#why would I call it something cool and wizardy-sounding
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I'm not sorry but I'll never stop calling it the interpenetration of the spheres
#I just watched the witcher blood origins and genuinely had fun with it#(it's not a good show but it had compelling bits and I'm glad I checked it out)#for context if you ever find yourself listening to an old(?) witcher audiobook#you might find that the conjunction of the spheres was translated differently for that#and if you're me you'll burst out laughing and hold that information close to your heart#for probably the rest of your life#why would I call it something cool and wizardy-sounding#when I can call it the mutual dicking of the spheres#falderal speaks
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am writing hellblazer fic asfdfsfff
title: The Cave
fandom: Hellblazer
characters: John Constantine, Chas Chandler, the First of the Fallen
blurb: John gets lost in a cave.Â
warnings: Depression, covid19, demons getting themselves Extremely murdered.Â
0Â
It was when the death toll had crested 100,000 that heâd snapped and made his way to Number 10 Downing Street with murder in his eyes and a briefcase full of every cursed artefact he owned.
âWhat are you gonna do, eh?â bellowed Chas, whoâd been following behind him in his cab for the last half mile. Heâd already tried to physically drag John into it and had received a bite on the hand for his trouble. âChuck âem through the windows? Thatâs bulletproof glass, John! Fuckâs sake! Be reasonable!â
âStop sodding shouting!â John shouted over his shoulder, wiping rain off his face. âYouâll spread sodding germs!â
âJohn, I already had it. Four months ago, remember?â
âYou can have it more than once! Christ, does nobody in this city read the papers but me?â
It was fair to say that John wasnât at his best. In his defence, heâd spent the last year sitting inside his tiny, poorly-ventilated, roach-ridden flat, vividly imagining what a respiratory virus would do to lungs that had suffered over forty years of heavy smoking, two run-ins with cancer, and the actual devil sticking his actual great big grubby clawed hand in âem. No fucking thank you.
Chas sighed heavily and climbed out of the cab again, slamming the door as he did. He splashed through a dozen puddles before coming to stand in Johnâs path, arms folded. âListen, Conjob. I love you. Even when youâre a complete prick, which is most of the time. And I know you can do amazing things. But mate, hear me out; you cannot assassinate the British Prime Minister.â
âSomeone bloody has to!â John Constantine, greatest wizard of his age, screamed at the top of his wretched, ragged, Satan-besmirched lungs.
Eventually, Chas managed to calm him down and get him home for a cup of tea.
âSorry âbout that,â John grunted as his socks dried in front of the heater and the rational parts of his mind re-exerted themselves.
âSâalright.â
âHowâs the bite?â
âDidnât pierce the skin. John, you need a break. A holiday. You need to get out of town for a few weeks. Go breathe fresh country air, do some weird mystical shit with a goat, whatever it is that sorts your head out these days. But you canât carry on like this, mate. I havenât seen you this miserable in years.â
He handed John one of Reneeâs strawberry-patterned towels. Dragging it across his face, John grunted, âHoliday? At a time like this?â
âWhy not? Makes as much sense as any other time.â
âWhat if you come down with it again? Or Geraldine? Or Renee?â
âJohn,â said Chas, gently, laying a hand on his shoulder. âYou already tried to cure me with magic. It didnât work. At all. Just wasted a lot of chicken blood and Reneeâs best spoons. Get this in your skull: thereâs nothing you can do. Alright? I know you hate that, but itâs the truth.â
John swallowed thickly. âYeah. Yeah. Alright.â
So he went home to his tiny flat, stuffed fresh socks and his toothbrush into a backpack, booby-trapped his front door, and fled London in the dead of night, feeling like one of those gits in Boccaccioâs Decameron.
0
âItâs called glamping.â
âSome new wizardy stuff, Iâm guessing?â
Chasâs voice over the phone was distracted, like he was half-watching the telly. John was relieved; heâd wanted to hear another human speak but wasnât feeling up to a proper conversation demanding his usual levels of sparkling charisma and staggering wit. Not right now. Not without weed, and heâd not thought to bring any.
Nestling deeper into his teak folding chair and drawing a thick woven blanket up over his knees, John said, âNah. Not buggering about with any of that old guff until Iâm back in town. Promised myself.â
âRight.â
âDonât sound so sceptical, you git. Iâve done it before.â
âMm-hmm. Whatâs your record? The longest youâve ever gone without doing anything mystical and creepy?â
ââBout⌠hmm. Three days.â
âYouâre coming up on the tail end of that right about now.â
âI know. Chas, on my word, I am going to make it to Sunday without so much as sniffing around a graveyard or wanking off a werewolf. I am on holiday.â
âAlright, alright, if you say so. Good for you, mate. So whatâs this âglampingâ business, then?â
âItâs camping. But posh. Iâm sitting up here atop a hill in Yorkshire with a tent the size of a cathedral and me chic woodburning stove and me box of white wine and feeling like the yuppiest old cunt who ever drew breath.â
âSounds horrible.â
âIt does, doesnât it? Thatâs why I chose it over a nice comfy bed and breakfast. Figured Iâd wake up with a cow shitting on my head and could use that as an excuse to come home early. Actually, though⌠itâs alright. Quiet. Thereâs a river at the bottom of the hill where these giggling honeymooners like to have a morning bonk but itâs far enough away that I canât hear them unless theyâre really having fun. And the weatherâs been alright. Itâs all surprisingly decent.â
âAnd youâre waiting for the other shoe to drop.â
âYep.â
âHmph. I should have come with you. You get all weird and introspective when youâre left alone for more than a couple days.â
âIâm not alone. Thereâre birds. Squirrels. A few ghosts hanging out by the toilets.â
âJohn.â
âAinât gonna talk to âem! Mind you, one did give me a wink when I was zipping up. Howâs everything back home?â
âEr â look, I wonât lie, itâs shit. Itâs all shit. But itâs not any more shit than it was when you left three days ago. Not any worse, not any better, yeah?â
âRight.â
(Stupid to be disappointed. Stupid that a part of him had secretly believed that as soon as he abandoned the sinking ship that was London, things would miraculously get better for everyone, even as another part of him, on the opposite side of his brain, had been convinced â maybe even hoped â that the moment he was gone, the entire city would descend into screaming anarchy, at which he could point and laugh from a safe distance.)
