mattersverymuch: (ɂ before i left for good)
the marquis de Carabas ([personal profile] mattersverymuch) wrote2014-01-27 07:20 pm

19 ɂ spam & text; fin.

spam } snow

[He doesn't know how he knows. He just does. Every atom in him turns like a key in a lock, with a very nearly audible click.]

[All that's left to do is wait. Which he does on the deck, looking out at the stars with a curious and abnormal stillness.]


private } ned

I want pie.

[Firm and straightforward, for once.]

private } door

[He heard it once, from mysterious sources. His voice is rich, thick, syrupy as he repeats it. The sound of satisfaction.]

I turn my head and you may go where you want. I turn it again, you will stay 'til you rot. I have no face, but I live or die by my crooked teeth.

What am I?

spam } dean

[It's easy enough to let himself into Dean's room after all this time. He knows how and, moreover, is allowed; is encouraged, in a silent way. Because Dean is his friend.]

[Out of respect, he doesn't sit on the bed, but leans against the dresser and thumbs through one of the more arcane books on the shelf, for something to do until his friend - his friend - comes back.]

[Attachment was unforeseen, and distresses him.]


text } public

[The marquis de Carabas is not in the habit of goodbyes; certainly not to a population that he is not, as a whole, fond of. This is what he gives instead, as a gift, or something.]

There are a hundred thousand ways to die, a hundred thousand traditions of death, a hundred thousand death gods. The people who know all of them are probably dead. [Which is fitting enough.] But death isn't exactly real.

An image can die. A person can die. But they don't have to.

There was a monstrous giant named Goëmagot, set by fate or one or the other's stupidity against Corineus in what is now Cornwall. He slaughtered a number of men who are forgotten by history and then was captured, by some miracle, by Corineus, who wanted to wrestle him, to best him. Goëmagot broke three of Corineus's ribs; then Corineus threw him into the sea, and Goëmagot died. That place is called Lam Goëgamot - Goëgamot's Leap - probably to rub it in.

So the giant was dead. But remembered alongside Corineus, which was probably not the man's intention. Corineus is, in fact, inextricably tied with the story of the monster now. And somewhere under the ground two very tall men walk hand in hand, and we call them Gog and Magog, because that's what they're called. That's what they've always been called.

That's what death is.


[And that's all.]

[There may be a point, but there is no moral.]
surfaceshine: (Space Between)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-01-28 03:56 am (UTC)(link)
[This, Dean knows on some level, is A Good Thing. The Marquis never wanted to be here, he never wanted to be forced to change, he never wanted to leave his home in the first place; it's a terrible thing, to be trapped, to be without choice, for everyone but for people like de Carabas most of all. Furthermore, Dean knew it was inevitable.

It's a good thing. It's a good thing. He makes his mouth smile but he can't feel his face, and glances up. It's a good thing.
]

That's awesome. You can... [But words fail him. He looks at the Marquis, at his reluctant, hardwon, dear friend, standing for the last time in his room, safeguarding and coveting his belongings for the last time, looking at him with something Dean can't even put a name to in the smooth planes and clever lines of his face, and the act - the lie - drops into a vice around his chest. The smile fades. The line of his shoulders drags down.

Caught between his palm and the desktop, forgotten, is the necklace he was attempting to fix. He swallows, eyes dropping, and tries to think of something, anything to say.

There's nothing. It's a good thing, it was inevitable, Dean had faith in him from the moment he looked up from this very couch through the unimaginable pain of a death toll he was trying desperately to hide and saw something in de Carabas he recognized, and he knew that he would go home when all was said and done. It hurts, though. It hurts so much.

He straightens, hands empty, and walks back out the door.
]
surfaceshine: (At the Edge of the World)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-01-28 04:28 am (UTC)(link)
[Later, Dean will not be able to honestly say he has any idea where he went or what he did for an indeterminable amount of time after he leaves cabin 4-18. He doesn't do anything dramatic, certainly, there are no new bruises or cuts that he can't explain, no one brings him any complaints about his behavior; he walks. Where, he does not know.

He first becomes aware of where he is when he can't get into the pub; he reaches for his item, but it's not there, and that simultaneously resonates so perfectly and is so impossible that he cannot comprehend it at all. By the time anyone arrives that would let him in, he's gone.

He next becomes aware of his surroundings standing at the forward rail, staring hard out into space. He hates the deck. He hates being reminded that they're sailing, floating, flying on nothing, that there is more nothing - nothing upon nothing - around them; he is terrified of the deck. Afraid on a visceral, uncontrollable level, but he has been working for months to quell what will not die. It seems, in the face of his only other visceral fear, much more manageable. He stares out over the railing, his hips bruising and cold where he leans against it, and if anyone tries to speak with him he does not respond and does not remember.

