Entry tags:
Birthday Party for Laura/X-23
It's a pretty low-key party, all things considered, and not significantly different than the one Parker or Meg would have thrown in a dorm room for a friend at home, not-exactly-traditional menu not withstanding.
There's music, low enough to talk over (and maybe with a little more folk in the mix than one expects to find a party). Balloons and streamers in purple and blue and red. A place to leave presents. People to meet or catch up with.
And, most importantly, a chance to wish X-23 (or Laura) a very happy birthday.
There's music, low enough to talk over (and maybe with a little more folk in the mix than one expects to find a party). Balloons and streamers in purple and blue and red. A place to leave presents. People to meet or catch up with.
And, most importantly, a chance to wish X-23 (or Laura) a very happy birthday.

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"It's about 700 kilometres from home to university. So . . . that's about 420 miles."
(Closer to 435, really, but the 3/5 rule is handy for estimating.)
"That's a much more daunting distance without trains and cars and planes, though."
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Castiel nods.
"I find it sometimes makes people underestimate how vast their world still is. With all of its uncharted corners."
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"When you were on Earth, did you go all over, or mostly stay in one place?"
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"There is work to do the world over."
"And," he adds, "I have watched many places that I have not walked."
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She smiles.
"And now you're here. And there are balloons. And root beer floats."
New corners all the time.
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He suspects that his Father had been having a whimsical sort of day when he created Milliways.
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"And yet, the more often I visit it, the more I can see the purpose it serves."
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And then nods.
"I think . . . I can see that."
At least, she thinks she can see the purpose it serves for her.
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Castiel ponders how to put what he is thinking into words.
"It provides a wider perspective. Even for angels."
"It allows people to experience things that would otherwise be impossible. And learn to accept them."
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"Like . . . like what's normal and what's strange."
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There were, at the end of the day, few things that Castiel found strange beyond being curiosities.
But he has something of a head start on Meg.
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Because, if she's being honest, oh, yes.
"But . . . I meant more that I found that my strange was someone else's normal, and vice versa."
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"Perhaps we are all sent here to learn things."
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She smiles.
"I like that better, as an explanation, than just sometimes there's a bar where the library should be."
In that it's less random and more rational.
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Nothing is truly random or coincidence.
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"Of course."
Admittedly, he may be a bit biased.
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(Not as long as Castiel took to consider the balloon, but long enough.)
"That . . . that seems to be . . ."
She pauses again.
". . . asking a lot, maybe."
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"Asking a lot to believe?"
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Castiel tilts his head.
"The Universe was created, by and large, to work in cooperation with itself. Much in the way individual cells and strands of acids make up a human body."
"Most events....they are as good as random to most people. It is only when viewed from a distance, sometimes over hundreds of years, that patterns form."
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"There's special providence in the fall of a sparrow?" she asks, finally.
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"Has a seemingly random event ever had an impact on your life? One that would seem of little importance, that may not even have happened to you directly?"
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Profound impact, really. In many ways.
"But I don't know that it necessarily follows that every seemingly random event has an impact."
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