âListen, John, Iâve gotta go. Renee needs groceries. Be careful, please?â
âYeah, yeah.â
âDonât fuck about with any occult bollocks. Donât go foraging for brain-melting mushrooms. Donât do anything. Just stay in your tent and read your dirty books, yeah?â
âHeard and understood, Mum.â
âBastard.â
âLove you.â
âYeah, you too.â
John dropped his phone onto the grass and stared up at the sky. A herd of thin grey clouds drifted past. Off in the distance, he could just make out the shape of a barn â or was it a church? Either way, there were sheep next to it.
A squirrel scurried down a nearby tree trunk and then up another one.
Yawning, he scratched his chin. (Getting scruffy. Hadnât shaved in two days now.)
âShould probâly do some reading,â he mumbled to no one.
A few minutes passed.
He dangled his head back behind his seat and sang quietly: âFirst produced my pistol⌠then produced my rapier⌠said âstand and deliverâ, for he were a bold deceiver⌠mush a-ring dum-a do dum-a daâŚâ
Heaving a sigh, he stood up and walked around his tent to dispel pins and needles, then went inside to read his book.
âI am not bored,â he muttered fiercely, staring down at pages that might as well have been blank.
âOh, but you are, John.â
Englandâs greatest wizard jumped up, wielding his novel as though it were a club, and dealt a devastating blow to empty air while screaming something along the lines of, âRaargh die die die!â
Then he waited for a moment to see if the voice returned. Tried to determine whether he could sense anything. Nope. Admittedly, that didnât mean much these days. Lots of beasties and bastards out there had learned how to hide from him.
âEither Iâm hallucinating or someoneâs pissing me about,â he concluded, placing his hands on his hips. âChas, mate, Iâm sure you would agree that either constitutes a fine reason to leave this fucking tent.â
And leave he did.Â
0
He went caving.
The BBC had published an article a couple years back calling the UKâs cave systems its âlast true wildernessâ. He and Chas had had a good long laugh over that, Chas suggesting that John take the caver quoted on an expedition to Faerie or maybe direct him toward any of the two hundred portals to Hell between Plymouth and the Orkney Islands.
But the article had stuck with him. Perhaps it was the obvious love the caver had for his hobby, the clean and simple joy he got out of crawling around in dark, damp holes. John was always drawn to people like that, and not just because it sounded smutty.
(Imagine if heâd loved something clean and simple; gotten into bird-watching or carpentry instead of magic. Would have saved him a lot of hassle.)
Idly, one evening, heâd poked around on the internet â now that, that really was the last true wilderness â until heâd found a map listing all the cave systems in the UK, along with a guide to which were popular, which were dangerous, which were good for a family holiday, and yes (inevitably), which had been the scenes of grisly accidents.
(Wikipedia said that historically thereâd been only 136 fatalities âassociated with recreational cavingâ in the UK and that, statistically, it wasnât a particularly dangerous hobby. Hadnât stopped him from having vivid dreams about bodies wedged in tiny tunnels miles below ground, cooling and rotting and bloating, except how could they bloat when there simply wasnât enough room, what happened whenâŚ
Anyway, Chas had eventually rescued him from his maudlin musings and dragged him to the pub.)
And while his memory was a messy old thing, especially these days, that just happened to be the sort of useless information that tended to hang around in his head for years, like the words to every song in Sweeney Todd or the rituals required for an exorcism spell that didnât actually work, doing nothing but taking up space.
There was a cave only a few miles from the campsite.
When he arrived, he beheld a clumsily painted sign nailed to an oak tree next to the entrance:
CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC UNTIL SPRING
NO TRESPASSERS
HAZARDOUS! ENTER AT OWN RISK
He lingered at the caveâs mouth. Though it was big enough for him to stand up in, it made for an unassuming sight. Squirrels played in the old oak with three sets of loversâ initials carved into it that stood at its left and the pathway leading up to it was strewn with weeds and wildflowers.
âAm I really this stupid?â he pondered aloud, before correcting himself: âAm I really this bored?â
After five minutesâ internal debate, he decided that yes, he was.
He took a step towards the narrow crevice, before stopping himself. No. This was ridiculous. What was he thinking? Shaking his head, he turned and walked away.
Three hours later he was back, now with a good pair of leather boots (stolen from an arsehole in a nearby village), a Power Rangers backpack (given to him by a kid in exchange for a cigarette and some magic tricks), a cheap flashlight, two cans of lager, and a packet of crisps (paid for with the last of his cash).
