#crowley has a cat
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Note
Hiiiii, i hope you're all having an amazing day on whichever day this gets seen, i owe you my life for running this incredible blog 💛💛💛
Would you happen to know of any meet cute human au fics in which Crowley is a cat dad? (preferably M or E rated, but im not that picky) There's just something very endearing to me about Crowley owning a cat that i can't explain...
Thank you in advance for your help!! 💛
Hello! Here are some fics in which Crowley has a cat...
with the help of a cat, or two by whicorzoo (G)
In which the cat in the window of the flat right across from Crowley's is unfairly perfect, so on a particularly whimsical night, he decides to put up a sign in his window to tell his neighbor as much. By morning, he's forgotten about it, until he sees it in his window and regrets the decision entirely. He expects to have his cool, intimidating facade never taken seriously again. He does not expect a response.
Pass the Star by mageofthepeople (E)
An Ineffable Wives roller derby AU Azalea Fell meets Antoinette Crowley at her first roller derby bout with a new league. After an incident leads to a trip to A&E, the two are drawn to one another but Crowley is reluctant to potentially ruin a great friendship for something more.
But, soft! by On1OccasionFork (M)
With love's light wings did I o'erperch these walls, For stony limits cannot hold love out; And what love can do, that dares love attempt. Therefore thy kinsmen are no stop to me. -Romeo and Juliet, Act II, Scene ii Crowley's life is going well. He's got his shop, his friends, and a new flat with a balcony perfect for a few plants. That's when things start to get complicated.
love like yours (will surely come my way) by CCs_World (T)
Dr Zira Fell is a new professor of theology at St Beryl's University. His first day there he meets the mysterious and enchanting Dr AJ Crowley, an art history professor and a painter. They almost immediately become friends, and spend most of their time getting lunch together, talking, drinking wine, making art, and falling slowly in love with one another. Featuring cameos of everyone's favorite (and least favorite) characters, gratuitous descriptions of paintings, long text messaging conversations, and one cranky cat.
Or Be Nice by charlottemadison (E)
Crowley and Aziraphale are neighbours. And...it does not go at all well, until it does. A human AU in which Aziraphale is a bookseller, Crowley is a drummer, and they are both petty disasters in the worst/best way. +++ “So what’s your deal?” “My-my-my deal?” Aziraphale stammered. “I’m a bookseller, is my deal.” “Oh,” Crowley replied, sounding as uninterested as it was possible to sound. “It’s just, I couldn’t help overhearing, and --” Aziraphale swallowed hard. “You really are an accomplished musician. But I thought -- for after 11PM -- perhaps we could reach some arrangement?” “Arrangement?” Aziraphale felt his his smile turning forced. “Such as, perhaps, playing the drums *before* eleven? Instead of after?” Crowley stared blankly at him. In fact he stared for so long that Aziraphale briefly wondered if he'd lapsed into ancient Greek again, which he was known to do in bad dreams or during panic attacks.
Whickber Street by Caedmon (E)
Anthony J. Crowley doesn’t think he’s ever been so happy. He’s finally quit his old job and is opening his childhood dream: a comic book shop. All of the neighbors are great, but the bookseller seems to hate him… Aziraphale Eastgate grew up in his great grandfather’s shop. Now he runs it and lives above it. He loves everything about his life on Whickber Street…. but the new proprietor down the street has him terribly, terribly vexed. Sparks fly when these two meet, and Aziraphale vows to hate him forever. Fergus, meanwhile, sets a timer. Looks like Cupid has come to Soho.
- Mod D
51 notes
·
View notes
Text
This isn’t my headcanon, this is my RELIGION: The Garden of Eden is like The Sandbox in Team Fortress 2.
A giant, no holds barred, free for all!
Like my brand of nonsense?
Like saucy art?
Join my Patreon and join my pigeons! Come on in, the water’s FIIIIINE!
https://www.patreon.com/Gleafer?utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator
#illustrator#illustration#digital artist#artist on tumblr#gleafer art#good omens#good omens art#crowley#aziraphale#good omens aziraphale#free for all#the sandbox#team fortress 2#mayhem#Eve runs the show#Adam is her rotten soldier#god hasn’t a clue#aziraphale has a singular focus#Crowley tolerates kindness like a cat in a bath
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
When Crowley woke, the air tasted savory-crisp to his snakey tongue and it took him a moment to recognize the scent of fresh bread baking in the hearth.
“Aziraphale?” Crowley sat up on the bed.
“My apologies for being a poor host,” Aziraphale said from across the room where it seemed that he was poking about in the hot ashes with a fire-blackened stick. “I have no cheese or butter, and very little oil. Trade isn’t what it was these days. I think this city is on the verge of failure.”
“Verge?” Crowley’s mouth twisted in a squiggle of sadness. “I’d say from what I saw it’s quite beyond that verge. Why are you here at all? There are hardly any humans at all in this city anymore. We’re usually posted in more populated places.”
“You know I can’t tell you that,” Aziraphale said primly, as he pulled a big piping hot flatbread off the hearthstone still gray with ashes with his fingers and set it upon a terracotta plate. “You should eat this. The oil’s over there.”
“Do you want me to get anything? I could make us some–”
“No,” Aziraphale said decisively. “Frivolous miracle usage will get both of us in trouble, it’s best to make do with what we have at hand.”
Crowley blinked; whatever happened Upstairs must have been extremely serious for Aziraphale to talk like this. The angel had never been one to be particular about the finer points of miracle expenditure and economy. He glanced at Aziraphale, but the angel’s expression gave nothing away.
