the marquis de Carabas (
mattersverymuch) wrote2014-01-27 07:20 pm
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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.]
[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.]
[ Spam ]
[He stands, hand on his hip, watching Dean and conducting the silence like the finest maestro with the twitch of lips and eyebrows. The irony's obvious, at least to him, but he wonders if Dean sees all of it. The only way to surprise this man - this friend of his - is to catch himself most deliberately in a trap of vulnerability. He must put a knife in Dean's hand and poise it against his own gut. He must be prepared to die if taken advantage of, and must assume he will not be.]
[He must be, not soft, but flexible. Not superhuman, not a story, but a man. Just a man, just for a moment.]
[He doesn't remember the last time he was just a man. Maybe once, on the cusp of death, blood trickling from the corners of his mouth - but never before, never after, not in memory.]
[Not until Dean, and Ned, and Snow. Not until he found fragments of home lodged in the souls of other people.]
[Slowly, he blinks, an acquiescence of all the things neither of them are saying. Yes. He's sure. It's a small sacrifice, to lose the edge of sobriety in the company of a friend, but then again, for a man like the marquis de Carabas, it's not so small at all.]
I don't drive. I walk, or take public transit, or occasionally become motes on the wind and float on air currents. None of which are methods of transportation that prohibit the consumption of alcohol.
Give it to me.
[ Spam ]
[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.
[ Spam ]
[He laughs, a deep and throaty and pleasant sound, rich and dark as peat. No tricks.]
You can't possibly believe that.
[Not that he won't be quote-unquote "a badass". He always is; no point in acting as though he's anything but highly competent. But tricks, he's always got those. Redeemed or not. There will always be something more. He will always be planning a hundred steps ahead of the enemy.]
[This time, maybe he won't have to give his life and find a way to steal it back. But he will do what needs to be done for his home.]
Do you really think London Below would welcome me back as a man of complete honesty? Please don't disappoint me and say yes.
[ Spam ]
[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.]
[ Spam ]
[He sounds insulted at the crassness of it, but his lip twitches, too. Then a smirk comes out to play, all fang, and he is watching Dean from across the room with something that could be mistaken in a dim light for admiration. Yes, Dean has paid attention. That is one of the most important qualities about him: his attention to detail, and that cleverness that masquerades as something much more like stupidity.]
It might not be totally useless, [he admits as though it's been dragged out of him.] I suppose.
[It will be invaluable. No one will know what to make of him. It will be marvelous, and he will laugh and laugh when he has the privacy to and the luxury of laughter. Things will be different, but he has come around to the belief that they will be easier this way.]
[And even if they're not, he doesn't think he wants to go back to the old way. Not entirely, anyway. What use is immortality if you're not adaptable, is what he thinks - what good is a life like his if he can't recognize the use of change?]
[That other thing, too. An object lesson. If a man like him can change, so can the city.]
[ Spam ]
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?
[ Spam ]
[His gaze ticks over to Dean. Then he takes another drink, without blinking, without looking away.]
All that jazz.
[He wants to say You're worried out loud, to get it out of the way and out in the open, but he doesn't. It would be discourteous, he thinks. Dean would not thank him. Not that he particularly wants or needs Dean's thanks, but - well. Consider this a pleasant last look. He doesn't want it to be of Dean pouting.]
I will be exquisite. Don't bother considering any other outcomes, they're statistically so unlikely as to be basically impossible.
[ Spam ]
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.
[ Spam ]
[He takes another drink, like a man who has been drinking beer all his life and thoroughly enjoys it, like this is something they do often.]
The best the multiverse has to offer.
[It sounds dismissive. He doesn't recall a time when he was more serious.]