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She stood under the old, dead tree, breath heavy. It had stood here—God only knew how long it stood here, at the edge of the world, weathering everything nature could throw at it. It had outlasted all its mates out here on the bluff; cracked stone was all the legacy of trees hundreds of years gone. By all estimations, this tree stood longer than any of them.
(updated 8-24-04) She dropped the spoon in the soup. What if he was bleeding? She’d just left him on the couch. Soup forgotten, she rushed into the living room. He was so pale; what if he was pale for a reason? She pressed her hand to his cheek, his neck. His skin was warmer now, heartbeat steady at the base of his throat. Her hands hovered over the edge of the blanket, stopped. Biting her lip, she shook his shoulder, trying to wake him. He slept on, unaware of her attempts to salvage what was left of his modesty. She gave it up for a lost cause and lifted the blanket. He was fine. Frowning, she turned him to the side, checking his back and checking the couch for any blood. Nothing. Not a bruise, not a scratch, not even a scar, unless you counted the two crescent marks tracing his shoulder blades. Vera stared at them thoughtfully for a moment before lowering him back down and straightening the blanket. Were they some sort of tattoo or ritual scarring? Her eyes moved to the phone. She should call 911, or the police… where was the handy veterinarian friend she was suppose to have when a beautiful man showed up bleeding at her doorstep? Well, not precisely bleeding, she thought ruefully. But still. She sighed, catching an acrid scent on the air. Crap. The soup. She rushed back to the kitchen. Grumbling under her breath, she grabbed the handle and dumped the whole mess in the sink. The tomato mess splashed into the sink, spattering her sweatshirt. For a moment, she saw blood. She yelped and dropped the pan, yelped again when the pan fell with an impossibly loud clang, spraying the remaining soup in a mess across the counter. She leaned against the counter’s edge, shaking, and decided she wasn’t that hungry after all. She cleaned up and made her way to the kitchen table, catching sight of her own scratched knuckles. How had he managed to avoid getting hurt? For that matter, how was he clean when she still had blood under her fingernails? Hours passed slowly. She made herself a cup of tea and sat nursing it until it went cold and bitter. Several times she reached for the phone, only to hesitate. She’d wait for him to wake, to explain himself. Then she’d call the hospital. Why that order seemed so important, she couldn’t explain. The whole situation was strange, yes, but there had to be some sort of rational explanation. She shifted in her chair, watching him sleep. Please let there be a rational explanation? She drifted off a few times, each time jerking awake with the certainty that he was stirring. Eventually, not even that was enough to disturb her. Morning found Vera wide awake and pouring over with nervous energy. Nothing she could think of, not even pain, was enough to wake him up. She’d gone to the phone three times now, ready to call and strangeness be damned, but each time she found herself… distracted. Wandered off and fixed breakfast, read a book, just watched him sleep—it was creepy. She wondered what would happen if she rolled him and all this strangeness out her door. Probably she’d just have the strangeness on her porch instead. Growling, she cleaned the dishes, scrubbing at the burnt pot with unnecessary brutality. She was considering just letting it soak when she heard something from the other room. She wiped the soap off of her hands and walked around the partition. He was still asleep, but he’d moved, shifting to the side and shoving the blanket off his pale shoulders. In the light of day his body was thin, athletic, almost frighteningly perfect. His skin was drum tight and glowed with health despite his paleness. His features were handsome too, but thin, almost childlike in sleep. His hair had folded around his face, reminding her the he’d probably need a hair tie, too. With a strange sort of resignation, she pulled the blanket back up around his shoulders. His eyes opened. There was no stirring, not a moment between asleep and wakefulness; one moment he was asleep, the next his eyes were wide open and he held her wrist in a firm grip. His face lost its innocence and took on a hard, unreadable expression with those hard, dark eyes staring out from it. They stared for a moment. He seemed no more interested in speaking than he did in releasing her hand. "How are you feeling?" Vera broke the silence nervously, feeling like she was the one trespassing. No response, only his searching eyes. She blinked, feeling suddenly tired; she shook her head to try and clear it. She looked away, and