âOff we go, then,â he said, and marched into the dark.Â
0
Like a well-fed leopard on a low-hanging branch, the First of the Fallen lounged across his throne of vertebrae, long black hair dribbling off his broad shoulders and pooling on the ground. Though he was wide awake, his eyes were closed. This, combined with the corpses of three supplicants dangling from nearby steel hooks, would hopefully discourage anyone from bothering him for the next few hours.
âMy liege?â
Shit.
He kept still. Said nothing. Perhaps they would go away.
âUm⌠my liege, Iâm terribly, monumentally sorry to disturb you, butâŚâ
With a wave of his claw, the messenger exploded into red mist.
When, ten minutes later, a second messenger summoned up the courage to approach him, he realized that it must be very serious indeed.
âYou have five seconds,â he said cordially, holding them up by the neck.
âCon⌠constantine!â they croaked.
Brightening, the First set them down. âIndeed? Whatâs the little bastard up to this time, eh?â
âNothing, my liege. Heâs dead.â
A few minutes later, a fourth corpse hung from a hook and the throne of Hell was empty.Â
0
To the First of the Fallen, caves were still a novelty.
Confined spaces, in general, were still a novelty.
At 13.6 billion years, he was only slightly younger than the universe. While solid planets had come into existence around the same time, heâd not actually visited one until the emergence of homo sapiens and his subsequent quarrel and falling-out with God â a mere 300,000 years ago.
Cast from Heaven, naked and freezing cold, heâd stumbled into a rocky cranny by the shoreline and wedged himself between its slimy walls. That was his earliest memory of ever being âindoorsâ. No surprise, then, that he avoided such places when he could. He had built no castles in Hell; his throne sat atop a mountain beneath an endless red-gold sky.
But right now, it wasnât the cave that had his attention, dark and chilly and, yes, slimy as it was.
âStupid turd,â he grumbled, glowering at the corpse. âOw!â
Heâd bumped his head on the cave ceiling again. It was too low for the average human to stand upright, much less an eight-foot primordial being.
Constantine stared at him, blue eyes blank and glassy. His body was unmarred save for the dent in the left side of his scalp, which had stopped leaking some time ago. As far as the First could tell, his nemesis had simply tripped and fallen onto an unfortunately positioned, unfortunately sharp rock.
The First spat on his tie and snarled, âPathetic! What the fuck are you even doing here, eh? And â Godâs hairy bollocks, when did you last bathe?â
His soul was still dangling off him, like drool from a dogâs mouth. Heaven, obviously, had no interest in him and the First hadnât yet authorised his admission into Hell.
Because he wasnât ready, dammit.
Heâd not been expecting to welcome John home for at least another thirty years.
âAlways have to make it difficult, donât you?â
When he reached down to take hold of the soul â such a grubby, tattered thing â it bit, blazing gold for a sliver of an instant before he snatched his hand back. Stuck his index finger in his mouth until the sting abated. Fumed.
He tried again, grasping it firmly, as one might a snake. It thrashed. He gave it a disciplinary shake before opening Constantineâs mouth with a claw and forcing it down his gullet.
Coming back to life was never enjoyable. Constantine spasmed and gurgled, legs and arms contorting as pink foam gathered at his lips. The First, bored, sat down beside him, reclining against the cave wall with one knee crooked. Surveyed their surroundings. The ground was â oh dear â littered with crisp crumbs, an empty foil packet, two cans, and dozens of cigarette butts. How foul.
âDisaster in your wake, as ever,â he commented, tutting.
Constantine groaned, eyelashes fluttering.
Belatedly realizing that he wouldnât be able to see in this subterranean gloom, and very much wanting to afflict him with the identity of his saviour, the First snapped his fingers. A dozen lit candles appeared across the cavern, hovering ghost-like in mid-air.
âUrgh⌠fffu⌠whu⌠oh, Christ Almighty.â
Watching him sit up, the First assumed a lordly expression, tilting his head. âAnd what do you have to say for yourself?â
Unhealthily pale skin and facial muscles stretched and twisted to an indeterminable end.
Then John Constantine set his jaw.
Growled: âIâm on holiday, you bellend.â
And passed out.Â
0
He awoke to the smell of slightly burnt waffles.
Better than burnt flesh, which was what heâd anticipated after His Infernal Bloody Majesty had popped in for a fag and a chat. Certainly better than sulphur.
âFor you,â the First of the Fallen purred.
A white plate â averagely-sized but rendered absurdly dainty by the dimensions of the clawed fingers holding it â was set down in front of him.
He frowned at its golden-brown contents. âThe catch?â
âNo catch. I was peckish. I imagine you are, too.â
âCome on. Not in the mood. Did you piss on âem? Did you mix a babyâs blood into the batter?â
âHonestly, John.â
Scratching his chin, he reviewed the facts. Still in the same sodding cave, albeit far better illuminated than the last time heâd been conscious. Alive, but with that unmistakable stiffness that heâd come to associate with having recently been dead. Cold. Irritable.
Hungry.
His archenemyâs smug smile was almost enough to make him spit the first bite back out. Instinct borne from months of extreme poverty forced him to swallow instead.
âTastes like shit,â he remarked, wiping his lips. âBut I suppose you usually have minions to prepare food for you. Whereâs the syrup?â
A regal sigh, before a bottle appeared beside the plate. He emptied a third of it and spent the next few minutes in delicious, sticky silence.
