Ariadne (
demonicbeauty) wrote in
deercountry2021-09-29 11:46 am
Entry tags:
And though scary is exciting...
Who: Ariadne, Castiel, and Evelyn
What: Tea and conspiracy theories
When: Backdated slightly to mid-September, following Sam Winchester's visit to the orchard
Where: Ariadne's home, in the Willful Machine
The second floor of Ariadne's home was exactly as it had been in Deerington. Complete with a kitchen she'd never used. Even the dust on the cooking surfaces seemed the same. Which was a good thing. Ariadne was a menace in the kitchen and had been rightly banned from the kitchens back at North Castle.
In her defense, it had only been a small fire.
Fortunately, there was one singular ability that Ariadne did possess when it came to the culinary arts and that was the ability to boil water. Even, so she watched the teapot like a hawk, prepared at any second to douse unexpected flames. There were none. But Ariadne credited that mostly to her vigilance. Soon enough she had a boiling pot and filled it with herbs, preparing tea the way she'd learned back in Valeria, when tea suddenly and unexpectedly entered her life. Once she put out the flames on the stove, she assembled three mismatched cups and set them out on her little table, along with a bowl of fresh fruit from her orchard and some cinnamon bark.
It occurred to her that she'd never really had guests before. Oh, she'd had Orpheus over on occasion. Or Dean once or twice when she was picking up supplies. But this was different somehow. She had invited people over, offered hospitality. And she realized that she didn't entirely know how to do that, especially not for earthlings.
Well, she could only hope they'd be forgiving. And much more focused on the problem at hand. The problem being that something was strangely amiss with Sam Winchester.
What: Tea and conspiracy theories
When: Backdated slightly to mid-September, following Sam Winchester's visit to the orchard
Where: Ariadne's home, in the Willful Machine
Content Warnings: Discussion of sex.
The second floor of Ariadne's home was exactly as it had been in Deerington. Complete with a kitchen she'd never used. Even the dust on the cooking surfaces seemed the same. Which was a good thing. Ariadne was a menace in the kitchen and had been rightly banned from the kitchens back at North Castle.
In her defense, it had only been a small fire.
Fortunately, there was one singular ability that Ariadne did possess when it came to the culinary arts and that was the ability to boil water. Even, so she watched the teapot like a hawk, prepared at any second to douse unexpected flames. There were none. But Ariadne credited that mostly to her vigilance. Soon enough she had a boiling pot and filled it with herbs, preparing tea the way she'd learned back in Valeria, when tea suddenly and unexpectedly entered her life. Once she put out the flames on the stove, she assembled three mismatched cups and set them out on her little table, along with a bowl of fresh fruit from her orchard and some cinnamon bark.
It occurred to her that she'd never really had guests before. Oh, she'd had Orpheus over on occasion. Or Dean once or twice when she was picking up supplies. But this was different somehow. She had invited people over, offered hospitality. And she realized that she didn't entirely know how to do that, especially not for earthlings.
Well, she could only hope they'd be forgiving. And much more focused on the problem at hand. The problem being that something was strangely amiss with Sam Winchester.

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Anyway, Cas only allows himself to linger for so long. Ariadne is probably waiting by now, and so he texts her a warning that he's arrived, and once granted permission, takes a quick glance around the shop before making his way upstairs.
"Ariadne?" He greets loudly, because in his experience, it's better to be loud about entrances. Even civilians seem to like that. And treat people as you'd like to be treated. He'd learned that since being a, well, people.
There's the sight and smell of fresh herbs being brewed into fragrant tea and a general feeling of welcoming, but Cas lingers in the doorway, all the same and calls from a suitable non-threatening distance, "May I come in?"
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Either way, she arrives not terribly long after Castiel, coming up on him from behind, stopping when she sees his figure in the doorway. She doesn't recognize him at first, not from behind, and tugs her coat a little tighter around her before clearing her throat a little.
"Ah-- Castiel?"
She hopes. Otherwise, it's a very random man that is up the stairs in Ariadne's home.
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Luckily, he is a good level of chill, and so he only reacts with mild surprise to the soft footsteps and gentle throat-clearing from behind him. He steps out of the doorway, back to the wall as he turns towards her with a smile. "Evelyn. Fancy meeting you here."
After only a moment, his smile fades towards a more genuine expression, and he adds quietly, "It's good to see you." After everything, he means. After Deerington, and the ocean, and now... whatever's going on with her that Sam had been so vague in describing. She looks whole and healthy, a bit older but altogether just like he remembers seeing her in passing back... however long ago that was that they both shared the Winchesters' home.
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Hopefully, she'd have the chance.
"Hello," she said, dipping into a curtsy to both of them, though she was wearing her leathers, instead of a dress. Eagerly, she stepped out of the doorway, gesturing them both inside.
That was a universal gesture, wasn't it?