“Sounds like a change in policy?”
But Aziraphale did not answer him.
“It’s all right, angel,” Crowley said, choosing his words carefully. “No one is doing any accounting like that at Head Office, no one really tracks these things Downstairs. And besides, I have a little extra in reserve…well, a lot more than a little extra. He’d never mind what I was using it for, and even if he knew you were involved he’d probably think it was funny and would only want to know what I had made for you–”
“No. Please. You’re my guest, please just let me do this.” Aziraphale’s face was tense and unhappy and Crowley wondered where this tension had come from.
“Fine,” Crowley shrugged.
Thinking better of it, Aziraphale reached out for the jar of oil himself and poured a healthy drizzle of golden olive oil onto the bread, handing the plate up to Crowley.
“Oh,” Crowley said softly, realizing that little white wild garlic flowers floated in the oil and he wondered how Aziraphale must have gotten it so late in the season until he realized that the flowers had been preserved in the oil, probably since at least spring. “Are you not going to have some yourself?”
“No. I ate already.” But the angel eyed the bread with no small amount of longing.
“Here, it’s too much. I won’t be able to finish this.” Crowley tore the bread in two, and handed Aziraphale the larger half.
“I really shouldn’t,” the angel murmured, but his hands trembled as he took the bread.
more
#good omens#crowley#aziraphale#ineffable husbands#aziraphale x crowley#aziracrow#crowley x aziraphale#good omens fanfiction#good omens fic#mistakes were made#it's late antiquity aka the dark ages#and they're in londinium which is slowly collapsing around them#and aziraphale has memory loss#and crowley has trauma#and everything is just sad and cold#and there is only one bed#but there is a cat#dark ages cottagecore
37 notes
·
View notes
Note
[Snaps fingers and suddenly you have a vacuum in your hands]
I gotta admit, glitter sucks after a while..
Luckily some anti-glitter measures have been taken…I suppose the flat could do with a hoover, though, what with the cats and all these days
27 notes
·
View notes
Text
🕊 “ .. spread a little happiness .. “
have an Aziraphale with a dog because we all still need to heal from s2
#back to my usual style !!#(crowley is coming don’t worry .. should he have a dog or a cat??)#this has gotta be my favourite thing ive drawn this month#like i dont think it gets much purer than this#good omens#aziraphale#good omens fanart#drawing#dog#good omens 2#ineffable#ineffable fandom#(regrettably)#ineffable divorce
186 notes
·
View notes
Text
comparing the Cat King to Crowley from Good Omens? WRONG. The Cat King should be compared to Crowley from Supernatural.
#cuz they’re both so pathetic but powerful but radiating the energy of a wet paperbag#also nurturing a crush on the main hero with internalized homophobia#don’t get me wrong i love crowley from good omens but i feel like he has little in common with tck#aside from the eyes and the occasional attitude#cat king dead boy detectives#the cat king#dead boy detectives#supernatural#crowley supernatural
35 notes
·
View notes
Note
i love your warrior cats / good omens AU art so much!!!!!!!!!!! warrior cats is my oldest fandom and good omens the one that has taken over my heart so completely. cloudwing and addereye both look amazing (and the names are so fitting omg)
do you have any headcanons for the dark forest in the AU / how addereye ended up there?
thank you thank you! ;o; i’m really happy that people have taken a liking to it!
conceptually this AU is still a bit hazy so i’d love to hear ideas from others too — i imagine that both cloudwing and addereye have been dead for so long that they no longer remember their lives or allegiances from before. addereye started out as starclan from a time before the dark forest was fully it’s own thing, but he eventually just wandered there and decided to stay (at least, that’s what he says…👀)
#honestly just waiting on crowley’s canon backstory ha#i think starclan’s corruption could be played up to match that of heaven’s in go#so on the other side you’ve got the criminals but also just folks who saw the institution for what it was and wanted nothing to do with it#addereye probably assigned himself to sowing chaos within the living clans once the really nasty cats started arriving in DF#plus earth is the only place where he can hang out with his bestie :3#asks#wc gomens AU
21 notes
·
View notes
Text
Get ready for Adventures of Meowley
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Nuggets: A
Title inspired by @shedontlovehuhself
This started with an amazing fanart the marker of which I can't for some reason 🤷♀️ (I will try to do that again the replies)
@panthera-dei and @vaicomcas hope you will like it
A few things
I can't write Rowena or Crowley very well, especially their POV
English is my third language and I have difficulties in framing certain sentence
I also am prone to making spelling mistakes so please forgive me
And lastly, if anything in my writings or posts ever offend you, please please let me know. I would never knowingly want to offend or hurt anyone
And I hope you enjoy yourself here 💙
Edit, new notes
I have a HC that Crowley names his hellhounds after Shakespeare's characters.
And that Hellhounds can't teleport but they can run at a speed that's very little less than a demon's teleportation (I can probably frame this better)
This story is set in alternate universe, season 12-ish timeline (the same as my drunk Cas fic) It basically is a good timeline, where God actually fixed shit, Like Lucifer is in the cage, Crowley rules Hell, Cas is fully powred Seraph etc.
