like the holding of hands, like the breaking of glass
read on ao3
Summary:
Aziraphale is alive. Armageddon was stopped. The bookshop was saved. Aziraphale is alive.
Throughout his tenure on Earth, Crowley has found that he greatly enjoys sleep. Heâs learned that itâs nice to have a break from, you know, eternity. But he never knew how much he had come to rely on it until he couldnât sleep through the night without being woken byâ
By the fire.
And it absolutely baffles him. Because Aziraphale is fine. Aziraphale is alive, as he reminds himself every second of every day. Crowley should be fine too. (Except heâs not.)
Authorâs Note:
hey everybody! guess who's still down the good omens hole! it's me. and this one hurts.
please take care reading this one! it involves nightmares, some issues with reality, some suicidal thoughts and very explicit descriptions of panic attacks along with imagery of fire and being burned alive (there's no gore, but again it's rather explicit about the concept) so please be careful if any of this might be a trigger
i've done my best tagging this for those things, but i'm rather new to posting on ao3, so if anyone has any advice on how it could be better tagged so people can navigate their triggers, don't hesitate to let me know!
that said, i'm pretty proud of this one, so please enjoy!
Text:
Crowley canât breathe.
He doesnât necessarily need to breathe, but the impact of the firehose against his chest forces all the air out of his lungs as it knocks him flat on his back.
An ice-cold sensation seeps into his clothes, his skin, his bones, his everything.
But itâs not the water. Itâs something much, much worse.
Aziraphale is dead.
The thought makes his fingers go numb and his head go fuzzy.
He stays on the ground, his face tilted upwards towards the burning pages fluttering through the air like ashen doves. Aziraphaleâs precious books. His misprinted bibles, his prophecies, his poetry. Centuries of collection used as kindling.
But it doesnât matter anyway. Thereâs no one left to miss them.
Aziraphale is dead.
Crowley takes a long, ragged breath, letting the smoke settle deeply into his lungs until it stings something awful. He wants to stay here. He wants to let the fire burn up his corporeal form. He wishes it would take everything else that makes him up with it.
And so it does.
As the flames crawl up his scalp, lick at his sleeves, swallow him up right down to his snakeskin shoes, he doesnât find himself back in Hell. Somewhere, in the depths of his mind, he knows for certain that heâs finally approaching the end. The release.
Crowley will be gone. The world will end. Adam Young will make it so. And that is fine.
As Crowley slips away, heâs thankful.
Because Aziraphale is dead. And life without Aziraphale is no life at all.
But Crowley wakes up.
He bolts upright, half expecting to be met with unbearably humid air thick with the smell of sulfur. The smell of Hell.
Heâs in bed, his entire body is covered in a cold sweat, tears streaming down his face. His breath is coming in shallow gasps as his body tries to hack up the smog that isnât truly there.
He exhales shakily. He has this routine down to a science now.
His clock read 3:36 AM. He shuts his eyes and presses his hands over them tightly.
Aziraphale is alive. Armageddon was stopped. The bookshop was saved. Aziraphale is alive.
He needs to shower. Crowley knows by now that thereâs no use trying to get back to sleep. He could easily rid himself of all the sweat and tears with a single thought, but a cool shower always helps him come back to himself a little easier.
The first time that Crowley had a nightmare about the bookshop, he got violently sick.
It was so vivid, so faithful to the experience he had, that he didnât quite realize what was going on until he was slumped on the tile floor of his bathroom, sobbing and retching into the toilet like some hammered university student. Heâd hoped it was a one-time thing, a fluke brought on by all the recent Armageddon-induced stress.
Itâs been weeks like this.
Throughout his tenure on Earth, Crowley has found that he greatly enjoys sleep. Heâs learned that itâs nice to have a break from, you know, eternity. But he never knew how much he had come to rely on it until he couldnât sleep through the night without being woken byâ
By the fire.
And it absolutely baffles him. Because Aziraphale is fine. Aziraphale is alive, as he reminds himself every second of every day. Crowley should be fine too. (Except heâs not.)
