make women fall as his feet, so perhaps I should put him on duty now he's actually here." Solomon wasn't exactly sure how he knew that, except that he did. It was something he was discovering lately, actually. He could sense the lifestream and the lifestream never stopped, even when he was asleep. Which meant there were times when he would wake up with a certainty.

It wasn't usually quite so solid as this, but he wasn't going to question it in front of China.

"Then again," he mused, "I may get jealous. Perhaps I should choose someone else." He was startled by a yawn and smothered it, blinking to try and get his eyes to open again. "I'm sure it will be a blow to your ego to be considered boring, but I may have to take you up on that offer."
neutralcollector: (color)

[personal profile] neutralcollector 2013-08-02 09:03 pm (UTC)(link)
China shook her head. "I've met Rue. Many times. Believe me, he is far less impressive than the stories."

For more reasons than one, she might have added, but it was one of the few secrets she'd discovered that she had never repeated. Partly because it amused her, but mostly because it was never a smart move to make yourself a target of the Dead Men during the war, whether you were actually on Mevolent's side or not. She could think of plenty of people who would have taken advantage of Rue's relative youth and inexperience, besides. China may have been neutral, but she would never have sabotaged one of the only units capable of ending the war once and for all.

Was she really neutral, anymore? Had she been, even before the angels? Was someone who sided with the good guys purely for her own survival still neutral if that 'siding' happened more often than not?

"Of course, if you'll be jealous, better not." China gave him a warm smile. "I'll do my best to nurse my ego while you sleep. If you're lucky, I may even ignore any urges to smother you with a pillow."
scryinghope: (shelter also gave their shade)

[personal profile] scryinghope 2013-08-03 01:02 am (UTC)(link)
"--be blamed for angels being insane! Who have thought they'd actually appreciate things like that?"

"You did set yourself up for that, you know. I'd have thought after a year there before me you would have already come to terms with the fact that angels are uninhibited."

"It was only a year! How much of Heaven did you manage to explore in a year?"

"I didn't have to. I have everyone else to do it for me."

"Cheater. You're a cheater. Everyone, I'd like to make it known that Descry is a cheater. Oh hello, are we home already?"

'Home', in this instance, was Corrival's living-room, more than large enough to house the dozen odd people who had suddenly appeared within it.

"If this is how the two of you went on Upstairs, I'm surprised they didn't throw you out," Corrival grumbled, pulling off his coat and tossing it over the back of a chair, but without trying to hide the tiny smile lurking at the corner of his mouth. Dexter wasn't even trying to hide his grin as he flung himself into an armchair.

"They would have placed bets," Descry said. The redhead had barely stopped being near someone or another the whole night. If he wasn't ruffling Saracen's hair, he had an arm slung over one of the other Dead Mens' shoulders. Right now, he was leaning on Anton, mostly because he needed the support. That had been the least of the actions which, over the course of the evening, had drawn the attention of anyone passing by their tables at the restaurant. "But they didn't have to. It's not as much fun to argue if there's no veteran peanut gallery to give commentary."

Rover whirled around from his wander through the room. "Speaking of peanuts, I need some! Skulduggery, summon your angels! Unless, of course, Dex has figured out how to conjure living matter while I've been gone? No? Angels it is."
skeletonenigma: (i am a pretty marvelous person)

[personal profile] skeletonenigma 2013-08-03 12:20 pm (UTC)(link)
"I'm not their personal secretary," Skulduggery answered, amused. He'd briefly toyed with the idea of giving his disguise a rest once they were out of the public eye, seeing as most of the Dead Men hadn't ever met him looking like this and couldn't possibly be as comfortable with it as they were with the skeleton. He hadn't given them enough credit, it seemed. Rover and Descry never even commented on it, barely batted an eyelash. And the others were either following their example to the letter, or were just so uninhibited that they didn't mind the appearance of a stranger in their midst. Skulduggery was putting his vote forward for the latter, himself.

Either way, he was quite enjoying being able to sit in a restaurant and order food as if it - and he - was perfectly normal. He was enjoying being able to retaliate for certain comments Rover made by hooking his foot around the leg of Rover's chair and pulling, watching the Elemental tumble backwards with a startled yelp. And of course, it went without saying that he enjoyed the reunion, no matter how brief it might end up being.

Or what the actual purpose was. No one had yet mentioned it. Skulduggery might have been the first one, but he didn't want to ruin the atmosphere if he could help it. Not when the reunion might very well be as brief as a day.

"Can't you summon them?" asked Erskine. "You're nothing but a soul. Actually, can't any of us do it? Doesn't it just take a prayer?"

"So goes the traditional knowledge," Skulduggery nodded.

"If we all pray really loudly at the same time, would that be the equivalent of screaming?"

"Probably." Ghastly cut Erskine off short before the Elder could test it out. Gabe, Rafe, Rover wants you. Something about peanuts.