#yes Juliet will be there#i realised there is a lot of Crowley as a cat fanart#even though I generally see him as a dog and Cas as a cat#which is stupid because#Crowley has many characteristics traditionaly associated with cats#and Cas has one associated with dogs#castiel#Crowley#juliet the hellhound
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
Do you know what gives me absolute JOY? Crowley's doorbell
committed to the bit 100%
#good omens#crowley#every neighbor he has KNOWS the guy ha s a snake thing going on and I respect that#he is the black cat obsessed friend we all have (me I am the black cat friend )
25 notes
·
View notes
Text
actually though. i feel like everything about tfw can be explained by the fact that everyone but cas is canonically a dog person
#like. crowley has his hellhounds. dean is hte MOST dog person to ever exist. sam i think canonically had a dog in s8 am i remembering htat#right??? jack is a living golden retriever. if we're countign rowena too she's probably a cat person though#supernatural#spn#team free will#tfw#dean winchester#sam winchester#castiel#jack kline#crowley spn#crowley macleod#the pig squeals
45 notes
·
View notes
Text
alec hardy has acid reflux and that's simply canon
#has anyone elze noticed that in DTs acfinv#the little half burps in the middle of sentences#when uncomfortable#did it as crowley too in the hes jist an angel i know#my man has gerd hes just like me for real#broadchurch#alec hardy#wet cat
11 notes
·
View notes
Text
A while ago I decided that my ideal Good Omens/Sandman crossover involved Lucifer giving the key to Hell to Adam instead of Dream during Season of Mists, and what the fallout of that might be. I don't think I'll ever manage to finish it, but here's the theoretical first chapter
The first thing any of Them knew about it was the fact that there were no mugs in the sink. This was not at all a common occurrence; despite Wensleydale’s fastidiousness, Brian's refusal to drink from anything other than directly from the milk bottle, and Pepper’s insistence on ‘supporting local businesses near campus’1, there was usually a precarious mountain of tea-stained mugs stacked up in monument to Adam's unfortunate sleeping habits. To anyone else, under normal circumstances, this might have been considered a good – even miraculous – change.
All of Them had come to develop a very healthy suspicion of both normal circumstances and miraculous changes.
“That's weird, right?” Brian said, balancing on one leg to idly scratch at his calf with his other foot. “I mean, it's not just me that thinks that's weird?” Pepper, who had thrown open the cupboards to check that the mugs were still in the land of the living, and hadn't been smashed or otherwise disappeared in a fit of pique or supernatural intervention, made a little uh-hm noise.
“It's definitely weird,” she agreed, staring at the cupboard, which was precisely as full and disordered as it ought to be. “But that doesn't mean it's, y’know, weird-weird. It could be normally weird.”
“Did anyone hear Adam get in last night?” Wensleydale asked, which was a very sensible question that neither Pepper nor Brian had thought to ask.
“He was still out when I went to bed,” Brian said, glancing at Pepper.
“He said he was going to the library,” she said, frowning. Wensleydale nodded thoughtfully.
“It is open twenty-four seven,” he mused. “Adam might still be there. Maybe he fell asleep in one of the quiet study rooms?”
It wasn't impossible, they all silently agreed, glancing around at one another. Who among them hadn't lost track of time in the unchanging fluorescent glow, only to wake up some absurd number of hours later with a pen stuck to their cheek and an embarrassingly large puddle of drool forming on the table2?
“Okay, well, I'll just call him,” Pepper said decisively after a moment.
“His phone’ll be on silent,” Brian pointed out.
“Still,” Wensleydale said. “If it's on vibrate he might notice it. And even if it's not, he'll see it when he looks at his phone next. Go ahead, Pepper.”
“Already on it,” she said, and indeed her thumbs were flying over her phone. She tapped the button to put it on speaker, and held the phone in the centre of the circle of Them with an odd reverence. Together, they watched Adam's name and number flashed across the screen as the phone began to ring, before it cut itself abruptly off.
“I’m sorry,” started the robotic message, “the number you have dialled cannot be reached at this time. Please try again later.” The message cut off with a cheerful beep. A moment later, Pepper’s phone, rather less cheerfully, burst into flames. She dropped it onto the tiled kitchen floor, where it went right on blazing.
All three of the remaining Them stared at it in horror.
“Right,” said Pepper faintly.
“I think that might be weird-weird,” Brian agreed, a shade more faintly. Wensleydale, being the only one of Them who was not only concerned that Pepper’s phone was on fire, but also that her phone was on fire, started swatting at it ineffectually with a tea towel.
“OK,” Pepper said, gathering herself, “Brian, give me your phone.”
“What? Hang on, I only got this last month! You can't go around seeing if that'll set other people's phones on fire just because yours spontaneously combusted, Pep, that's not fair.” Pepper, being somewhat more nimble, and considerably less indignant than Brian, used this opportunity to lean over and pluck his phone from the depths of his hoodie pocket. “Hey!”
“Here's what we're going to do,” Pepper said decisively. In Adam's absence, one of Them had to be the one making the decisions, and that one might as well be her. “You two are going to go to the library and check there, just in case. Maybe this is… coincidental weird-weirdness. Call me when you get there, let me know if you find anything.”
“And what about you? What are you going to do?” Wensleydale asked, giving up the tea towel as a bad job, and accepting the fact that the phone seemed to be burning itself out quite nicely on its own.
“I'm going to ask around, and email in sick for all of us,” Pepper said. “Maybe one of Adam's other friends saw something, or heard something, or… y’know, something. Wens, call Mr. Young – he likes you the best, he'll be happy to speak to you, but don't let on just yet what's happening.”
“What is happening?” Brian asked, a little helplessly. Rather than admitting she had no more idea than any of the rest of Them, Pepper just shook her head darkly.
“Nothing good,” she muttered. “OK. Alright. Meet back here at, say, half eleven? If we haven't found anything before then, I mean.” Brian and Wensleydale both nodded, looking a little peaky, and glanced at each other. Wensleydale swallowed, and piped up with the question that was troubling them both.