There were, as ever, consequences to allowing the First of the Fallen centre stage. The moment the big smelly git realised that John really wasnât in the mood for banter, he waved a hand and conjured up a thin hardback with Into the Underworld: The Amateurâs Guide to Caving in Britain on the front.
As John rolled his eyes and stuffed another waffle into his mouth, the First cleared his throat and read: ââAccording to the National Speleological Society, the minimum number of people required to safely embark on a recreational caving expedition is four â at least one of whom should have prior caving experience.â Did you know that, John?â
John chewed sullenly.
âI did. Iâd wager that most people do. At least, Iâd wager that most people know that going caving in groups smaller than two â going caving alone â is wildly inadvisable. Caves are dangerous, John.â
Where were his cigarettes? Had the bastard nicked them?
âAnd⌠letâs see â ah! Here we are. âThere is a great deal of commercial equipment available to a first-time caver, some of which is necessary, some of which is not. Two items, however, that are absolutely non-negotiable are a helmet and a helmet-mounted light.â Do you have either of those, John?â
âDo I criticise your fucking hobbies?â he exploded, knowing better, knowing it would only encourage him. Sugary crumbs flew everywhere.
âYou do, in fact. Often. And quite understandably. My favourite hobby is murdering your friends, after all.â
John threw the plate at his head.Â
0Â
Heâd had a good sense of direction even before heâd learned how to see psychic residue coating streets and walls, left behind by previous travellers. Always scurrying around in places no kid should; subways, sewers, dirty basements, any haunted house his greedy little eye fell upon.
When heâd reached sixteen, burgeoning schizophrenia had muddled him up now and then. Occasionally, itâd even left him standing in streets he didnât recognise with no earthly idea how heâd got there. PTSD had compounded the problem.
Even so, at fifty plus, he didnât make a habit of getting lost. Meds, practice, and years of experience meant that he could walk from Chasâs house to Saint Paulâs with a blindfold on.
Long story short: This was embarrassing.
âIâm fairly sure weâre going in circles. That stalactite is very familiar.â
And he certainly wasnât fucking helping.
(The floating candles, following them like ducklings, were. Johnâs torch had broken when heâd tripped. Still, he didnât need the First of the Fallen for light. Could conjure it up himself, no bother. It just made sense to avail himself of a primordial beingâs infinite magical resources before dipping into his own, far more limited stockpile.)
âDo you know the way out?â John asked, not breaking his stride.
âI do.â
âWill you tell me where it is?â
âI will not.â
âThen shut up.â
In his defence, John hadnât thought the cave was big enough to get lost in. It hadnât looked it from the outside.
But heâd wandered, then crawled, down at least a mile of twisting, increasingly narrow tunnels before getting himself killed. Heâd kept meaning to stop; said to himself five times, âOkay, Conjob, this is getting stupid, letâs trot our arse back to civilisationâ. Then he would notice another crevice wide enough for him to squeeze into.
âCurious place for a holiday,â the First of the Fallen commented after bravely keeping his tongue still for an unprecedented five minutes.
âCurious times weâre living in, innit?â
He hummed in agreement. âAre you really not here for any particular reason? Not â I donât know â trying to find a missing child abducted by the fae? Searching for a wicked spirit whoâs been cursing the local shepherds? Treasure-hunting, perhaps?â
âNo.â
âYouâre just here.â
âYep.â
âWhy?â
âI told you. Iâm on holiday. Taking a nice long break.â
âJohn. Weâve known one another for some time. I am familiar with the ways in which you âtake a breakâ. You either go to the pub or you go to several pubs. Attempting to reconnect with nature is hardly your style.â
âBeing oblivious to current events â especially shit ones â is hardly your style. Been too busy shaving your chunky arse to pick up a newspaper lately?â
âPrint is dying. Besides, you try managing an entire dimension. See how much spare time it leaves you. Honestly, Iâm run off my feet most days.â
âSo quit.â
âDonât be silly. What else would I do?â
âI dunno. Could be a camgirl. Youâve got the legs for it.â
âStop trying to change the subject. Why arenât you at home?â
John stopped walking and spun to face him. âThereâs a plague, you gormless, oblivious prick. I canât go to the pub. I canât meet up with me mates. I canât visit peopleâs homes to perform exorcisms. I canât do anything but sit indoors, on my own, for months on end, just watching everything get worse, and that⌠and thatâs not an option. Not for me. I crack too easy. So I got out. Before I killed someone. Now, for the last time, shut up and let me concentrate.â
He bent down to tug off his shoes and socks.
Telepathic magic tended to work best when you were naked. But sod that. Not with the First of the Fuckheads watching. Waffles or no waffles, he did not deserve a treat.
âOh, is this what weâre doing now? Marvellous! I do love watching your quaint party tricks,â he oozed with a mocking round of applause as John dropped to his knees.
Ignore him.
Taking a deep breath, John let his awareness expand.
It was hard, with the First standing right there. His presence was staggeringly heavy, weighing on the ley lines like an iron ball on a lace hammock. And so alien; elements found nowhere on Earth, bones and muscles formed before Earth had been a glint in Godâs eye.
John sneered into the darkness. Piss on that. On him. This was childâs play. Buggered as his brain might be, John Constantine wasnât going to falter at the sound, scent, or sensation of a mean-spirited old cosmic relic.
Okay, letâs see what weâve got.
