Guarding the Borders of Heaven

A short standalone Angels story.

Seraphel, standing beside the portal, couldn’t hold back from sighing as he saw the approaching procession.  Of course, since angels didn’t need to breathe, they really didn’t have to sigh, either, but he felt that it appropriately expressed his mood.

The angel approaching his portal didn’t look quite right.  The wings were sagging, and the halo appeared to be held up with the help of a chopstick and some duct tape.  Instead of glowing with holy light, it had been painted yellow with reflective spray paint.

The “angel” was also pushing a large trolley, on top of which sat several cardboard boxes.  The boxes seemed to be shifting and twitching more than was appropriate for inanimate objects.  The “angel” was struggling a fair bit to get the trolley to roll over the clouds leading up to the portal, but he was still creeping forward.

“Hold it,” Seraphel said, putting out one hand as the other “angel” approached.  He didn’t draw his flaming sword, but he lowered one hand to its hilt, at the waist of his robes.

The “angel” stopped, looking rather frustrated.  “Yeah?” he grunted in gravelly tones.

Again, Seraphel sighed.  “Come on,” he said in gentle tones, still hoping he wouldn’t have to do any smiting.  It always made the air taste all greasy and unpleasant.  “You can’t really be hoping to fool me with this getup.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” came the reply.  “I’m an angel, same as you.”

Seraphel’s eyes narrowed.  “Do you really think I’m that stupid?” he asked, a note of irritation creeping into his voice.  “Your wings are definitely made of cardboard, and one of my kind would never actually push a trolley to move a shipment of things.”

“Oh yeah?” the other figure challenged.  “What would you do then, huh, flappy?”

Ignoring the dig at his wings, Seraphel pointed at the boxes and lifted one immaculate finger.  On their own, the boxes rose up and floated off the trolley, hovering in the air.  Another little twist of his finger, and they flipped upside down, and several rather dirty looking humans came tumbling out onto the clouds.

The angel didn’t feel that he had to say anything more to prove his point.  Instead, he just crooked an eyebrow at the imposter who had been trying to get through the portal.  It was a look that Seraphel had practiced for several centuries, and he was very good at it.

The men on the ground were complaining as they climbed to their feet.  “What gives, man?” asked one, angrily shoving his disguised companion.

The “angel” just shrugged.  “I told you it wouldn’t fool him,” he said.  “They’re not as dumb as devils, you know.”

Seraphel nodded.  “Very true,” he approved.

The disguised man gave him a nod as his companions finished crawling out of the boxes.  “I mean, we gotta try, you know,” he said, trying to explain himself.  “The demons may be dumb as a bunch of rocks, sure, but they still keep trying to do the whole “flay the skin from your body” thing.  I mean, after a couple weeks we all work out that we can’t feel anything, but they don’t get that.  We’ve tried explaining it a hundred times.”

It was all true, but there still wasn’t anything that Seraphel could do about it.  “Better luck next time, I suppose,” he offered.  “Besides, it’s still Hell, you know.  You have to serve out your immortal judgement there.”

“Oh, bugger that,” the disguised man replied, to the murmured agreement of his companions.  The anger had gone out of his voice, however, and he wasn’t making any confrontational moves.  “One of these days, Seraphel.  We’ll get through eventually.”

“Keep on trying,” the angel replied, not unkindly.  He knew that he was assigned to prevent damned souls from getting into Heaven, but he had to admit that he felt a little sorry for them.  Besides, it was a nice break from the monotony of standing beside this portal throughout the millenia.  At least they were creative.  “Maybe next time I won’t notice.”

Seraphel’s hand was still on his flaming sword, but he decided to give the men a break.  “Do I really need to smite you?” he asked.

“Nah,” the man replied, bending down to toss the empty cardboard boxes back onto the trolley.  “I know how you dislike the smell.  We’ll take our time walking back.”

Seraphel leaned back against the gate as he watched the men leave.  One of the fellows who had been hidden in the boxes was still angrily complaining, but he was new.  He’d settle into the natural rhythm soon enough.

Sure, being a border guard was a rather dull job most of the time, but at least it had interaction with mortals.  That helped keep it interesting.

The Angels novel, Chapter 1: The Vault Theft

Author’s note: So, I’ve been considering the idea of taking all of my Angels stories and compiling them into a collection or book of some sort.  They are my favorite to write.  Unfortunately, I’d need a central theme to tell, even with little asides or stand-alone stories.  Hmm.

As Sariel drifted slowly along, he wondered if he would get in trouble if he did the next lap with his eyes closed.

He probably would, he eventually decided.  But, just like on the last seven million laps, the idea was tempting.  If he could walk this route with his eyes closed, he could give that whole sleeping thing a try.  Of course, no angel had ever managed to fall asleep, but that didn’t stop Sariel from wanting to attempt it.  And what if he did manage to fall asleep?  He’d be famous!

Still with his eyes open, Sariel turned around the next corner, passing by the Salt Pillar of Heavenly Wrath.  To his eyes, it looked like any other pillar of salt.  Apparently it had once been some woman of vague importance.  In Sariel’s eyes, that fact would be a lot more apparent if someone went at the pillar with a chisel for a few hours.

