Muroi Seishin (
unpriest) wrote in
damned_institute2012-08-02 10:04 am
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Day 65: Arts & Crafts Room (Fourth Shift)
Seishin didn't have the opportunity to visit the arts and crafts room before, but handicraft wasn't something the former priest had ever been particularly skilled at. He would have been content with remaining in the library, but the nurse insisted that he'd pursue a more social activity than something so isolating as reading a book. Pushing one's own ideas of what was good for them onto others was not something limited to just Sotoba, he guessed, and in the end Seishin had little choice but to quietly follow along.
The room was still empty when Seishin entered, leaving him with little else to do but eying the materials with relative uncertainty.
[Dr. Facilier]
The room was still empty when Seishin entered, leaving him with little else to do but eying the materials with relative uncertainty.
[Dr. Facilier]
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It had been such a long time since Skulduggery even contemplated fishing. He hesitated, glancing up from his knot. "It really has been a while since I last dealt with fishing line," he emphasized. "Long enough that I don't even remember who taught me." It might have been his father. All that had really interested Skulduggery at the time was his early discovery of magic, and the following lies that had slowly poisoned his relationship with his family. It wasn't until later that fishing had become a peaceful reprieve for him.
"Are you the oldest in your family?" he asked, trying a second knot. This one went a little quicker, and looked noticeably better when it was finished.
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It was how people learned and grew, and that was always the part that had fascinated him most about humanity. That process. Getting people to think that they just had to hold out until the reward in Heaven, instead of enjoying the process of getting there, was one of the ways Lucifer managed to corrupt them.
The Archangel nodded a bit, as if to himself at Skul's emphasis. Someone long-lived, then. Maybe not a fullblooded ancient--Gabe would know him if he were--but someone with purer blood. He didn't comment on it, though. "No," he said, and laughed a bit. "We've got a big family; I have three elder brothers and a lot of younger siblings. How about you?"
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"An older brother," he replied. "And several younger brothers and sisters, too." Any of whom he hadn't seen in centuries, either. That was what really unnerved Skulduggery about this place; not only that his past was suddenly dredged up far too often, but that he wasn't as reluctant to talk about it as he usually was. "Where did you live?"
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And his Master was everywhere.
"I just came from California, though," he added. "Before then, I was travelling a bit, mostly around the American coasts." He laughed. "And before then, I was visiting my brother in Damascus."
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"Ah, a world traveler!" he said instead. "I haven't been to California very often, but I was in Damascus recently. I don't remember exactly when, but there were bombs. Lots of bombs." Was it an air raid of some sort? World War I, maybe. The city had gone through a very violent history, and Skulduggery hadn't really been there for the sightseeing, anyway. He paused. "Your family is scattered, then?"
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"Yes, we are. I'd just visited one of my other brothers in California, in fact, though that was somewhat unplanned. The rest of us are in various other places." He smiles then, a quick, dimpled smile of reassurance. "It works for us, though. We enjoy the opportunity to see the world."
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Skulduggery's moderately successful knots were beginning to litter the table in front of him. "I believe I have the hang of this," he said, examining them with eyes that were, for once, narrowed rather than wide and blank. Narrowed with what, though, was still difficult to determine. "What's next?"
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The Archangel reached over to cut off a generous length of twine for Skul too, and then with a glance around realised they needed more tools. "Well, we don't have the equipment to temper the ends," he said. "Just a minute--I'll get some tape."
So saying, he rose and moved to the table in the middle, and only a few moments later was back. "May as well make it as easy on ourselves as possible," he said cheerfully, using the tape to create a pointed edge on the end of his twine, so it could be threaded just a little easier. "Should have thought of this before."
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The tape was a clever idea. Skulduggery followed suit, noting with mild interest that once he got used to the extra circumference and weight on his fingers, it wouldn't be too different from his own skeletal hands. It might take him a couple of days, but he would get that dexterity back. It was his lack of muscle and pathetic stamina that was worrying him most, particularly if he and Rita were going to try again tonight.
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“Instead we’ll be starting with the first Ave of the third decade. Just three wraps, for them; the Paters will be five. We can consider the spacing as we go, though the Aves should be even, because the Pater will be spaced a little further past each decade.” The Archangel glanced up to make sure Skul was following, or see if the man had any questions.
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It really had been a while since he'd had anything to do with a religion that didn't involve the Faceless Ones. It was almost relaxing, in a way. Rather like meditation, without the inconvenience of having your skull nicked right off your spinal column. That was a grudge Skulduggery didn't think he'd ever be able to let go.
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Even so, if that was how Skul wanted to do things, Gabriel had no objection. The Archangel spaced the knots evenly, except for the eleventh knot, which had a bit more distance, and went slowly so Skul saw how many rounds each knot took. "You're from Ireland, aren't you?" he asked. The accent gave it all away, really. "Which part? You implied you travel often."
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"Dublin," he answered, his attention focused on the knots in front of him. "Well, just outside Dublin." He'd been spending a great deal of time in Haggard as well lately, a place he never thought he'd visit once Gordon no longer lived there. "I'm mostly in Ireland these days, but I did travel quite a bit for a while."
It was difficult to name any place in the world where Skulduggery hadn't been, or gone near, at least once. Most of those places were probably very different at the time, though. Damascus, for instance. "I even managed to squeeze in some sightseeing occasionally," the detective added absentmindedly as he worked.
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"I haven't been there in a very long time," Gabriel said rather wistfully, and sang without pausing in his knotting: "'Fare thee well, sweet Anna Liffey; I can no longer stay. I watch the new glass cages that spring up along the quay. My mind's too full of memories, too old to hear new chimes; I'm part of what was Dublin in the rare auld times.' I really ought to visit again, when I leave here."
It wasn't much, or even very long, but the way Gabriel segued in and out of the quote was as natural as breathing. Almost as if Gabe could easily sing every word he spoke, because it would be instinct and passion, and simply chose not to. Even more notable was the fact that Gabriel didn't even seem to notice that he'd done anything that might be construed as odd. Instead he simply looked up and asked, "You travelled mostly for business, then? Where were your favourite places to go?"
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"Good to see you're optimistic," he remarked, referring to Gabe's use of the word 'when' instead of 'if.' Not that Skulduggery wasn't just as optimistic, but Landel did seem to be able to control almost everything here. Yomi and Detective Badd had both practically given up.
The detective went back to working on the rosary, looping the string through into another knot. "Not exactly business, no. But..." he hesitated. "New Zealand was beautiful. France wasn't bad, either. And the music from America around 1920 was particularly good."
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Oh, American music! Truthfully, once Gabe and Michael had started escorting the pilgrims West neither of them had really left America. Michael in particular--Gabriel still visited elsewhere, of course, but a great deal of his time was spent there, and the changing face of music had been one of his favourite parts. The Archangel beamed. "It was good, wasn't it? I always particularly liked Jimmie Rodgers, myself--I've always been fond of cowboys."
The last was said with a strain of impishness, as if there was an inside joke there no one else here knew.