Edwin Payne (
technicallyhellbound) wrote2025-02-14 06:37 pm
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for @convincingsmile - Nobody's dying today (probably)
Edwin knew as soon as he fell through the mirror that something was wrong, and not just a little bit wrong, but the kind of wrong that made the whole world tilt on its axis a little.
It wasn't a misdirected portal, not like the case that had ultimately led them to Crystal, not like many other failures of concentration when traversing mirror portals before, it was something else, and he couldn't place what it was. All he knew was that he'd simply passed through the mirror in question and had landed, hard on the floor on the other side of the room, hard enough that he actually skidded a couple of feet and that couldn't be right because that actually hurt, and hurt in the way he hadn't felt in... well, decades.
It was enough to tumble him against the far wall just from his own momentum, impacting hard enough to knock the breath out of his lungs, and that was definitely wrong, because he shouldn't have had breath or lungs. He could see, even through pain-hazed vision that the poltergeist he'd been baiting had, indeed, gotten caught in the trap he himself had leapt over when aiming for the mirror.
That was, however, the last thing he saw before the half-rotted-through loft floor gave way beneath his sudden and unexpected weight, sending him falling, flailing, scraped to ribbons on the broken slats, to the ground below, and he was reasonably sure he'd actually heard something snap on impact, ribs, if the sudden radiating pain was anything to go by, though his shoulder wasn't in good shape either, and that was an entirely different kind of pain, just layering on top of the feeling of the ragged scratches from the wood, and it occurred to him, dimly, that he'd forgotten how much he hated the feeling of blood on his skin.
It had been different in Hell, the pain, the sensations in general, all of it, it had been horrible, yes, but it was so much more visceral now, and even as his vision began to go hazy again, head swimming, his last thoughts were trying to remember how he'd somehow gotten separated from Charles, who had been barely a step behind him when he'd rounded the corner into the loft pursued by the poltergeist now trapped securely above him.
It wasn't a misdirected portal, not like the case that had ultimately led them to Crystal, not like many other failures of concentration when traversing mirror portals before, it was something else, and he couldn't place what it was. All he knew was that he'd simply passed through the mirror in question and had landed, hard on the floor on the other side of the room, hard enough that he actually skidded a couple of feet and that couldn't be right because that actually hurt, and hurt in the way he hadn't felt in... well, decades.
It was enough to tumble him against the far wall just from his own momentum, impacting hard enough to knock the breath out of his lungs, and that was definitely wrong, because he shouldn't have had breath or lungs. He could see, even through pain-hazed vision that the poltergeist he'd been baiting had, indeed, gotten caught in the trap he himself had leapt over when aiming for the mirror.
That was, however, the last thing he saw before the half-rotted-through loft floor gave way beneath his sudden and unexpected weight, sending him falling, flailing, scraped to ribbons on the broken slats, to the ground below, and he was reasonably sure he'd actually heard something snap on impact, ribs, if the sudden radiating pain was anything to go by, though his shoulder wasn't in good shape either, and that was an entirely different kind of pain, just layering on top of the feeling of the ragged scratches from the wood, and it occurred to him, dimly, that he'd forgotten how much he hated the feeling of blood on his skin.
It had been different in Hell, the pain, the sensations in general, all of it, it had been horrible, yes, but it was so much more visceral now, and even as his vision began to go hazy again, head swimming, his last thoughts were trying to remember how he'd somehow gotten separated from Charles, who had been barely a step behind him when he'd rounded the corner into the loft pursued by the poltergeist now trapped securely above him.
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He turned his head to bury his face in the bend of his other elbow, just in case he had to bite down on something his clothes were a better option than his lip. Luckily despite the deteriorated state of the slats he'd fallen through, the piece that had lodged in him was solid enough to come out without fragmenting further, but it was still enough for Edwin to muffle a noise of pain, breath shaking for a few long moments before he managed to rein it in again.
He lifted his head a moment later, taking as deep a breath as he could manage, feeling hot bands of pain across his chest as he did, like iron wrapped around his ribs. But what he managed to say, low and still pained was: "I believe my shoulder is dislocated. I can return it to its place, but not without help."
