Kratos Aurion (
simulsimul) wrote2016-11-22 11:53 am
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another thing; w/
fafnirs and
skeletonenigma; cw for suicide talk
a post for random filings of things
d_p - in which Kratos and Zelos snark as well as they can with Lloyd in hearing.
here - Zelos takes Kratos up on a challenge. (cw for suicide talk)
here - spacedad finds another canon on another planet. it involves a skeleton with a disturbingly similar backstory.
d_p - in which Kratos and Zelos snark as well as they can with Lloyd in hearing.
here - Zelos takes Kratos up on a challenge. (cw for suicide talk)
here - spacedad finds another canon on another planet. it involves a skeleton with a disturbingly similar backstory.
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[What does Kratos hope to glean from this? He can't possibly understand the answer, especially when Skulduggery doesn't understand half of it himself. Still, he does deserve something for being able to ask the question at all, and Skulduggery stops to think for a moment.]
I was killed. ['Killed' probably won't be in the children's thesaurus, so Skulduggery tries to get the meaning across by sliding one finger across the area beneath his skull where his throat should be.] By a man named Nefarian Serpine. [They've technically gone over 'name', but just in case, Skulduggery points to himself, repeats his name, and then indicates the empty space next to him and repeats Serpine's name.
This is certainly the strangest way he's ever had to tell the story.]
After I was dead, Serpine burned -- ah. Fire. [Skulduggery snaps his fingers to bring the flame back up in his hand.] And when I was nothing but bones -- [He peels off one glove and points to a single bone in his arm.] -- a series of things happened that might be too complicated for me to reenact here, the end result of which was me. [He hesitates, then points at the thesaurus.] It's a little like a ghost. G, H. Only not like a ghost at all.
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[Except that it still doesn't answer his most pertinent question. It's the series of physical events, not an explanation of Skulduggery's mana. Perhaps that is too complicated. Perhaps Skulduggery genuinely doesn't know.
[In any case, hearing the story makes Kratos wonder something else. His flips through the book again until he finds the page quite obviously about families. There's a mother. A father. A son. A daughter. Kratos's voice is gentler than it was as he taps that image and asks:]
Family?
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[Wait.]
Yes. But no, not anymore. Not now.
[The passage of time makes it both easier to talk about, and not any easier at all.
There's something, though, about the way Kratos asks. The change in his tone -- the fact that he asked at all, even. Skulduggery wouldn't have thought angels had families in the traditional sense, but Kratos did specify human angel. Skulduggery doesn't need to know the details in order to make an educated guess.]
What about you? Family?
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Serpine.
[Grimly. If Skulduggery had been killed by someone else, why would that someone else spare his family? It's a guess, but Kratos does not think he's wrong. He's willing to let Skulduggery change the subject, since the subject of Kratos's family is far less unpleasant nowadays -- regardless of the panging grief he still feels. Kratos smiles slightly.]
Family. Yes.
[He reaches up to his collar to pull out the locket and open it to show Skulduggery. It's quite clear the two pictures are years apart; the one of him and Anna and Lloyd is chipped around the edges, while the second is still shiny with varnish. (If Skulduggery thought Kratos was wearing rather a lot of buckles now, the outfit in the image is going to be a surprise.) Kratos points to each person in turn, starting from the older image, moving to the newer.]
I. Anna. Lloyd. Lloyd. Colette. Genis. Raine.
[Kratos hesitates, then makes the same motion across his throat which Skulduggery had.]
Killed?
[He points to his side and says, in tones of bitter, resigned anger:]
Kvar. Kvar killed Anna.
[It isn't entirely accurate -- but Kratos is willing to submit to Lloyd's interpretation of the situation, in light of the language barrier.]
I killed Kvar. Serpine?
[Vengeance may be a hollow victory, but there's something to be said for knowing a killer is no longer capable of killing.]