“And what do we do then, if we haven't found anything?”
“Then,” Pepper said, with all the grim determination of a General sending her troops to their certain deaths, “we call the Witch.”
The first thing Anathema knew about it was that she picked up a stack of old magazines to throw away, only for a sheet of old parchment to flutter lazily out and come to rest on her shoes. She wasn't sure where old Agnes had ended up after her explosive exit from this mortal coil, so she glared first at the ceiling and then at the floor for good measure.
“I burnt that book for a reason,” she sternly told the page. The page, naturally, did not reply.
Anathema stared at it for a few long seconds, dithering. She wasn't a person predisposed to dithering, but had found in the last couple of years that it was nice to indulge oneself in a change of pace, from time to time. Still, having no natural talent for it, and being far more inclined to action anyway, she only allowed this for a brief time, before snatching up the page and casting a curious eye over it.
“Oh,” she said, swiftly followed by, “hm.”
Then, “right.”
A few seconds later, “what?”
And, with hardly a pause for breath, “I see.”
Before finally, “oh. Oh dear.”
In the next room, from its perch on the coffee table, her phone started to ring.
(Halfway across the country, the first thing Constantine knew about it was that the demon she was attempting to banish back to the bowels of Hell laughed in her face. It stopped laughing with gratifying speed at the first splash of holy water, but it was enough to set her thinking.
Thinking, however, could wait until she'd downed roughly half her weight of Robbie's Secret Whisky Stash, and fallen face-first onto her sofa for the next sixty hours or so.
Which was exactly what she did.)
The first thing Aziraphale knew about it – though he wouldn't realise such for a few days yet – was the abrupt interruption of his quarterly book club3.
He'd been enjoying a rather excellent cup of lapsang souchong in companionable silence, a collection of poems that Oscar had enthused about but never committed to paper propped open in front of him, when the summons arrived.
“Lucienne. I must speak with you. Meet me in the throne room as soon as is convenient.” A momentary pause. “Please.”
On the other side of the room, primly seated on a velvet sofa, Lucienne, librarian of the Dreaming, quite deliberately did not sigh. She hardly had to – her silence spoke volumes. Marking her page with a delicate silver bookmark, she set the book to one side and stood, brushing at her immaculate waistcoat.
“I am so sorry,” she said, unsmiling but warm around the eyes. “I hate to cut this short, but –”
“Not at all, not at all,” Aziraphale replied, waving a hand and offering her as understanding a smile as he could muster4. He did, after all, have some notion of what it was like to work for an entity vastly more powerful than oneself, towards a cause that one broadly believed in but did occasionally cut into one's leisure time. “I gather it must be something frightfully important – you know, I'm not sure I've ever heard Lord Morpheus make such a polite request?”
That did bring a smile to his companion's face, small and conspiratorial, though still unflinchingly professional.
“As a matter of fact, since our Lord's return and his latest… trials, he has been making a considerable effort to show his appreciation to myself and the other residents of the Dreaming. Please don't misunderstand me, Lord Morpheus has always valued our work, but –”
Aziraphale nodded as she trailed off.
“He has, perhaps, come to realise that expressing his appreciation may be beneficial to both the work and morale,” he suggested. He didn't remember such tactics ever being successfully applied in Heaven, but they had worked a treat on dear young Warlock. It had been difficult on the poor boy, of course, to have positive reinforcement applied by two very different entities in completely opposing directions, but he had appeared to cope well enough with the confusion. Children were remarkably resilient that way.
“Exactly,” Lucienne agreed, apparently relieved that he understood. “You'll have to excuse me – of course, you're free to remain in the library as long as you like, and if there's anything else you need, just let the library know and one of the palace staff should be sent along to assist.”
So what could Aziraphale do but hum and thank her, before finishing his cup of tea and taking his leave of the Dreaming, after which he failed to give the incident a single thought more for several days?
Well. There were, perhaps, many things he could have done – but, crucially, he did none of them, and so such hypotheticals really don't matter very much in the grand scheme of things, do they?
And the first thing Crowley knew about it was the shrill ring of Aziraphale’s landline jolting him out of a very pleasant nap.
“Whozzit?” He muttered from his place face-down on the sofa. “‘m gonna kill’m.”
“Oh, you'll do no such thing,” Aziraphale scolded as he bustled over to the phone. “It's barely midday, it's a perfectly reasonable time to call. Hello? A Z Fell and Co rare books, I'm afraid we're very much closed for the rest of – oh! Well hello dear girl! How lovely to hear from you – you know, I was just saying to Crowley the other day, we –”
“Who is it?” Crowley repeated, this time managing to include enough syllables to make it three clear and distinct words. Not that it seemed to matter to Aziraphale, who made a complicated but ultimately meaningless hand gesture towards him but otherwise didn't answer.
“Yes of course I'm free to talk; anytime you need Anathema, you know that.” Which did at least answer Crowley's question. He blew out a noisy sigh and closed his eyes again. Might as well try to get a few more hours’ kip. Those two could natter like fishwives when they got into the swing of it.
“Adam? No, not since he popped ‘round last month during his reading week for a visit. Why do you –”
Aziraphale paused, and the silence stretched long enough that Crowley peeled his eyes back open. The angel had gone very, very pale, and the hand that gripped the phone was white-knuckled. Crowley frowned and pushed himself upright.
“You're quite sure?” Aziraphale asked faintly. Crowley's brows leapt up towards his hairline. “No, we haven't heard anything. Do his parents –?”