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"Did well, Edwin, you did good," Charles stuttered, reaching up to stroke his cheek. He felt it warm, but not as warm as it was before. And yes, there was blood on Edwin, and some around them but not as much. Which could mean that Edwin was either only scared, or they were slowly returning to their original state, or something worse.
His eyes were wide and wild as Edwin finally looked at him, waiting for a confirmation, a direction, anything. And when Edwin gave it, Charles' gaze dropped on his shoulder. Charles had his shoulder dislocated once. Only once. And he remembers the pain still all too clearly.
"Right, where do you want me?" he asked, licking his lips nervously.
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Instead he used his good arm to indicate two places, his forearm and his upper arm, "Hold firm here, and here, if you would, and don't flinch." Any time he'd had to force a joint back into the socket in his multiple escape attempts, he'd wedged it against a door frame, or between rungs on a gate, anything that would hold firm while he moved, shoulders were easier than knees or hips, he remembered that much, but it was still going to be unpleasant, "The sound will be... well, it sounds worse than it is, I promise."
Once he was sure Charles was actually holding tightly, he gave a nod, stuffing the back of his wrist, and the cuff of his jacket, between his teeth before just wrenching his torso to the side, doing his best to bite back the cry and blink through the spots in his vision again, flexing and curling the fingers of that re-located arm just to make sure there was no lingering damage.
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As Edwin was trying to work through his pain, Charles was also attempting to get a grip on himself. He pressed his forehead against the boy's shoulder, as if he could will his pain away. As if he could take it on himself. He didn't let go of his arm, only loosened his grip a little.
"That was a hell of a sound, wasn't it?" Charles remarked in a tense breath, raising his gaze at Edwin. Then quickly wiped his eyes from the tears of tension. He swallowed, then slid a hand on Edwin's back rubbing as gently as he could but trying to let him know that he was there. "We gotta go, yeah? Somewhere safe, somewhere you can..." heal? Die again? Be a ghost again? Either way, somewhere not here. "Our friend's trapped, yeah? It's gonna stay, we can come back to banish it," he said.
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He was wheezing faintly again by the time he'd finished, he'd forgotten, really, just how much breath speaking normally took, let alone his usual tirades, and cracked ribs didn't make that any easier. He took another deep breath, forcing himself to settle again, "At least if it's banished it's in the hands of the Department, they're better equipped than we are." It wouldn't be the Lost and Found, at least not likely, but there were other Departments, as they'd learned being somewhat-official employees.
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"I will sit, right here, keeping still, until you return if that will make you happy and secure in the thought that I'm not doing anything to injure myself further or aggravate the injuries I've already sustained." It wasn't sharp, it wasn't an argument, it was exactly what it sounded like, an offer, a vow even, because he hadn't fully realized until that outburst just how worried Charles actually was, and it was with good reason, all things considered.
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"Right," he sniffed, rubbing his nose for a moment. "Right," he nodded. Yes, Edwin didn't order him, he wasn't like that. But Charles knew when to act. It was how they worked. He pushed the first aid kit toward Edwin.
"Here, if anything, like, goes wrong when I'm not here," he said. Then he took his backpack. "I'll get to the stairs, find my way up," he said, to tell Edwin why he was using the door. He didn't look at him, he just couldn't. This all felt like he was abandoning him. After a moment of hesitation, before he would have gone, he reached for Edwin and leaned in for a quick kiss on his lips. Then, he got up before he could have launched them into another argument.
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That and the fact that they might be fully broken and not just cracked, in which case it was probably even worse.
He swayed forward reflexively into that kiss once Charles was drawing away, blinking slowly, surprised by it, but Charles was already off and moving before he could come up with an actual response. He did pop the first aid kit open to get at a packet of antiseptic wipes so he could at least deal with the scraped arms as well as daubing at the place where his shoulder had been pierced by that shard of wood, he couldn't fully see the injury himself and couldn't determine whether it would need stitches or just a bit of gauze and tape.
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It took him long minutes to find the room, as the howling of the poltergeist was very disorienting but in the end, Charles hurried into it. He almost stumbled into the gap Edwin's fall made, pulling back at the last moment. He took a second to check on his friend, seeing him trying to patch up a wound. The sight was surreal, and that was an understatement. But Charles once again forcefully had to remind himself to focus.