It occurs to him, he should probably reflect a bit on that, as he strips and steps under the cooling spray, but his nightmares leave him too drained to think much of anything other than his new mantra.
Aziraphale is alive. Armageddon was stopped. The bookshop was saved. Aziraphale is alive.
He rests his flushed forehead against the tile.
Aziraphale is alive.
âââââââââ
Aziraphale also canât leave well enough alone.
âRespectfully, Crowley, you look awful.â
âYou say the sweetest things, angel.â
Heâs stopped by the bookshop a few hours prior to their plans to dine at the Ritz, dropping himself onto the sofa with propped his legs up on the arm, his feet dangling over the side. (He visits more often now for the purpose of staying rather than going out. It eases his heart to see the place intact.) Aziraphale has abandoned his finances for the moment to pester Crowley about the dark half-moons heâs sporting under each eye.
He had been fine for a while, but now the lack of sleep is truly taking its toll on him. Heâs the kind of tired that stuffs your head full of cotton and lines your bones with lead. It makes your eyes burn and your feet drag. And as oblivious as the angel can be at times, heâs noticed the recent change in his best friend.
Crowley knows he looks awful, and he knows why he looks awful, but that doesnât mean he has to admit it.
âAre you sleeping, Crowley?â Aziraphale peers at him over his reading specs (that he doesnât need) and furrows his brow.
âDonât worry about me, Aziraphale. I was marathoning Golden Girls all night, had a lovely time.â
âI always like a good chamomile tea in the evening if Iâd like to sleep that night, puts me rightââ
âCome on, I brought this on myself and itâs fine. You can drop it.â
The angel narrows his eyes at him, but abandons the subject for now and turns back to his computer.
Thank GâThank⌠Someone.
So Crowley relaxes into the sofa as Aziraphale babbles on about a lovely new bakery that opened down the block recently, letting the lilting tones of his voice wash over him.
Before he knows it, his eyelids are getting heavy.
He thinks about fighting it, sitting up and listening more closely in the hopes of keeping his exhausted body awake. Surely his falling asleep would only exacerbate Aziraphaleâs worries just as Crowleyâs gotten him to drop the subject.
But heâs just so tired. So he gives in.
Heâs awoken by the sound of crackling flames.
He sits up, his eyes wide. His head still feels thick with sleep, heâs not sure how long heâs been out for.
Heâs still in the bookshop, Aziraphale is still at his desk, chattering away as he works.
But thereâs fire coming up through the floor beneath him.
Hellfire.
âAziraphale, get away from there!â Crowley wants to jump up and pull him away from the flames, but heâs rooted on the spot, unable to move.
Aziraphale turns towards him, entirely unbothered. âWhatever are you talking about?â
The flames snake upwards, slowly engulfing Aziraphale as they go.
Crowley wants to scream and yell and fight. He wants to drag the angel out of the blaze. But his voice is trapped in his throat as if heâs choking on his screams. His muscles refuse to move an inch.
Aziraphaleâs tan trousers and cream-colored jacket turn black as they burn.
The angel doesnât seem bothered by the heat. Heâs looking at Crowley with concern on his face. (Entirely misplaced concern, as Crowley isnât the one whoâs currently being burned alive.)
The heat stings his eyes but he canât look away. He has to sit and watch as the inferno eats his best friend whole.
Aziraphale is dead.
Finally, a scream rips its way out of Crowleyâs throat.
âAziraphale!â
A sharp pain on his face snaps him back into reality.
âCrowley, dear, are you alright?â
Crowleyâs on the ground next to the sofa. As he rolls over, he suspects that he smacked his cheekbone against the floor when he fell. The impactâs left him somewhat dazed as he takes in the bookshop around him, breathing hard.
Thereâs no fire.
Aziraphale is kneeling next to him, looking absolutely distraught. Crowley takes a deep breath.