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The locket comes as a surprise. Skulduggery brushes the bottom of it with a finger in an arrested attempt to hold it so he can look more closely. There are two pictures inside, not just one. There's a pang of old jealousy that Kratos has anything like this to remember his family by, because Skulduggery doesn't. Big paintings were expensive back when he and his family were alive, and anything smaller got lost in the war.
Their names, as well -- 'Anna' and 'Lloyd' could be English. 'Colette', 'Genis', and 'Raine' less so, which probably means the similarity of 'Kratos' to the Greek god is coincidental.]
Yes. I killed Serpine.
[After far too long, but Skulduggery will take his hollow victories where he can.]
Only after he made himself immortal, though. It's a funny story. That was the same night I destroyed two artifacts that were supposed to be indestructible.
[The momentary cheerfulness fades rapidly after Skulduggery finishes speaking. In an effort to, once again, change the subject, he points to the newer picture, and speaks clearly so Kratos will understand the words he's already learned.]
Where are they? Your planet?
[And, added as an afterthought, because otherwise the question will bug Skulduggery for a very long time:]
Are they also angels?
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[Rather, Kratos focusses on the question. 'Are' is related to 'be', according to the book and the long section on time -- 'where', he also knows. 'Your planet' is obvious enough. The only word Kratos doesn't recognise, combined with Skulduggery pointing, is easy enough to figure out. He points too.]
They? They. Yes; Aselia.
[His finger shifts to indicate Colette and Lloyd.]
Lloyd, Colette, angels, yes. Human angels. Raine and Genis -- Hm. Elves. Human elves.
['Elves' is a word that Skulduggery won't recognise; it's in Tethe'allan. Kratos pauses, then puts the locket -- still with the chain around his neck -- in Skulduggery's hand so Kratos can open the book. He points to the image of the daughter, then the image of the son; then respectively to the parents, reading the words indicated by the arrows to show relations.]
Raine, sister. Genis, brother. Father -- human. Mother -- elf. No human.
[Kratos watches Skulduggery carefully at this, to tell from Skulduggery's reaction how he might feel about interracial relationships, if they even exist on this planet.]
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More to the point, the angelic nature seems to be a heritable trait. Kratos hasn't labelled Anna among the angels, which could mean everything and could mean nothing. Lloyd, however, is. Colette -- daughter-in-law? future daughter-in-law? -- is also an angel. Skulduggery doesn't understand what Kratos calls Raine and Genis, but presumably it's some analogue to angel. Human angel, human other-thing.]
Not human.
[Correcting grammar obviously being the most important thing here.
Skulduggery has to revise his earlier estimate when Kratos finishes. Unless it's possible to only be half-angel, which Kratos hasn't specified, Skulduggery's missing something. Sister, brother. Of Kratos? They look more similar to each other, so no. If being a human other-thing is like being a human angel, then --
... this isn't the point of being shown the locket.
When Skulduggery speaks again, there's an audible smile in his voice, and his fingers have tightened ever-so-slightly around the locket.] You're a lucky man.
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[It's very nearly an automatic repeat, if faintly puzzled only because Kratos is wondering at the reason behind a difference in a single consonant for two words which mean the same thing. He's still looking at Skulduggery, however, and realising just how difficult it is to read a skeleton. He'd been managing so far only by tone of voice, because he's so used to reading Yuan's mental bleed-through; it's not much different.
[So Kratos can't tell what Skulduggery actually thinks of the idea of interracial couples, which is frustrating. Skulduggery's tone is a positive one, at least, though Kratos can't understand most of the sentence. He can guess it's something to which he'd agree, however, and smiles back.]
Yes.
[He takes the locket back and looks at the pictures one last time before closing it; and the look on his face and in his eyes is the clearest it's been since he and Skulduggery have met. Wistfulness. A regretful kind of acceptance. Hope. Tenderness. Then he snaps the locket shut and looks up again, his expression falling to a considering sort of impassiveness. Skulduggery's family might be gone; but he had contacted someone, earlier.]
Who?
[The sixth from that page of questions, earlier. Kratos indicates the pocket where Skulduggery stowed his phone pocket as he asks.]
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All questions Skulduggery can't ask for some time yet.]