Yet again, he was hissing in pain when he had to dip his hand into the backpack to get the necessary items, black salt among them. The banishing ritual wasn't that intricate, as a trapped poltergeist didn't pose as much of a treat as one reining free. The banishing, though, took him longer than time than when they did it together. Now he had to say the spell, mind the salt, make sure the poltergeist didn't escape through the cracks... and try not to go too fast and get back to Edwin. Charles messed up the words many times as he had to read them and with each time he grew more and more impatient.
But when the ghost was finally banished to whichever department, Charles looked down at Edwin, spreading his arms as frustrated as he could get.
"Banished, yeah? Happy? Now can we please go?"
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Which was why he took a breath before responding, "Yes, thank you Charles." And then, "Before you come back down, would you please check for anything odd, markings or symbols about the lintel on the door or about the mirror?" Another breath, frustrated again that even just that small amount of talking took so much air, "I'd do it myself, but I don't think I can manage the stairs." And given the way the floor had disintegrated before, he doubted it would hold both their weight even if he did manage to get up there.
Realizing belatedly that Charles probably needed an explanation, he added: "It's only that I went through the mirror, and you didn't, and yet we're both suffering the same effects." He had, indeed, gone through it, he'd meant to return to the office and come back once he was sure the poltergeist was trapped, but he'd gone through the mirror itself as if it were an empty frame, and that was what had landed him -by way of going through the floor- back on the ground floor of the building.
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"Edwin, I hope you know you're alive now and I can strangle you," he said. "You just stay there, yeah?" He got up, kicked the used trap the poltergeist was in in his helpless fury, and started to pace around. He only made his steps a bit more careful when he heard the floor creak once again. The last thing he wanted was to fall down, maybe on top of Edwin even. His body hurt. All over. He knew this pain so well, it was the pain of exhaustion. A nostalgic sensation. And he hated that it made him excited, on top of everything...
"There's nothing here!" he exclaimed, even without checking properly. Though that venting was needed for him to really check because if Edwin was to nag him again, he would... maybe regret his words. And the explanation helped. Right, they needed to figure out what happened. "I mean," Charles started looking around. "No signs on the mirror, or the door," he reported. "Some runes on the floor, I think it was a circle," he frowned.
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When the answer came he swore, softly, pinching the bridge of his nose and running that hand up over his face and into his hair, "Will you be able to remember them to be able to sketch them out when we return to the office?" He'd seen Charles struggle with the bag now that he was living again, and didn't want to risk his having to use it to find something to write with, if he even had such a thing in there as it was.
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Charles did wish Edwin was there. He had eyes for these things, and he noticed everything. Suddenly he wasn't even sure if what he saw was anything at all... And then the thousand quids question came.
"Don't bloody do this to me, Edwin," Charles muttered, letting his friend know that there was no fucking way he could remember... And he never carried any pen or paper because that was all Edwin! Where he stood, it was supposed to be Edwin! Edwin was the brains, the note-taker, the whole fucking business. Charles was... the other, less important bits. "Right, I can't write it down either, but," Charles huffed again, out of breath. He dipped his hand back into his bag, feeling like it was going to be crushed the next time he would do it again. Then took out Crystal's Polaroid camera. She got it on a whim and banished it into Charles' backpack after a day of having fun with it.
It took Charles a bit to snap the first picture but then he made a few of the half-broken floor and the runes for Edwin to see. He looked around if there was anything, and took a picture of the door and the mirror too. He wanted to take a picture of the used trap too but by then the camera used all of its pictures.
When Charles was done he folded the pictures together so they wouldn't just flap away as he dropped them down to Edwin.
"'S this gonna do?" he asked.
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He checked over the pictures, shuffling them into an order he could use -he'd copy the runes down larger once they returned to the office, so they could actually be seen at something close to full size, and he'd even do what he could to recreate the placement and the through-lines of the circle as well, just to see if he could determine what it had originally been for, because it was entirely possible that using the trap for the poltergeist on top of it was what had caused the problem in the first place, if the circle itself wasn't the issue.
He tucked the pictures into the pocket with his notebook to make sure they were secure, "I've managed as much first aid as I'm able, I'll need assistance covering my shoulder before we start back to the office." He did know better than to leave it exposed, especially as they were going to be walking for a while, and that was something he already wasn't looking forward to with the way his chest still felt tight and his breathing too shallow.