Dean Winchester is not a man that knows how to say goodbye. His very presence here is evidence of that, but he's only recently realized the problem inherent in that selfsame presence: everyone here is working tirelessly towards the goal of
no longer being here. Everyone will go. Everyone must go. Everyone should go. Including the Marquis de Carabas, including Dean, including every person here Dean knows, every person here he loves. It makes no sense to be upset when it happens. When it's a good thing, a goal reached, an opportunity available. And he is happy.

He is also terrified. And angry. And fiercely proud. And silently desperate. And thinking of all the what ifs, the what nows, the hundred thousand ways his friends - the people he loves, the people he's given pieces of his heart to without any thought about taking them back - could die out of his sight. And trying to accept that there is nothing he can do about it that he has not already done.

He does nothing dramatic, though he very much wants to. That is the price of growing up. He stares at the space that used to intimidate him, and wishes profoundly that he could navigate it like some here do, that he could know with certainty that if any of those hundred thousand ways come for his people, he could be there to stop them. Wishes for the hundred thousandth time that there were even one way - one, single way - that he could be included in the lives that they keep with them. That they would stay. That he could go.

But wishing never got anyone anywhere, and he is not this person. The Marquis does not require Dean to be happy for him, which is fortunate because he's not sure he can be yet. There is only one way to know, and the thought that finally breaks Dean away from the rail and sends him back belowdecks is that the Marquis has graduated - it may already be too late. He may be gone, a thought that speeds his pulse and makes his path back to level four direct and swift.

But he is not gone. His door is still there, across from Dean's where it has been for a year and a half, and the hunter pauses to brush his fingers over the coarse, solid wood of it. Then he turns away decisively, more centered but no more certain about what he's going to do now.

It is hours later when the knob turns again and Dean lets himself into his cabin. It is the last place he saw the Marquis - he is, a little, surprised to find him there still. And then again, maybe not at all. He steps inside and closes the door again, quietly, and breathes out.
]

Sorry. [For leaving. For reacting like an asshole. For being someone that someone like de Carabas would stand and wait for. For needing it. He smiles again, and this time it sticks - sad but warm, the pieces of himself he managed to pick back up, changed but still true.] I know you miss London Below. I'm glad you get to go back, now. I am.
Edited 2014-01-28 04:29 (UTC)
surfaceshine: (Dean Glance)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-01-28 05:28 am (UTC)(link)
[This is why Dean needed to walk away, first. This is the person he is, the man he wants to be; because now that everything has been compartmentalized away, now that he is not stronger but more stable, he hears what others would not, finally sees what he had missed completely before.

Dean says he's glad the Marquis can go home now; the Marquis responds with that laugh, that smile, and something Dean had suspected for a while, now. He chews his lip, and nods as he steps away from the door again. This - this waiting, this visit, this exchange - is for Dean, but it is also for the Marquis. He does not know how to do friendship, does not know how to be selfless, except in the way that he has just now admitted to: being without self.
]

I was wondering. [The hunter is finding his stride, now; someone needs something from him. He can meet that need. He always could. It gives him purpose. He moves for the mini fridge, glancing at the desk on his way by, pausing but only because he glances, then, at the Marquis again.] And there's no one else, is there?
surfaceshine: (Sacred)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-01-29 04:51 am (UTC)(link)
[Dead. Dean can relate.

Dean who is, himself, dead back home. Supposed to be. Dean who cannot use his full name anymore. Dean, who came here because his family was dead, and that he could not bear. Dean, who looks now back to the desk and sees his amulet there, the newly reknotted cord. Dean, who suspects the cord will never break again, the knot never come untied, and god knows what else.

The Marquis does not know how to do friendship. He is still uncertain about what is weakness and what is strength entrusted to others; Dean picks up the amulet, turns it over in his palm and inspects the cord, and knows that it isn't far off no matter how little confidence his friend has in this part of himself. In its power.
]

Well. Good thing you aren't anymore, then.

[He twists to glance up at him, raises his hand with the amulet in it in silent thanks. There's no question about it.]

Names are important, but they don't make you who you are. You make them what they are. That's all.
surfaceshine: (Eyes of Truth)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-01-29 07:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes.

[Dean meets that smile with steadfast confidence, unhesitating; it's a good thing. He cannot accept death. He won't. He is fiercely, solidly glad his friend gets another chance, that he survived, that he will go home and pick up where he left off with new tools and new strengths and new friends.