She hoped so. And she desperately hoped it didn't mean something terribly rude in either of their cultures. She just hadn't spent enough time with either of them, beyond the occasional huddling in the Winchester cabin. No one had been concerned with manners there. But new town. New start. Or at least, that seemed to be the theory.
"Sir. Mistress Evelyn." Too late, she realized her mistake, but all she could do was grimace.
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She's tired, older - she wears a wedding ring she isn't sure if she should take off or not, dirty boots from the ride over, expression wane.
"Ariadne, it's good to see you again in person," she says, offering a smile, not bothering to correct the woman, since it sort of seems like she's already a bit abashed. "This is a lovely place."
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The open door and Ariadne's typical bounciness is an appreciated distraction, and Cas' melancholic smile widens back out to watch her courtesy without the skirt. He presses his palms together and bows back, which is probably totally inappropriate in about three different ways, but that's just more reason to do it with a smile, in Cas' opinion.
"Afternoon, m'lady," he greets Ariadne, then glances at Evelyn so that they don't accidentally collide before taking the lead and stepping through the doorway. Evelyn is right: the orchard is more Cas' style, but the upstairs apartment is charming all on its own. Following Ariadne's barefooted example, Cas toes his slippers off at the door while he does an automatic little mental map of the windows, exits, potential cover, etc, and generally does his best to blend in with the wood paneling while letting the ladies do the heavy lifting of the conversation until they get down to business.
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With a little jerk of her head, she led the two of them over to the table.
It was a terribly low table, and although there was a small sofa beside it, the other sides were surrounded by pillows in various shades of purple and blue. Ariadne gestured to the sofa for her guests, before sitting down on one of the pillows to the side, pulling her legs into the lotus position.
She knew it was technically her responsibility to serve tea. But since she didn't have cream or sugar, she decided to let that go. Instead, she nodded to the fruit basket. "Help yourselves. It's all from the orchard." She forced herself to pause. To take a breath, before adding, "Which is actually when this whole thing began. When Sam came to visit the orchard."
So much for pleasantries.
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Alone.
It doesn't do to dwell though, and Evelyn is happy to trail after them, perching on the sofa and reaching to take a piece of fruit, examining it before looking up to Ariadne.
"Is that when he tried to sleep with you?"
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like a bisexualliterally anywhere else??? With a quiet thanks to Ariadne for being an excellent host, Cas grabs a nectarine from the bowl and takes a seat on one of the pillows next to Ariadne. His lotus is more like what a flower looks like when it's wilted and almost ready to fall apart: all gangly. But we're not worried about form right now, anyway. He bites into the peach immediately, ready to listen to what he's sure will be a long list of Sam's broken puzzle pieces, and instead the conversation jumps to... that."That doesn't sound very gentlemanly," he observes with a half-chewed mouthful, followed by wiping off the juice dripping down his chin with his sleeve because if we're talking about gentlemanly behavior, well... Cas isn't it. He learned his manners from the other Winchester brother, unfortunately. But the real problem here is obviously not that casual sex is in general unbecoming behavior, it's that it doesn't sound very like Sam.
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"Well, he wasn't interested in sleeping," she said, wrapping her hands around the mug, feeling the heat flow through her. "But he did say he was interested in sex."
She took a small sip before continuing.
"He had noticed that I was having a conversation with Dean and Dean offered to teach me about sex." She shrugged, unapologetic. "I don't really know much beyond what I've seen sheep doing in the fields, back in Valeria. Anyway, he asked to come by the orchard for some fruit, but he kept bringing up the conversation he'd seen. And then he flat out asked me if I wanted to have sex with him. I found it a little bit odd--both because it seemed a bit out of nowhere and because..." She glanced over at Evelyn. "Well, I thought he'd be a bit more devoted to you. Then he told me that sex didn't have to 'mean anything.' Which also seemed odd because I'm pretty sure that for a lot of people, it means a great deal."
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Alas.
She will take her own cup and take a sip, nearly choking on it at Ariadne's statement before deciding perhaps she best wait.
"It does, for many people. Not everyone, but Sam always seemed more the sort who prefers sentiment."
At least, that's certainly how she remembered their night together. But perhaps she was wrong, and in which case, she feels rather the fool, even if it was eight years ago.
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Oh did he, now. Someone's getting a catty text chain after this. Cas stares at the dark pit in his peach like it's offensive before taking another, more vicious bite, and he forces himself to remember that this is a hate-on-Sam convention and he should stay on target.
There's a lecture here to be made on the physical and spiritual benefits of sex outside of relationships that haven't involved wedding rings or promises of monogamy, but poor Evelyn's looking a little flushed as it is. He closes his mouth, rolls his eyes a little and redirects. "There is something very wrong with Sam. He told me once that he sacrificed himself to put a stop to an angelic apocalypse. He went to Hell, and I don't believe he's returned to us... intact. Metaphysically."