the grip on her wrist tightened a little. "Look, I’m not going to hurt you." And I hope you feel the same, she thought fervently. "Please let me go?" He did, fingers peeling back mechanically before he slowly lowered his arm. Vera rubbed her wrist; whoever he was, he one hell of a grip. "Do you need anything?" she tried again. Did he even speak English? "Do you want some water?" He nodded, watching her with those opaque eyes. Well, he understood English at least; whether or not he could speak was a different matter. Feeling just a little grouchy, she went to the kitchen and poured a glass. The pipes rattled a little, making the peeling wallpaper over the sink shiver. Absently promising herself she was going to fix it, she made her way back into the living room. He was up—and oh god, he was putting on the clothes she’d left by the bed. Ducking back around the partition, she waited for the sounds of movement to stop. Wheeling back around the partition, she almost plowed right into him. He stumbled back a little, recovering with more catlike grace than Vera could exhibit on the best of days. She barely rescued the glass, water sloshing over the side. "Crap." Frowning, she mopped it up with her sock and headed past him into the living room, setting it on the table. "Are you sure you should be up?" She asked, waving at the couch. "Thank you for your help," he said, and opened the door. "On, no!" She exclaimed, running around him and slamming the door shut. "I think at the very least you owe me an explanation. I just dragged you out of a tree! A bleeding tree. What the hell is going on?" He frowned at her. "I don’t think you want to know." She raised an eyebrow. "Try me." He sighed. "I don't think I will." "Look, I drgged you out of that... whatever it was. And you're wearing my sweatpants. You owe me." "I owe you nothing." She just glared at him, making it clear that she wasn't going to let this go easily. "You're not going to believe the truth anyway, so why should I try? Just let me go, chock this up to some sort of drug-induced haze, and move on. You'll be much happier, I assure you." "Let me be the judge of that." He shook his head. "All right, then give me my clothes back." "You must be joking." "No, I'm not All I'm asking is an explanation. If you won't even give me that, then why should I give you my sweatpants?" she said, almost sweetly. Almost. He glared. It was quite a glare. She glared back. "You want pants? You spill." He growled something under his breath in a language she didn't recognize. She wanted the truth? Fine. "I’m an angel, released from a sleep that was supposed to last until the end of time, thanks to your helpful interference. And I don’t think you really want to be any more involved than that." She glared, setting herself against the door. "Nice try." His expression didn’t change. "Oh, shit, you’re serious." He just stared at her. She leaned against the door. "So that was…" "My prison, yes. For one thousand years, give or take." He didn’t seem eager to say anything else. "So… a prison? Why?" She didn’t think he was dangerous. He certainly hadn’t hurt her. Yet. Another thought occurred to her, a thread of logic against all this nonsense. "And if you’ve been in there all this time, how the hell do you speak English?" He didn’t say anything. He didn’t have to. He just looked at her with those eyes of his, and this time he wasn’t trying to hide it; those eyes were diving into her, draining her, taking her into them… "oh, shit." Her voice was small. Her knees went weak, giving until she slid down the door to hang her head between her knees, breaking contact with those eyes. He was kneeling in front of her. "Now do you understand? It’s dangerous." His voice held no malice, little emotion at all. "So, what? You just went into my head and got it—the language, everything—from me?" "Not really. I can only gather so much, weakened as I am. But I have been here with nothing but my thoughts and the thoughts of others for a very long time." She shook her head. "All right. Assume what you say is true. What happens now?" "I walk out that door." "And?" "And you go on with your life." "No, I mean what do you do from there? Do you have a plan? What do angels need anyway? Do you eat? Sleep? Get cold?" His hard expression melted a little, becoming uncertain. "Crap." She pushed herself weakly to her feet, planting a hand squarely on the door. "I can’t just send you out there, in the woods at night. You’ll freeze." She mulled it over. "Look. Let’s at least talk. Maybe I can help." He looked a little nervous, sitting there on the couch, half-empty glass of water in one hand. More vulnerable. Vera took a long pull of her hard cider and considered him over the rim of the glass. He looked almost… scared, like he was waiting for the house to come down around his ears. She swallowed. If he’d been imprisoned for