Posted in deadmouth quarry

Deadmouth Quarry Episode 1 part 2

Compared to Hell, Summerville sure was… something.

From the moment Sadie materialized on campus, in her mysterious and illusive way (namely popping up in a crowd and separating from it when she was sure nobody was suspicious), something about the place struck her as off. Everything about the University itself screamed old town, old money, historic district, except for the tall dorm buildings that looked decidedly new. Everything was made of brick and stone, shades of faded red and tan and gray that blended beautifully with the well kept foliage. Trees cast their shade across the quad, the lawns were lush and green between smoothly paved walkways.

Nothing explained the strange, unsettling energy she felt. Like cozying up to Mount Vesuvius shortly before it wiped out Pompeii. She couldn’t shake the feeling that something monumental had happened here. Or maybe would happen. Time was pretty iffy in Hell, and her ability to read it in the living world had gotten a little muddled.

Sadie waited patiently in front of the doors to the student center for her tour guide. She felt convincingly new, her orientation papers in hand (despite not having gone). Apparently some older students had volunteered to give transfers tours; hers, according to her papers, was named Ron Winslow. There was nothing else indicating who this guy was, but she was supposed to meet him here.

Students of all ages bustled through the quad, or sprawled beneath the shade of the trees to beat the cloying heat of August. The anonymity felt like a shield, keeping her from being noticed, from standing out. She hadn’t felt so delightfully invisible in ages. Even with the sunglasses perched on her face, the semi-casual jeans and black tank top, the flannel tied around her waist, her usual piercings. She looked normal. She felt normal. She felt human.

“Miss Sadie Morningstar, I presume?”

Oh, thought Sadie, turning toward the sound of the voice. It was a nice voice— deep, a little raspy, the kind that summoned thoughts of smoking and rockstars and epic guitar solos. There’s a slowness to his speech, too, something just on the seductive side of polite.

It matched the face, she thought mildly, feeling a grin stretch over her own. The man was tall and a little gangly, though there was notable strength to his lean limbs. His curls were dark and had been wrangled, barely, into a bun. Sadie clocked his torn black cargo pants and Ghost band tee and thought, perfect.

“That’s me,” she chirped, pretending not to check Ron Winslow out. “Love the sleeve.” She gestured to his arm, a patchwork of beautiful tattoos.

He glanced at it like he wasn’t sure what she was talking about, and she saw the faint pink flush hit his cheeks. “Oh! Thanks.” He cleared his throat— she saw his dark, nearly black eyes sweep over her, and reminded herself not to preen at the attention— and scratched at the back of his neck, blush deepening slightly. “I’m, uh— I’m Ronnie. Winslow. I’m— a junior. Music major.”

Sadie decided to give the man a break, and put on her sweetest, most innocent smile. It seemed the better choice over hauling him to the nearest dark corner and giving this adorable, painfully awkward dork the blowjob of his life.

At her subtle shift, he seemed to collect himself, and then half bowed, sweeping an arm out toward the quad at large. “I’ll be your humble guide on the tour du Summerville.”

Oh, she was going to eat this man alive.

“I’m excited,” she said, and meant it. For more reason than one.

“Perfect,” Ronnie purred, curving an arm around her shoulders. She felt deliciously small compared to him. “Right this way, Sweetheart.”

Sadie did preen at the nickname. She loved endearments, loved hearing and giving them, loved the inherent bond that came from using them. Ronnie was already shaping up to be one of her favorite people, and she’d known him a grand total of two minutes.

Glancing at her paper, she caught the winky-face that had appeared beside Ronnie’s name, in ink darker than that of the rest of the page, and realized what had happened.

Lucifer, you sly dog.

“You’re a music minor, right?” Ronnie asked sweetly, guiding her toward one of the buildings close to the student center.

“Music and opera, yes,” she said, tilting her face up toward his. “Child psych major.”

“Ah, she’s smart and pretty!”

Oh, he was bold. God, she adored him already. “You sweet talk all your tourists, or am I special?”

Ronnie dramatically clapped a hand to his heart. “You wound me, Sadie! Each tour is unique and custom tailored to the little sheep I herd through the hellish landscape of the University.” Sadie managed not to snort, but it was a close thing. “Besides, I’ve never been assigned to someone with such great taste in music.” He glanced pointedly at the backpack she’d brought with her, and Sadie had to mentally recatalogue what all she’d put on it. Several pins, a few patches. Probably something from Fall Out Boy and Ghost, but also probably things referencing Broadway Musicals, maybe even Disney movies. It really ran the gamut.

“I’m gonna level with you, Ronnie, I have no idea what all is on there, anymore.”