Aziraphale is alive. Armageddon was stopped. The bookshop was saved. Aziraphale is alive.
âCrowley, what on earth is going on? You were yelling in your sleep. And your cheek! Itâs already bruising. Oh, you poor thing!â The angel reaches for Crowleyâs face to better inspect the bruise, but he flinches away, no matter how badly he craves the grounding touch.
He has to squeeze his eyes shut against Aziraphaleâs devastated expression.
âCrowley, please talk toââ
âI have to go. Iâll take a raincheck on the Ritzsssâ On the Ritz.â
âDonât be ridiculous, this isâ Crowley, stop!â
He canât do this. He scrambles to his feet, startling Aziraphale enough to fall backward from where heâs crouched on the floor. The longer he looks at Aziraphale, the more vividly he remembers the sight of him ablaze. Dead.
So Crowley does what he does best. He runs away.
âââââââââ
Heâs in the Bentley, breaking every traffic law known to man as he speeds back to his flat.
Heâs tripping up the stairs, he doesnât trust his hands not to shake as he unlocks the door, so he opens it with a thought.
He slams it shut and collapses against it, slapping a hand over his mouth to muffle his sobs and squeezing his eyes shut to keep the tears inside. And it hurts.
God above, does it hurt.
Itâs a feeling that starts deep in his chest, a pressure that grows and grows until it permeates not just his body but his being, everything that makes Crowley, Crowley. It makes his lungs shudder, his stomach turn. His fingers go numb and his vision goes spotty. It makes his head spin and his heart ache. The worst part about it is that it just doesnât make sense because Aziraphale is fine.
Aziraphale is alive. Armageddon was stopped. The bookshop was saved. Aziraphale is alive.
Aziraphale is alive. Aziraphale is alive. Aziraphale is alive.
He wants it tattooed on the insides of his eyelids. So that even if he doesnât know anything else, even if he doesnât know himself, at least he knows that Aziraphale is alive.
Because since that day, the fear has been ingrained in him like a program that canât be rewritten, the fear that Aziraphale isâ
Is Gone.
Just the thought drives all the air out of his lungs. He feels somewhat faint. His head is pounding. Pounding. Pounding⌠On the door?
He should yell at whoever it is to go away. Or open it. He should do something, anything, but he just canât. Heâs gasping desperately for air and his skin feels too tight. Itâs as if there's a spring wrapped around him coiling tighter and tighter until heâs crushed in its center.
He can distantly hear someone speaking. Itâs as if heâs underwater. Drowning. Sinking down, down, down.
The water runs down over his shoulders. Itâs almost soothing.
Wrong. Not water. Hands.
Hands.
Crowley takes a slow, ragged breath. The smog and confusion start to clear from his brain. He takes stock of himself: Heâs curled into a ball on the floor, knees up against his chest, face pressed tightly down against them, arms wound over his head. Somewhere between the bookshop and his flat heâs lost his sunglasses. His back is up against the inside of his front door. There are hands on his shoulders and a voice speaking in soothing tones. Thereâs an urgency to the voice, though. A fear. A fear that the voiceâs owner trying and failing to conceal.
Crowley exhales. Lifts his head and opens his eyes.
Aziraphale.
ââthatâs better, isnât it? There you are, just keep breathing with me, just a little bit slower, love, breathe with me. Youâre in your flat, and Iâm here with you. Iâm not going anywhere, just watch me and breathe, darlingââ
Itâs a steady stream of sweet nothings and nonsense, but itâs steady so Crowley hangs onto it with all his might.
He keeps his gaze locked on Aziraphaleâs and he breathes. They breathe.
Aziraphale is alive.
Crowleyâs not sure how long they stay there, him curled up in a ball and Aziraphale cross-legged in front of him, but he feels the some of the tension drain out of his body, his head lolling to one side as his exhaustion catches up with him once again.