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He knelt to help Edwin up but then he made yet another good point. Right, yes. They had bodies and wounds. And wounds could get nasty if they weren't treated. Charles took a deep breath, looking at the wound.
"Right," he said. "You gotta take off your jacket for me to work," he said. "And the waistcoat, and the shirt. Otherwise, I gotta tear them up," he added.
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His brow creased just a little at Charles' instructions, pausing before remembering that yeah, he was going to have to do that manually. Once again making sure the polaroids and his notebook were secure, he peeled carefully out of his jacket, folding it into quick quarters and setting it aside, followed by the waistcoat, and while it made him pale again thanks to the way the movement shifted his ribs, his hands were still steady as he worked the buttons of his shirt free to shrug carefully out of it as well, lamenting the rip in the shoulder thanks to that initial wood fragment.
"I'm not sure how well I managed to clean it." He commented, voice a little quieter than usual, keeping himself steady, "Couldn't reach it that well."
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He definitely had a body alright, and blood, and it was circulating healthily.
Once again, Edwin's tone was what brought I'm back to the present. He frowned, looking at the wound. It was half cleaned, it was obvious where Edwin could reach and where he was unable to. So Charles licked his lips and took some of the antiseptic wipes to finish what Edwin started.
"This may sting," he muttered. One of his hands was steadying Edwin, while the other was working. And while he was still scared and worried, he still couldn't stop thinking how warm Edwin was under his touch. When he was done cleaning he leaned closer to check if he could see any splinters. Thankfully, nothing caught his eye, other than Edwin's skin. "Right, hold still. Got some bandages now," Charles muttered, trying to do this in small steps to not get overwhelmed and slip or hurt Edwin somehow.
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He hadn't yet noticed that Charles was being unfortunately distracted by the exact same thing he was, the warmth of the other boy's skin against his own, and Charles' step-by-step commentary was only a good thing, as it kept him on track and didn't let his thoughts drift too far, there was another quiet: "Thank you, Charles." At the mention of a bandage, as he'd mostly managed to regulate his breathing again after the way it had caught while undressing. He didn't think it was getting worse, but it definitely wasn't getting better either, and he wasn't sure whether that was actually a good sign or not.
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"Sorry for yelling at you," Charles said and before he could have told himself it was a bad idea he leaned in to kiss the back on Edwin's neck. Bloody hell, he needed to get a grip. "Lemme help you dress and then... can we still travel by mirror?"
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He just shook his head, "No, that's what I was trying to do before realizing I was... this, again." A loose gesture with one hand towards his chest, "I just went right through. I'd been trying to go to the office and back, and that's clearly not what happened. We'll have to walk, I'm afraid." Mostly he was thankful that they weren't that far from the office, and had only mirrored in to start with because it was easier, especially when trying to take a poltergeist by surprise.
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"Shit," Charles cursed. Then he took a deep breath. "I'll carry you, yeah? The office is not that far," he said. He was ready to do it. Grab Edwin, on his back or in his arms, however, but take him and drag him back. To take him home. "Want my coat?" he asked already shouldering out of it. He noted how the bandage on the other may not make it possible for Edwin to put back his shirt. Or his pain, for that matter.
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He gave the waistcoat a baleful look, because while he wanted the comfort of his usual layers, wanted something to be normal, he knew that he wouldn't be able to manage both that and his jacket, and of the two the jacket was the more important.
It was also why his brow creased a little at Charles' second offer, shaking his head and clasping Charles' elbow gently, "You'll need it. We can feel the cold now after all." He was thankful that in that area, at that hour, there wasn't likely to be anyone else about, which meant they were unlikely to draw attention, either.
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"Right, right," Charles swallowed. Then just took the waistcoat Edwin didn't put on and put it in the backpack. One less thing for him to carry. "But lean on me at least, yeah? Could be easier to walk like that," he said as he got up and offered a hand.
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As it was, he accepted the hand up, though almost reached for it with the injured side at first before correcting himself and using the other hand. He did blanch again, briefly, once he was on his feet, but he didn't sway the way he'd done when just sitting up from where he'd first hit the floor, though it was hard to say if that was a good sign or not.
Once he was steady all he had to say was: "Once we're outside we'll keep the river to our left and we'll be going the right direction."
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