Alec Lightwood (
angelic_archer) wrote in
marlowemuses2019-01-10 07:11 pm
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The lonely become either thoughtful or empty
There had bee no other options. Someone had to guard the relics the Angel had given them. The Cup and Sword were too powerful to be left in mortal hands even those that had been blessed by the Angel. That power was too tempting no matter how noble Nephilim might be. There would always be someone, some group of someones, who would be seduced by the possibilities that those gifts represented.
Even centuries after the decision had been made, Alec wasn't sure why he had been chosen for this particular duty. His parabatai had been a better warrior. His sister was far more clever. But the Angel had chosen him. Perhaps because he was better able to accept the isolation of his divine task. His siblings would have been driven mad by loneliness after the first few decades.
There were times when Alec wondered if he would eventually succumb to insanity, but he had the books that he eventually became guardian of and the cats that somehow crept between worlds to keep him company. They weren't exactly cats, of course. They were built more like predators than pets, eyes glowing with flames instead of the usual nocturnal glow. No matter how frightening they looked, they were Alec's friends and they helped Alec protect the items the Angel had left in his care.
It was the cats that warned him that something was wrong at the gates. The largest of them howled a warning, hissing as she faced the gate. The rest of the pride ran to her as Alec sprinted for the gates. Something - Someone - was attacking. He felt the temple shiver its warning through him and he knew that no matter how impossible it seemed, someone had crossed the threshold between worlds.
Even centuries after the decision had been made, Alec wasn't sure why he had been chosen for this particular duty. His parabatai had been a better warrior. His sister was far more clever. But the Angel had chosen him. Perhaps because he was better able to accept the isolation of his divine task. His siblings would have been driven mad by loneliness after the first few decades.
There were times when Alec wondered if he would eventually succumb to insanity, but he had the books that he eventually became guardian of and the cats that somehow crept between worlds to keep him company. They weren't exactly cats, of course. They were built more like predators than pets, eyes glowing with flames instead of the usual nocturnal glow. No matter how frightening they looked, they were Alec's friends and they helped Alec protect the items the Angel had left in his care.
It was the cats that warned him that something was wrong at the gates. The largest of them howled a warning, hissing as she faced the gate. The rest of the pride ran to her as Alec sprinted for the gates. Something - Someone - was attacking. He felt the temple shiver its warning through him and he knew that no matter how impossible it seemed, someone had crossed the threshold between worlds.
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"Good bye." He couldn't quite keep the wistfulness out of his voice as he watched Adam walk through the gate and back to the mortal realm.
~
Even the cats were subdued after Adam left. Alec wasn't sure if they were picking up on his mood or if they were unhappy the priestess was gone. Persephone and Emily stayed with Alec constantly, almost tripping him whenever they were on the ground. He went through the daily tasks that were probably not necessary to the temple but kept him busy. There were always plants to tend and pets to feed. Archery practice and... he stayed away from the library. The books wouldn't be neglected if he didn't sort through and arrange them for a few days.
When he felt someone at the gate, the cats reacted before he did. They rushed off to see Adam, ignoring the food that Alec had been putting out for them. Shaking his head at their excitement, he followed after them, not sure if he felt that same excitement or dread over the priestess returning. He hadn't actually thought Adam would return. He had a life in the mortal world. Why return unless it was absolutely necessary?
Giving Adam a confused look when he realized that the priestess hadn't gone straight to the library, he blurted out the first thing that came to mind. "Why did you wait for me?" Mentally he winced and tried to recover. "The temple is your place."
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Stepping forward carefully, he offered his cupped hands. He didn't know if Alec would be disgusted or offended by being offered an insect, and Alec had been wary of approach up until he'd sat down next to Adam at the library table. "I brought you a new friend for your garden," he explained, trying not to think about the fact that he hadn't seen Alec's garden and didn't know if the caterpillar would be an invasive species. He'd worried that the temple might not allow the passage of a living creature and that the caterpillar would be killed or left upon the threshold when Adam had crossed over, but the temple had either respected Adam's intent or his cupped hands had been enough of a protective bubble to keep the caterpillar alive. "If I've remembered correctly, this kind transforms into a blue butterfly with yellow spots."
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It felt strange to have someone near him that wasn't one of the cats, but Alec kept his reaction to himself, afraid that Adam would stop if he seemed uncomfortable. At least until he realized Adam was giving him something. Then curiosity drove away that unsettled feeling. "A friend?" Without thinking he stepped closer, cupping his hands around Adam's to see what the priestess had brought. He stared down at the caterpillar, trying not to think of how long it had been since he saw one that wasn't an illustration or through the mirror. It was real. Alive. Just like Adam. Just like Alec had been before he'd stepped through the gates.
