Part "Wow I Need a Life" of the Post-Asmodeus Sabriel Feels series. This story is based on the following prompt from Archive user PersonFace:

"Gabe hides his true thoughts and pretends to make progress, and, to his surprise, he's good at it. Not, they let it go, not, they're not noticing, he's really good at hiding away, and putting on a face. Even Sam is fooled. Gabe is conflicted on how to feel about that."

I'll confess that some of this doesn't follow the prompt to the letter, but I did my very best. And of course I am sorry for how overdue it is.

I also posted it on Tumblr and Archive of Our Own about (checks watch) a million years ago, and now it's here too. Oops.

Finally, if you like cats, find me on Tumblr as UnityGhost. As always, thanks for reading.

Work Text:

"No," said Sam.

"Yes," said Gabriel.

Sam pinched the bridge of his nose. "I told you, you're not coming to fight."

"I heard what you said, which is why I lied and agreed I'd lay low. Thing is, I don't want to see you flop because you lacked the knowledge to keep from getting slaughtered."

Sam's face softened. "You gave us all the information you could."

He and Gabriel stood alone in a motel room near the Uinta mountain ranges in Utah. It had been a long while since Gabriel had spent a significant amount of time out west, and indeed, they planned on being here for no longer than a few days. Dean had already left to start the car, and Sam was blocking the doorway so that Gabriel couldn't accompany them.

Gabriel knew that Sam had a point: since healing an injury on Sam's hand two weeks previously, after a witch and her miniscule but bloodthirsty familiar had attacked him, Gabriel had been exhausted.

Even so:

"You really don't know much about these sons of bitches," Gabriel reminded Sam, trying not to sound like he was pleading. "And I've seen them before; I would be able to take one on."

But Sam held firm. "You've already done plenty to help us along, all right? You taught us more about the satori than Wikipedia and all the Japanese folklore books combined. We don't need you to fight; we just needed that guidance. Okay? You really aren't ready for this. And I'm not saying that to try and make you feel bad. When you're stronger, I won't make you stay put. Promise."

"In other words, I'd slow you guys down." Before Sam could protest, Gabriel added, "Fine. You're hardly off the mark, so fine. I'll entertain myself while you go hunt down your furry lunatic. Remember, get a good swing in, and if it doesn't know what's coming then you've got yourself an extra three seconds or so to avoid being eaten."

Sam nodded, pretending Gabriel hadn't told him this already. "Sure thing."

"Did you meditate? Clear that noggin of yours? The satori feed on thoughts. Especially complex, contemplative thought."

"Dean and I both meditated."

"Like I said: complex and contemplative. I'm not as worried about Dean."

Sam glanced down at his watch. "Gabriel, I've got to go. But while we're gone, put your feet up. Let yourself relax for a while. I promise we'll be okay."

"Did I say you wouldn't be?"

Sam smiled, and just missed the raised middle finger cast behind him on his way out the door.

Gabriel waited for the engine to fade before he checked his pocket to ensure the room key was there.

Yes, he was worn out; yes, he was low on grace; and yes - he had enough sense to understand that Sam had been generous in allowing Gabriel to come at all when he was sure to slow the others down. Nevertheless, it was true that Gabriel knew these creatures better than Sam did: he'd dealt with them more than once when they had free reign over the Central Pangean Mountains, long before humankind could take advantage of any opportunity to mess with them.

Gabriel was familiar with what scant literature was accessible to the public these days; and no matter how many times he insisted that not only were these monsters more cunning than the Winchesters' average prey, but quicker and more ferocious, neither of them took the warnings seriously.

"I'm not questioning whether you can take them on," Gabriel had told them. "I'm just trying to get you to believe me when I tell you that you gotta prepare for more than you've been able to read up on."

"So tell us more," Dean prodded, watching him in the rearview mirror.

"I told you all I know! It's not like I've ever sat down to have lunch with one. But I've seen what they can do to humans, and …" Gabriel paused, remembering. "A couple of times I was able to chase them off."

Dean raised his eyebrows. "And the other times?"

Gabriel waved a dismissive hand. "Doesn't matter." He didn't want to admit that the "other times" had seen him standing out of sight, watching the carnage and unwilling to get involved. "I just hope you had good reflexes in Little League."