Dean knows what to make of it. He raises hie eyebrows as he raises the cord to drop the amulet back where it goes, back around his neck.
]

You're a bastard. [Dean is a creature built to love, to have faith, but he never learned how to express it; how to feel secure in knowing this about himself. It does not change the instinct, only his acknowledgement of it. It didn't keep him from picking one thing out about the man across from him and believing in it unconditionally to loan it strength. The Marquis asks what he is and Dean responds with the first thing that comes to mind - true, multilayered, safe.

Then he digs in before he can trip over himself.
] Trustworthy, with the right things, more than most men are with anything. Impossible, too many things to be mixed into one person but formidable nonetheless. [He looks down, then, at the amulet, still held in his fingertips from the compulsion to settle it back where it goes by hand. At the necklace that had been all important to him, that he had lost as an inmate and that had cost his closest friend one of his nine lives and most of his borrowed times to exact as much vengeance for the loss of as they possibly could in that place.

So Dean would not do something even more stupid, and find himself more crippled than he already was.
]

One of the best friends I've ever had. Not for the things you did, but for the things you didn't do. The things you will do. The things you would do, if I asked.

Which is only true because I don't. But others will, and because you are better than they are, you'll help them. [He glances up then, squints, barely able to recognize his own voice and the words he's saying except that he is. He has found himself here, at the point of no return, far too often not to recognize what this is.

Dean is not good at goodbyes. This is what he does instead. His voice lowers as his clumsiness catches up to him, but the momentum is gathered - it must be spent.
] You are clever and careful and one of a kind. You are what you made yourself.
surfaceshine: (Side-Eye Smile)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-02-05 04:26 am (UTC)(link)
[Dean does not look away.

His steady gaze is there to meet the dark eyes when they turn his way again, unyielding in either direction. He does not retreat, he does not advance. There is no threat in Dean Winchester for the Marquis de Carabas. Not truly. Not while he knows himself.

His mouth quirks, his skin hot with a kind of embarrassment that won't allow him to repeat himself or make anything like a habit of what he's just done, what he's just said; but Dean is the realization of conviction if he is anything, and he stands by it.

And he laughs. It's easier than letting the mirror be reflected back on him, when he sees none of that in himself. It's easier to take the barb at face value - he is a bastard, too, by nature and by design - and so he does, despite what his knowledge of the Marquis may try to suggest lies just below the surface of such a remark.
]

Now the truth comes out. You came here to get a few more jabs in for the road.

Well, c'mon then, sunshine. Let's have it. [His fist closes around the amulet. He continues to the fridge.]
surfaceshine: (Hold On Hope)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-02-16 01:57 am (UTC)(link)
[Once upon a time, Dean firmly believed that if he took his eyes off his friends, his loved ones - particularly just after they'd graduated - they would disappear, or unimaginable evil would befall them. He still believes it, of course, that hasn't changed, but he is able most times to overcome the intensity of it. He would not have held it against the Marquis if he turned back around and found his friend gone - he forces himself to turn away because if it happens, then it happens. Nothing he can do about it.

This has been the hardest lesson he has ever learned, and he is not anywhere close to mastering it. He is no better at goodbyes now than he was when anyone else he loves gave him the opportunity to say one. He won't be any less aimless in the days to come, whether others notice it or not.

But he turns away because what he has learned - what he has been working on learning, what has always been disconcertingly easy with this man in particular - is to trust that the people he loves will do what they think is necessary, and only that. If the Marquis needs to go, he'll go - now, not at all; Dean knows he'll go eventually - and if he wants to stay, he'll stay. Dean can trust him that far.

He smiles with his back turned when the other man speaks; he hears what the Marquis doesn't say, hears the compliment, hears that it's all the moreso because de Carabas also gets to indulge in his very favorite pastime of being right. It isn't a smile in any way appropriate for sharing; it's acknowledgement and gratitude and all the soft, brittle emotions they don't share. That Dean doesn't share with anyone anymore, not in anything like visible, acknowledge proportions.
Your heart beat with London's, the Marquis says. It goes into the same niche in his chest alongside things like I just reminded you of who you really are and We will always be family.

So he pretends to have to look around the fridge, pretends to have to make a decision, and he's shaking his head by the time he turns around with his own beer in hand. If something else needs said, Dean doesn't know what it is.

He holds up one of the bottles of water that have, mysteriously, been appearing in his mini-fridge for several months now; unspoken, unacknowledged, and always present among the beer bottles and the occasional half sandwich. And he grins.
]

Since when did you rely on me to get you anything?
surfaceshine: (Considering)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-05-07 03:38 am (UTC)(link)
What?

[It shouldn't surprise him - the Marquis has a habit of striking him speechless, almost effortlessly, certainly deliberately, so he shouldn't be surprised - but he blinks, glancing down at the water bottle, back up.