Hopefully everyone in this room has heard the story of Sam's heroic deeds before, because if Cas has to explain it, he's going to need something a lot stronger than peaches and cinnamon.
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One thing was exceptionally clear:
"He's not whole?"
So she and Evelyn were right. There was something wrong with him. Although it was a bit difficult to feel triumphant about that, in the face of the larger issues.
She turned to look down the line of her shoulder at Evelyn, wondering if she had any ideas about what that meant.
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"Truthfully, he seemed fairly blasé about it. One would think an experience like that would be more...traumatic." She doesn't know anything about not being 'whole', or what that may implicate.
"In...ancient Egyptian culture," she says, picking that topic, because she knows it, it's familiar, "death was a temporary sort of inconvenience, I suppose you could say. When a person died, they were mummified so the soul could eventually return to the body. That's why the organs and such were preserved, as well. They believed Anubis would weigh the person's heart against the feather of Maat, and, if lighter than the feather, the soul would go with Osiris, to be reborn."
She tucks a piece of hair behind her ear, frowning a little.
"Of course, if it was heavier, the goddess Ammit would eat it and destroy it." Get to the point, Evelyn.
"Anyway. My point is, if he died, if his soul was really in Hell...is it possible it was...guided or put somewhere else? Somewhere less than, er. Desirable?"
cw: casual drug references, as ev!cas does
But, there's no point in further worrying his friends without more i formation of what's really going on. Cas chews thoughtfully on the last bite of nectarine while Evelyne pontificates on gods. As to where Sam's soul might've been put... Cas speaks up automatically. "It may still be in Hell."
Which isn't a pleasant thought, and what could any of them possibly do about it, if that's the case? Try to send Sam home to his soul? To Hell? Beg a god for help? We all know how that goes.
Cas reaches for his mug of tea, drops the pit into it, and asks Ariande with the cup already on the way to his lips, "What kind of tea is this? Is there wormwood in it?" Please, please tell him it's laced with something.
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She didn’t have sugar. How could she? She didn’t know how to bake.
A little line of worry formed between her eyes. Was she the worst host ever? She was certainly screwing up something awful.
Of course, there were more important things to worry about. Like Sam’s soul, or so it seemed. “Forgive me for asking, but could you two perhaps explain exactly what or where Hell is? I’m not sure I understand what we’re even guessing at.”
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"It's...the Underworld, essentially. Most mythological systems have some version of it, including Egyptian, Greek, ah-- Chinese, Christian."
"Essentially, it's the place bad people go when they die. Evil people."
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Christ.
Evil people, she says, and that's certainly how the mythology goes, though it's not all black and white as that in his world. Obviously Ariadne is from some other universe, and he assumes Evelyn must be as well. It'd be an awfully big coincidence if theirs were the same. But then, he and Dean, and even Sam are all here, miraculously...
Anyway, speak of the Devil, Cas feels compelled to clarify, in defense of the younger Winchester, "Evil people and lost souls. And anyone with a soul who was damned to perdition despite their good intentions. Like Sam."
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Which was upsetting, but within the scope of reality, she supposed.
Good people--and good fighters--died. Unfortunate. But also very true.
She continued to work it out in her head, setting down her tea so she could make a few vague gestures with her fingers, connecting the pieces as best possible. "He died and came back...broken. Missing a soul." She looked between the two of them. "I'm not terribly familiar with resurrections," she admitted. "But is that how it always happens? That when someone comes back, they come back wrong?"
A pause.
"Because I don't think that's how it worked in Deerington." When someone died, they came back. Whole. Intact.
...which had a horrifying implication for one way to fix Sam. Not that she would ever say that out loud.
sorry for the delay y'all
"I've only seen someone come back twice - though he, ah, had to sort of...suck the life force out of humans to become whole again. I don't think that's what is happening with Sam, though, and I don't think it's something he plans on doing."
Hopefully. That would be dreadful to deal with again.
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What else can they do? There are rituals Cas remembers, vaguely, because he isn't wasted enough to forget them, but considering where they are, and where Sam's soul may be... Would it even work, pulling it through another dimension? And what has Sam done, really, except loosen up a bit? He didn't push Ariadne or Evelyn into anything they didn't want, seems like, and he passed back instead of hogging the joint Cas shared with him, so... Cas's eyebrows lift and he shrugs. "I don't think it'll come to that. He's still Sam."
And surely Sam, smart boy that he is, has made no bad decisions in his life, ever.
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Her concerns etched themselves out on her face.
For once, she didn't bother to obfuscate.
"Wouldn't Sam want his soul back?" she asked softly. Ariadne was sure she would, if there was a piece of her missing.
Then again, she was missing part of herself, really. And the scars on her back ached at the thought of it.