In truth, Sariel just wanted an escape from this job.  Initially, a few thousand years ago, the job had sounded perfect.  Guard the Vaults of Heaven!  Protect the most powerful treasures in existence!  Repel the hordes of demon invaders!

In the entire time that Sariel had been employed as a guard for the Vaults of Heaven, he hadn’t even seen an imp, much less an invading demon horde.  That had really been false advertising, he grumbled to himself.

Sariel was now approaching the Astral Wing of the Vaults, where the gadgets tended to be smaller and covered with lots of spikes.  These devices were designed for bridging the gap between the astral planes, allowing the bearer access to the different realms.  They were also very, very illegal, and thus were promptly confiscated from any being who came to possess one(1).

Of course, like any angel, Sariel did a good job at his job.  It went against every fibre of his being to do otherwise.  He was assigned to this job, and he was going to do it well.  He still kept up the vague hope that he’d get a promotion.  Unfortunately, that avenue didn’t seem to be panning out either.

At his last performance review (that had been what, eight hundred years ago?), he had shifted uncomfortably in the seat across the desk from his superior, Razakael.  His superior was scrutinizing him over a pair of silver half-moon glasses.

Razakael didn’t need glasses, of course.  All the angels had perfect vision.  But he had seen humans use them to project an air of dominance, and he thought they made him look more like a proper supervisor.

“So, Sariel,” he finally spoke up.  “How long has it been since your last review?”

“One thousand years,” the other angel replied.  Angels were designed to respond well to authority, and Razakael was definitely the superior.  The fourth syllable in his name showed that.  “Give or take a few months.”

“Well, I’m a very busy angel,” Razakael replied, trying to brush away the second half of that comment.  He really wasn’t.  He spent most of his time sitting with his feet up on his desk, attempting to throw his halo over various objects in his office.  But he couldn’t let Sariel know that.

“Looking over your report,” he went on, “I don’t see a single report of a demon being repelled from the Vaults, much less a horde.”

Sariel shrugged uncomfortably.  Angels weren’t really built to shrug, but it was such a useful expression, they’d adapted it almost immediately.  “There haven’t been any demons attacking the Vaults, though!” he protested.  “I can’t repel demon attackers if there aren’t any!”

Razakael wasn’t going to give in to mere logic.  “The conditions are clear, Sariel,” he insisted.  “I can’t give you a promotion unless you repel demons.  And you haven’t repelled any demon attackers, so I can’t promote you.  Those are the rules.”

In his seat, Sariel slumped slightly.  The rules.  They didn’t always work out, but he couldn’t disobey the rules – to do so would be anathema to everything he was.  “I understand,” he said in a glum tone.

His boss rose up from his seat behind the desk to walk him out of the office.  “Perk up, Sariel,” Razakael said, not unkindly, giving the lesser angel a pat on the shoulder.  “You never know when a demon horde might be around the corner.  Maybe next time.”

Sariel nodded as he stepped out through the doorway, but he didn’t have high hopes.  And now, with only two hundred years until his next review, he still hadn’t seen a single hint of a demon.  Just aisles and aisles of dusty artifacts.

As he’d considered this, Sariel had been making his way through the plinths and shelves in the Astral Wing, past row after row of little devices that hadn’t been touched in thousands of years.  Perhaps if another angel was demoted low enough, he’d be sent down here to dust, and Sariel would have some company.

But something wasn’t quite right.  Sariel paused, his nose rising up in the air a little like a bloodhound(2).  He had patrolled this way millions of times, and he had long since memorized every single aspect of the route.  But this time, something wasn’t right.  Something was out of place.

Sariel’s eyes scrolled over the shelves, across the little gizmos and gadgets.  As he searched for whatever was different, he had to sigh.  No wonder this wing didn’t draw any visitors – the layout was appalling!  Most of the objects were piled on the shelves with no real sense of order.  And while the Salt Pillar of Heavenly Wrath at least had a small little placard at its base to tell inquisitive admirers about when and where it had been created through Divine Providence.  These objects weren’t even in labeled.

Finally, Sariel’s questing eyes settled on what was wrong.  On one of the shelves, there was a small circle lacking dust, a single little clean spot in the midst of the other discarded objects.  And that little circle hadn’t been there before.

The angel squatted down, bending over until his thin nose was only an inch or so from the little circle of cleanliness.  He took a long sniff, inhaling in through his nostrils until his lungs were full – again, not unlike a bloodhound.

There was definitely a hint of sulfur in the air.  And that meant demons.

Standing back up, Sariel reached down to his belt and grasped the handle of his flaming sword.  As a guard angel, he had been issued the standard angel sidearm.  Of course, it hadn’t left its scabbard a single time before this in the course of his job, and he had to grunt and yank at it a bit before it finally slid free.  But it still sprang into flaming life as he drew it out, blazing up in a plethora of red and orange.

Sariel grinned.  This was his chance to prove himself.  He was finally going to get to go after a demon!

But as he dashed up and down the aisles, he saw no sign of any demonic presence.  His nose told him that there had definitely been a demon at the site of the missing artifact.  But it must have simply popped in, snatched the device, and immediately leapt back out.  Sariel had missed his chance to finally try out his smiting skills.

As quickly as his good mood had set in, the pleasant feelings vanished.  The tip of Sariel’s flaming sword dropped back down to the ground, leaving a small char mark on the floor of the Vault.  This meant that Sariel had failed in his guard duties.  And now he would have to report to Razakael that a demon had managed to make off with an artifact.