It's another of those moments, another where something unobvious is said behind something otherwise completely mundane, and part of Dean recognizes that long before his conscious mind catches up. It's the part of Dean that hangs onto the things that logic doesn't touch, that believes deeply and with conviction that he is not a good person, that he will fail, that those he loves are right to walk away and that they always will. That he is forgettable, useless, devoid of worth.

It hears what this is, and when the rest of him catches up he blinks uncertainly and, glancing up again, turns back towards the fridge without looking. He never really needed to anyway.

Then he snorts, because the moment has drawn out too long, and because he desperately needs something to cover up the deep, bloody twist of hurt that is a preview of what will be left when the Marquis goes, because he can't admit that what this is between them is a flavor of, of all things, love.

Because he can't miss his friend before he even goes.
]

Man, are you sure? You don't have to like, drive or anything, right?
surfaceshine: (Now There's a Thought)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-05-20 10:16 pm (UTC)(link)
You are so full of shit.

[Dean laughs this, because he isn't truly meant to believe that crap about motes on the wind and air currents; other people are, but he doesn't, because he does know the truth of it. The Marquis is just a man, but Dean will never tell. He will keep this secret just between the two of them, a man with a name but no sense of self, a man in control of himself with no name. He will take it to his grave and beyond.

Dean is comfortable holding the knife, as it were; even with people he loves on the other end of it, he knows he will not plunge it home. It's not in him to violate trust in that way. If he is asked, if he is invited, he will not waver. If he is entrusted, he will not falter. This is where his most basic confidence lies. This is where he is the man everyone thinks he is.

He tosses the bottle of beer to de Carabas, and wrinkles his nose.
] Just this once. [Except always: always he will give it to him, no debt attached, not for a while now. Not for this.

There are other debts he could name, he could ask, but he won't. Instead he pops the top off his own with a practiced motion of his fingers and his ring, tosses the cap at the trashcan, and looks down at the froth that builds up under the release of pressure.
]

You'll be more of a badass than ever, now. Back to life again, no tricks up the sleeves this time.
surfaceshine: (But What About Sex?)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-05-27 11:45 pm (UTC)(link)
No. And I mean that as an answer, too, not just because it would kill me to disappoint you.

[Dean grins, then, and surprises himself with the ease of it. With how he can be happy, really happy, when every other moment he is reminded that this is all a series of lasts. And, in some cases, firsts.

It has a lot to do with the laughter, of course, and he doesn't even care that it is in ridicule of him. He's never cared. He invites it, and he grins - really grins - back at his friend as he takes a sip of his own beer.
]

But don't you try to tell me it's not useful, having complete honesty as one of the tricks up your sleeve. I'm sure it adds to the confusion of when you're lying, and when you're not.

[He smiles around the mouth of the bottle at his lips, raising both eyebrows impishly. He did, after all, pay at least a little attention. It would be much harder to be sure of the Marquis - or would have been for anyone but Dean - when he can also suddenly count among them being sincere for the sake of sincerity, not just gain.]
surfaceshine: (Just Last the Year)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-05-28 06:19 am (UTC)(link)
[Dean knows that for the victory that it is, knows a sound strategic tactic when he hears it, even if it isn't one he would make use of himself. He raises his bottle in toast to it, and keeps wearing his own grin like a badge of honor. Whose honor, though, is somewhat in question.

Dean doesn't know what, in fact, the Marquis intends to do with his life; he does not expect that it is his business to know. He has the general idea - he knows he will die, someday permanently, in service to his city if he dies at all - but the specifics escape him as he suspects they escape even his friend himself. There have been moments, from the day he realized in conversation with Ned that this day was coming soon, that he has worried that there is one more skill, one more advantage he could have imparted to help that death be a long ways off, that there is one more thing he should have done.

And then he looks at that sharp-toothed smile and knows himself for a fool, that this man could ever need one more thing from him to survive; knows himself for a fool and worries anyway. The Marquis, after all, did not learn love from Dean Winchester. He did, however, learn to apply it - and he learned a whole host of other things that will either make him unbreakable if used cunningly, or break him if exploited.

The hunter shakes his head.
] So, back to the badass thing: you'll mind yourself, yeah? You'll keep your friends close and your enemies closer, all that jazz?
surfaceshine: (What're You Gonna Do?)

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[personal profile] surfaceshine 2014-06-05 06:28 am (UTC)(link)
[Dean knows himself for a fool, and worries anyway, though he's put the lightest possible face on it he can. He's joking, anyway, and the Marquis's response only makes that easier: smirk at what could never happen, the ridiculousness of it, the humor.

He won't pout. And he wouldn't have thanked him and he doesn't now. He drinks again and nods, offers characteristic cocky arrogance for the more elegant, practiced version of it that de Carabas has claimed as his.
]

Well, you learned from the best, after all. I suppose that counts for something.