Slow and sinuous, Crowley unfurled himself from the sofa and inched towards Aziraphale, who appeared on the verge of shaking. It was, he had to admit, a little alarming to see. A chair that hadn't been behind the angel until a few moments ago5 let out a faint wumpf as he pushed Aziraphale down to sit on it. This close, he could hear the tinny echo of Anathema’s voice, but couldn't quite make out the individual words.
“We certainly haven't felt anything,” Aziraphale said. His free hand had curled around the arm of the chair – Crowley unpeeled his fingers and offered up his own hand as a sacrifice in place of the upholstery. “Neither of us get any word from, ah, the head offices anymore, as it were, but I haven't heard anything through any other channels, not that many of them keep in close touch these days. I don't suppose Agnes –?”
He paused to listen to her agitated response, lips pressed together. Crowley rubbed his thumb against the back of his knuckles, in the vain hope he might relax his grip a little. The little bones in his hand were in imminent danger of collision.
“Yes, yes, tell me now – I'll remember,” Aziraphale said with all the solemnity of a true vow. The tinny little echo of Anathema's voice came again, this time in a distinct rhythm that Crowley usually associated with poetry or prayer. Aziraphale nodded along, his brow furrowing the longer she went on, his own mouth shaping the occasional word as she went.
Crowley, meanwhile, was starting to get a headache.
“No, of course, of course, I'll let you know the moment I think of something,” Aziraphale said, which perhaps wasn't the hastiest promise he'd ever made to the witch, but did still make Crowley's skin itch vaguely. “Yes – he's right here, would you like to speak to him?”
Ignoring Crowley's increasingly frantic head shaking, Aziraphale handed the phone over. Crowley grimaced, weighed up the pros and cons of just hanging up (pros: it would be rude, which as a demon was something he was rather fond of being. Cons: it would be rude, which would upset Aziraphale, who was already looking remarkably distressed. Also, he may not get to find out what was going on), before accepting both the inevitable and the phone.
“Yeah?” He said, trying his best to sound like he didn't give a single damn about whatever Anathema had to say. Anathema, who was very used to this by now, and swiftly climbing the ranks of living people well-equipped to both see through and handle Anthony J Crowley, did not bother mincing her words.
“Adam's missing. Last seen yesterday evening, as best we can tell. His friends are looking for him the human way and running interference with the university and his parents, in case it's something… esoteric. Also, I have a new prophecy from Agnes that I think is about him, but I haven't quite managed to figure it out just yet. I thought you might know something.”
Crowley's blood ran cold. Well. Colder.
Most of Crowley's knowledge about what to do to find a missing human was both theoretical and gleaned from procedural police dramas, and he suspected that the angel's wasn't much better, except that he could likely replace procedural police dramas with Agatha Christie first editions. They hadn't even managed to find the right antichrist until the day of the apocalypse, and he hadn't technically been missing.
“He's definitely disappeared?” He tried, perhaps a little desperately. “He hasn't, er, just wandered off for a bit and forgot to text?” That was a thing, wasn't it? You had to wait for a day or two before you could call someone missing, if they were an adult doing their own thing. He was fairly sure that was a thing.
“Pepper says that he didn't go back to their accommodation last night, and all of his notes and books were still at the library. She thinks he must have his bag and his phone on him, but no-one’s been able to get through to him.” Anathema sounded harried, and the sharpness of her tone set something bristling in Crowley, before he forced himself calm again. Aziraphale was hurriedly scrawling something on a scrap of paper, so fast that the ink flew and dotted his hands and sleeves.
“So do they think he was – what, grabbed?” Crowley tried to imagine the sort of thing that would be capable of grabbing Adam if he didn't want to be grabbed, and succeeded only in feeling vaguely ill.
“No, but they think he must have left in a hurry and none of them know why, or why he wouldn't have contacted somebody.” The somebody like you went unsaid but very clearly implied.
“He didn't leave the stove on, I'm guessing?” Crowley asked hopelessly. Anathema did him the grace of ignoring that.
The problem, Crowley decided, was that there were simply too many places that Adam could have buggered off to to even begin narrowing the list down. He wouldn't know where to start. He wouldn't know how to start. There were very few places in the universe that Adam couldn't get into, if he put his mind to it. Heaven, he supposed, but that seemed very unlikely given that Adam's opinion of Heaven as a concept was ambivalent at best, and outright scornful at worst (Crowley was oddly proud of that, considering he'd had almost nothing to do with it).
“Fine. Well, did they find anything with his stuff at the library? A lingering smell of sulphur, a stray feather from, oh as a random example, an angel's wing? A helpful note detailing exactly where he was going and how long he might be gone for? A circle of runes burnt into the nearest flat surface large enough to walk through?”
“Oh yes, how silly of me, I completely forgot to mention the ransom note of newspaper clippings,” Anathema replied, so lightly that it managed to loop back around to scathing. “No, of course there wasn't anything there.”
Crowley dragged in a breath, and let it out so gustily that he almost missed the little um that came down the line.
“What?”
“Um. Well, actually. Now that you mention it. Pepper did say that when she tried to call him, her phone sort of. Caught fire?”
Crowley blinked, which was something he didn't do often, and always felt a little bit weird about.
“It what?”
“Caught fire.”
“S’what I hoped you hadn't said.”
“Mhm. Shit?”
“Yeah,” he agreed, and his laugh was so far from humour that he suspected it wouldn't even be visible as a little dot on the horizon. “Couldn't have put it better myself.”