What had the demon felt was worth stealing, anyway?  Sariel turned his attention back to the little circle, trying to recall what had sat there.  Slowly, his mind filled in a picture of a little disc, deeply tarnished and covered with small, ornate carvings.  It seemed harmless enough.  There weren’t even any spikes(3).

When Sariel made his report to Razakael, however, his supervisor turned pale, and those silver half-moon glasses slipped all the way off his face face to clatter onto the desk.  “Are you certain?” he gasped, his fingers tightening on the scroll with Sariel’s description of the artifact.  “Are you completely sure that this is what’s missing?”

Sariel nodded, not sure what all the fuss was about.  “It’s just an astral shifting device, isn’t it?” he asked.  “And I’m sure we’ve tagged its signature.  Can’t we just trace it and get it back?”

Razakael was already clambering up out of his seat.  “No.  Yes.  Maybe.  Look, it’s very important that we recover this immediately!  Do you understand?”

Sariel also stood up, although he wasn’t quite sure why.  He’d never seen his boss so agitated.  “So I should head down and see if I can get this traced?” he asked, unable to keep a note of hope out of his voice.  This would be his first time out of the Vault in millennia, and he was quite looking forward to it.  He had a demon to hunt down, an artifact to retrieve, and a chance for some fresh air!  He should have let a demon come in and snatch something centuries ago.

Before he could move towards the exit, however, Razakael shook his head.  “This is bigger than you, now,” he said.  “You’re going to follow me.  We have to call in a strike team.  This is way beyond what either of us can handle.”

This sounded serious.  “This artifact,” Sariel asked, as he followed his boss out of his office and along the white corridors of Heaven.  “It’s important?  Dangerous?”

Razakael nodded.  “Oh yes,” he replied.  “More than you can imagine.”

*

(1) Given that these devices were illegal, Sariel was never quite sure why they were being displayed in the Vaults of Heaven, and not simply destroyed.  He supposed that perhaps they were intended to impart some sort of lesson.  They were not a popular exhibit.

(2) Having been stuck on guard duty in the Vaults of Heaven for the last few millenia, Sariel didn’t know what a bloodhound was.  Even if he did, he would have been very offended by this comparison.  Despite his objections, however, it was an apt comparison.

(3) Most of these artifacts had been created by demons, attempting to find a way to break into Heaven for some underhanded scheme.  In the mind of a demon, everything was made more ferocious through the addition of spikes.  The sight of a demonic toilet was enough to give anyone nightmares.

Ambition, Part II

Continued from part I.

Azrael stood up, gripping his cup of pale, sugary coffee.  He slid over the barrier between the booths, dropping into the seat opposite the mousy-looking salesman at the next table.  The man glanced up as the newcomer slid into his booth at the diner, but he didn’t seem to be unduly surprised or put off.

As the angel leaned forward to stare into the man’s eyes, searching for some sign of what might be lacking, Mephistopheles sauntered around and slipped into the seat next to the salesman.  The waitress, noticing that her two customers had changed tables, came over and dropped the devil’s plate of greasy meat in front of him.

“Hello there,” the angel ventured, speaking to the man as if he was a small child.  “What’s your name?”

The man looked back at the angel without much interest.  “Arthur,” he replied.

“Hello, Arthur.  And what do you do?”

The man gave a shrug.  “I sell insurance,” he responded.  Azrael waited politely for the rest of the speech, but nothing more was forthcoming.

The angel’s eyebrows dropped down.  Now that wasn’t right.  One of the most defining qualities of any insurance salesman is their insistence that, no matter how much insurance you might have, you always need more.  So to not be immediately deluged with “one low price” offers was more than a little surprising.

“You know, I don’t happen to have any insurance,” the angel ventured, poking the bear.  He kept on peering closely at the man as he waited for some sort of response.  Nothing seemed to be coming out of the man’s mouth, however.  He just nodded vaguely and continued gazing straight ahead.

Next to the man, Mephistopheles had managed to get his hands around the large, meaty burger that had been brought to him.  He took a big bite, chewing with obvious relish and ignoring the little flecks of mush that flew from his lips.  “Weird, ain’t he?” he asked with enjoyment.

“You definitely took something from him,” Azrael agreed.  He turned his attention back to the man.  “Arthur, did you know that I’m a genie?  I’m here to grant you one wish!  Anything you want!”

Arthur blinked a couple times.  “I could maybe go for some cheese balls,” he spoke up.

Azrael’s eyes narrowed.  “I just gave you a wish for anything,” he repeated in tones of mingled disbelief and righteous anger, “and you want to wish for some cheese balls?”

“Maybe some crisps,” Arthur ventured.

The angel’s hand twitched as it wrapped around his coffee cup.  He took a long drink, steadying his nerves, and then turned to Mephistopheles.  “You took his ambition, his drive,” he told Mephistopheles.  “The poor guy’s a husk.”

“Lucky guess,” the devil said through his mouthful of food, but he raised one of his greasy hands and snapped his fingers.  Another little cloud of smoke burst around Arthur’s head, and he blinked a few times and looked around, as if seeing the other visitors at his table for the first time.