"We've got everything we need," Sam assured him from the passenger seat. "Plenty of options in the trunk."

"I'm not worried about what weapon you use. What matters is how fast you can swing it. The goal is to take the sucker off guard, not to destroy it."

"Then what's the point of this trip anyway?" Dean demanded.

"See, Sam? Your brother gets what I'm trying to say."

"As long as we can chase it off," Sam reminded them both. "Look, Gabriel - I hear you. We don't know how to kill it. So we're going to immobilize it."

"Right." Gabriel sat back and closed his eyes. He could feel a headache coming on. "With your fancy-pants spellwork."

"Rowena told us - "

"Rowena knows how to chase them into isolated sprawls of water. They can't swim, and that's all well and good, but what happens after that? Did she do a follow-up study? For all we know, this could be the same one she took down all those years ago. You want me to page the coral reefs, see if they found a mangy corpse over yonder?"

Sam sighed. "You're just gonna have to trust us. We're doing the best we can."

"I know. That's why I insisted on tagging along."

Outside of the motel, Gabriel halted, breathing in the mountain air. Not for the first time, he was discombobulated at the subtleties his near-graceless body picked up in a way it never would have before: the way this oxygen was thinner than that of Kansas, the chilly tickle of fall as background noise in the latter half of summer. These minute changes affected him in strange ways, altering his heartbeat and sometimes making him feel as though he was surrounded by unfamiliar presences.

He began walking. It had been a long time since he'd set foot in the Uinta Mountain ranges. Memories flickered at the back of his mind - memories that might have taken place prehistorically or may have happened a mere few centuries before. It was hard to tell sometimes which memories fell where, considering that his time with Asmodeus was a history in itself that felt both very old and very fresh.

That's how it works when there's no end in sight, he thought, making his way down the road toward the mountains themselves, where he knew the monster would be lurking.

It was an hour before he got a text message from Sam. Nothing yet. Probably gonna be a few hours.

"Cool," Gabriel said to the mountain air. "Because this won't take me long at all. Good thing one of us knows what we're doing."

He couldn't recall the last time he'd been on rolling, open grass like this. Lebanon was beige; the mountain ranges were a pure, warm green.

He wished he could move positions the way he used to. It was conceivable that he might manage some distance should he attempt to fly, but there was no point in wasting his energy on that, especially since he wasn't sure whether he had the grace he needed to take this creature down. He couldn't remember having ever seen one killed another way; all that could be done, it seemed - at least for humankind - was to frighten the satori off with whatever object an unwitting traveler could swat at it.

What Gabriel had wanted to say to Sam, and hadn't, was: "If it's a choice between you getting clawed to death and turned into a meal and me taking myself out with a last gasp for grace, why are we even debating?"

How's it going? Gabriel texted, and Sam wrote: I'll let you know when we get rid of it.

That terse reply, indicative of irritation (although Gabriel, sensitive as he was these days, knew he wasn't a good assessor of others' emotions), was nothing compared to what he would face when Sam found out he'd tried to tackle the satori on his own. The real upside to Gabriel not making it through this in one piece was that he wouldn't have to deal with punishment.

Sam's not going to punish you, something inside of him retorted, but he focused on taking one step after another. He was tired, but he could feel that his grace was present. Maybe healing Sam's hand had stimulated it.

Doesn't matter. Just gotta get this done.

When he felt the satori, his neck prickled and his heartbeat sped up. It seemed that his ability to sense unwelcome supernatural presences had either never left or been reignited at some point in the recovery from his time in Hell.

Or perhaps he was attuned to predators lying in wait.

"Come on," Gabriel called. "Eat me."

All birdsong ceased as Gabriel turned around.

The creature stared at him and smiled.

"You're gross," Gabriel told it. "You look like if the offspring of Mr. Potato Head and an orangutan got its finger caught in an electric socket."

The goblin-esque animal-thing only grinned wider. Its eye sockets were still and hollow in a furry face.