Seven years ago, three people came this way. A family. A woman; her sister; her daughter. They were having fun. The sisters had done this before; the daughter had been begging to come along for years. Afterwards, they were going for pizza. It was a good day.
Two years ago, four people came this way. All friends from work. Well â âfriendsâ. One was the company CEO, the other three wanted promotions. Everyone but the boss was miserable. One was arachnophobic.
Eight months ago, a⌠sheep? Yeah. A sheep. Barely more than a lamb. It was lost. There was a storm and it came down here looking for shelter. Went too deep. By the time the shepherd found it, it was half-starved.
âJohn? What are you-âŚâ
Ignore him.
Ten years ago, another family. Fifty years ago, a frightened child running from a monstrous father. And others â a hundred others â a thousand. The cave had a rich and storied history. Almost against his will and entirely against his better judgement, John followed its threads through the rock layers, chasing faded ghosts, brushing up against magic so ancient it had fossilised.
âJohn!â
Ignore him. Ignore him. Ignore-
His head was ringing. His blood was on fire.
Fuck, Iâve gone too far, too bloody deep, fuck, oh fuck.
âConstantine! Heed me!â
His eyes snapped open.
âAh,â he said.
âPrecisely,â said the First of the Fallen, who was holding him up by his coat collar like a jizz rag in need of a bin.
The cave had changed.
It was brighter, thanks to a small, well-constructed fire in its centre.
The walls were covered in paintings. Deer. Hogs. Great red and brown bulls.
A woman sat in the corner, wrapped in furs, adding detail to what might have been a fox. She didnât seem to have noticed them.
âDid you mean to do that?â the First of the Fallen queried.Â
0
âIn thirty thousand years, a monk will come down here and find them. Heâll be horrified, believing that theyâre the work of⌠well, me. So heâll leave and return with water in buckets and scrubbing brushes. As he lies on his deathbed, he will be firmly under the impression that this great good deed will grant him entrance into Paradise.â
The First of the Fallen paused for effect, then added, âAlas, he will be mistaken.â
Without looking away from her work, the woman spoke several words in a language miles removed from any contemporary tongue John had ever heard.
âThe young lady says she doesnât mind spirits wandering her caves, but requests that we donât chatter while sheâs trying to concentrate.â
Crouching next to freshly-etched cow and her calf, feeling uncharacteristically dazzled, John said, âAsk her if I can take a picture. Ask her!â
âHomo neanderthalensis, John. She wonât have the faintest idea what you mean.â
Rolling his eyes, he fished his phone out of his trenchcoat pocket and waved it at her. When she deliberately ignored him, he shrugged and took the shot.
The flash won her attention. She stood â revealing a faded seashell necklace and a long, curving scar across her left thigh â and approached them, limping slightly. John held out the phone to show her the picture and, after a resoundingly unimpressed inspection, she uttered a terse sentence.
âSheâs unsure why the sickly-looking spirit thinks shrinking her beasts in any way improves them,â said the First of the Fallen.
The woman raised her head (hard to tell how old she was; younger than him, definitely) and looked John in the eye, squinting. Another few sentences followed, some of which sounded like questions.
Sarcastic questions, unless he was mistaken.
âShe asks if you shrink them because large beasts frighten you. She speculates that, if the only beasts you can bear to approach are scrawny ones, itâs no wonder that you yourself are such a measly creature. She says that she too was scared of bulls when she was a child, but that her mother taught her not to be. She wonders why your mother failed you in this regard. Should I tell her your mother died in childbirth, John?â
âStick your head up your own arse and choke. But ask her name first.â
Tossing back his thick black hair, he scoffed. âWhy? What does it matter? Sheâs a primitive, doomed creature and sheâs not even really here. This is just one of the caveâs memories.â
âChrist â are you jealous Iâm talking to her more than Iâm talking to you? Because thatâs fucking inane. This is a one-in-a-lifetime type deal. Iâve never spoken to a legit bloody Neanderthal. I speak to you all the blasted time, moreâs the pity.â
Yellow eyes narrowed. âMaybe Iâll kill her.â
John laughed. âYou said it, squire; sheâs a memory. You canât kill her. Sheâs long dead. Now shut up.â
He wasnât able to learn her name. Still, via pantomime and pointing, he eventually managed to convey his desire to find a way out of the cave â or so, at least, it seemed.
She took a bundle of sticks from beside her fire, lit them, and walked towards the nearest inky-black tunnel.
âSee?â he said to the First of the Fallen as they followed her. âPoliteness. All it takes.â
âDonât act like you have any real idea whatâs going on. She could be leading you straight into a trap. Youâre aware, Iâm sure, that archaeologists generally agree Neanderthals practised cannibalism? Ten muscular relatives might be waiting right around the corner with clubs and a cooking pot.â
âFor fuckâs sake â I have literally stood and watched you slouching on that colossally pathetic bone throne of yours and nibbling the edge of someoneâs pelvis like it was a turkey drumstick. Loathsome bloody hypocrite.â
âThat doesnât remotely count as cannibalism, John. That was a human pelvis. Iâm not a human. Iâm the prototype. A species of one. Which, I suppose, means itâs technically impossible for me to commit cannibalism. Hmm. What an interesting philosophical notion.â
Walking a short way ahead, bare feet soundless against the rock, their new self-appointed guide said something.
âWhat was that?â John whispered.