“Oh, hello there!” he commented to the angel and the devil.  “Didn’t see you folks sit down.  Now, are you totally satisfied with your current insurance?”

*

Instead of answering, the devil and the angel simply stood up and walked back to their table.  Arthur watched them go, a slightly crestfallen look on his face, before he was briefly distracted by something flitting in front of his face.  When he pulled his eyes back to the two retreating figures, he couldn’t remember why he’d been looking at them in the first place.

“I liked him better without any ambition,” Mephistopheles complained.

“I know, I know,” Azrael comforted him, patting the devil on the shoulder of his suit.  The fallen angel felt slightly greasy, but the angel resisted the temptation to wipe his fingers off.  “But you lost, so you have to pay for the meal.  Rules are rules.”

Mephistopheles nodded, and tossed a couple heavy gold coins onto the table with a clink.  The waitress came by, scooped them off the table without stopping, and made it several steps before she stopped and looked down at her hands with a confused expression.

“But next time,” the devil insisted.  “I’ll get you on the next round!”

Azrael just lifted his coffee cup to his lips for another sip.  The sunshine was streaming into the windows.  He leaned back in the booth, savoring the moment.

Ambition, Part I

Azrael slid into the seat in the diner, waved his hand vaguely towards a waitress to put the idea into her mind to bring him some coffee, and began struggling out of his overcoat.  Just as he’d known, Mephistopheles was late.  The angel had even done his best to move slowly, to not rush to get to the diner on time.  Angels have a hard time violating social protocols, however, even when they’re trying to do so, and Azrael had still ended up walking into the little restaurant exactly on time.

The waitress arrived with the coffee, and she placed it in front of him with a rusty smile.  The angel nodded back politely and began adding his generous rations of cream and sugar.  Twice, he had to pour a little of the coffee out to make room; he guiltily opened up a tiny dimensional pocket to hold the excess liquid.  No sense in making a mess.

Once the liquid in his cup was a light brown in color and a thick sludge of sugar covered the bottom, Azrael raised it to his lips with a satisfied sigh.  And of course, that was the moment that Mephistopheles chose.

The devil came barging in, kicking the door open in front of him with a clatter.  He barreled across the diner, pulling off his coat to reveal the ill-fitting suit beneath, and plopped down into the booth opposite Azrael.  He grinned, showing off his tombstones of teeth.

Azrael glanced up at the clock.  “Only eight minutes late,” he commented.  “You’re getting better.”

Mephistopheles just countered this with a glare.  The waitress, alerted by the man’s banging entrance that he was probably an important person, wandered over with a menu.  Temporarily distracted by this, Mephistopheles quickly leafed through it and ordered something with triple bacon.

“I really didn’t even need to bother showing up,” Mephistopheles complained after he had placed his order.  “Pretty thin itinerary for today.  It’s only because we’ve been meeting for the last couple thousand years at this place that I even bothered to come.”

This put a grin on Azrael’s face.  The devil would never admit it, but Azrael knew that he had grown fond of having some company to chat with.  “Well then, we can just talk,” he offered.  “There’s always time for a relaxed debate.”

The fallen angel rolled his eyes, but his attention was diverted as the door to the diner opened again.  A man came wandering in, looking around with his footsteps a little uncertain.  He hovered at the entrance for a minute, but eventually made up his mind and settled into the booth next to Azrael and Mephistopheles.  He had the vague, mousy, slightly worried look of a home insurance salesman.

Mephistopheles jerked his head back to indicate the newcomer.  “Shall we play a game?” he asked, waggling his eyebrows.

Azrael groaned, but he didn’t say no.  “What are you thinking?” he asked.  “Sodomite?  Whose Claim?  Judgment Day?”

“You know that all of those games are basically the same thing,” Mephistopheles pointed out.  “In fact, every game we have is the same.  I try and ruin him, you try and save him.  Just once, couldn’t we play something different?  Like horseshoes, or Mousetrap?”

“Does that mean you don’t want to play?”

“Now, I didn’t say that!” the devil countered.  “Here, I’ll tell you what.  I’ve got a twist.  I’ll strip some quality out of him, and you try and figure out what it is!  Guess it right, he gets it back.  Deal?”

Azrael looked shocked.  “Of course not!”

“Too late,” Mephistopheles said.  “I’m doing it anyway.”  And the devil snapped his fingers, and a puff of smoke momentarily surrounded the insurance salesman’s head…

Azrael & Mephistopheles, part II

At this comment, the devil took another large drink.  “Shit,” he said with feeling.  “That one was actually on us.”

Azrael raised an eyebrow.  It was rare to see any demon, much less a Lord of Hell, accept responsibility for any wrongdoing, however small.  “Care to elaborate?” he asked.

Mephistopheles’ drink was nearly empty, and a cherub scurried over to retrieve the glass and bring him a new drink.  As soon as the new frosted glass was in his perfectly manicured hand, he took a pull and consumed more than a third.  “We were testing out some new portal systems,” he finally said.  “Larger openings.  Armageddon’s coming, you know.  Gotta figure out how to move our troops around.”

“And what, you just left one of these things open?” Azrael picked up, aghast.  “You figured that no one would stumble upon a literal portal to Hell?  What if one of their satellites spotted it!?”

“It’s cloaked!  Give us some credit!” Mephistopheles interjected.  “And we had it over a mile up in the air.  Who’s going to ever bump into that?”