The first thing Crowley did after hanging up was try to phone Adam himself. It was lucky that angels, and those originally of angel-stock, had a good head for remembering numbers, though in this case it was made simpler by the fact that Adam had thought it was funny that every mobile number he'd had since he'd been gifted his first phone aged thirteen had ended with 666. He dialled quickly, and held his unnecessary breath as the phone began to ring. He glared down at the ancient landline, silently daring it to try anything so silly as bursting into flames. Whether because it feared a fate worse than fiery death, or just because it had no more reason to than at any other time it had been used, the phone did nothing more than ring. It then rang several more times, before a detachedly cheerful voice implored him to leave a voicemail.
Was that a good sign? Crowley honestly wasn't sure at this point. He made a note of it anyway, just in case.
Aziraphale groaned from his spot at his desk, and dropped his head into his hands.
“What?” Crowley asked. “What did Agnes have to say about all this?”
Aziraphale groaned again.
“Well that's half the problem,” he said. “Without any context it's almost impossible to be sure. Trying to decipher a prophecy before it's come to pass is like trying to derive meaning from –”
“From one particular needle in a stack full of other, identical and maybe just as important needles?”
“Well. Yes, now that you mention it,” Aziraphale turned to face him, wide eyed. “I just don't understand! There's been nothing for years, no movement from either side, no interest in Adam whatsoever. What could have possibly changed, and without either of us noticing?”
“I mean, are we sure it was Heaven or Hell? There's lots of other things out there that might be interested in the antichrist.” Not many that would be capable of hiding themselves from both an angel and a demon, and vanishingly few that would also be capable of persuading Adam to go with them. Unless he wanted to, of course, but Crowley was trying not to think about that too much. Would it be the better outcome for everyone involved? Possibly, but he wasn't willing to bet on it. Certainly not when he would be betting Adam's life, or mind, or general wellbeing6.
“But surely we still would have heard something. I know neither of us keep up with the latest news bulletins, but I hardly think any plans of this sort of scale would be quiet.”
It was a fair point. They each had their contacts among the various communities on this and a few other planes of existence. Not that either of them got out much these days, but it didn't take too much effort to send a letter here, or listen to an ominous whisper there. But, as Aziraphale had quite rightly pointed out, there had been nothing.
“Right, and I'm guessing you haven't accidentally been sent any golden post-its?”
Aziraphale shot him a look so withering that Crowley suspected it may have been used as a weapon of righteous smiting a time or two, back in the day.
“Of course not! I don't hear from Heaven any more than you do from Hell. Less, I should imagine. It's not as though my lot ever thought to take out advertising space in the middle of your new radio plays with the fancy name, or start keeping in touch via electronic mail.”
Resisting the urge to point out that they’re podcasts angel, not radio plays, we've been over this and I know you remember what they're called, I know you're doing this to me on purpose, because Aziraphale had, once again, made a very good point. Even if he wasn't aware of it.
"Huh. Yeah. Hang on – maybe Hell sent something out. Lemme check."
Crowley wove his way around the piles of books in a fashion that probably would have looked hurried on anyone else, but on him looked mostly like the room had rearranged itself to minimise the number of steps required to get to the door of Aziraphale's office.
"Let you check? Check what, Crowley, I didn't think you were, ah – what's the phrase? Connected to Hell's net-works anymore."
Perhaps one day Aziraphale would manage to drag himself into something resembling the twenty-first century, Crowley mused glumly. If the off-white plastic box humbly masquerading as a computer on his other desk were any indication, it wouldn't be before the world once again tried to off itself. He tapped the enter key impatiently a few times until the screen lit up, something that came as a terrible shock to the computer – which was, until that very moment, both switched off and unplugged. Crowley, who had never plugged in a single appliance in his life and didn't intend to start now, hadn't bothered to check.
Brilliant things, computers – except for when they weren't.
Despite its age, the computer in question had a healthy appetite for its continued existence, and so at Crowley's impatient prompting, navigated itself to Gmail without any of the ponderous delays it usually employed. Aziraphale was particularly forgiving of ponderous delays, as they provided an ample excuse to refill his mug of tea. Somehow, it suspected the irate demon wiggling the mouse wouldn't be quite as keen on a page that loaded just slowly enough to pop the kettle on.
The thing about Hell was that they wanted to give the impression that they were always aware of your every move, no matter what plane of existence you happened to be residing in at the time. It wasn’t true, of course – Crowley knew that better than almost anyone – but that didn't stop them putting in a reasonable amount of effort to maintain the illusion. Mostly it was just a bit of a hassle, but at times it could come in handy.
Like now, for instance. Hell wanted its agents on Earth to feel just as surveilled as the poor buggers still Down There, so as well as just butting into whatever you happened to be watching or listening to anytime they wanted your attention, they'd also made sure you could access every one of your emails, memos, and warnings from any service provider anywhere in any world. A bit unnerving, perhaps, but useful for any demon willing to get a bit creative7.
It was also a relatively impressive feat, given that Hell itself had only just managed to install dial-up a couple of years immediately prior to the world not-ending. Crowley'd only stuck his head in once or twice in that time, but the noise had been God… had been Satan…
It had been Someone-awful.
"Mm, I'm not, technically," Crowley replied, stabbing at the keyboard.
There was no technically about it. Crowley had been removed from Hell's mailing list, so to speak. His account had been wiped out, and it was mostly luck, a few miracles here and there, and currying favour with the then-pre-teen antichrist8 that had kept him from being wiped out right alongside it.