Who --? [Skulduggery has to put his hand in his pocket to realise what Kratos means.] Ah. Ghastly Bespoke. A friend. [Pause.] Brother, but not brother.
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[There's a laugh in Kratos's voice. That sounds familiar, indeed. Kratos is assuming, judging by the book, that 'brother' is for blood relations; so this sounds extremely like a situation in which men have become brothers without being related by blood. Which is what he's also assuming.
[There just aren't many people who would accept being woken in the middle of the night by a skeleton.]
Yes. I --
[He taps his own chest.]
Yuan Ka-Fai. Brother but not brother.
[By all rights, he should also be in the locket.]
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[Chinese, Greek -- French, if you count Colette. What sort of a world is Aselia?
But, again, not currently the point. Kratos has a close friend, but that friend isn't pictured in the locket. That, Skulduggery thinks, probably says a lot about their relationship.]
He's an angel too, then.
[It's barely a question.]
It occurs to me, Kratos, that I've been running under the assumption that everything you tell me is fact. I don't think you're lying, necessarily, but you might be mistaken. You might believe you're from another planet, and you might even be right, but that's not to say your planet and this planet exist in the same dimension.
[Hm. How to put this in as simple a form as possible.]
You. Your planet.
[Skulduggery takes three steps to the right.]
You. My planet. Earth.
[Then he points at the distance in between.]
How?
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[By rights, their relationship probably goes beyond brotherhood at this point. There aren't many people who would attempt the impossible just to save someone else, let alone in the way Yuan had. Kratos still isn't sure what side-effects there might be from that.
[The ramble gets an amused head-tip, but Kratos stays where he is as his gaze follows Skulduggry's movement away. Then he smiles.]
Derris-Kharlan.
[He pauses for a moment. Even without knowing a great deal of the language, he's aware that this is going to sound mildly ridiculous.]
Car planet.
[He says it with all the deadpan at his disposal, which is great indeed.]
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Car planet.
[Not even Skulduggery can match Kratos for deadpanness, but he isn't trying. Every ounce of his considerable bemused disbelief is evident in his tone.]
Car planet.
[Even accounting for the possibility of a spaceship, Kratos's use of the word 'planet' implies a great many things Skulduggery can't accept. He shakes his head.] I'm not sure I believe you.
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[Kratos's smile is very nearly a smirk, and he beckons Skulduggery as he steps toward the door. The book, the most useful so far, is tucked into the back of Kratos's belt so he can't lose it, in case he needs it later. Or possibly not -- in space, he'll need to use telepathy, most likely. Skulduggery may need it, then.
[He moves out the door, glancing over his shoulder to ensure that Skulduggery is following. Out the door, around the side of the house -- where they'll be hidden from the road, with only a flat spread of meadow beside them. Kratos walks a short distance further and then stops. Blue fragmented light blooms from his back and shoulders, tendrils of a gossamer flower which extends all around him, though not quite to touching the ground. They look fragile, but aren't; and they aren't his wings at their greatest, either. He still doesn't know what sort of detection technology they have here, and he shouldn't need anything more than his wings at their most passive to get out of the atmosphere.
[In vacuum he'll need to extend himself more -- but not yet.
[When Kratos turns, in the darkness and with the way the light works on this planet, he looks as though he is wearing a halo. It draws some of the colour from his hair so that it looks redder than it is. He holds out his hand.]
You. Derris-Kharlan.
[It's an offer.]
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They're not feathered wings, though. Some part of Skulduggery is disappointed by that. They're no less impressive for being intangible sparkles in the air, and Skulduggery has no doubt they're not nearly as delicate as they look. But still. No feathers.
The offer, once again, is a surprise.]
Now?
[Skulduggery looks up into the night sky. If Kratos wasn't detected by anything coming down onto the planet, he probably wouldn't be detected leaving it either, so that's one concern resolved. Leaving the atmosphere -- well, Skulduggery's never done it before, but theoretically he can. He doesn't need to breathe. There's no air to manipulate in space, so he'd be dead in the water, but he'd still be alive. And Kratos, presumably, would take care of the rest.