Ronnie, hand to God, giggled. “It’s quite an eclectic assortment, I must say. I don’t think I’ve ever seen Metallica next to The Mummy.”

“Shame,” Sadie drawled, “The Mummy is a masterpiece.”

“Definitely my bisexual awakening movie.” He sent her a sly grin, one that Sadie reciprocated.

“I suppose that’s somewhere on my backpack, too?” She teased.

“Not at all,” he said, though the way his eyes flicked toward her back pretty much confirmed the lie. “It takes one to know one, yeah?”

If Sadie hadn’t known better, she’d think Lucifer had crafted this man with her in mind, solely to reward her for half a millennia of good behavior.

“The music and performing arts building, Sweetheart,” Ronnie said, holding the door open for her.

The day continued like that, the two of them flirting relentlessly while Ronnie showed her the buildings where she’d be spending most of her time. The library and food court were tucked into the student center, half of her minor classes would be in the auditorium and the other half in the music and performing arts building (MAPA, for short, apparently). Her major classes were mostly in the behavioral sciences building. Sadie had forced herself to familiarize herself with Lucifer’s cover story for her, as a transferring junior with her gen-ed classes covered (thank god. She never wanted to take math again). It never came up, but she was ready anyway.

Ronnie talked about extracurriculars and clubs, fun ice-breaking events he was “totally going to check out” with her (she could practically see the sarcasm dripping out of his mouth). By the time they were done with the tour, stopping in front of the dorm building, Sadie had decided she actually liked Ronnie. Not just in the I’m going to fuck this man into the next life way. Though that was definitely still working its way through her mind.

“Here we are, Princess,” he was saying, while Sadie very dutifully pretended not to check out his ass. Kinda flat, but not too bad. Great hips for grabbing. “Centennial East, your new home-sweet-home.”

Sadie hummed appreciatively. The building was taller than the other buildings, and unexpectedly modern, sleek and silvery in a way that stood out against the rest of the campus. She was a little disappointed it wasn’t made of brick, to be honest. “It’s nice living so close to all our classes, yeah?”

“I’m actually a commuter,” Ronnie admitted, running a hand anxiously through his hair, disturbing the already messy bun it was in. “But if you want someone to show you to your classes when term starts up, I’d be happy to meet up with you and… do that.” Sadie watched the moment his brain and his mouth stopped working together, about the same moment she swindled his phone from his hand, opened his contacts, and added herself in.

“There you go, darling,” she said, sending herself a text. She showed him her own phone as it buzzed. “Now we can talk about The Mummy and our embarrassing crushes on Brendan Fraser anytime we want.”

“Nothing embarrassing about wanting a taste of that,” Ronnie teased. “I’d be more embarrassed if I’d had a crush on Benni.”

Benni,” Sadie hissed, eyes narrowed. “Slimy rat bastard. He got what he deserved.”

Ronnie snorted. “Alright, Sweetheart, this is where I leave you.” He swept an arm toward her new front door and gave her the same half bow he’d greeted her with. “It’s been an absolute delight, Sadie, darling.”

“Likewise,” Sadie said, reaching out to touch his arm. “I’ll let you know when I get my schedule. Maybe we can study together. You can make fun of how bad I am at the circle of fifths.”

Ronnie snorted. “You can make fun of my shitty chicken scratch.”

“Count on it.” With that, Sadie sent him a flirty little wave-and-smile combo, and then pulled out her ID and scanned into the dorms. “Bye, Ronnie.”

Posted in deadmouth quarry

Deadmouth Quarry Episode 1 part 1

To be honest, Hell wasn’t all that bad.

Stories about it couldn’t do it justice. They missed the mark by leagues— or maybe they only referred to the places where sinners paid for their mortal crimes, or whatever the current rhetoric was topside. No eternal flames, no arctic tundras, no torture chambers. In actuality, Hell was nothing more than a sprawling metropolis.

It was also Sadie’s home.

There were, of course, the notable differences to the living world; namely, the blood red sun, which stained the sky in watercolors of orange and pink and yellow during the day, like an eternal sunset. At night, the same skies were a deep, velvety purple, swirling with celestial bodies that glittered bright white against it. Streaks of red tore through the fabric of the sky day or night, rain or shine. Sadie had come to know these tears as splits in time, where souls fell to their doom from every universe, every timeline, every reality.

The first time she’d had that particular conversation had given her a headache that had lasted weeks. She hadn’t bothered trying to understand it, afterwards.

To be fair, Sadie had it made: a pretty one bedroom apartment in a skyscraper on the scenic side of town, where she could watch the sunrise in the morning; a cushy job stealing souls for the big man himself; lovers at her beck and call.

After five centuries, Sadie was bored.

