gabriel had seen a lot of things since arriving in the good place.
a bottomless frozen yogurt supply? sure. an entire neighborhood of people having existential breakdowns in real time? hilarious. but drunk karaoke on a whim? that was new.
he was nursing a drink (that he absolutely did not pay for) when the poor bastard started belting out a song in what could technically be classified as singing. generously.
gabriel watched with mild amusement, sipping his drink as clark lost his mind over the karaoke machine like a kid discovering santa was real. but then—
“wait, why the fork can’t i say fork?”
ah. now that got his attention.
gabriel’s eyebrows lifted slightly, a slow smirk creeping onto his face. oh, this was good.
“oh, yeah,” he drawled, setting his drink down and leaning back in his chair. “that’s a fun little feature they got here. can’t curse. no f-bombs, no s-bombs, not even a good old-fashioned ‘hell’ if you say it with too much enthusiasm.” he gestured vaguely. “whole place is sanitized like a daytime sitcom.”
his smirk widened as he eyed the mic clark was shoving toward him.
“but, uh—” he clicked his tongue, eyeing the karaoke machine like it might physically assault him. “as much as i respect the, uh… energy you’re bringing to this, i don’t sing.”
a beat. then, because he couldn’t help himself—
“but i’ll absolutely judge your performance.”
"that makes sense. when i was a kid, our teachers used to tell us that if we cussed, god would cry, and that's where rain came from." clark paused thoughtfully. "the god here is probably different from what we were taught, but still... that might be why the rain got really bad sometimes. i used to cuss a lot."
he laughed. "no, you've gotta sing. you know, back home, our uncles would always sing skyline pigeon by elton john, for some reason, whenever we did karaoke. you remind me so much of my uncle, chris." taking a moment to pause, he said, "i'm not sure what it is. your facial features aren't really the same. you're way taller than him. your voice is different. your hair color is maybe a little bit lighter than his." another pause, then a eureka moment. "wait, no, i know why! i'm pretty sure it's the age! you seem like you're the same age as him."
gabriel blinked. once. twice.
he had been fully prepared to tune out whatever theological nonsense was about to come out of clark’s mouth, but then—
“the god here is probably different from what we were taught, but still… that might be why the rain got really bad sometimes. i used to cuss a lot.”
gabriel stared at him, tilting his head slightly like he was waiting for a punchline that never came.
then, after a long, slow sip of his drink—dead serious—
“so what you’re telling me… is that you think god—whoever’s in charge of this place—just, what? cries every time you say ‘fuck’?” he clicked his tongue, shaking his head. “damn. real sensitive guy.”
but clark wasn’t done.
no, clark had now shifted to deeply analyzing gabriel’s entire existence, trying to piece together why he reminded him of some uncle named chris. gabriel watched the mental gymnastics unfold in real-time, expression a mix of mild horror and sheer amusement.
first, it wasn’t the face.
then, it wasn’t the voice.
then, it wasn’t the height.
and then—the eureka moment.
“wait, no, i know why! i’m pretty sure it’s the age! you seem like you’re the same age as him.”
gabriel let out a short, disbelieving laugh, shaking his head.
“man, you just went through every possible reason except the right one—maybe i just remind you of him because i’m also a guy standing in front of you saying words.”
a beat.
then, with a lazy smirk, he leaned in slightly, just to mess with him.
“or, you know. maybe i am your uncle chris. ever think about that?”