When it spoke, its voice was high and tight as if it had inhaled from a balloon, and the words came rapidly:

"The blackness thickens," it said. "No one will be here for long; it's all pretend. Not one of them wants you; not one of them cares. It's a good thing you came along to destroy the enemy: make yourself useful and perhaps they'll let you stay. Ask nicely and they'll allow you to keep stealing from them."

Gabriel's skin crawled. "What are you doing, you mangy freak?"

"It has not been able to read your mind before," the beast replied. Gabriel, who could only assume that "it" meant the satori itself, could no longer tell whether it was actually looking at him or whether those grotesque holes were sightless. The horrid animal looked dead. "You used to be an angel. When you were more than this, it couldn't get into your head. But look: is this not proof of what you have become?"

"I'm here to - "

"And yet if you use what little grace swims in your near-human flesh, what use will you be? Perhaps it is time; the hour has come to show that you're a failure, and they'll have the excuse they so sorely need to throw you away. It can eat you, too; if you are human, and it can read you, then it can swallow you as well."

Gabriel stepped backward.

Chill out, he told himself. The son of a bitch is screwing with you.

"The son of a bitch is not screwing with you," the creature said. "Your memories - I smell them on your breath." The satori cackled - harsh, like retching. "You fear that he is still inside of you. Who would have thought that you, once so esteemed and powerful, might buckle? Paralysis maintains its grip upon the creature you once were."

Paralysis indeed, Gabriel thought as he found himself struggling to respond with either speech or movement.

The creature gave its choking laugh again. "You see? You are frozen. It knows. It knows better than anyone."

"Wrong." Gabriel steeled himself for either overwhelming exhaustion or worse. He felt a pang of annoyance that he couldn't do this the way he used to. "No one knows better than yours truly."

The flash of grace hit the creature hard, and Gabriel felt some of it ricochet back to him. It hurt, but wasn't enough to knock him over. That came only after he saw the satori crumple to the ground, its eye sockets just as lifeless as they had been a few seconds before.

Gabriel found his face pressed into the dirt. Every muscle ached in a peculiarly human manner.

He experimented with standing up and found that, although it was a sluggish process, it wasn't impossible. He was dizzy but he could walk.

He took breaks here and there to lean against a tree and catch his breath. The birds had started singing again.

During one of these brief siestas, he sent a message to Sam:

I know you'll hate me and I don't blame you but I squashed the big furry toad thing.

A few moments later, Sam replied: Where are you?

Almost to the motel.

What were you thinking?

Gabriel didn't reply. Sam sent another message only a few seconds after that: We can find you if you stay put. Don't move.

I'm almost back; calm down.

He could picture Sam closing his eyes and inhaling, trying not to show that he was frustrated.

Are you sure? Sam asked.

Yes. Chill. I'll meet you there.

He didn't check the messages after that.

Gabriel arrived first. The motel room smelled like coarse carpeting and the salami sandwiches Dean had eaten in Gabriel and Sam's room several hours before.

Gabriel groaned and lay down on one of the two beds. He wished he could fall asleep then and there, but he knew he was about to be in trouble.

"You didn't even take a weapon?" Dean cried when the brothers returned. "You were just banking on being able to lasso him with possibly nonexistent angel milk?"

Sam strode over to the bed. "Did you really - "

"I'm sorry. I know. I didn't want you to get slaughtered by something I knew I could get rid of for you, okay? Sue me."

Sam cupped his hands over his face and exhaled. "Did it do anything to you?"

"No."

"It didn't hurt you?"

"If it had, then my answer would've been yes. I'm fine, Sam. I'm good. And I knew you'd be upset with me, but I would rather you be mad than dead."

"I'm not upset with you; I just - you should have told me you were going to risk your neck like that."

"Well, I asked your permission to risk my neck and you said no! What was I supposed to do, Sam? What's done is done and we're all still freakin' alive, so go shower and stop yelling at me."

He knew that Sam wasn't yelling, but to Gabriel it sounded dangerously close.

Sam glanced at Dean.

"He's an idiot," Dean announced.

"Come on," Sam snapped. "That's not helpful."

"Neither was going after a monster without telling us first." Dean glared at Gabriel before making his way to the exit and slamming the door behind him.

"He's worried, that's all," Sam said.