Aziraphale takes both of his hands. âCrowley, will you please tell me whatâs wrong?â
His voice is solemn and deep in a way that it so rarely is. Crowley sighs, his eyes fluttering shut as he nods. He knows that this is a conversation that needs to happen, but it doesnât make it any less difficult.
Crowley refuses to take his eyes off of his toes as he concedes, âIâve been having these⌠dreamsââ Oh, he hates how small his voice sounds. ââNightmares, I suppose, is the more accurate description.â
When he doesnât continue, Aziraphale nudges him a little further. âAnd what happens? In these nightmares?â
âWell, they vary, from time to time, but thereâsââ His voice catches in his throat. Heâs already worked up again at just the thought, at the way Aziraphale looks so anguished, so he drops his forehead to his knees once again, squeezing his eyes shut and focusing on the grounding feeling of Aziraphaleâs hands in his. His voice escapes as a strangled croak once he forces himself to continue. âBut in every single one, you die Aziraphale. You burn just likeâ Just like I thought you did, that day in the bookshop. You burn, and youâre dead, and Iâm all alone and itâsââ His throat closes up and he canât continue. There are tears gathering in his eyes again. Aziraphaleâs hands tighten around his before disappearing.
Crowley panics for a moment, eyes flying opening as he picks up his head, fearing the worst. But Aziraphale is only shifting to sit by his side instead, wrapping his arms around Crowleyâs slight frame and drawing him close so that he can rest his head against the angelâs chest. Crowley spares a thought that heâll ruin Aziraphaleâs shirt and vest with his snot and tears but then gentle fingers are carding through his hair and he really canât be bothered.
âListen, Crowley, right there. You can hear my heart beating,â He could. He could feel it, too, a gentle thudding sensation against his cheek. âItâs symbolic more than anything else, really, but itâs proof. Iâm here and Iâm not leaving you, Crowley. Iâm here, Iâm alive and so are you.â
Aziraphale is alive and so am I.
The dam breaks and Crowley weeps.
But itâs different than before. Itâs not out of terror, or loss, or the sensation of hot smoke in his face as everything burns down before his eyes. For the first time since Armageddon, a sensation of catharsis sweeps over him as he cries. He cries for little Adam and his friends, swept up in something so much bigger than themselves, he cries for Anathema and Newt, the weight of the world upon their shoulders. He cries for Aziraphale, so good and human and ineffable.
And for once, Crowley cries for himself. Because heâs literally been dragged to Hell and back again and heâs tired. Tired of the overarching plans and orders and the bigness of it all when thereâs so much pleasure to be found in the smallness. The smallness of people and their cups of tea and television programs and postcards and fancy wines and CDs. The smallness of the smile thrown his way when heâs said something witty, pink flustered cheeks, and the feeling of soft hands in his.
Crowley trembles and wails and itâs fine because now thereâs someone there to hold him.
Soft kisses in his hair and on his forehead, fingertips wiping away his tears, and a soothing hand up and down his spine.
Eventually, his sobs subside and they stay curled up against the door as Crowley sniffles against Aziraphaleâs chest.
âHow long has this been going on?â Aziraphale asks quietly, continuing his comforting touches.
âSince that day.â
âOh, love.â The angel sighs and rests his cheek against the crown of Crowleyâs head. âGosh, I shouldâve noticedââ
âYou did notice. And I was doing everything in my power to hide it from you.â
âStill. I hate the idea of you going through that on your own,â Aziraphale lifts his head and shifts himself into Crowleyâs eyeline, purposefully meeting his eyes. âPlease come to me, the next time your experiencing something like that. Youâre not a burden, itâs not a difficulty. I want to be there for you, and Iâd love it if youâd let me.â
Crowley nods and places a hand on Aziraphaleâs cheek, drawing him in for a chaste kiss.
Thank you for being here when I need you. I love you.
Aziraphale kisses him back, placing his hand over Crowleyâs.
I love you, too. Iâll always be here.
âWell, I think itâs about time we get you to bed.â
âWill you stay with me, angel?â
âAlways.â