ââIf you must burden my ears by bickering like children, you could at least do it in a language I can understandâ. Then she called us a rude word.â
Then the First of the Fallen spoke several sentences in his usual bored, drawling cadence and, to Johnâs surprise, she laughed.
âWhat was that?â
âNothing,â the First of the Fallen said, innocently.
âIâm serious, bastard. Whatâre you saying to her?â
âNothing important, John, really.â
More than once after that, he caught her glancing back at them and snickering.Â
0
The artist and the twisting stone galleries through which she led them â it couldnât possibly have all been hers; the monk had destroyed the work of generations â were insufficient to keep Johnâs mind from straying back to important matters.
âHey. Ponce. Whatâve you done with my cigarettes?â
The First of the Fallen had plucked them from his trenchcoat pocket while he was unconscious. When it came to his sorcerer, heâd learned, you always wanted a bargaining chip to hand.
âWeâre in the company of one whose lungs are as yet unsullied by the Industrial Revolution, Constantine. Are you really planning on exposing her to second-hand smoke?â
It was a prospect John, it seemed, hadnât even considered. Obviously angry with himself for that (oh John), he snapped, âNo! I was â itâs â look, she canât get lung cancer, can she? Sheâs dead. Doesnât matter what she breathes in now.â
Smothering a smile, the First of the Fallen said, âOh? So the fact that she wonât actually perish upon inhaling your fumes is all that matters, is it? Never mind her comfort or dignity, I suppose; as long as you donât have to clean up another corpse.â
Nostrils flared. Fists clenched. Blue eyes gleamed with something hotter and even more violent than divine wrath.
âLike you give a shit about her,â John growled.
So much in this miserable world reminds me of Heaven. The grass. The sky. The beauty. You alone remind me of the time before Heaven; that bizarre, unpredictable time when there were no rules, no beauty, only feelings, only sudden bursts of light, fierce and erratic, cutting through the void.
âOr anyone,â John continued, gathering steam. Nicotine withdrawal, the First of the Fallen suspected, was kicking in. âRemind me, what was that you said the day we met? âTo be mortal is to be stupid, proud, conceited â and ultimately patheticâ. You showed your hand, idiot; you loathe us all. Ergo, any taunts that depend on you concealing that are a total bust. Forget about the ciggies. If theyâve been anywhere near you, I donât want âem.â
For years, the First of the Fallen had secretly hoped John had forgotten his, in hindsight, ill-considered words.
(Heâd meant every one of them, but at the time heâd been trying to come off as a Gentleman Devil, the quintessential Man of Wealth and Taste, affable and urbane, not a bitter, angry old monster.)
Should have known better. John was so foolishly protective when it came to humanity as an abstract concept, even while his attitude towards actual humans tended to be far more variable. Heâd probably been furiously gnawing on that phrase â âultimately patheticâ â like a dog with a bone for thirty years.
Thirty years.
Was that really all the time theyâd known one another? John Constantine, his Constantine, He Who Was Most Hated⌠a mere thirty year acquaintance?
âWhatâre you laughing at?â
âHeh. Nothing, John. Reminiscing, thatâs all.â
âAbout what? Poor old Brendan?â
Brendan, Brendan. Who -? Oh yes. Johnâs friend. The one whoâd sold his soul. The catalyst, in fact, for their meeting. Pity the bastard was in Heaven; heâd have liked to thank him.
âYou see these?â said the artist, holding up her torch to illuminate a painted wolf pack. âMy grandfather did these.â
âWhatâs she saying?â John demanded.
As the First of the Fallen translated, he gazed dispassionately at her.
The first time heâd encountered a human, theyâd looked much the same. Small. Unremarkable. Clad in skins and hardened from a life exposed to this planetâs weather (he personally hated weather and had made sure there was no such thing in Hell).
Mind you, the ones heâd run into while naked and terrified and still injured from being swatted down to Earth like some insect had been much less hospitable. They hadnât known what he was; only that he was wrong. When heâd tried to approach their campfire, theyâd thrown stones at him. Slaying them all hadnât even occurred to him. Father had said that they were precious and at that stage, heâd still given a toss about His rules. Instead, heâd slunk away.
Catching food wasnât a problem. He was faster than any buck or bird. It was loneliness, not hunger, that drove him to try again, and again, and again. In time, they grew used to him. Even showed him kindness. They had an extraordinary capacity for that. (For all that it was so often conditional and withdrawn the moment one became too strange or too frightening.)
But heâd never grown used to them. They were, at heart, creatures of community. And he simply wasnât. He was a species of one. The prototype. Heâd always been alone but for Godâs company, and adjusting to life as a member of a tribe had proved impossible. Their norms, their traditions, their complicated etiquette â it had all bewildered him, then intimidated him, then irritated him. That, combined with his ageless body and supernatural strength, had driven an inevitable wedge between them, and heâd returned to the wilderness to wander alone.
He considered telling John that story.
(Why not? Heâd told him everything else and the idea that his nemesis might have an incomplete view of him was, for some reason, concerning.)
Then he considered Johnâs likely reaction. The curled lip. The scornful snort. âWhat, you looking for pity? âBoo-hoo, my rotten childhood turned me into a gitâ? Hah! Jog on, squire.â
No. Johnâs hatred was a hard-won prize. Johnâs contempt was to be avoided at all costs.