some reason… "Who imprisoned you?" He looked at her, startled. "Other angels. The council, for lack of a better human term. That’s part of why I’m eager to be away from you. Their reach is long." She shivered. He stood up, lips pursed. "Thank you for your concern, but I can't stay here. They may not have realized that the seal is broken--mine is not the only one they have to watch--but it can't be long. Ignorant or no, you would be punished with me." She glared. "So that's it? The most amazing thing that has ever happened to me and I should jutst let you stagger out into the cold?" "I tell you, its only a matter of time before they discover me missing. They may be unable to seal me again, but you, you they can punish. And harshly." He made for the door. "I trust I've earned these pants, at least." She watched him leave, watched the door close behind him. Crap. She wasn't really going to let him go, was she? If what he said wsa true (and that was still a big if) did she realy have a choice? Wrath that could chain someone like tha in a friggin tree was not something she wanted directed her way. Still. It felt strange to see the magic, the otherworldly that she had craved since she was a child reading fairy tales, and just let it walk away. She stared at the glass on the table, still half full. How bad could angelic wrath be, anyway? She snorted. Seriously, was she really asking herself that? She stood, picked up the glass. Better just to let it go. Better to move on, to count the blessing of this strange, exaustign day. She'd always craved the unknown. All right, she'd seen it. Best not to get greedy. She walked into the kitchen. She dropped the glass, which promply shattered on the vinyl flooring. This day was bad for her dishes. Of course, if the glowering, very naked angel stanging in front of her stove was any indication, it was about to be a bad day for her, too. He was beautiful, in a painful way, like staring into the sun. He took a step forward. "You are the one who freed Hadrianus." It wasn't a question. His wings seemed to fill the tiny kitchen, and a corner of her brain not engaged in babbling panic worried for her hanging pots. She nodded. What else could she do? Praying seemed to be out for the moment. Besides, she was agnostic. Had been agnostic. She certainly couldn't claim unsurety now. He glared at her. She backed away a few steps, despite adamantly ordering her legs not to back down. They knew better, because with a seemingly casual motion he backhanded her. She hit the partition wall hard, that oddly lucid corner of her mind noting that the angel was left-handed. Light footseeps crosse the room, and that large, perfect hand was grabbing her by the collar and dragging her to her feet. Vera had never been punched. She'd been accidentally hit, run into things, fallen... but none of that could quite match the pain of being smacked by an irate angel. Her whole face burned, and she tasted blood. "Amadeus." It was another voice. The man--no, angel--from before. "Let her down. You're better than that." His voice held a weary resignation. "Adrian." The tones in the winged angel's voice were complex, too complex for her to follow as she was lowered none to gently to the floor. She struggled to stay on her feet, and was stabilized by the angel's realtively gentle grip on her arm. "Adrian, you could have been free. Your case was already up for review, and under the new treaties..." "Up for review when? The new treaties were signed a hunderd years ago." "I was working on it! The case was actually in a magistrate's hands!" The grip on her arm tightened painfully. "Now you have no grounds for appeal. None! Why on earth did you encourage her?" "How many times has my case been up for review, Amadeus? With every new treaty. And with every new treaty, I remain a prisoner. They weren't going to free me, right or not. You know that. And I grew tired of hoping." "You realize I'll have to punish you. And this girl. the council will accept no less. Dammit, Adrian, you'll be foreced to the other side!" "Better than living in a tree! If the council sees me as evil, I may as well fulfill their expectations!" "There may be another way." A third voice. Immediately, the angel's hold on her slackened. She took a step away, turning to face the new person. It was a short woman, mercifully clothed and unwinged but as beautiful as the other. And she hadn't used the door, either. The woman looked at me. "I know you don't realize what you've done, but its created quite a mess. And you have no rights by our government. Normally you would be sent to hell with Hadrianus, but... well, Adrian's case is specail. Which makes yours specail as well." She paused. "Magistrate, I--" "Quiet, Amadeus, let me think." She drew in a breath, as though preparing to say something important. |
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