"Yeah, he's all in a tither over my safety. I could tell by the way he tried to disembowel me with his eyes." Gabriel shoved his face into a pillow and groaned. "I know, okay? I do. I really - I mean - look, I'd be royally pissed too, but I was doing what I thought was best. I'm not sorry for that."

"I …" Sam struggled for a moment, but all the fight seemed to have left him. "I'm glad you managed to pull it off. Just don't do it again."

With an effort, Gabriel sat up. "I'm not interested in standing by anymore."

"We've had this talk already: you don't owe us anything."

"Fine." Gabriel flopped back down. He hadn't removed his shoes. "I just knew what had to be done in this instance. It can't be taken back now and I'm glad you're not dead."

He shut his eyes, then felt the mattress sink under Sam's weight.

"I'm sorry," Sam told him. "It's only that - "

"Don't be sorry." Gabriel kept his eyes closed. "I knew the reaction I was in for. As if I didn't run through this a thousand times in my head. You disowning me is more appealing than me having to dig your grave."

"I wouldn't disown you. You know that. I'm not mad, and if I was - "

"You are mad. But frankly, I figured you'd be a lot worse than this."

"You really don't trust me, do you?"

Gabriel opened his eyes and squinted up at Sam. "I trust you. You obviously don't have enough faith in me to help you when you need it, though."

Sam stood up. "Maybe let's have this conversation tomorrow."

"No need. Go clean yourself up."

"Take off your shoes."

"Too tired. Not conscious."

As he was drifting off, he felt Sam untying his sneakers.

There was little dialogue during the long trip home the following day. Dean was still tense, which surprised Gabriel, who had been ardently convinced that Sam would be furious and Dean would be relieved. Dean wasn't worried about whether Gabriel lived or died, and someone had taken care of his dirty work for him.

There was, of course, the possibility that Dean was upset over being denied a triumphant capture. But Gabriel wasn't particularly concerned about Dean's feelings in this instance. What mattered was that he and Sam were both alive and well.

Gabriel slept most of the way home, and his dreams were full of eyeless beasts clawing at his face and digging soiled ape-like paws so harshly into his skull that the pressure became too much and he grew blind. In the nightmares, he tried to scream at them, but couldn't make a sound.

There was nothing he could do, because they already knew he was afraid.

He was stiff and clammy when it was time to climb out of the car. During the extraordinarily long journey (probably not so extraordinary for them, Gabriel realized), Sam had taken Dean's place at the wheel and Dean was staring sullenly out of the window.

"Okay back there?" Sam asked.

Gabriel nodded.

"Here - " Sam made his way around back to open the door and help Gabriel out.

"I'm fine," snapped Gabriel. "I can move on my own."

He immediately felt guilty for his tone of voice, but the dreams wouldn't leave him.

"What's wrong?" asked Sam. "Hey, you're all sweaty and shaky."

"Tired from using up my grace. Think there's probably none left." Both halves of his explanation were true. There was no need to explain that the nightmares had made it worse.

He shoved himself out of the car and Sam reached out a hand to steady him. Gabriel stepped away before Sam could touch him.

"Gabe," said Sam, "You look like you're going to pass out."

"I'm not."

"I can tell when something's wrong with you."

Gabriel clenched his jaw. "Is that so?" He straightened himself and made a concerted effort to walk evenly and steadily up to the door and down the stairs into the bunker. He stumbled toward the bottom step and Sam grabbed his shoulder.

Gabriel wrenched himself away. "Jesus, Sam, I'll tell you if something's wrong!"

"Okay!" Sam looked alarmed. "I just - okay."

Gabriel ignored the shame that accompanied his outburst. Sam didn't deserve anybody shouting at him, but there could be no denying that he was right: Sam had seen Gabriel in various states of distress and knew what it looked like when he wasn't well.

He turned away, making for his bedroom; then he paused and looked back at Sam.

"I just need a little rest," he said. "That's all it is. I'm on edge, all right? But I'll be fine."

Sam nodded. "Yeah. Go. Get some sleep. I'll bring you something to eat later."

"All right." Gabriel wasn't sure he would be able to eat, but there was no reason to make Sam more suspicious. "I'll see you later."

He didn't look back this time.

