Adam Milligan (
halfwinchester) wrote in
entrancelogs2013-10-17 11:51 am
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OPEN | there's a place i have gone
Who: Adam Milligan (
halfwinchester) and anyone who cares to cross his path!
Where: Around the mansion.
When: Oct. 17th.
Rating: PG-13?
Summary: Having been unconscious for most of his stay in Wonderland, when Adam has a lucid moment he takes himself on a tour of the mansion.
The Story:
For someone who'd been in Wonderland for over a week, Adam had seen remarkably little of it since Castiel had brought him indoors. The forest, he remembered in flashes and vague splinters of memory, and that was only in those rare moments of consciousness.
Being awake meant remembering everything. Each time he breathed, he smelled burning skin in Hell's fires. Each time he moved, he felt phantom pain from Hell's ministrations. Each time he closed his eyes, Hell. No matter what the angels had done to him, Hell was still everywhere, and he was still a part of it. Unconsciousness was a blessing in disguise when Hell was all you had to wake up to, and if he’d had a choice, he would have picked oblivion every single time.
But on the ninth day, something changed.
Adam woke up to a sense of clarity he hadn't felt between his pelting through the trees on his first day and the angels playing with his soul like Silly Putty. Not since… no, he couldn't remember. Not since before. Not since he’d had a body and a place in the real, physical world without Michael. As he stared at the ceiling, the fact that the room stayed just a room and didn’t bleed into a place he’d been in his memories, or somewhere in the pit, almost confused him more than the alternative.
For once, lying in a bed (in Wonderland of all places, according to an angel, whatever that counted for) seemed like a possibility and not just a fever dream cobbled together by a sick mind.
Real.
What that possible? Really? He hadn’t believed Castiel about being free, not enough to dare let that hope sink in. Now, the longer he laid there, the more doubt crept in.
Free…?
If he was alive, being alive felt an awful like being on the verge of passing out. Sliding out of bed and convincing his legs to hold him up was a touch-and-go affair, made worse by a floor that didn’t seem to want to stay steady underneath him. Getting across the room was a sheer miracle in and of itself; his need to know just what the fuck was happening to him just barely outweighed his body's desire to pitch him over. He held onto the door frame to rest for a second. Good for him that he didn't have any dignity left to lose.
"Warmed-over shit" was a good way to describe the young man who eventually staggered into the sixth floor hallway that morning, unshaven and unwashed. A kind assessment, given that Hell was still written all over the lines of his face; it was in the glassy cast to his eyes and the purpled skin underneath, in the way he had to steady himself on the occasional section of wall. Absorbed in the push and pull of his own muscles, Adam almost forgot his surroundings entirely. Stairs, more hallways, rooms… Places he didn’t recognize, falling forgotten behind him.
The first time he glimpsed himself in a mirror brought him to a halt, however. Startled, he froze in place before turning back to the mirror, bringing his hands to rest on either side of it.
He saw his face. At the same time, he saw the face of a stranger. The person in it didn't look… right.
Maybe he was alive, after all. Only reality could be this gaunt, and cold, and uncomfortable.
(OOC: It's prose to start, but I'm down with action tags! Feel free to find him anywhere in the mansion you'd like, too.)
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Where: Around the mansion.
When: Oct. 17th.
Rating: PG-13?
Summary: Having been unconscious for most of his stay in Wonderland, when Adam has a lucid moment he takes himself on a tour of the mansion.
The Story:
For someone who'd been in Wonderland for over a week, Adam had seen remarkably little of it since Castiel had brought him indoors. The forest, he remembered in flashes and vague splinters of memory, and that was only in those rare moments of consciousness.
Being awake meant remembering everything. Each time he breathed, he smelled burning skin in Hell's fires. Each time he moved, he felt phantom pain from Hell's ministrations. Each time he closed his eyes, Hell. No matter what the angels had done to him, Hell was still everywhere, and he was still a part of it. Unconsciousness was a blessing in disguise when Hell was all you had to wake up to, and if he’d had a choice, he would have picked oblivion every single time.
