veneficusvenato (
veneficusvenato) wrote2016-03-16 10:15 pm
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Alice, Through the Looking Glass
Do your job, you love it, Lee had said,
and Sokka hadn't helped adding, Be good
and we'll make it worth your while even.

Learning that this was all part of it, too.
Blending in, using your real name, but with the longest-lived lie you were handed.
Today, which involved watching two people curl her hair and apply her makeup with wands, and even a board that looked more like an artists pallet. Then a short white dress, with just enough give to hide her wand but nothing else, and an even smaller, more ornamental, looking shoulder jacket.
It would have been lovely if that was the worst the night could offer. Dresses, makeup, small talk, and Gillespie. But things never went that easy, really, did they. She couldn't just go home and bitch to her people about the mind numbing boringness and the funny tasting food. No, of course not. Instead the night went from that to explosions, sparks raining purple and black, from two dozen people dressed in black and purple, and running.
Shoving Gillespie, while shouting and and firing behind them. Creating a diversion. A spectacle. They weren't meant to be the people who did clean-up or cattle herding of the ministry wives and children. This wasn't exactly what they were for either, but they excelled in a pinch. Just like a handful of the other groups that had been in the milling dinner crowd.
The throbbing knuckles, and the disarray of her curls, as well as a rip along one side of her skirt, had happened before the running started, but they were lost in that. The way running did. Took every thought that wasn't attacks, hexes, and counter-spells. Stumbling through the doorway that should have led to a staircase, but didn't. She felt it sizzle through her skin, but all the three wizards were following right after, and as a burst of purple exploded toward them, Jo shoved Gillespie out of the path.
But it slammed straight into her, acid burning and needle stinging, sending her stumbling backwards, with a crack that she was sure was one of those damned heels they'd insisted on, which only helped it. She reached out to catch the reddish drape hanging behind her, but her fingers went straight through it, and her shoulders followed sending her into a tumble.....
Or the one after that. Everything went black around, and she swore she would
have Gil's ass for breakfast, as well as the costumers, and her best friends.....
....before the light returned in a blinding assault and Jo collided solidly,
in an all too familiar feeling, with another body beneath her.
in an all too familiar feeling, with another body beneath her.
[ Jo's Timeline: 1 Year Before Order of the Jobberknoll
SPN Timeline: ??? ]
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He's quite certain she can go clothes shopping without his supervision. And that she would probably appreciate him not following her through the underwear section.
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She's done that. She's good at ghosting. That's what WHD and Jo Harvelle is on record, basically.
The joke wouldn't have helped anyway. She hasn't clarified nearly the things about him, that he has about her.
There are no wizards robes here, but she was raised in America, with only her Dad's magic in her world at home, so this isn't anything. She grabs a pair of jean's and a tank top, changing in the dressing room, which is fine. Form fitting, down to earth, blendable. She has no attachment to these clothes the way it was slightly harder to give up instantly Dean's own clothes. To her own chagrin.
She grabbed two more pairs of jeans, tank tops, piled an over shirt on it, and found a pair of sturdy boots. Socks. Underwear. A pile that reminded her far too much of moving into this world more than being here just a few seconds, but it was just for now.
Just for now. She was going home. She had to. Jo went to find where he'd gotten to in the store.
Pretending there wasn't some twinge in her, like maybe letting him out of her sight had made him not real.
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He sees her from the corner of his eye and looks over at her. "All done, or should we hit someplace to get you some boots?"
He thinks it's probably safe to assume she'll want to give Amy her shoes back sooner, rather than later. Wearing someone else's shoes or boots tends to be annoying, since they've adjusted to be comfortable for the owner of said footgear, rather than random other people.
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Jo shifted the pile in her arms to reveal the boots already in her arms.
The ones she'd picked up before finding him. A smile tilting her mouth.
"Beat you there already."
They weren't the best boots, but really magic could fix all the things they were lacking, and a number that probably couldn't be purchased anywhere in this area. No less this country. Universe. That was just such a weird thought every time the word slipped in against her mind again. An easier though that the strangled sensation of shock and relief re-finding him caused in her chest.
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This entire conversation was weird. It's not the sort of thing he ever expected to be talking with Jo about, even when he still had his own of her.
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Jo snorted. "Yeah, Winchester. That's what I'm about. Hiding boots from you."
She can't help herself, even knowing the words rolling out. "It's not like it's a world or something."
There was a roll of her eyes, that really did not a single thing to assuage the flash of amusement and admonishing rejection mingled against silent laughter in her copper eyes. She fell into step with him, sliding into casual with overly trained ease, as she gave a nod toward where all the cash registers and lines had been coming in. "I'm sure what you all have will be fine. It's not like any of us are hoping this lasts all that long, right?"
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He's in line a moment later, waiting for it to become their turn.
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Jo looked at him oddly, a wary confusion touching her expression for a moment. "You want me to come back?"
The last three words are almost stumbled over, like somehow that has to be completely outlandish.