How would vacuum affect his suit?]
How long will it take? Hm -- when. When will --
[Then Skulduggery stops, and decides he doesn't actually care. He raises a finger.]
Hold that thought.
[He pulls out his mobile and leaves Valkyrie a text saying he may not be around in the morning, and if she could please keep herself alive until he gets back, that would be grand, as they have something to talk about. Then he leaves Ghastly two texts: one saying he may not be around in the morning and to assume he's indisposed until he calls, then a second one belatedly apologising for the phone call in the middle of the night.
With that all taken care of, he puts the mobile away.] OK. Let's go.
[Rather than take Kratos's hand, though, Skulduggery simply lifts into the air himself.]
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[If so, he can bring one back with him and install it in Skulduggery's yard. It would shorten travel time somewhat.
[Kratos looks back as Skulduggery rises into the air.]
Huh.
[That's interesting. Kratos can even sense the shift of mana in the wind, not unlike Sylph -- except more conscious effort is obviously expended. Kratos drops his hand and alights from the ground also, a short hop before the tendrils of mana comprising his wings push the air beneath him, making him rise with far less apparent effort than anything with feathers.
[He regards Skulduggery thoughtfully as he ascends with easy beats of those wings. How high can Skulduggery fly on his own? It's clear he needs his hands to do so.]
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Because of that, his only frame of reference has been what he's figured out how to do on his own. He's had a lot of opportunity to practice, and so far he's been able to fly out to other cities, making the trip look effortless when it's anything but -- especially to Valkyrie, who he's usually carrying at the time.
He felt like something of an expert. Next to Kratos's easy ascent, suddenly the smooth manipulation of air currents feels exceptionally clumsy.
Still, height has never been an issue, and initially Skulduggery doesn't find it too difficult to keep up with the angel. He stays vertical, hands splayed down by his sides, saving the fancy footwork for another time. He can and has felt exhaustion as a skeleton, but one of the annoying things about being dead is that exhaustion doesn't creep up on you, warning of its existence, prodding at your energy until you start to feel your muscles ache. It hits all at once. Fancy footwork has no place in trying out something new.
It's higher than Skulduggery's gone before, higher than he's trusted his own strength before, and he can definitely tell when the air starts to get a little thinner.]
Kratos.
[Dublin -- most of Ireland, in fact -- is laid out below them in a glittering web of lights. There's no fear in Skulduggery's voice, but there's a touch of worry. His ascent has slowed.]
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[Such as destroying the power of a city. For instance.
[So Kratos feels it when Skulduggery slows, when the wind has gotten thinner. Overhead, vacuum is so close it looks like a window they might be right up against.]
Yes.
[It's the last thing Kratos will say out loud; he exhales to rid himself of excess air, and turns off all other mortal necessities, for the movement into vaccuum. A twitch of those glowing, fragmented wings sends him drifting closer to Skulduggery, slightly above him. Kratos reaches down to take hold of the back of Skulduggery's neck-tie, taking the opportunity to tag him with a bit of mana so Kratos's spells negate on contact. He's never carried anyone in vacuum before; best not risk Skulduggery being caught in the mana-burn.
[The next beat of his wings is harder, and sends a current of lightning threading down over their clothes. The air's too thin to simply pull himself through it anymore; now with each beat, arcs of lightning form and push them ever upward, shaped more like the feathered wings customary to angels. His wings of fragmented light are still there, pressing the mana beneath them, but while they pass from upper atmosphere into orbit proper, it seems as though there's a large electric-winged cocoon around them.]
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[It's not the most dignified way to travel, but fortunately there isn't anyone around to notice. Fairly soon, Skulduggery's forgotten all about it -- he feels a little like they're traveling inside of a storm cloud, and it's fascinating. Kratos, or someone Kratos knows, might well hold the key to limitless energy.