But on the ninth day, something changed.
Adam woke up to a sense of clarity he hadn't felt between his pelting through the trees on his first day and the angels playing with his soul like Silly Putty. Not since… no, he couldn't remember. Not since before. Not since he’d had a body and a place in the real, physical world without Michael. As he stared at the ceiling, the fact that the room stayed just a room and didn’t bleed into a place he’d been in his memories, or somewhere in the pit, almost confused him more than the alternative.
For once, lying in a bed (in Wonderland of all places, according to an angel, whatever that counted for) seemed like a possibility and not just a fever dream cobbled together by a sick mind.
Real.
What that possible? Really? He hadn’t believed Castiel about being free, not enough to dare let that hope sink in. Now, the longer he laid there, the more doubt crept in.
Free…?
If he was alive, being alive felt an awful like being on the verge of passing out. Sliding out of bed and convincing his legs to hold him up was a touch-and-go affair, made worse by a floor that didn’t seem to want to stay steady underneath him. Getting across the room was a sheer miracle in and of itself; his need to know just what the fuck was happening to him just barely outweighed his body's desire to pitch him over. He held onto the door frame to rest for a second. Good for him that he didn't have any dignity left to lose.
"Warmed-over shit" was a good way to describe the young man who eventually staggered into the sixth floor hallway that morning, unshaven and unwashed. A kind assessment, given that Hell was still written all over the lines of his face; it was in the glassy cast to his eyes and the purpled skin underneath, in the way he had to steady himself on the occasional section of wall. Absorbed in the push and pull of his own muscles, Adam almost forgot his surroundings entirely. Stairs, more hallways, rooms… Places he didn’t recognize, falling forgotten behind him.
The first time he glimpsed himself in a mirror brought him to a halt, however. Startled, he froze in place before turning back to the mirror, bringing his hands to rest on either side of it.
He saw his face. At the same time, he saw the face of a stranger. The person in it didn't look… right.
Maybe he was alive, after all. Only reality could be this gaunt, and cold, and uncomfortable.
(OOC: It's prose to start, but I'm down with action tags! Feel free to find him anywhere in the mansion you'd like, too.)
no subject
It wasn't enough, but they hadn't done enough for Adam from the beginning. Was it really any surprise that the pattern was continuing here?
The question wasn't what Castiel would have expected Adam to come out with next, but then again, his mind probably wasn't working in any rational way right now.
"I went as soon as I could, after you both fell in. His soul remained for a year after that... so more like a hundred and twenty years, in your case. Then Death went to collect it."
Castiel didn't have all the details of how that transaction had been made and why Death had pulled out Sam's soul without offering the same kindness to Adam, but he and Death were hardly on good terms anyway. There had never been an opportunity to ask, and admittedly, the question hadn't occurred to him before now.
no subject
And if he believed the angel was telling him the truth...
Everything hurt in the worst way possible. More difficult than thinking, however, was letting himself feel any part of their exchange.
We didn't fall!
Adam made the decision for himself and frowned, a pinched look as if a sudden migraine had settled behind his eyes. If he had to choose, thinking it was, if his stumbling, half-formed train of thought counted for as much.
"Death?" he repeated, rounding on Castiel. "So Sam's dead?"
Incredulity colored his tone. Again, he could only pluck at one part of Castiel's answer and hold onto it. He could search for some amount of surprise at the rest, but inwardly he felt as though he'd be searching in vain for another century or more. He couldn't remember everything, the length of his memory wouldn't allow it, but the cold numbers didn't sound wrong.
A hundred and twenty years in Hell. Three years on Earth. The angel could have said he'd been in the Cage for a thousand and he didn't think he could muster another single drop of astonishment. Measurements of time were nothing in comparison to having lived the real thing.
no subject
It wasn't something that he understood much himself, but Castiel still knew the facts. Adam wasn't going to be happy with it. It was only going to make the resentment and bitterness grow and fester inside of him like an untreated wound, and that could become dangerous before long.