"It's beautiful." He was almost afraid to touch it. "I don't remember blue ones. The ones I saw before were green or orange." Grinning at Adam, he thought of what it would be like to have something new and alive in the garden. "Thank you. There aren't butterflies here... except this one."
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And no one, not even Izzy, had given him something so precious. "I do. I knew that people could go through the gate, but I didn't know that other living things could." Looking down at the gift, Alec moved his hand so he could gently touch the caterpillar. It wiggled a bit, but didn't disappear like he expected. "Thank you for the newspaper and magazine." Which he should be more interested in but the caterpillar was more rare than the written word. "Sorry. I like those too, but haven't seen anything like this in centuries."
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"I think that the gate let her through because I wanted to bring her," Adam said. "I was worried she might be killed in the process." He looked up again, and his heart gave a sideways lurch at the soft, gentle way Alec was looking at the caterpillar. "I wasn't sure what sort of things would be significant to you from the outside world," Adam mumbled, certain that his cheeks were flaming now. He felt a bit dizzy from the rush of blood to his head. Gay. Very gay?
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"You have to be the reason she can be here. Nothing alive else except the cats has ever crossed the gates." Alec wasn't sure if the cats counted. They could be magical not mundane. "Anything from the mortal would be special."
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He struggled to regain his logical sense. Alec's hand was warm and steady. Adam wasn't sure he could remember how to form words, and with every passing moment he became more painfully aware of how beautiful Alec was.
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Swallowing hard, he told himself that he should step away or say something to break the odd moment that they'd gotten caught up in, but he didn't want to. He wanted to stay where he was, watching color creep across Adam's cheeks, feeling the warmth of Adam's hand against his. Finally he forced himself to speak, voice soft as he asked, "Is this all right?"
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"Garden," he suggested, getting at least that one word out as a recommendation for the well-being of the caterpillar and a way to secure himself enough space to start to process his feelings.
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Adam had never had the opportunity for pets, and his recognition of this caterpillar was a fluke. He still wasn't sure he remembered correctly, since he'd learned about the caterpillar as a child, and green caterpillars all seemed alike to him.
As they made their way down a hallway, Adam’s mind whirled. He was gay, and he had a crush on Alec.
No, he’d dated a girl. He’d found Blue attractive. Still found her attractive. Would have liked to kiss her, and though he didn’t want to kiss her anymore, that was because of the mess of their breakup rather than anything having to do with her attractiveness. So he wasn’t gay. He was straight.
He remembered that bisexuality existed, and felt immediately soothed by this realization. It was comforting and freeing at once. It allowed for all possibility, with no hard limitations. He could be attracted to people on a case by case basis, on account of their merits, regardless of their gender. The idea appealed to him.
Cradling the caterpillar carefully, Adam walked in silence, letting his mind do its processing.
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Alec wasn't sure why everything that found itself in the temple seemed to be female... except the being that he'd always assumed would be female. All the cats seemed to be female and Adam had called his gift female. Alec was sure that was for convenience not knowledge.
The priestess probably should have been female since he should not be looking at Adam the way he had before. He shouldn't keep glancing over at him, starting to blush any time he even thought that Adam might notice. By the Angel, he'd known how to hide his interests before. Why was he suddenly acting foolish over a boy now?
Because he had been kind and he was attractive. And Alec hadn't been around anyone for centuries. Which wasn't fair to Adam. He shouldn't be looking at him like he was a besotted hero from a romance.
Stepping into the garden, he bypassed the strange plants that Alec thought could only grow outside the mortal world to show Adam the safer options for Alec's new pet. "This area should be safe for her. And for you." No, that wasn't right. "The other gardens are safe but the plants here are the same as the outside world so they're not poisonous." Alec paused, realizing that the flower he'd given Adam had been from the other garden. "The flower wasn't - it was pretty so I gave it to you. I knew it wouldn't hurt you."
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He chose a low plant and set her on one of the lower leaves, near enough to a couple other kinds of plants that she could roam from there easily enough. It occurred to him that his little caterpillar might be lonely here, and he hoped that the temple would help see to that. Otherwise he'd have to try to bring more of them, and to be sure he matched the type.
Then he stepped back, leaving the caterpillar in her new environment. Awkward without the purpose of holding a creature, Adam remembered the periodicals under his arm and offered them to Alec.