âYou realise most people arenât allowed down here,â the artist said, glancing his way. She was shorter than John, who himself was slightly shorter than the average man; her eyes were level with the Firstâs navel. âOnly elders and those whoâve earned the right. There are grave penalties awaiting any who sneak in.â
âReally?â he replied, interested only in Johnâs furrowed brow and silent, aggravated attempts to work out what they were saying.
âYes. Because this place is important. Sacred. When I was young, I spent years dreaming of being allowed to venture this deep. I donât know the ways of spirits â but Iâll not pretend it doesnât rankle that you spend more time studying your sickly friend than your surroundings.â
âYouâre still young. Compared to me, everyone is.â
âHe doesnât even seem to like you very much. Why are you travelling with him?â
âI donât know. Why do urine and semen come out the same hole?â
ââItâs none of your businessâ would have sufficed. Are you always this rude? Is that why the sickly one doesnât like you?â Â
âNo. No, he dislikes me for other reasons.â
âWell, well, well. Hullo,â came Johnâs voice, and they both realised that heâd stopped walking.
Turning, the First of the Fallen spied his nemesis standing with his hands in his pockets, studying a man dressed like a thirteenth-century peasant.
âEh? Where did he come from?â the woman asked.
In quavering tones, the peasant said, âAre you angels?â
The First of the Fallen laughed. âJohn! Heâs asking if-âŚâ
âJust because I canât speak Neanderthal doesnât mean I donât know sodding Middle English. Give me an ounce of credit. Iâm only a cocking wizard, after all,â John snapped, before addressing the new arrival: âNo. Just travellers.â
The peasantâs shoulders slumped. âOh. I thought maybe God had sent me angels. Iâve been requesting them for several days.â
John shuddered. âBad idea. Trust me. You donât want to mess around with that lot.â
âBut I need guidance. Protection.â
âFrom what?â
Eyes wide, the peasant took his hand and clutched it. âMy friend, canât you see? I am being pursued.â
âBy who?â
âBy demons.â
(to be continued)Â
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WS Chapter 40: A Home in Hell
Previous Chapter
Masterpost
A lotta lore coming your way! Thank you X for being the only one with a braincell in this group to explain world mechanics in a way that even I- the author- hardly understands.Â
And sorry for yet another cliffhanger! I just love them too much! (wonder how many people caught the foreshadowing a few chapters back)
Ecto belongs to @cooler-cactus-blockÂ
Red belongs to @theguardiansofredlandâ
Red picks up his head as he hears the sound of fireworks. The late afternoon sun blocks Redâs vision, whiting out the sky and making it impossible to see who is flying by. He feels like a castaway, trapped on this mound of sand with only an ominous nether portal and an unlit campfire. He doesnât even have the ability to start a fire.Â
Glimmers of white rain from the sky, forms slowly descending from the heavens. Well, most of them are. One dives straight for Red, wings tucked in like an arrow shot from a bow. The grey elytran wings only open at the last second, just enough to slow the descent and save the flyer from experiencing kinetic energy. Not enough to keep Ecto from barreling into Red, sending them both skidding across the sand.Â
Red squeaks, gasping for air as Ecto hugs the breath out of her. Red feels something wet on his shoulder, and realizes that Ectoâs crying. She isnât sure sheâs ever seen Ecto cry, even when she was iced out of her own home. âWe thought you were gone.âÂ
Redâs lips thin out. She should be gone. Out of everyoneâs way. But even death didnât want something as useless as her. Avonâs wings eclipse the sun a moment later, oscillating to lower her to the sand. She crosses the sandy island in a few strides, lifting off the ground to reach Red as fast as possible. Avon wraps her arms and wings tight around the other two wanderers, cocooning all three in the embrace. A weak chuckle escapes Avonâs lips.âWe have got to stop losing each other in this world.âÂ
They only break up when Red has to push them apart. She needs to breathe, and Ectoâs vice grip is definitely not letting her do that. The hermits take slow circles to lower in altitude before landing on the short spit of land. Grian does the best landing, sliding across the sand and using the grains to skid to a stop. Stressâs landing is more of a stumble, coming in too hot for her liking.Â
Ecto lets go, but stays close to Red. âI...I canât believe youâre alive. How...how doesâŚâÂ
âOur world has a few different rules than yours appears to have. Differences in the laws of nature, and all that.â Xisuma states, sitting down next to the wanderers. The other hermits crowd close. Even Mumbo, despite nearly being killed by sixty six percent of the trio. âMost deaths here arenât permanent. You die, but you can come back.âÂ
âIs that what world magic can do?â Red questions. âHow does that even work?âÂ
Iskall pulls out a pair of flint and steel, striking it to start the campfire. Keralis and Stress pull up logs for them all to sit on. And Grian reveals pockets full of food. He canât help but notice Avonâs gaze never faltering from the potatoes in his hand. He starts cooking while Xisuma fills them in. âI donât know how all it works, but I know my spells work and it eases the tension on all of us.âÂ
âYou donât want to know how many times Iâve died. Iâve kinda gotten used to the tingly feeling of reviving.â Scar chuckles, leaning back and watching as the sun sets on the world. That reminds Scar of something. He picks up a bag from behind the log, tossing it across the fire to Red. âHere you go, little fish. Keep that little guy close in your world, you hear?âÂ
Red looks down, seeing the gilded statue glinting in the sunset colors and fire flames. He notices that it has little wings on itâs back, like an angel with wings outspread. Cute little wings, smaller than his wide nose. He canât tell if the nose was a mistake or intentional. Itâs endearing, but Red isnât sure why Fred is so important for Scar. Did he make it?Â