In a way, the fact that he wasn't a demon after all that time was a shock. Winchesters were definitely made of stronger stuff, there was no denying that.
"No," Castiel said after a pause, shifting to lean against the wall. "Dean made a deal with him, and Death's part of the bargain included going to retrieve Sam's soul so that it could be placed back in his body. But the damage on his soul was already immense by then, and he eventually broke down because of it."
And because of Castiel. It wasn't that he didn't want to admit to it, but rather that it would take a very long explanation to even give Adam the context. But at least this would let him know that he wasn't the only one who'd suffered from Hell damage. Sam had hardly escaped the Cage unscathed.
no subject
So Sam was alive. He could grasp the sentiment, if nothing else about Castiel's explanation. And if but barely.
Sam had been freed, no less. Not missing, not dead, freed. Pulled out. Body and soul.
How?
Did it matter?
He shook his head again, and again after that, but his thoughts wouldn't settle. There was no comfort no matter from what end of the equation he tried to look, and before long he was merely shaking his head in silence, fingers squeezing the bridge of his nose.
no subject
Castiel could hardly blame him. While in that mental institute, he'd been catatonic for a good portion of it, and avoidant for the rest of it. He'd healed eventually, but he was an angel, made of stronger stuff than a human. Would Adam be able to recover?
He frowned, watching Adam quietly before he realized that this conversation couldn't go to any better places.
"I realize you have no reason to trust me," he said at length, "but if you ever have any need for my help, you can feel free to call." That could apply to the phones or to praying, depending on what Adam was more comfortable with.
Castiel was prepared to fly off right then and there, but he lingered, waiting to see if Adam would have anything more to say, or if they were done here.
no subject
Because there was an unbelievable amount of gracelessness in someone like Castiel offering help after everything that had been and everything that had been said. Now that the words were coming out, there was nothing stopping them.
"Or... what, is this how you cut your losses? Sam stopped the Apocalypse so everything's all right now?" The accusation was there: how could this ever be considered fair or just? "If I'm supposed to believe what I'm hearing, my mom's still dead and the guy who packed around Satan and did all of this to begin with got a free ride out of the hole he opened. Why don't you tell me what you want? What else do I have to do? You're sure not here to help me."
Getting out of the pit two years after Sam wasn't a consolation prize. It wasn't even a prize at all. Adam felt the onesidedness of the fucking angels and their fucking help so acutely he burned with the pain of it, soul throbbing like an angry wound.
His voice dropped to almost nothing, but he didn't look away, he didn't so much as blink.
"If you really wanted to help me, you'd just kill me. Take whatever you need from me, whatever I got brought back for, but I don't want this. This is sick, even for you."
no subject
Sam and Dean both have turned on him like this in the past. It's a human reaction, lashing out and saying things that might hurt if he and Adam had been closer. But as things stand, Castiel knows that he deserves every word, and that his offers are too little too late.
"I don't mean it as a joke," he says after a lengthy pause that he allows so that Adam's words can sink into the walls around him, into his skin.
"I won't kill you, but... I want nothing from you. The same can't be said for Wonderland, as it chose to bring each one of us here." It's not as if Adam would be better off elsewhere, but Castiel can also see how he might find the finality and escape of death to be a kindness at this point.
But as he said, he won't kill him. More bloodshed isn't going to solve any of this. "As far as I'm concerned, you can do as you please here." So long as it doesn't involve hurting others, but despite all the odds Adam doesn't seem to be that far gone. Michael and Lucifer may have tortured him, but they didn't turn him into a demon. Castiel's guess is that Michael wouldn't have stood for such a thing, not with his own vessel.
no subject
How fucking ironic, that an angel of all things didn't care to be merciful. They were the coldest bastards Adam had ever met, and giving this one lip and riling it up probably wouldn't result in what Adam wanted, no matter how much he bothered to unload onto Castiel.