It was, then, fortunate that every demon in Hell had been assigned a username with the same standard formula (rank, hyphen, circle of Hell, hyphen, name) as well as the same password (HailSatan123!, no hyphens). It was also quite fortunate that Crowley was the only one capable of figuring out how to change the password9. He'd been keeping tabs on Hastur's account since the Apocalypse-that-wasn't; partly to stay in the loop, and partly to laugh at the ongoing chain between Hastur and Dagon as they argued over who would get to claim the soul of, as they put it, 'that Nigerian prince feller'.
The computer, having a better sense of self-preservation than most of the human race, accepted both username and password with remarkable speed, and only one single pop-up box that politely enquired if the user might like to save their password for their own convenience and improved experience in the future? At Crowley's pointed handwave, the box promptly vanished, and he was – as the hackers said – in.
It was tempting, as it always was, to take the time to sift through the near-countless unread emails to find something fun. The latest update in the exchange with Dagon (the subject line of which now had too many Re:s to be readable, but no doubt chronicled precisely how close they each were to securing the soul of the next in line to the Nigerian throne for their lord and master) was right there, bracketed by countless – pointless – memos from low-level imps, and a call for any last-minute rota swaps from Andromalius. Not that any swap requests would be entertained, much less honoured. Hard to swap shifts when you were always working, and utterly unable to escape.
"Well?" Aziraphale asked, having abandoned his heavenly patience at the door. Even the computer shuddered a little. Crowley, not to be outdone by a piece of hardware and also rather more certain of his place in Aziraphale's good graces, decidedly did not.
“Hold your bloody horses,” Crolwey muttered. “It's not like the idiot has any sort of organisational system. Or any sort of system at all, come to think of it.” He scrolled a little more, scanning in a way that he would never, under any circumstance, admit to being frantic. Aziraphale rested a hand soothingly on his shoulder, which he thought was a little rich, given the angel's reaction to Anathema's call.
In fact, his not-frantic scrolling was fast enough that at first, he glanced right past the innocuous little email that had been sent out to everyone from an email address that was, even to Crowley, incomprehensible, and whose subject line simply read: get out. He might have written it off as chain mail, of the sort that hadn't been seen anywhere except Hell for approximately ten years, and promised a grisly fate if one didn't send it on to at least twenty of one's dearest friends and family, were it not for the abiding sense of dread that filled him when he hovered the cursor over it10.
By definition, as a demon, Crowley wasn't meant to be put off by abiding senses of dread. In fact, he was meant to be not only drawn to senses of abiding dread, but also frequently responsible for them.
Despite this, Crowley found himself hesitating long enough that Aziraphale noticed.
“Do you think that's–?” He asked, trailing off as Crowley swallowed hard and opened the email. They both read in silence11, the dawning horror of its contents creeping up on them rather like a spider in the shower – that was to say, a moment of peace before they truly registered just what they'd seen, followed by an immediate rejection of any reality where this could be allowed to happen, particularly while one was already in so vulnerable a state as nudity, or having just received word that the antichrist was, once again, missing.
“That,” Aziraphale started, before taking a shaky breath and trying again. “That does at least explain what Agnes was on about with that bit about the Tempest.” He cleared his throat, which did absolutely nothing to help the situation, and continued, “I should probably phone Anathema back. Be a dear, and pop the kettle on, won't you? I think I could do with a strong cup of tea.”
Crowley nodded distantly, and made no move to get up. In the kitchenette at the back of the shop, the kettle obediently clicked itself on, having assumed (rightly) that Crowley wasn't quite up to the trip just yet. Instead, he just stared at the screen through blurry eyes and tried to pretend this was all just a bad dream.
Hell is empty, he thought morosely, reading over the email that was, for all intents and purposes, an eviction notice, and all the devils are here.
Meanwhile, some six miles away as the raven flies12, a young man slouched his way into a pleasant London pub just in time to miss the lunch rush.
1 Here, the reader may wish to substitute ‘supporting local businesses’ with ‘attempting to flirt with a local barista over poorly-roasted coffee and soggy pastries’
2 Adam was the only one among Them that had never succumbed to the tempting lure of the library's sleepy clutches, a point all of Them were working hard to ignore
3 Though to call it a book club was, perhaps, a generous exaggeration. For the most part it was two like-minded individuals enjoying a cup of tea in mutual, silent appreciation. The occasional discussions regarding fine literature and unusual misprints were a pleasant addition rather than a requirement
4 a more understanding smile had never before, nor since, been mustered
5 the chair in question was a rather hideous paisley, which left an unpleasant taste in Crowley's mouth but would serve to cheer the angel when he was again in a fit state to notice such things
6 And, by extension, lives, minds, and wellbeing of the rest of Creation
7 Crowley, exclusively
8 A simple enough endeavour for Crowley, as there is very little difference between a pre-teen antichrist and a pre-teen human, and functionally no difference at all between a pre-teen human and a demon
9 As well as the only one that had managed to switch on the spam filter
10 Not to be confused with the generally abiding sense of dread felt while one was generally checking one's emails
11 Aziraphale just a touch faster than Crowley, though the difference was so slight as to be effectively negligible
12 Which is not quite as direct as the crow flies, particularly if the raven in question is new to the job and easily distracted (not to mention still unpracticed at flying against the wind) but still a sight more direct than a magpie making the same trip
#good omens#sandman#crossover#aziraphale#crowley#anathema device#the Them#lucienne the librarian#not exactly a writing tag#important to note that I don't know what the timelines here are#like I guess if we're going with the shows then it's a few years between the end of sandman s1 and seasons of mists#also this is only compliant with s1 of good omens and I'm absolutely cherry picking from canon#ALSO important to note that Warlock works at the New Inn and has a cat called Stalks By Night better known as Socks
18 notes
·
View notes
Text
“I found a bucket,” Crowley said glumly as he stood in the doorway, rain-sopped despite having wrapped a fold of his black toga over his head and his black pallium over that, which gave the effect of appearing as if the demon were in in mourning, half-blinded by the water dripping down his dark glasses, and holding up what looked almost more like a large sad wooden cup with pretensions as he stepped inside. “But it’s small, and it leaks miserably. Would probably take half an eternity to draw up enough water to fill just this bucket much less a tub. Damned, how is this place so poor in things?”