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Kneeling down beside Adam, he smiled when the caterpillar was settled on the leaf. When he was sure that it would be safe from the cats and be able to find other places to crawl, he stood and took the gifts. The newspaper looked like the ones that he'd seen in the mirror or reproduced in books. The magazine. Tipping his head to one side, starting to blush when he read the titles of some of the articles. "Uh - I knew attitudes had evolved, but I didn't know that some subjects were so - uh - out in the open."
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"What?" Adam asked, coming over to find out what Alec was talking about. He glanced at the page and blushed, startled to find that it was a very explicit article about sex positions. The accompanying illustrations weren't exactly pornographic, but they very clearly implied the situation. "Oh," he said, turning deep red and feeling light-headed again. He had a crush on the attractive male guardian, and now he'd given him a heterosexual sex guide.
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Considering the era Adam was from, he shouldn't be shocked by the topic of the article, but it seemed like he was. "I know about these things." Looking down at some of the positions, he quickly amended that comment. "In a way. I don't think some of these are possible." Shutting the magazine to save Adam from more embarrassment, he wondered if there ones that had articles about the types of relationships he preferred. He assumed there were, but Adam was already embarrassed so he shouldn't ask. "I didn't know people were that open about what they liked."
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Adam hated making stupid mistakes, and this one was searingly painful. The guardian would think that he was an idiot, and a prude, and hopelessly awkward. He didn't know if the positions were possible. He had no practical experience with sex and only a minimal awareness of pornography. Without a private laptop or computer, he'd only ever seen glimpses of things on the phones of his peers or in his father's trashy magazines.
"Sorry," he mumbled, resolving to do better next time.
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"Why are you sorry?" Alec didn't understand why the subject of the magazine mattered, but it seemed to be important to Adam. Slowly he reached out, brushing his fingers along Adam's hand. "You gave me something from the mortal world. Something I've never seen before. Things appear at the temple, but I haven't had a gift in centuries. I asked about the articles because I want to understand the things I've only read about." Maybe Adam didn't like his questions. Maybe they made him uncomfortable or he didn't like being reminded that Alec wasn't quite human. "I'll stop asking, if you want."
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“You can keep asking.” Adam extended his fingertips and brushed against Alec’s arm in return. He liked the light, careful touches and was surprised by the way he wanted more of them. His mind fixated on Alec, noticing even his breaths. “I’m your connection to the outside world. It’s my role to answer your questions.”
Forcing himself to stop staring at Alec, Adam returned his attention to the temple around them, tipping his head up to the sky. “Is it the same sun, here, as on Earth?”
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"I don't know. It feels the same and the plants grow the same way as they do in the mortal world." He looked around at the neat rows of vegetables and herbs, wondering if they interested Adam or were a detail that was unimportant to the priestess. "There's day and night here and seasons, but they're never harsh."
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It hadn't escaped him how Alec had only shown him the library last time, despite the discussion of a tour. Adam didn't know why that had happened, or what he'd done wrong to displease the guardian. Alec's approach to what Adam was allowed seemed very much at odds with what Alec was willing to show him.
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Alec answered Adam's other questions but he had the feeling that the gardens weren't something that the priestess cared about. He glanced over at the caterpillar, smiling when it seemed content on the plant Adam had chosen. Briefly he wished they could stay out in the gardens, enjoying the sun like they were friends, but he knew that Adam needed to figure out his duties. "Of course. This is your place."
As they headed back inside, Alec tried to decide which rooms would be best to show Adam. The temple would probably let Adam into any area, but Alec wasn't quite ready to show someone else the places that he'd chosen as his own. Eventually Adam might demand to see them, but for now, Alec would try to preserve his privacy. "Are there certain places that you'd prefer? There's art galleries. Another, older branch of the library. The places that were once used for worship."
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It stuck out to him that Alec said it was his place, as if it belonged to him alone. That didn't make sense to Adam. He hadn't won or claimed or conquered anything. He'd agreed to a bargain. He'd sacrificed himself. "Isn't it our place?" he asked, wanting to know why Alec disincluded himself from this place even though it had been his for centuries. He was the guardian, and intrinsic to the fabric of the temple.
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The priestess was the one the temple would welcome. It had been waiting for Adam. Alec was just here to ensure that the wrong people didn't desecrate the space or steal the relics that mortals weren't supposed to touch. "I'm the guard dog." Thinking of his pets, Alec looked sheepish, knowing they'd hiss over the comparison. "Or guard cat."
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