Azrael rolled his eyes.  “Someone sure did,” he muttered under his breath.

“Listen, we’re on damage control,” Mephistopheles insisted.  “We’ve already knocked together a mock-up, dropped it at the bottom of the ocean, and our people at the news networks are pushing towards it.  This whole thing will blow over.”

“A mock-up?  What happened to the actual plane?”

Mephistopheles rubbed his face with one hand.  “The thing crashed right through our invasion launch cavern and ended up taking out Beezlebub’s summer palace,” he complained.  “Now we’ve got a metal tail sticking out of his lava fountain, slaves working around the clock to repair the damage, and a whole bunch of Buddhist souls from on board that we can’t get rid of.”

This opened up a whole new debacle.  From an inside breast pocket, Azrael withdrew an elegant fountain pen and inscribed a few notes on the scroll.  “We can probably get in touch with Hotei.  That chubby excuse for a god can probably pull away from his eternal buffet long enough to do something.”

“Please,” Mephistopheles replied sincerely.  There was a definite advantage to this face-to-face meeting between the archangels and the Lords of Hell; while it took some humility, things certainly got done a lot faster than through the normal bureaucratic channels.

The archangel’s snifter of scotch was nearly gone.  He glanced down at the list on his lap.  “Well, there’s just that last item that we tabled from before,” he said.  “We need to take some action about that.”

“How long has this thing been tabled for?  It’s been a while, hasn’t it?” asked Mephistopheles.

Azrael had to quickly count on his fingers.  “Two millenia?  Might have been a little longer.”

“Ugh,” the devil groaned.  “Refresher?”

The archangel disliked flashy magic, but he spun his pen in a slow circle over the scroll, making the words change beneath the ink nub.  “Looks like we had some guy proclaim himself a god,” he read off.  “Whole bunch of trouble went down, we both slipped up, and the aftershocks of all of this has been causing ripples and problems all over.”

Mephistopheles considered this for a few minutes, and then took a contemplative drink.  “Well, my drink is almost gone, and these stupid bodies can’t hold a buzz,” he complained.  “We’ve tabled this for a couple millenia, and nothing’s fallen apart yet.”

Azrael nodded.  “Move to table?”

“Move to table.”

The angel rose up from his seat, stretching out his limbs.  “Ugh.  I can’t wait to get out of this body.”  He tossed back the last of his scotch, tossing the glass back down onto a table.

One of the cherubs came up to the archangel, bobbing at his elbow.  “Sir, the bill?”

With distaste, Azrael turned and glared at the little angel.  “Are you kidding me?” he thundered.  “Do you know who I am?  We made this whole thing on another plane, just for meetings.  What in the world do you need money for??”

The little cherub looked uncertain, but he stood his ground.  “Sorry sir, but not money – karma,” he insisted.  “We have to pay the karmic balance for the drinks, sir.”

Azrael was still about to argue, but Mephistopheles snapped his fingers, and a few shining tokens appeared out of thin air and tumbled into the cherub’s outstretched hand.  “I got this one,” the devil commented.  “You can pick up the tab next time.”

Together, the devil and the archangel strolled out of the lounge.  Azrael knew that he should hate this manifestation of evil, but they had been meeting so long, had talked and griped together so long, that he actually felt closer to him than to many of the other angels.  Metatron was an insufferable know-it-all, Gabriel had a frustrating tendency to gloat, and Michael was never able to remove the stick from his ass.  But Mephistopheles’ lack of any respect towards authority was refreshing, a nice change from the stuffy bureaucracy he usually had to face.

“So, meet again in another couple years?” Mephistopheles asked at the door.

“Let’s make it next year,” Azrael replied.  “Follow up on that plane, you know.”

The two men stepped out through the door, out into the nothingness on the other side.  For just a second, both of their bodies were outlined in a glow; Azrael’s figure lit up in white, while Mephistopheles’ shape imploded into blackness.

And then they both were gone.

Azrael & Mephistopheles, part I

Azrael settled into the leather armchair, letting his tired legs stretch out.  Despite the fact that he was a being of pure energy, his stress seemed to manifest itself as a physical strain when he manifested.  And now, as he irritably waited for his drinking companion to arrive, he could already feel his mood fouling.

An attendant was instantly at his shoulder, a shining glass snifter of amber liquid lowered into Azrael’s hand.  The archangel took the glass without sparing a glance to the lesser cherub, who scurried off, and lifted the rim to his lips.  The scotch was perfect, aged and seasoned and infused with a million notes of flavor on the edge of perception.  In Azrael’s mouth, it might as well have been sewage.

The archangel glanced down at his gleaming watch three more times before another visitor entered the lounge.  He knew that Mephistopheles was late; the demon had last wandered around the mortal plane back in the late nineties, when arrogant young kids in freshly tailored business suits ran the corporate world on their own personal clocks.  The fallen angel had picked up more than a touch of that arrogance, as well as a disgusting likeness for energy drinks combined with his alcohol.

When the other man finally strolled in, one hand running up to slick back his greasy black hair, Azrael didn’t bother to hold in his sigh.  “Get lost?” he asked.

The other man didn’t respond right away, settling into his seat opposite the angel and accepting his own drink from another cherub.  “You just have no sense of panache,” he responded between slurps of the fizzy yellow drink.