“What do you mean by that?”
“You know, things. Things. Human things. Buckets. Baskets. Buttons. Cloth. Even rope. It’s like everything that wasn’t nailed down was carried off and hardly anyone is selling much of anything. And while things are falling apart enough to maybe take some materials from crumbling buildings, they’re certainly not good enough to use. Couldn’t find a pole longer than my arm, and the river’s at least ten cubits down even when the tide is high. Do you think I could maybe tie a few poles together? Damn, that would only work if I could find enough rope…”
“I’m afraid this city is slowly coming apart at the seams,” Aziraphale explained. “I suppose that’s what happens when the neglect from the central authority has spread. Not that there is a central authority anymore.
“Which of course tells us just how important it is to have a powerful, controlling hand at the wheel, keeping everyone in order, putting everything and everyone in their place. Without absolute control, without leaders like the Metatron and the Archangels, it’s all chaos and misery. I can’t wait for all of this to be properly destroyed, it’ll all be quite lovely then,” Aziraphale smiled politely, even though something in his eyes looked distressed. “But…but in the meantime, please come in and dry off!” In the angel’s hands was a towel, something plain but clean and when Crowley unpinned his soggy pallium, willing it away and put the towel over his head, the linen smelled like lavender.
“Oh…” Crowley sighed, as Aziraphale led him to the makeshift hearth, which he now realized was part of the old furnace, though with many narrow bricks taken away from the inside wall to make a makeshift fireplace, where the outer furnace opening had been blocked off with the cracks of said bricks mortared together with daub.
The fire burnt merrily, and he sighed as he was guided to a cushion made of creamy undyed wool that was not here last time. Another similar cushion leaned against the wall against a leg of Aziraphale’s desk. Like the bed, it was stuffed with fresh straw, generously, and he wondered when Aziraphale had made these. Perhaps during any number of his naps? He sat down on the cushion which was heated through from the floor and was just perfectly, perfectly warm.
Now that he was sitting here, he noticed that some of the floor tiles near the hearth had the traces of a cat’s footprints in them, the fired clay retaining indelibly the memory of scampering paws from some distant summer’s day.
He wondered if the tough black cat was related to this cat from generations past.
Crowley felt the damp steaming off his clothes. For a moment he wondered if he should miracle himself dry and then he realized that Aziraphale had spent an entire miracle upon him when he had first arrived, when the angel was not even using any to live and certainly even living was not living comfortably.
“Thank you, Aziraphale. You didn’t have to do all this for me–”
“No, the opposite is true. Thank you for taking this trouble for me,” Aziraphale began, but Crowley thought that the angel’s words sounded rehearsed. “But you needn’t go through all this difficulty on my behalf, slogging about the city in the rain trying to find materiel.”
“Why not?” Crowley glanced up at Aziraphale, as he wiped the dark gemstones of his glasses with the clean towel.
Aziraphale seemed to shrink in upon himself as if a flower shriveling, wilting under the blazing heat of the desert in those golden eyes, and Crowley waited for him to respond.
“D-don’t be silly. It’s not necessary. Why should anything be done for me? Much less by you. When I’m obviously here to serve and not be served. Besides, it’s not as if you owe me anything. Which you don’t,” Aziraphale said sternly.
more
#good omens#crowley#aziraphale#ineffable husbands#aziraphale x crowley#aziracrow#good omens fic#good omens fanfiction#good omens fanfic#mistakes were made#crowley is a mess#aziraphale has memory loss#look they're just both traumatized and neither of them really want to admit it to themselves or each other#and they're holed up for the autum/winter in londinium during the dark ages/late antiquity#there is only one bed and also a cat
15 notes
·
View notes
Text
Crowley: So you like cats? Halt: Yeah. Crowley: *tries to impress him by slowly pushing a glass off the table*
#i love how the fandom has basically just collectively agreed halt likes cats#without barely any discussion#rangers apprentice#ra#halt o'carrick#ra memes#incorrect rangers apprentice#ranger's apprentice#crowley meratyn#ranger apprentice#john flanagan
21 notes
·
View notes
Text
Mr Mistoffelees and the Rum Tum Tugger walked so Aziracrow could run
#It's perfect#misto is a magician#and tugger has the Crowley swagger and the red hair#plus people ship them anyway#cats the musical#good omens
13 notes
·
View notes
Text
A friend of Naomi and Andromeda (more so Naomi)
He does welding n mechanics!
Also tbh he’s mainly beaten up because he keeps tryna jump people but he’s really fucking bad at it
#I was tryna do cat eyes#idk if I succeeded but I think I did well#he also has a little sister!#Her name is Lottie#his shirt is his dads#so it’s a little big on him#art#my art#oc#oc art#illustration#drawing#artists on tumblr#artists of tumblr#oc illustration#oc drawing#my ocs#semi-cat boy#fun fact his eyes were supposed to be yellow but he looked too much like Crowley that way.#So uh#blue it is!#tw bruises#Pickettville kids
3 notes
·
View notes