Skulduggery knows the moment they slip out of the atmosphere. It's a gradual process, much more gradual than he realised, but there's one identifiable moment when he can feel the air against his hands one second and nothing the next. He can still feel his magic like a coiled spring in the center of him, which is probably a good thing, but he can't feel the air. It's like he's been set adrift into nothingness.
If he could speak now, there would definitely be fear in his voice.
There's nothing visible below, and nothing but the inky blackness of the night sky above. Being unable to breathe suddenly, ridiculously, feels like a much bigger deal than it did before. Skulduggery's used to not needing to; he's not used to being unable to. It's a dizzying lack of a grounding rod.
His bones aren't falling apart, though, so. At least there's that.]
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[This will become apparent to Skulduggery the first time there's an abrupt turn, lightning flaring outward not unlike a pair of feathered wings in the act of banking; through the static arcs, Skulduggery should see metal gleaming as it soars soundlessly past in its orbit. Kratos broadcasts an implication of calm apology, appended with the sense of exasperation at fools not cleaning up their litter. (There's words there, but the images and feeling is stronger than those; Skulduggery won't need words to understand the message.)
[That happens several more times on their way to the outer orbit, and twice that amount the green of Guardian flares, pinging with minuscule debris nevertheless moving fast enough to be a danger. Finally they're clear and Kratos turns them, letting the mana-burn fade, so they're floating out past the graveyard orbit and Skulduggery can see his planet in its entirety.]
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More to the point, there was an injection of outside calm in his mind. Telepathy? A moment later Skulduggery's question is answered for him when he experiences a very keen exasperation over something he hadn't given a second thought to before right now. Telepathy accompanied with emotion. Interesting. Why didn't Kratos use this before?
Probably to be polite. He reminds Skulduggery a little of Hopeless.
Skulduggery tests whether the connection is two-way with a bit of verbal (mental?) affronted defense over the planet's cluttered orbit, but either he isn't doing it right or only angels can broadcast telepathic messages, because he doesn't receive any reply. That'll make things a little more inconvenient, but it suits Skulduggery just fine. With the constant flickering green shields, electricity serving almost as a second pair of wings for Kratos, and the vastness of space all around them, it feels like no time at all has passed before Kratos turns them back towards the planet, and for an instant Skulduggery's confused as to why.
But only for an instant.
It's funny, he reflects somewhere behind the dull turn of shock. Sorcerers live for nearly a thousand years. That kind of time affords the entire community the utmost assurance that they're the masters of fate, the keepers of all knowledge, the end-all-be-all of the experience of life. Skulduggery himself has done things worse than any mortal on Earth can possibly imagine, and the weight of those crimes has done a fair bit to convince him that disagreements between sorcerers can end the world.
But there's the world. Right there. Impossibly big. Impossibly beautiful. Impossibly solid. Completely unaware of what's on its surface, billions of years old, and laughably untouched by every single event Skulduggery's fought through, cared about, and given his life for.
It lends perspective.
No wonder Kratos wanted to land here.
After what feels like forever, Skulduggery reaches up and taps Kratos. If he stares at this much longer, he's half-worried he'll go insane. ... er.]
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[Even after four thousand years and all that he'd done, looking up at the stars is one thing that hadn't changed. Sometimes he'd forgotten to look. Sometimes it had hurt too much to look. But always, always, he'd eventually looked up to the stars, and been comforted by the vastness of the universe beyond.
[Four thousand years isn't so long, when he thinks of it like that. When he thinks of it like that, he feels like he has the strength to live, as Lloyd had asked.
[Something in Skulduggery's mana shifts, and Kratos looks at him with a frown. It isn't a major shift, but he knows the sense of it; the beginnings of mana unravelling, just prior to a final strike which disperses it entire. But nothing has attacked them; what could be causing that?
[With Skulduggery's tap, Kratos sends him acknowledgement, and then sends out his active wings, spreading them in broadening arcs of electrical current. The mana of light is so very clear, out here; so very unobscured by atmosphere, pure in ways Kratos could never have explained to someone who couldn't feel in it a heartbeat. Someone who isn't another angel.