As the cooked meals are being passed around, Avon looks across the fire to Tango. He reminds her so much of Blu, especially the way that the flames frame his face, his blonde hair and eyes the color of heated netherrack. Xisuma said something about Tango spending lots of time in the nether. She bites into her baked potato, swallowing it before she speaks. âYou worked in the nether?âÂ
Tango perks up, noticing the quietest camper suddenly speak. He takes a bite of his steak, and leans back. âYeah, a few worlds back I made this massive nether style base and humongous big farm-ificators in the dimension.âÂ
âWere there other people in the nether? What was it like working there so long?â Red adds, scooting closer to Tango.Â
âI mean, it was a pretty long time ago. My mind starts to wander and mix things all up into a bunch of gobblty goop. It was really hot, for one. And yeah, there were other people. They didnât really talk to me much, but they liked to watch my work. They were pretty chill people, the ones I met. Gave me lots of books and told me all sorts of things, like how they would just- pop!- appear in hell. Called themselves hellspawns because of that.âÂ
Xisuma hums, looking at the wanderers and Tango. âI think thereâs a reason why hellspawns exist. Every world is a bit different. Different rules of nature, and different ways of keeping those rules. But as every world mage knows, each universe needs to keep its balance. I may have a theory as to why the person who attacked you may exist.âÂ
âOhhh, if itâs an Xisuma idea itâs got to be all sorts of cool wizardy spells and potion things.â Tango is on the edge of his seat. He doesnât exactly know why these people appeared and lived in the nether, but his time spent with them made him want to make the best of his own life. Live on his own terms. And he feels he has, here among the hermits.Â
âThereâs three dimensions. All in balance with one another. Too much of one thing can be bad, and too much of another isnât good either. The nether and the Overworld are equals and opposites. Mirrors, counterweights. Keeping the universe in balance.â Xisuma picks up a handful of sand, watching the grains fall through his fingertips and return to the millions of others among the beach.
âBut what about the End? Where is it in all this?â Avon questions, leaning against a propped up knee.
âIf the overworld and the nether are the weights, then the End is the scale. Measuring, taking, adding. The liminal space between both, but just as integral as either side.â Xisuma looks around. Most of the people listening seem to be lost, but still listening
âSo hellspawnsâŚ.â Tango whispers.
âProbably appear to give the world balance. To be the counter to the universe. A hellspawn canât exist without itâs overworld counter being born. And the overworld needs the nether to ease the weight of creation. Both are needed to keep balance.âÂ
âWhy would Blu attack us then?â Ecto seems to understand the gist, tossing out all the weird theoretical stuff. âIf both need to be balanced, why attack us? Why kill the ender dragon and freeze an entire desert?âÂ
âThat...I canât understand.â Xisuma shrugs, pulling off his helmet to finally dig into the mushroom stew heâs been preparing. Long, fluffy brown hair falls from his helmet, curling around his face.Â
The wanderers look to Tango, but he shakes his head. âI donât think any of my books or conversations can help, friends. Itâs been ages since my nether base and those massive farms, leaving to join the other hermits in the new world. I really wish I could help more, but this is way out of my league man.âÂ
The wanderers look at each other, before looking back at the fire. Itâs not the answer they were looking for, but itâs information they needed. Now they know, hellspawns are from the nether. Some way of their world balancing itself. Stress changes the subject to something lighter, and Scar adds on his own quirky stories until the air is filled with laughter. Calm respite after so long the wanderers struggled. Retreating into the hermit world, wounded and defeated. Quickly becoming lost in the jungle, only to find new friends willing to help them. In more ways than just getting back on course. And now, they can return to their world. Healed and with a new understanding of what theyâre facing.Â
With the dawn light, Scar guides the wanderers back to Larry. The giant snail still eeks over the infinity portal, guarding it with a fierce, lopsided gaze. Scar presses a crystal into each of the wandererâs hands. â The heart of the warrior for Avon, Luck for Ecto, and water breathing for Red.âÂ
Red looks at his crystal, then up to Scar. He doesnât have the heart to tell him that he can already breathe underwater. He just clutches the crystal close, nodding as the rift warps and shifts between them. As much as Red loves being with the hermits, heâs ready to go home. Ready to face whatever is waiting for him.Â
The wanderers step back through the portal, falling between worlds and back to their own. Itâs dazing, and they canât help but stumble back into their world. The portal disappears, leaving them in the forest. Ecto winces, rubbing her head after nearly cracking it against a tree. âUgh, whatâs that awful scent? It smells like dead fish.âÂ
Red looks around, breath catching in his throat. He recognizes where he is. He remembers the river, flowing through the forest towards the sea. The giant boulders tossed aside and trees growing from the fractures within them. And he smells the horrible scent, making him gag, his nose burning and eyes watering. The tide is turning.
Red scrabbles to his feet, leaving Ecto and Avon behind. Stumbling through the sand of the beach, only to collapse at the interface of the water. The water swirls with a rusted red color, waves brushing dead fish and seaweed against the pristine beaches. Itâs already too late.Â
Red was too late. The tide has turned.
#wandering stars#ecto#avon#red#hermitcraft#hermitblr#minesona#mcsona#tango tek#grianmc#xisumavoid#gtwscar#stressmonster101#writing
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