Azrael disguised his lack of respect with another sip of his scotch.  Fortunately, he knew the devil sitting across from him well, and the archangel could out-wait him every time.  And true to form, Mephistopheles only managed to sit still for a minute or so before he took a deep pull of his disgusting alcoholic energy drink and opened his lips again.

“Okay, let’s get this over with,” the fallen angel announced, sitting back and squirming in his chair.  “I hate having to physically manifest.  This body itches.  What’s on the list for today?”

The archangel raised his hand, and another cherub dropped a scroll into his hand.  He set down his snifter of scotch on the end table next to his seat so that he could pull the ornate scroll open.  “A light load,” he replied, a note of relief creeping into his voice.  “Just three items.  North Korea, something about a missing flight, and that issue that we keep tabling.”

The devil waved his hand in a dismissive manner.  “Ugh, not North Korea again.  What are we even supposed to be doing about it?  None of our operatives are there.”

“Nor ours,” Azrael replied.  “And to be honest, we believed that one of yours was behind the whole debacle going on down there.”

With a snap of his fingers, a long list appeared in smoky red flames in front of Mephistopheles.  He flicked through it with one finger, reading off the names in demonic script.  “Nope, no one there,” he said at length.  “It’s just that dictator they’ve got.  Totally off his rocker.”

“So what should we do?  Lightning bolt?  Column of fire?”

Mephistopheles waggled his fingers noncommittally. “Give him a couple years.  He’ll either come around to your side, or we’ll end up replacing him with someone focused a little more on the religious hellfire.”

“Great.  Next item: we apparently lost a plane…”

The Angels: In a Perfect World…

Coming out of my apartment, I hurried quickly down the street towards my coffee shop of choice, hoping that I had escaped notice.  But I heard the flutter of wings behind me, sounding like a dozen pigeons were descending on my location, and I knew that I had been sighted.

“Hello, my little charge!” Otriel, my guardian angel, greeted me as he alighted on the sidewalk.  “And how are we doing today?  Happier now that I’m here?”

I made sure to turn towards the angel so that he could see me rolling my eyes.  Unfortunately, I wasn’t even sure that he knew what that gesture meant.  “You know, sometimes I like my own time,” I commented, talking under my breath so that the other pedestrians on the sidewalk wouldn’t see me apparently talking to myself.  “Do you really have to drop in every single morning?”

Otriel blinked a couple times.  “I’m your guardian angel!” he replied.  “If I wasn’t here, who would protect you?”

“Protect me from what?” I shot back.  “No one’s attacked me, no big heavy things have fallen on me, and you certainly don’t stop me from making stupid choices!  Not much of a guardian angel!”

Now Otriel was starting to look a little hurt.  Good.  “But nothing bad has happened to you!” he insisted.  “That wouldn’t be true if I wasn’t here!  I think.”

I had to fight the urge to throw my hands up in the air.  How had I managed to be stuck with the guardian angel who didn’t have a clue on how to do his job?  “Plenty bad has happened to me!” I exclaimed.  “Aren’t you supposed to be, like, making my world perfect or something?”

“Actually,” the angel remarked, “we tried that once.”

“Tried what?”

“Tried a perfect world.  And I have to tell you, it ended up taking a lot of time, causing a ton of headaches upstairs with my bosses, and really just didn’t come together that well.”

Dammit.  The angel had managed to pique my interest.  “Okay,” I let on cautiously, turning into the coffee shop and joining the back of the long line that had already formed.  The angel stood next to me.  I never understood how people didn’t run into his big, white feathered wings, but they somehow instinctively walked around them without realizing.  “What do you mean?”

Otriel smirked at me.  He knew that I was curious and couldn’t stop myself from asking.  “Point out something that could be fixed,” he said.

I looked around.  “Okay, well, how about this?  This coffee line always takes forever.”

Otriel leaned in towards me to point over my shoulder up towards the barista, a young girl currently looking flustered.  “That’s Ellen.  She works two jobs to put herself through college.  If she was fired for a faster helper, she would experience a lot more tragedy than you’re going through waiting for your coffee.”

I shrugged off this setback.  “Fine.  How about that kid that was killed in the hit-and-run?  It was on the news the other night.  That doesn’t seem like something that should happen in a perfect world.”

The angel standing beside me twirled his fingers, and a thick manila folder appeared out of the air and fell into his hands.  “Let’s see,” he commented, licking his forefinger and flipping the folder open.  “Ah.  Bobby Simmons.  Well, first off, the man that hit him, Ernest Fitzhugh, was falling apart.  If he hadn’t gotten into this accident, he would have gone on to inflict more harm throughout his life in countless other ways.  And Bobby, if he had lived, would have grown bitter and resentful and ended up drunk and abusive.”

I shook my head as Otriel snapped the folder shut and it vanished from his hands, back to wherever it had originated.  “You can say things like that about any tragedy, claiming that it could have been worse,” I insisted.  “That doesn’t prove that you can’t have a perfect world.”

“Look, I can’t prove it without some seven-dimensional math,” Otriel said, his voice maddeningly calm.  “But the higher-ups decided that, instead of making everything perfect, they’d focus on the little things.”

I quirked my eyebrows at him.  “Here, I’ll show you,” the angel went on.