As though she couldn't for a second understand why Dean, of all people, would want her around. Like. Actually want her to find a way to be around. Again. Except. It catches up late. One second. Maybe two. Or three. His her, she's not here. She's dead. Even Sam said so. Couldn't stop looking at her like she'd vanish.
It's not. She keeps having to remember. He didn't. Or more aptly she didn't to him.
It makes her stomach knot, and her arms shift the load, even though it's light and barely noticeable.
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Given this Jo was a witch from a universe where Harry freakin' Potter was real. Along with her hunting being different because of it.
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"Aside from the fact I don't belong here?" God. The words in her mouth.
And the fact it wasn't stopping. "And you've all just had to sort of take me in without a vote?"
If she could stop feeling that trill of confusing was turning hard toward a flush of panic, the quickening ratchet of her heart, toward the brush of the days she did her best not to think about except during that one month a year she usually cherry-picked the worst of the worst case files for their department, whether man or beast, to distract herself with, and everyone let Jo pretend Jo just didn't give a damn about the month, or her handlers trying to say something about any of it.
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Right, their turn. He sets down the cookies and moves over to give her space to put down her own things, digging out his wallet in the process. All hail fake credit cards to pay for things.
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He's setting things down, and she has to set things down, lips pursed. Not agreeing.
Knowing it's coming from somewhere else, and she should just let it go. What bloody hell is it about him, that it makes her want to open her mouth and saying something. Anything. A war between the part of her that understands, that is, what, relieved?, to even see his face, see him fight, hear him laugh, to say he wants here with him, again, even if it's not his, and the one that wants to push him back, behind the wall she put up so exquisitely it stood for years without him, the other him, getting through.
Why. Why him? Why couldn't she have fallen out of a curtain-ceiling and landed on anyone else.
Except she knows she doesn't mean that. And she hates that she actually feels so much more than compelled not to go quiet. Not to just leave the person talking to her in the dark on the fact they are wrong, wrong, wrong. Because he's not just some other person, even if he's someone elses. And maybe it's an excuse, or maybe it's just another messed of thread in it.
"You don't even know me." It's quiet. He definitely doesn't know the things she's done. Even if she's not clarifying that part. Glancing at him barely, over one shoulder, hating that she know exactly where her gaze will land, right around his shoulder, and what fills her periphery. But not finding his eyes. "Not really."
That's the thing about lies. The best lies, especially of omissions, are made of the absolute truth, too.
Especially if they are other true problem. "You don't look at me and see me. You look at me and see her."
"This other person that I don't even know who was, not really either, but was still here. Or at least that she was before."
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He finally speaks up after grabbing the bags to lead the way out. "I wouldn't mind the chance to get to know you better. Find out about more of the differences besides the incredibly obvious."
The last said with a lop-sided smirk.
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She not used to help, or having someone around anymore. She was once. She remembers it. The way you remember childhood memories. There are details you forget until something reminds you. Like someone grabbing the bags with all your things and leaving you empty handed. That it's just polite but it's odd, too. Puts you unmoored and taskless.
It leaves her simply walking behind him, catching up to his side once away from the register. Trying to take in his words, or even figure a way out of the maze she set herself in. Or him, and maybe, rather than. Mirrors on mirrors. She wasn't being fair either, even at absolutely honest, and absolutely lying, and still he said that and smirked, the far too familiar way. Making something sore sound in her chest, against all of it, all of her better knowledge, nature and years, worst of all, that agreed.
And yet. Still. "That I'm too smart to fall for any of your crap?"
The response rolls out only a beat after his, too much habit to miss, even if it doesn't entirely reach her eyes now.
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He has the feeling said 'magic thing' will take some getting used to. He'll have time. He seriously doubts they'll find the answer to sending her home immediately. It could be days. Weeks, even.
Right. Time to change the subject slightly. "Cas should be here either sometime tonight or tomorrow. He might be able to help figure things out."
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Damn him and his stupid face, and the muscles in her cheek that fluttered just a little when he didn't even argue the point.
Even though they both knew what he meant. She'd be surprised if he didn't flinch for a while at the sight of her wand.
"I don't know what you could be talking about." There was a careless wave of a hand, her first two fingers sharper.
That very possibly might have caused a cart to roll a few inches. Not far enough into the street to be a bother. Or a scene.
"I'm obviously just an absolutely, everyday, ordinary girl, run the mill, British-American dual citizen, with absolutely nothing --no job, skills, hobbies, proclivities -- to interest any of these people." A bland, as markedly almost blank as it was almost teasing. "Or you."
Beat. "Who might have score an O all of her O.W.L.'s and been near the heads of both of those countries at a point. But I couldn't say for sure." There's the faintest flick of a smirk. "Then, I'd have to kill you, and both of us being dead, here, would be a sin."
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Best to give her news about things like this in pieces instead of all at once. Give her time to absorb one thing before moving on to the next.
He's soon shifting the bag in one hand to the other, freeing up his ability to pull out his car key to open up the trunk and deposit the bags in it before slamming it shut again and heading to the front of the car to unlock the driver's side door. He intends to lean over and unlock the passenger side one as well, but he wouldn't be surprised in the least if she beats him to it.