[Kratos reaches for that light and its speed, and borrows the trail blazed by a light-beam headed in the moon's direction. To Skulduggery they seem to simply shift in space, and the planet is abruptly quite some distance further; they, meanwhile, arc gently into the moon's orbit, and around its curvature, to its dark side.
[There, behind the bulk of the moon, is what is unmistakeably a comet -- a large one. Hidden from the sun's heat, its purple tail is short; but it's still present in the gaseous mana-burn maintaining its artificial orbit hidden behind the moon, keeping pace and gently deflecting the gravitational forces native to the solar system. If they had been closer, they might have been able to see the shine of Welgaia's outside boundaries across the comet's surface.
[This time, Kratos's broadcast has words. Derris-Kharlan.]
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And then he's looking at the car planet.
It's not a planet, at least -- more of a large asteroid. If there are any signs of life on its surface, Skulduggery can't tell from this distance and with this level of light. The sense of surrealism has snapped very neatly back into place.
He's in outer space. Being ferried along by an angel.
In his pocket is his mobile phone, probably searching hopelessly for a signal.]
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[Inside of a minute the surface is lifting toward them, and the crackle of the manufactured gravity well comes into sight. The moment they pass through that arc of lightning, the artificial gravity takes hold. Kratos spreads his wings and they descend at a controlled fall until he can set Skulduggery down on the moon's surface, and land beside him. There's gravity, but no atmosphere -- yet.
[The feather-winged angels inside the field bow deeply toward Kratos, and he waves them back to their work -- halfway through establishing the scanner they'll leave behind them. It's the warp-pad he's after.
[Kratos beckons Skulduggery to follow and leads him toward the small mobile pad comprised of the base and the three rings, and control panel. Five pieces, easily carried, and just large enough for two. It takes but a moment to step on, and then the moon's environment blurs and shifts into the familiar polished, arcing lines of Welgaia's inner architecture. There is atmosphere, here.
[The angels guarding the warp startle at the sight of him, and bow hurriedly.]
Lord Kratos! You're back so soon?
[She speaks in angelic, a language like liquid sound which cuts through the distant hum of telepathic comms lines. The warp is on one of the many daises spread between arching bridges; high overhead can be seen more of them, spreading in webs like a snowflake's facets. Far, far beyond them is the edge of Derris-Kharlan's outer atmosphere, and the guardian bridges; and past them the glowing speck of Skulduggery's planet, peering around the bulk of its moon.
[More immediately around them, angels glide between the bridges without a care. Though the air is clear, even a dozen feet distant the atmosphere has a faintly purple tinge.]
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Here, though, are the feathered wings Skulduggery was disappointed Kratos doesn't have. They seem to denote subservient angels. They're all working on something -- Skulduggery has no idea what, some sort of outpost -- and he pauses before following Kratos, feeling suddenly ill at ease. He'd assumed Kratos was alone, first as an accidental dimensional traveler and then as some type of intergalactic explorer. This, however, looks and feels much more like an invasion force.
In the end, Skulduggery follows Kratos for a couple of reasons. The first is that bringing someone right into your base of operations after having known them for a mere handful of hours isn't a step of any invasion plan Skulduggery's heard before. The second is that, for all his skill and experience, he suspects Kratos could have rendered him useless any time before now without going to all this trouble.
He's also standing on the moon. That, Skulduggery feels, is worthy of a little notice. Before they step on the warp pad, he takes the opportunity to glance back at Earth, hanging suspended in the sky.
And then they're in a city.
It is, at least on its surface, a well-designed and utilised city. But not one of the angels spare Skulduggery a glance. Even if living skeletons are a little more common on Kratos's planet, the curiosity of someone new should be evident. Instead, there's nothing. The more Skulduggery looks, the more it feels like the city is lacking some ingredient crucial for proper life. It feels emptier than its population would suggest.]
Hm.
[-- oh. They're back in atmosphere. Skulduggery flexes his fingers and sends out a little puff of air.]
You didn't say you had friends here.
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