By this point, we had reached the front of the line.  I gave my order to the girl behind the counter.  “Thanks, Ellen,” I said when she handed it to me, and turned away before she could ask how I knew her name.

As I headed over to the station with cream and sugar, Otriel pointed at the cup.  “No, wait a second,” he said.  “Try it now.  Just take a sip.”

Looking unsure, I lifted the cup up to my lips and sucked a few drops up through the plastic lid.  To my amazement, it was perfectly balanced.  “Hey, it’s perfect!” I exclaimed in surprise.

“There you go,” the angel replied.  “Perfect world?  Not feasible.  But we can make sure you get a perfect cup of coffee every now and then.  And is that really such a bad thing to settle for?”

The Angels: Cold-blooded humans?

I stepped out into the fresh sunlight, smiling and tilting back my head as I felt the light warm my exposed skin.  “Oh, this feels good,” I commented out loud, luxuriating in the light.

Behind me, I heard Otriel clear his throat.  “You know, we tossed around the idea of making humans cold-blooded for a while,” he commented.

I spun around, opening my eyes again to stare at my guardian angel.  “Wait, really?” I asked.  “Aren’t we supposed to be made in God’s image?”

Otriel snorted at this.  “Really?” he asked, lifting one eyebrow.  “God made everything in the universe, and can create anything you can imagine and more.  You really think his true form is limited to a bag of fleshy meat?”

I waved off this comment.  Otriel had never quite mastered the ability to understand the impact of snide remarks.  “Cold-blooded, huh?” I said, pulling the conversation back a step.  “So what, like lizards?  We’d have to carry around heat lamps if we wanted to work indoors?”

“Or spend a lot more money on heating, I suppose,” the angel remarked.  “To be honest, it was one of those ideas that always pops up at the eleventh hour of brainstorming, you know?  When the coffee’s run out and everyone just wants to go home.”

I nodded.  I definitely knew that moment.  “I’m glad we dodged that little addition,” I said with feeling.  The sunlight was still warm, but I decided that it was time to start walking down the street.

As always, my guardian angel floated along, just above my right shoulder.  “Of course, the changes to ears and noses were thought of at that same time, and those went through,” he said.

“Wait, what?  What about our noses and ears?”

“Oh, they keep growing!” Otriel pointed out, a hint of surprise in his tone.  “Yeah, even I don’t remember the reasoning behind that, but it sounded great at the time.  So we pushed that through, the design went gold, and we all took a couple millenia of vacation time while the administrators bickered over budget costs.”

My hand had already rose to self-consciously rub at my schnoz.  “This thing’s going to keep growing larger?” I repeated in shock.

“Oh yeah,” Otriel chuckled.  “That’s the best way to spot age on you humans, I’m convinced.  Like counting rings on a tree.  Just check the ear diameter.”

That was enough conversation with my little guardian angel, I decided.  I lengthened my stride, hurrying along the sidewalk.  I heard a faint voice squawking as the little angel had to work his wings to keep up, but I just grinned to myself.  Serves him right, I thought to myself with just a hint of vindictiveness.

The Angel on the Train, Part II

Continued from Part I, here.

“Angel?” the punk repeated slowly, turning to join the rest of us in staring at the young man in the polo.

We all watched, confused, as the young man’s shoulders slumped.  He bent down to one side, fiddling with a shoulder bag, and then withdrew a brightly glowing circle.  At first, I guessed that it had to be some sort of glow stick, joined to make a ring, but it was far too bright.

The young man raised the glowing ring up above his head, holding it in the air about three inches above his short, bed-head styled hair.  He released the ring, and the other members of the train car let out a soft but still audible gasp as it hung in the air, bobbing slightly as the young man below it shifted.

Halo affixed, he then moved forward, taking a seat dejectedly on the steps going up to the car’s slightly higher seats.  “Yeah, angel,” he said hopelessly.  “Guardian angel, for what it’s worth.  Not much.  Man, a couple months ago I was still in the reaping division!”

The rest of us exchanged glances.  Finally, since no one else seemed to be willing to make the move, I stepped up to the plate.  “So, angels are real?” I asked.  “God, the devil, all of that stuff?  It really exists?”

The angel glanced up at me.  “Of course!” he replied.  “Well, I mean, as far as I know.”

“You don’t actually know?”

He shook his head.  “Nah.  It’s like in that one movie, with Matt Damon, right?”

“The Bourne Identity?”  the punk offered.

The angel started to nod, but then paused.  “Maybe?  In any case, I haven’t ever met God or Lucifer myself.  Way too many layers of bureaucracy in the way.  But I’ve heard from folks who say that they know other folks who have seen them, so I’m pretty sure that they exist.”

After this little speech, the angel seemed to lapse off into dejected silence.  The old woman sitting in the handicapped seating area leaned forward and poked him with her cane.  “What happens to us after we die?” she demanded.

The angel looked up as she continued to jab him in the arm with her cane.  “Hey, not my department,” he shot back.  “Besides, you’ve got nearly half a year till you have to worry about it, so calm down.”

After a moment to think through the meaning of this, the old woman squawked wordlessly, and leapt up off her seat.  She scurried to the opposite end of the train car, from where she focused on shooting the evil eye at the angel.  He appeared not to notice, once again drooping his head down between his shoulders.  His halo seemed to dim sadly.