That week, Gabriel made it a point to eat in front of them - especially Sam - at least once a day. He wasn't unable to eat, and mostly it wasn't a necessity; usually, however, he didn't have any appetite. Besides that, hunger made him feel guilty, and sometimes he had a hard time eating without an immediate recollection of being held down and force-fed during his time with Asmodeus.

If Sam noticed that Gabriel was eating more, he didn't say. Gabriel tried to let his mind go blank during mealtimes. Asmodeus often crept in, and he must have looked a certain way when that happened because Sam would frown.

Not one of them wants you; not one of them cares.

Gabriel forced himself to swallow, privately willing Sam to stop watching him, desperate for control over his own mind.

Is this not proof of what you have become?

Not even Sam ought to have access to his innermost thoughts and memories - not anymore.

Meanwhile, Dean's behavior had settled into some semblance of normalcy. Gabriel had never been more thankful for his indifference; he had never taken such joy in the absence of intuitive empathy.

Then there was Castiel, who seemed mostly inclined to leave his brother alone. He sometimes looked puzzled - although that wasn't unusual for him - but he didn't say anything.

If Jack had any suspicions about Gabriel's newfound stoicism, he didn't let them show. He was cheerful and inquisitive as always, and yet - maybe from spending so much time with Cas, or perhaps because he had learned neither how to express his compassion nor how to block it - there were times he too appeared confused, not sure what to make of his uncle.

"Why are you looking at me like that, kid?" Gabriel asked him one evening.

Jack replied, "How am I looking at you?"

"Like I'm still brushing off loam from the uncanny valley."

Jack didn't know how to respond to that, and the subject didn't come up again.

The four of them were sharing dinner one night when Gabriel made his decision.

"Hey," he said to the others. "You guys all need to chill right the hell out, okay?"

Everyone turned to stare at him.

"Every time I take a bite," Gabriel elaborated, "At least one of you watches me like you think I'm going to burst into flame. Or tears. Maybe that was warranted at one point, but I'm starting to feel like there's something stuck in my teeth and nobody wants to tell me."

"Your teeth look fine to me," said Jack.

"Look," Gabriel went on, "I get that I kind of wore myself out back in Utah, but can you fellas please stop watching my every move with those confused looks on your faces?"

Sam appeared taken aback. "Is that what we're doing? I guess I was just …"

Slowly, looking him in the eye, Gabriel forced himself to take a bite of the pizza Dean had crafted. He had tasted it before, and although it was exceptionally good, Gabriel had a hard time with the richness of it. Had it been up to him, he would have steered clear of meals that were meant to make a person feel full. This was the first time in the last week that he had fully committed to this sort of sustenance; before that, he'd been able to get away with lighter fare.

The fact that Gabriel was able to dismiss the taste and weight of the food, that he was able to bring his mind elsewhere and ignore the spasm of nausea he had anticipated when he sat down, was encouraging.

"You were just what?" Gabriel asked when he'd swallowed.

"Uh …" Sam blinked. "Nothing. Sorry."

"You're used to me being a swooning maiden," Gabriel countered. "Right now I feel fine, and your constant inspection is nothing short of creepy."

Sam furrowed his brow, but nodded. "All right. Sorry, Gabriel. I'm glad you're feeling better."

Gabriel took another mouthful, swallowed, and said: "Who knows? Maybe using my grace to wipe out the monster was just the kick in the pants I needed to get up and running again. I mean, hey, if I have it in me to off a predator from Jim Henson's fever-dream, maybe I'm not in for the permanent misery that seemed inevitable before he and I faced off."

Sam smiled, looking more at ease. "Yeah. I guess that makes sense."

"Hey," Dean interrupted, "You including me in that accusation? You and I have been having a great time."

"That's true," Castiel agreed. He hadn't taken any pizza, but was enjoying the company. "I've never seen the two of you get along so well."

"Right?" Gabriel sat back. "So what do you have to complain about, Sam?"

"I'm not complaining, Gabriel, really."

"Good. Because if you've got something to say, you can say it to me."

For a moment he was afraid Sam was going to shout at him, although Gabriel knew that when he'd dared use that tone with Asmodeus, he deserved whatever response came his way.