They were that spiteful. They'd had their own plans from the beginning, but they'd always been that spiteful.
"You want to hold my leash and watch me run? Then you'd better eat that apology. Keeping me alive is just as bad as the Cage," he said, feeling none of the slim hope for recovery that Castiel did.
no subject
Castiel stands stiff and straight, hands balling into fists at his sides as he tries to find some kind of response.
But there's nothing he can say to fix this, nothing that would ever calm Adam down. And so all he can do is fall back on the reliable method of being honest.
"We stopped the Apocalypse, Adam," he says, voice low and firm, an angel's tone. "You were a casualty of that. Many others died for that cause, some needlessly. Others willingly sacrificed themselves."
He levels his gaze on Adam, unblinking, determined to get his message across. "I have regrets, of course. Nothing about it was perfect. It was bloody and messy, and you suffered more than any other. But too much blood was spilled in the process. I refuse to spill any more."
If that's selfish? Then so be it.
no subject
Adam didn't back down. He hadn't put up a fight with Zachariah for fear of being hurt, but not now. He wasn't afraid of the repercussions. He leaned in, as if drawn in by Castiel's shift in emotion, spitefully gravitating toward the anger he thought was brewing.
This angel could crush him in a second. He was waiting for it. Breaking his bones or puncturing his organs was proof--proof that his resentment hadn't been misplaced all this time.
The Apocalypse? Please.
"You gonna tell her you fought the good fight? Died for the cause? That that's what happened to me?" he questioned. "Yeah, you stopped it. Sorry if I can't bring myself to care that much."
no subject
They're not supposed to leave anyone behind. And yet it seems like a trail of bodies stretches out behind them.
Castiel doesn't have any plans to find Adam's mother in Heaven, as she's beyond grasping anything that's going on down below. Adam would likely be happier there with her, blissful and carefree, but there's no way to get him there.
"... Even if I killed you, you wouldn't go to her. Not here."
No, all that would happen would be Adam's revival. There's no such thing as escape here, and the sooner he figures that out, the better.
no subject
Adam had played his role as obediently as any good soldier, but the angels? They were at fault for his family breaking at the seams, Castiel included. They hadn't wanted John to have children, if Castiel hadn't help protect Dean... things might have turned out differently.
Castiel hadn't killed her by his own hand, but his kind might as well have.
"Better for her if she never finds out what you really are."
no subject
"She wouldn't know the difference now. She's in Heaven, which means she's at peace." And oblivious, but he wasn't going to be too clear on that. Then again, Adam probably already knew how it worked, seeing how he'd been trapped with two archangels for hundreds of years.
He didn't know if Adam had picked up on his entire meaning, though, and so he added, "Anyone who dies here revives." There was no escape. It wasn't that easy here.
no subject
Adam shook his head. No. No technicalities, no excuses. "It means she's dead."
The accusation left his voice. He hadn't forgotten. That had been the only important thing from the beginning, her survival, and now he couldn't imagine a time or a place where the angels wouldn't have struck down those hopes. She was the one who deserved the apologies, not him. She was the one still untouched by all of this... destruction.
Although he heard the warning that resurrection was a promise and not a possibility, he couldn't be bothered to say anything to it.
no subject
He thought that went without saying, but if Adam wanted him to admit to it out loud, then so be it. That particular death wasn't on his hands, though. Castiel saw his own failure as not being strong enough to rescue Adam when he'd rescued Sam.
They seemed to have hit a dead end, and Castiel doubted he could make any more progress with Adam at the moment. Still, he wanted to get in one parting comment.
"You may never make use of it, but that offer is still there." If Adam ever did need his help, Castiel would be there. It might never come up. They might never even interact after this conversation. But he wanted to make that crystal clear.