Unexpectedly, I felt a surge of pity.  I got up out of my seat, slowly moving closer to the angel until I could pat him sympathetically on the shoulder.  “There, there,” I murmured, not quite sure what to say.  “Things will work out.”

More hands joined mine on the angel’s shoulders and back.  I glanced up, to find that the other passengers of the train had also come forward to provide comfort.  “Listen,” wheezed the older man who had been sitting next to me.  “Just when things get dark, that’s when you have to pull up hardest, because something better’s about to come along.”

The middle-aged woman nodded.  “He’s right,” she agreed.  “You’re still young, you’ve got your health, and you’ve got a job.  Plenty of time to figure things out.”

The punk kid, standing behind the angel, gave him a soft punch in the shoulder.  “Look, screw my date,” he said.  “She was kind of a jerk anyway.”

As we continued to provide soft words of encouragement, the angel shakily made his way back up to his feet.  Once he was standing, we all felt a jerk beneath us, as the train started rolling again.  In less than a minute, we were pulling into the next station.

The guardian angel looked around at all of us.  “Listen, thank you,” he said, his voice earnest but sounding as if it was about to break.  “You’re all wonderful people, and this is why my job isn’t quite as bad as it could be.”

He headed for the doors, but paused, glancing back at the old woman, who was still glaring at him.  “Listen, I didn’t mean that ‘six months’ thing!” he yelled.  “That was a little human of me, that’s all!”

And with that, he was gone.  To be honest, I still haven’t quite figured out what to make of the whole event.  I was a few minutes late to work, but no one noticed.  And I was certainly nicer to people for the rest of the day.  A couple choice curse words aren’t worth going to Hell, you know?

The Angel on the Train, Part I

Listen.  You ever have one of those, how can I call it, “spontaneous conversations”?  Know what I mean?  When you’re sitting with a group of strangers, nobody knows each other, and then by the end of a half hour you’re all chatting like you’ve been mates for years.  They don’t happen often, but when they do, it’s great.  Even if you all never see each other again, it’s a little glimpse into someone else’s life.

Anyway, I had one of those today.  And man, was this one a doozie.

I had gotten onto the subway, off on my usual forty-minute commute downtown.  It’s a Thursday, which I personally consider to be the worst day of the week.  It’s day four, the week is dragging along, but you still don’t quite yet have the weekend to look forward to yet.  Everyone’s grumpy and short-tempered on Thursdays.

I got onto the train with no problems, taking a seat between some young punk, dressed in a leather jacket covered in patches and sporting purple and black spiked hair, and an older man with a thin shock of white hair behind his ears.  Both of them begrudgingly made room for me, just one more middle-aged guy in a business suit, headed off to a long day’s work in a stuffy office somewhere.

About fifteen minutes later, however, stuck halfway between a couple of stations, the train began to unexpectedly slow down.  We all glanced up from our distractions.  I had been leafing through a couple financial documents without much interest, but now looked up, as did the other passengers.  I took this chance to glance around.

For a weekday morning, my compartment was surprisingly empty.  Aside from the young punk and the old man, there was also a brown-haired woman who looked to be about my age, similarly dressed in a pantsuit.  A young man, probably in his mid to late twenties, was lounging across a seat, dressed in slacks and a polo.  A very old woman was sitting uncomfortably in the handicapped seats, a cane leaning against the plastic next to her.  As the car slowed down, coming to a stop in the darkness, they all looked up, unsure of what was happening.

A moment later, we heard the metallic rattle of the PA system.  “Sorry, folks, but it looks like there’s a bit of traffic up on the station ahead,” came an indeterminate male voice, not sounding very sorry at all.  “We’ll be sitting here a few minutes.”  Click.  The voice ended without offering any further details.

“Great.  Now I’m going to be late.  Just frickin’ great.”  To my surprise, this loud complaint was voiced sourly by the old woman, still rocking slightly on the bench.

“You?  Last week, my boss caught me sneaking in late.”  The woman who looked about my age was speaking.  “If he catches me late again, I’m going to be fired.  Fired!  Can you imagine finding another job?  In this economy?”  Her voice was rising, beginning to approach panic.  The young man in the slacks and polo leaned forward and gave her an uncomfortable pat on the shoulder.

“So what?  I’m gonna be late for my date!” shot back the punk kid with the brightly colored hair.  He caught me rolling my eyes, and withdrew slightly.  “Matters to me,” he muttered to himself.

“Hey, I’m in just the same situation,” I pointed out, trying to keep my tone reasonable.  “The only thing worse than having to work is being late for work, I’m telling you.”

The older man next to me snorted.  “I’m supposed to be going to see my daughter-in-law for her birthday,” he informed the cabin loudly.  “And she’s going to rip my head off.  She’s never liked me.”

“At least she’ll still be there!” the middle-aged woman yelled.  “I might not have a job to come back to!”

“I’m late for a hospital appointment!” the old woman screeched.

“Screw that!  I’ve already been demoted down to guardian angel, and if I don’t get to my assigned human, I’m going to be busted all the way down to freaking cherub!”

We all turned.  The young man in the slacks and polo was standing up.  As we all stared at him, open-mouthed, he slapped his hands over his mouth, his eyes going wide.

“Angel?” the punk repeated slowly…

Continued here.