Instead, he saw Sam further relax. "All right. I will."

Sam was watchful during the remainder of the meal, although it was possible that Gabriel was only imagining as much. Sometimes he thought he felt Sam's eyes on him, but when he looked over, Sam was just enjoying the food.

After dinner, Dean crooked a finger at Gabriel. "C'mere a minute."

Gabriel followed him into the hall.

"What's going on?" Dean asked, which surprised Gabriel.

"Nothing," he replied.

"Look, I'm not complaining. I like you like this. But last week, before we left for Utah, you were afraid to ask for a napkin - and that's even if you took five minutes to eat without Sam practically forcing it down your throat. So what gives?"

"Nothing," Gabriel said again, wishing Dean had used different hyperbole. "Why are you harassing me about this?"

"Well, maybe if I knew what I was harassing you about it, we wouldn't need to have this conversation."

Gabriel stiffened. He felt betrayed. He had trusted Dean to be ignorant and unconcerned.

"I don't know what you think you're seeing," Gabriel told him. "All I know is it isn't real."

"Maybe Sam should be the one to decide that."

"Oh please. What's Sam got to do with anything?"

Dean remained stone-faced.

Gabriel hardened his voice. "No one's bothering Sam about anything. What, have you consulted him how to fix whatever imaginary problem you've got keeping you up at night? Asked him how to rewire his favorite disaster?"

"No," said Dean, "Because I'd never hear the end of it from this new version of you."

"What 'new version' of me? I can't figure out if I'm being insulted."

"Look, all I know is people don't change like this overnight. Not without a reason."

"Good thing I'm not people, then," Gabriel snapped.

Dean shook his head. "Like I said, man, I don't know what's going on with you. Maybe it's none of my business; I just figure you should ask Sam for help if something isn't right."

"I - " Gabriel faltered. "You don't want me to bother Sam about this, do you? Not that there's any - but if there were, if I was - look, no one's asking Sam for anything, okay? There's no need, and if something was wrong with me, then he doesn't need to do anything. Poor sap's done enough for every lifetime he's been put through."

"I think he'd wanna know."

"What would he want to know? What do you think the issue is here?"

"Well, if I knew, I wouldn't've thought to bug you about it. But fine. Maybe my intuition is off." He turned to leave, but then paused and looked back at Gabriel. "Sam would never forgive himself if you felt like you couldn't tell him something, though."

Gabriel stared at him. Then, more timidly, he asked: "Are you sure you haven't mentioned anything? About … about whatever you think you see?"

"No. Should I?"

Gabriel shook his head.

"Look, Gabe," said Dean, "He worries, but at the same time, he really wants to see you get better. He might be pulling the wool over his own eyes about this. If something happens to you and he thinks he could've done something to stop it, neither of you is going to be okay."

Gabriel didn't respond.

"I'll see you later, Gabe," Dean said, and left him standing in the hall with his heart beating twice as fast as it had been during dinner.

With static humming in his mind, Gabriel went back to his own bedroom. He shut the door and lay down on the bed, puzzled and frustrated by the sudden tautness in his throat. He ignored it.

He felt as though he had just been scolded, although he was reasonably confident that no such event had taken place.

Paralysis maintains its grip upon the creature you once were.

It occurred to Gabriel then that even he wasn't entirely sure what he was doing. He allowed himself a brief indulgence in the notion that Sam really was under the impression that, for the first time in months, nothing was so wrong with Gabriel as to require immediate attention. He wondered if they could be friends without the ongoing dynamic of victim and savior, although he knew Sam would have scoffed at such a description.

Then he considered the practical implications of remaining here when he had just taken such a hit to his grace supply. He had reason to believe that it would come back - he had been entirely without grace more than once, and it always came back - but the amount of time that would take couldn't be predicted. If he was to stay here, in the bunker, he had to have grace sooner rather than later. He remembered being without grace in Hell, and wished he could forget the punishment for such a crime. Now, in the bunker, he might not be penalized so much as …

Well, uselessness was a punishment in itself.

The hour has come to show that you're a failure.

Gabriel sighed and closed his eyes.

They'll have the excuse they so sorely need to throw you away.

