Cal Chandler (
americas_son) wrote2011-03-09 08:49 pm
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It's been a few days since - well. Everything. Cal's been at home, focusing on his obligations there, giving Sherlock and Tony space to deal.
(Tony knows he can come talk to Cal if he wants. Cal told Jarvis. And he hasn't cut off all contact with Sherlock, either. He's called a couple of times.
He just. Doesn't want to get in the way.)
He's been keeping an eye out for Milliways, though. He did make a promise.
So when a door shows up, he takes it.
(Tony knows he can come talk to Cal if he wants. Cal told Jarvis. And he hasn't cut off all contact with Sherlock, either. He's called a couple of times.
He just. Doesn't want to get in the way.)
He's been keeping an eye out for Milliways, though. He did make a promise.
So when a door shows up, he takes it.
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"Tell him I said hi," he mutters, "that should confuse the shit out of him."
(He brightens ever-so-slightly at the prospect. Not that he'd admit it.)
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He doesn't really feel like sticking around for any more surprises.
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He tries it again.
He slams his fist into the wall hard enough to leave a shallow dent.
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Not because it's funny, but because it fucking figures.
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"Something to smoke and something to light it with. Yes, thank you."
Stiff with anger, he turns for the lake door this time. Thankfully it is late evening out there.
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(The tragic act a few minutes ago was good, but he doesn't buy it. Reed Chandler had faked his compliance pretty well for a while, too.)
But - no. That's leaving everyone else in danger. At the very least he should tell whoever's on Security right now. Leaving a note won't cut it. A note will take too long to find.
Cal stays where he is and scans the crowd, looking for one of the familiar badges.
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(Outside, Sherlock is wishing he could have asked Bar for something more potent than a cigarette.)
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Cal forgets sometimes that not every security staff works for Peter Beardsley.
He glances toward the back door. Maybe -
No. That's a stupid idea.
But he's probably the only one here (aside from maybe the odd god or goddess, who are unhelpfully hard to identify by sight alone if there are any here right now at all) with even the faintest chance of neutralizing this Sherlock until Milliways sees fit to let him out.
Cal could probably sit and think about this, waffling back and forth, all night, but someone else gets up and goes out through the back door, which makes his decision for him.
"Hold those for me," he says distractedly to Bar, and crosses the room to go outside.
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Or that could happen.
He doesn't turn around, but he stops.
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He thinks about getting out his own cigarette, but he's pretty sure it would tremble in his hand. He knows Sherlock can tell how nervous (terrified) he is without any help, but Cal himself doesn't need the visual reminder right now.
"You're Bound." His voice isn't shaking, at least.
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Instead he goes with,
"I bet you didn't see that coming."
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"No, but I should have. If being a vampire really does make you stupid I believe I shall take a nice afternoon stroll and save you the trouble."
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He doesn't see why it couldn't work the other way around.
He doesn't share that theory, either.
"The timing probably threw you off a little," he says.
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"Oh, no, it was perfectly predictable. Absolutely in keeping with this bloody place's sense of humour."
At last, he looks back at Cal.
"Come to make sure I don't have a nibble while I wait?"
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"It did occur to me," he says evenly.
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That all sounds like Sherlock's logic, clear and entirely reasonable. But the demon does take on the personality of its host.
"I haven't heard a lot about vampires being good with impulse control," he says.
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Except then he thinks of a very recent example. ("I really ought to have remembered that.")
He fumbles his response completely, and he can feel his face getting hot.
Asshole, he thinks, though who it's directed at is up for debate.
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"Oh, I am off my game today," he murmurs. "Well. Now that we have established that you are apparently my sole weakeness in that area—"
Sherlock reaches into his pocket, extracts a laser pointer, holds it up, and tosses it underhand to Cal.
"If it comes to a choice between killing you and dying, I know which one I'd pick. No complex reasoning necessary."
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No. No. He's been fighting not to think of it all week, he's not going to weaken now. He'll never win the fight if he weakens.)
He manages to catch the laserpointer, just barely, and looks at it.
As symbolic gestures go, it's not a bad one.
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The symbolic gesture, the deadly weapon—either one, really.
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He looks back up at Sherlock.
"You know I couldn't," he says. "He wouldn't have anywhere to go back to once they cast the spell."
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