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Except Jo hasn't moved.
She's still standing somewhere near the back of Baby.
Unable to not think the name. Unable to make her feet even move.
Because.
No.
He didn't.
And if he -- even if --
That's not. It's just not.
"You don't get to just say something like--" Like that. There's solid metal under her hand and she doesn't remember when she started touching the car. The parking lot doesn't even exist. The store doesn't. The whole world refracted down to Dean. And Dean's face. And what he just said, no matter how he just said it.
She's not even sure if her organs are connected to each other. Her blood is moving. She's still breathing.
She's always kept access to file she shouldn't. She always had to know. Always had to know he was okay.
Nothing in the world makes sense if she has to hear, or has to make herself actually say, barely above a whisper, her voice a waver almost demanding to make that a joke, something, anything else. Anything but a sideways truth. "You died?"
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"Once everybody was hitting twenty-two, abilities started showing up for them. In Sam's case, it was visions of people who were going to die. Mostly people connected to him. Awhile after that, said demon, who, by the way, killed Mom because she interrupted him while he was occupied and who later took Dad out, basically kidnapped everybody in waves to make them fight each other to the death."
Dean swallows and licks his lips. "Sam didn't make it. So I went to a crossroads and made a deal. What else was I supposed to do? Dad told me to keep him safe--been drilling it into me since I was four--and I failed."
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She doesn't know when she starts moving, rounding the car. Not on the passenger side. On his. Past the trunk. Past the door. Barreling against him. Even if it's probably wrong. Inappropriate. Not her place. Not her world. Not her Dean. Except. It's still Dean. Dean still died, and nothing in her understands any of the details between point A and point B. Not if that one is TRUE.
She can't stop. Her forehead ends up against her chest. Her arms half around. Finger fisting in his shirt.
She has to know he's real. He's alive. Right now. Solid. Alive. Heart beating.
And there's a viciousness, in her whisper against his shirt, that was never present even in the garage,
"Don't you even dare make a joke about this."
Maybe later. Maybe never.
Not about what she's done. Not about dying.
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He can't help the small grin that forms at the memory. "I told her 'yes ma'am' 'cause she was kind of intimidating. Always has been, since I first met her."
He blows out a breath, grin disappearing. "Cas saved me for a couple reasons. One, to try to keep me from unknowingly setting the first ball for the Apocalypse rolling. Two, little hard for Michael to wear me to said Apocalypse if I were dead or a demon."
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Jo snorted out, in surprise a little, maybe painful amusement, at the story about her mother. Lips pressing hard. She was not going to tear up. She didn't. She wouldn't. She shook her head, even against the burning. She'd always wanted that. Dean to meet her mom, and he had. That one day. The last day they ever saw each other. It'd been a big thing. Bringing him back to America. To the Roadhouse. To her.
It meant a lot of things she didn't say, and he'd gotten that.
And then it was all over. It was all done.
She'd seen her mother again, much later. But never him.
Jo refused to be this stupid. Refused if it hurt everywhere. Even if maybe she was almost tearing up. She made one of her hands unfit the material of his shirt and slid it between them, against his chest, meaning to push away, but somehow she didn't. Somehow she found the beat of his heart, even though her hand was only in the middle of his chest, where her head had been, and all she did was look up, the agony of the whole of these ideas meeting something like incredulousness in her expression. About him being used for ---what.
"And somehow you like this guy? This angel?"
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She probably needs the reminder, given their current choice of topic. It's just a mite distracting. "I think you'd like him. He might hug you when he arrives. As a word of warning."
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Totally not like there was anything of the sort going on right here in this second, that Jo herself might have started.
Which was about as much true as it really wasn't. She hugged long gone colleagues, and Sokka and Lee hung on her like limpets until she scattered them. Even though she almost never did. It had been too long. It'd been too long. so many years, and the loss of Dean, before she broke all the rules to take them back for herself when Lee almost died. Even when they'd stopped looking at her like she might up and vanish on them again. Lee was always jostling her, and Sokka was always hugging her or dragging her somewhere, arm in arm, like they were still kids back at Hogwarts.
(And, okay, maybe. Just maybe. Because she kind of liked it. For them.)
Jo leaned sideways against the car, "You've had a very different life over here, too."
Maybe just as fucked up and broken in a lot of very different ways.
It's wrong, but she's glad neither of them died on each other.
Life was hell without him. But a life she chose. Could survive just fine.
She couldn't see how she'd want to choose life, want to be alive, if he was suddenly gone.
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"No kidding. I bet your me can't say he helped stop the Apocalypse," Dean says, giving her a cocky grin. Time to bring things around to him being a smartass and her trying to puncture his ego. Give them a break from the heavy subjects.
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Ack! I lined it up wrong hours ago!
That explains why you were apparently taking forever to tag. >_>
I EVEN LEFT IT THERE! So you can see it before I delete it. It was 3 hours ago! *facepalm* Sorriest.
Now I'm wondering if lack of tag for Gabe's tfln turned action is related. <_<
Shhh, you. At least you are getting some. It could be so much worse. :P
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