(no subject)
Jul. 8th, 2007 05:06 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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Date: March 27, 2001
Status: Private - Crowley and Gabriel
Setting: London
Summary: The first leg of the journey, continued from here
Following the angel to the airport was a relatively simple matter. Crowley was well aware of the difficulties inherent in flying in the city but moreso knew that there was only one possible destination no matter how his quarry traveled. Thus he didn't worry when he lost Gabriel's trace on occasion. He'd pick it up again at Heathrow. Using short cuts and certain driving techniques, the demon made it to the airport not five minutes before Gabriel's plane left.
Parking in the loading zone, confident that his car wouldn't be bothered, Crowley hurried inside. The angel's aura was stronger here and he wondered what miracle he'd needed to perform in order to make his flight. As it was strongest at the British Airlines desk, the demon followed. In moments, he'd learned that Mr. Gabriel Engel - how original - was bound for Copenhagen on a flight that had just left. With a vehement curse and a lot of yelling, the cowed lady behind the desk who could coolly deal with even the most drunken and belligerent fliers but not a angry demon, found a seat on a rival Air France flight that was due to leave in half an hour. Crowley produced his passport and strode toward the gate.
***
Over the next several hours, he trailed Gabriel through the streets of Copenhagen, then back to the airport. It had apparently been only a stop to throw off anyone who might be following him. Which wasn't a bad idea in theory, but Crowley wondered just how dumb the angel thought he was. They went next to Munich for a day, and then to Oslo, before ending in Amsterdam, where Crowley's normally thin patience wore out.
Status: Private - Crowley and Gabriel
Setting: London
Summary: The first leg of the journey, continued from here
Following the angel to the airport was a relatively simple matter. Crowley was well aware of the difficulties inherent in flying in the city but moreso knew that there was only one possible destination no matter how his quarry traveled. Thus he didn't worry when he lost Gabriel's trace on occasion. He'd pick it up again at Heathrow. Using short cuts and certain driving techniques, the demon made it to the airport not five minutes before Gabriel's plane left.
Parking in the loading zone, confident that his car wouldn't be bothered, Crowley hurried inside. The angel's aura was stronger here and he wondered what miracle he'd needed to perform in order to make his flight. As it was strongest at the British Airlines desk, the demon followed. In moments, he'd learned that Mr. Gabriel Engel - how original - was bound for Copenhagen on a flight that had just left. With a vehement curse and a lot of yelling, the cowed lady behind the desk who could coolly deal with even the most drunken and belligerent fliers but not a angry demon, found a seat on a rival Air France flight that was due to leave in half an hour. Crowley produced his passport and strode toward the gate.
***
Over the next several hours, he trailed Gabriel through the streets of Copenhagen, then back to the airport. It had apparently been only a stop to throw off anyone who might be following him. Which wasn't a bad idea in theory, but Crowley wondered just how dumb the angel thought he was. They went next to Munich for a day, and then to Oslo, before ending in Amsterdam, where Crowley's normally thin patience wore out.
no subject
Date: 2007-09-12 12:35 am (UTC)"Like what? The only thing you've done with demons recently is screw them," he sneered, shoving the angel hard against the rough stone wall of the cafe and pinning him there by the shoulders. He kept his body just an inch from Gabriel's, hoping to prevent the archangel from having the leverage to deliver a knee to the groin and maybe just to disconcert him a little.
It was a far cry from the shaky truce they'd managed in the previous half hour, but Crowley hoped that one day Gabriel would understand why this was all necessary. It was always so much easier when the damn angels just shut up and cooperated.
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Date: 2007-09-12 06:51 am (UTC)Pinned to the ground, his white and gold wings arched over them like a misplaced shield. It was a risk, perhaps, to expose the vulnerable limbs. But then, Gabriel knew very well that Crowley could not do the same, as he had patched up the demon's broken wings himself; and perhaps that is what drove him.
"I think you've dug yourself deep enough already, demon," he hissed near Crowley's ear. "Or do you insist on making every situation worse with your vile tongue?"
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Date: 2007-09-12 07:07 pm (UTC)Feeling reckless and possibly suicidal, he smiled insouciantly, reptilian eyes locked to ethereal blue. "I do try. Sweet of you to notice, really." And that vile tongue darted out to lick the weeping gashes marring Gabriel's perfect face.
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Date: 2007-09-14 06:35 am (UTC)He stood, half in shadow with only the dingy light of street lamps pooled around them, and barely dared look at Crowley. In that dull, weary moment, it was hard to remember why they were here; why he'd just attacked one of the few demons he'd ever known any sort of sympathy for. But there was just enough of the oppressive weight still tight in his chest to remind him that it was easier not to think about it at all.
"You have your injuries to show," he said tersely. "I think that should be sufficient."
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Date: 2007-09-16 03:57 am (UTC)Yes, Gabriel was the Enemy. They'd been on opposite sides from time immemorial without the flexibility that the Arrangement provided. He'd been a cold, officious prick for as long as Crowley could recall, smug and demanding and compassionate... Wait, what? Not to John, certainly, and that made the demon flush furious, but to Aziraphale in what seemed like a lifetime ago, and to himself more than once, though there'd been no reason why he should.
The Messenger stood there under the sickly yellow light, a paragon of angels looking like nothing so much as a lost little boy, and the Serpent of Eden felt something twisting in his gut. Some slight measure of guilt or empathy, if that was possible, lonely in unlikely territory. Gabriel had recently lost his lover and the rocks upon which he'd built his world kept being overturned one by one. It was familiar, perhaps. Yet he'd never so much as thought to question the ineffable. He kept to his path. It was a faith Crowley had never, obviously, been able to sustain and it wearied him beyond endurance. He closed his eyes.
"Go then, angel."
no subject
Date: 2007-09-16 05:47 am (UTC)