No dreams, no nightmares, no tossing and turning: this slumber was quiet and pure.

But the next thing Gabriel knew, there were two voices calling his name; one he recognized immediately as Sam's, and the other took him a few seconds to identify as that of Castiel. He couldn't make out the words, and then he realized he couldn't fully open his eyes; they had grown too heavy.

Panic set in as someone lifted him upright. He didn't even have the strength to go rigid, let alone any power to fight back.

"Gabriel." Sam was speaking to him in a low, hurried voice. "We're not going to hurt you. Just wake up, all right?"

Gabriel wrenched his eyes partway open. The room was hazy. He took shallow breaths.

"Geez," Sam told him. "Gabe, buddy, we couldn't get you to wake up."

Gabriel tried to ask, Why? but couldn't make himself speak.

"It's almost two in the afternoon," Sam told him, "And when I came in to check on you, you just …" He trailed off.

"Wouldn't move," Castiel finished.

Gabriel leaned back against Sam.

"What's going on?" Sam pressed. "I've never seen that happen to you before."

When Gabriel managed to reply, his voice was hoarse. "I've fainted plenty."

"This is different. Hey, keep your eyes open for a minute; we thought - " Sam paused. "We just didn't know what was going on."

"Tired," Gabriel slurred.

"This goes beyond tired, Gabriel," said Cas.

"My grace … it's …"

"It's what?" Sam prodded.

"Dunno. I …" Gabriel tried to ignore the pounding in his head. "Killing the monster, the satori - "

Sam and Castiel waited for him to continue. When Gabriel's breath began coming a little more easily, he finished, "Maybe took some fight out of me."

"This is why I told you not to come." Sam didn't sound angry - just worried, even afraid. "I know you were trying to help, but Gabriel, you were the one who said how vicious those things are. You're not ready for something like that."

"Through no fault of your own," Castiel added.

Gabriel tried to push himself off of Sam and found that he was too weak.

"What's wrong?" Sam asked him. "Does anything hurt?"

"Why?" The question emerged, at last, without Gabriel even thinking about it.

"What? Why what?"

"What good're you gonna get out of knowing what's the matter with me?"

Sam shifted so that Gabriel was lying with his head on Sam's lap instead of bent at an angle against his chest.

Castiel spoke up: "I suspect that Sam is simply trying to remind you that you've become an important part of his life, and he doesn't want to see you suffer."

"Well, whoop-dee-doo."

"Gabriel …" Sam checked for a fever, then pushed stray locks of hair from Gabriel's eyes. "I don't understand. You seemed okay last night."

"I'm still okay."

"That's obviously not true," said Cas.

"Can you try and sit up?" Sam asked.

"Maybe." He let Sam shift away and prop him against the pillows. As he watched Sam step back, face pale with concern, he had a moment's doubt about his own pride.

Sit back down, he wanted to say, or I wouldn't want to touch me either.

He closed his eyes.

"No," Sam commanded. "Gabriel, don't. Not yet. I want you to stay awake for now."

When, and how, had this suddenly become too much? He knew how to frolic in lies. He knew how to make personal falsehoods into very real truths; pretending until he was no longer play-acting was a familiar process.

Why now, then, did he feel his throat tighten as he stared down at the blankets?

He was committed this time, though. He was well-versed in the warning signals of a breakdown and understood that there was no benefit in acting like a child. Sam had seen and dealt with enough, and Gabriel had debased himself so often that he couldn't imagine anyone harboring even a modicum of respect for him at this point.

That was fine. He needed to learn not to care so much about his reputation at the bunker.

"Cas," Sam said, "Maybe …"

"Yes. Of course." Gabriel felt his brother watching him. "If you need me, I'm nearby. Although I suspect you know what you're doing, Sam."

"Thanks. I think we'll be okay."

Gabriel heard the door close.

"All right," Sam said, "I know you don't like to be coerced into talking to me, and usually I'd let up a little, but if you're sick you need to tell me."

"I'm not."

"Then what happened just now?"

"Beats me. But what do you expect?" Gabriel spoke more smoothly now, but directly to the blankets. "I used up all my grace on the satori. Can you blame me for being a little out of sorts?"