Half a millennia of demonic and sexual mayhem would, apparently, do that to a girl. She’d done her world traveling, not to mention her time traveling, spending so much time in the real world she held a record for purged souls. She’d been through a mind-boggling amount of lovers of every gender, honing her skills as a sex-demon and becoming the kind of irresistible creature their species was praised for. She’d even spent several decades just enjoying Hell and all it had to offer— she was so wrapped up in the community, she’d basically become a feature herself.

She was bored out of her mind.

Which led her, of course, to her current position, scrunched into a rolling chair in an elaborate office opposite the Big Man himself. Lucifer watched her spin in the chair with his signature smirk. Like a pet-parent watching their fur baby do something cute and mildly annoying. Which was a fair assessment, as Sadie hadn’t even bothered to announce herself before appearing in his office-slash-throne-room and immediately driving him up a wall.

“You can spin all you like, Sadie, but that won’t help me get you what you want.”

His voice was deep and rich. Once upon a time, Sadie would have found it unbearably attractive— much like all of him, his muscular build, his dark and silky-smooth skin, his mile long jet black hair, those burning red eyes, the horns that stood proudly from his temples. There was more— of course there was— but Sadie could only objectify him for so long before she was struck with an overwhelming sense of that’s my dad. Which wasn’t entirely true; he’d bestowed the mantle of demonhood upon her, but she’d been mortal before. Many Hellish years ago. She’d died mortal, slipped through those mysterious tears in the fabric of Hell’s sky, and landed seething with rage at Lucifer’s feet.

She liked to think she’d been his favorite ever since. Hence the dad feelings.

That in mind, Sadie regarded him as she spun slowly to face him again, the chair’s black leather creaking faintly as she shifted her body in it. “I’m bored,” she told him flatly.

Lucifer snorted.

“Don’t laugh,” Sadie squawked, craning her neck as the chair continued its slow rotation. “Not all of us can be endlessly amused by our demonic offspring and their ridiculous plights! Some of us need more enrichment in our enclosures!”

Sadie.” His tone was firm, but fond. “You don’t need any more enrichment. You desperately need to be socialized.”

Sadie shot him a withering look, which was probably undermined by the fact that she was still spinning like a four year old in his chair. He’d been kind enough not to kick her out of it when he’d caught her, still standing in the middle of his office after passing someone’s judgment. Though she could have done without watching him send some poor soul off to his eternal damnation or whatever. She preferred screams of ecstasy to screams of agony.

Lucifer propped his enormous arms onto his desk, careful not to sink his thick, golden claws into the dark wood. All he’d done so far was cock an eyebrow at her, and Sadie felt quite suddenly like a child throwing a tantrum.

“Fine,” she grumbled, crossing her arms under her breasts. “Maybe I need a little more socialization. But!” She pointed at him, her own black claw glossed like smooth onyx, “I also want to go out and learn again. I need more stimulation for my mind.”

“There it is.” His signature smirk returned, a glimpse of sharp teeth at the corner of it. “You want to go play schoolgirl for a bit.”

Like a cat, Sadie reached out and whacked some of his papers off the edge of his desk. “Don’t be gross. Rephrase that or I’m taking the rest home with me and hiding them under my mattress.”

Lucifer sighed, rolled his burning red eyes, and said, “You missed out on your own college experience, and want to make it up to yourself now. Happy?” Now he had his arms crossed, eyebrow still cocked up halfway to his horn.

Sadie almost stuck her tongue out at him. She hadn’t expressly said she’d wanted to go to college in any of their previous conversations, not that she could recall. But he’d heard her lamenting what she’d missed out on due to her early death, and college had definitely been in there.

At least he hadn’t said high school. Ugh.

“I can’t believe the mattress threat still gets you,” she teased.

“I know what happens on your mattress.”

Ew. Perv.” But Sadie still smiled, finally stopping her restless spinning with one combat boot on his ornately carved desk. If he had any reservations about it, he didn’t voice them. “Alright, Mister-All-Knowing, Lord of Hell, King of Sin—”

“Sadie.”

“— What,” she continued, ignoring his exasperation, “is your ingenious plan to get me out of your admittedly-gorgeous hair? I know you have one already.”

Lucifer sighed, visibly put-upon, even though Sadie knew it was an act. She just waited patiently, smiling cheekily up at him as he picked up what looked like a blank piece of paper and turned it between his fingers thrice. Flames as red as his eyes ripped across the paper, smoldering down to inky stains that melted even further into coherent words. He held the newly formed contract out to her with a flourish, and Sadie’s cheeky smile turned into a feral, fully demonic grin.

She loved getting what she wanted.

There were rules. There were always rules. She’d abide by any and all of them if it meant getting something she wanted— a couple of centuries in the Renaissance era, another few in Ancient Greece, that one stint during the Satanic Panic where she caused such a hysteria she’d gotten yanked back down to Hell several years short of her original timeline. That one, admittedly, she’d broken the rules for, but it had been so funny she couldn’t have helped it if she’d tried.

(Lucifer had forgiven her. He always would, when one of them played with the masses like that. He found it just as funny, if not more so.)

The contract outlined her matriculation and acceptance to Summerville Community College, somewhere in the middle of Ohio. The name etched into the fine print was Sadie Morningstar.

Aww, Dad,” she teased, flicking her eyes up to Lucifer. He snorted. “Should I feel bad about you sending me to Ohio?

“Be glad it wasn’t Alaska,” Lucifer said dryly. With a flick of his wrist, something else appeared in his hand. He presented it to her with the same flourish. “Your student ID.”

Smirking, she took the slim plastic card. She glanced at the little square bearing her own face—

Sadie paused.

She didn’t spend all of her time in her demonic form. It got old, the tail, the claws, the horns, the wings— sometimes she just wanted to feel like a regular person. She knew what her human form looked like, when she used it; the same one she’d had in life, but somehow more. Prettier, she supposed, not in looks, but some other way. A light in her eyes, a glow to her skin, a sweetness to her voice. In the mortal world, she usually changed things up, becoming an amalgamation of all the features that were most aesthetically popular in whatever place and time she visited, layered over her own features.

She frowned at the picture on the ID, though. Because that was her face. Her human face. The one she used here in Hell. The one she’d had in life.

“When are you sending me?” she blurted out.

When Lucifer didn’t immediately answer, she lifted her gaze to his again, finding him watching her patiently. She looked at the contract and the ID again, and gasped.

Fall 2023.

“…But…?” She couldn’t stop staring at the words. At the numbers.

“Yes?” Sadie’s confusion must have shown in the look she gave Lucifer. He nodded, still patient, and said, “You died about four months ago.”

Four months. Four months. Sadie stared at him like he’d grown another head— not the weirdest thing she’d ever seen, actually, but the shock and vague nausea were the same, she figured.

Four months after her death, she’d reappear. Reborn. Renewed. Getting her second chance, even for a short time.

“People will know…?” She hedged. Lucifer shook his head.

“Your rules,” he began, and Sadie blew out a breath.

“Right.”

One golden claw pointed to the word Ohio. “You can’t go home. You can’t visit your old family or friends. I chose a place for you where nobody had connections or desires. You can visit anywhere else, but—” he wiggled his hand back and forth, and Sadie knew what he meant. The magic of the contract would prevent her from ending up somewhere that could compromise it.

“The usual rules apply, too. Don’t get famous in your own body. Try not to get involved with the government, no matter how small a capacity. No public displays of your powers.” That last one, she knew, was only for the age of technology, when people could record and prove what they’d seen.

“I know,” Sadie said, the closest she ever came to agreeing to his terms before she signed his contracts. “Is this how you treat all your kids?”

The jab was meant to be teasing. Or maybe she just wanted to feel special for a moment. She wasn’t sure, but Lucifer’s derisive snort certainly wasn’t one of the expected responses. “You lasted three centuries longer than Nikita before he begged to go home and play in his own timeline.”

Sadie snickered. “Everyone lasts longer than Nikita. Don’t tell him I said that.”

“He doesn’t have your practice or stamina.” Lucifer gave her an indulgent smile, and then waved his hand, his own signature appearing in a graceful scrawl at the bottom of the contract. “You’re all set up in Summerville. Single bedroom so you can sleep in whatever form you please, or not sleep at all. Child psychology major, Music and Opera double minor—”

“You’re actively trying to kill me,” Sadie muttered.

Please,” Lucifer snarked, “your minors will be a breeze and you know it. You’ll have plenty of time to focus on your major between all your singing and songwriting.”

Sadie stuck her tongue out at him. “Alright, Mister don’t get famous.”

“A car will materialize if you need one, but it’s a very walkable little college town. You should be fine unless you want to venture beyond its limits.”

Sadie looked at her face one more time— her face, with her hazel eyes, half hidden behind sultry, thick lashes. Her hair, nearly black and down to her waist, was braided down either side in the picture. She could almost remember putting on that exact smoky, neutral-toned makeup, slipping the silver wing-shaped earrings in, adding the extra piercings into the cartilage of her right ear. The only indication of her usual goth-ish style was her blouse, high necked and long sleeved black lace over a modest black camisole. The very picture of a serious, professional college student.

“Deal,” she said, and her own pretty cursive appeared at the foot of the contract. The paper vanished, and she blew out a breath.

She was going back.