"No, of course I don't blame you. But I'm not talking about your grace. Or at least I don't think I am."

"Yeah? What do you think we're discussing here, then?"

"I don't know." Sam looked helpless. "You seemed fine yesterday, and now you're - I mean, how did you go from that to this? This whole week you've been ... I mean ... I don't know. I thought ... "

"Am I not an open book to you anymore? Good."

"What?"

"There's no reason for you to be inside my head. There's no reason for you to - to know any more about me, or what happened to me, than you already do."

Sam was silent.

"I see through your strategy, Sam," Gabriel added, still staring at the blanket. "I - when you're quiet, you want me to talk."

"I'm just worried."

"You've made that abundantly clear, and I don't know what to tell you. I don't know what I can do to make you feel better about this whole thing."

"About what whole thing? About you trying to get well?"

"Pal, if that's what you're looking for - for me to get back on my own two feet - then what are you complaining about? Obviously I'm better. I haven't cried or thrown up once since we got back, and I don't see how that's a questionable development."

"No, I mean, it's not, but - "

"But what, Sam?"

"It's not. Really, it isn't."

In the moment of silence that followed, Gabriel felt such an urge to speak, to tell the truth and recount exactly what had happened in the mountains, that he tore his gaze away from the blankets and met Sam's eyes. He now had a choice: he could say something about what had taken place, or he could lose control of himself altogether.

If there was a third option, Gabriel didn't see it.

"I don't want to give you a whole novel about this," he said. "My head is killing me."

Sam nodded.

Gabriel hesitated for a few moments longer. Then he took a deep breath and began: "When we were out in Utah, and I took down that creeptastic freakazoid, it - you know - it did what it does. It found some way into my brain, and yammered on and on about my every thought. Which wouldn't have been a problem in and of itself if I hadn't - if I wasn't - well, before, when I faced one of them, it couldn't read my mind. I was an angel and it couldn't get in. So what does that tell you, Sam?"

Sam looked blankly at him.

"Come on, Mr. Ivy League," Gabriel pressed. "This is measurable proof that right now, at least, I'm more human than anything else. Plus, I've already got one monster in my head. I don't need another psychic bedfellow. You mean well, I know, but - but don't you think, Sam, that you being the way you are to me might be holding me in one place? Or making me an easier target, instead of building me back up to what I used to be?"

"I've never thought that."

"Well, does this change your mind? I just wrote you a whole thesis."

"Gabriel, if you didn't have any power then you wouldn't have been able to take that thing down in the first place."

"And look at how that turned out. I can barely move."

"That's because you haven't given yourself a chance to recover."

"How was I even supposed to know I needed it? I've been fine this last week."

"Have you?"

"Yes!"

"I sort of wasn't talking about the satori."

"Oh for the love of all things holy and unholy, Sam, stop being so dramatic. I've had plenty of time to tunnel my way out of this."

"Did you get through the whole week without a flashback or nightmare? You seemed like you felt pretty good. I … should I have checked?"

The guilt in Sam's voice made Gabriel wish he'd stayed unconscious. "No."

"I'm sorry."

"I said no, Sam."

"You're not well." There was horror and distress on Sam's face now. "I thought - "

"Christ, Sam, relax."

"Why didn't you - "

"Because this is on me, Sam! It always has been. And that's almost beside the point. Geez, you know - you really need to make up your mind. Am I meant to improve by eating more and learning to calm myself down, or am I supposed to hold you like a security blanket every time my engine misfires? Which is it, Sam? Should I be strengthening the muscles that Asmodeus deflated or should I keep letting you man the ship when a storm kicks in?"

"Gabriel …"

"Answer the question. I'm serious. I can't solve this equation no matter how creative I get with it. What am I supposed to do? For me, for you, for everyone here? I need an answer and maybe you have it. I sure as all get-out have no idea what I'm supposed to do or where I'm supposed to go without messing something up."

Gabriel thought Sam looked like he might cry. "I guess it depends."

"No, see, that's not how this works. Because if this was a case-by-case endeavor, one of us would have found the balance by now. No, Sam, I don't feel good. Why's that? I don't feel good when I'm alone; I don't feel good about how I act when you step in. There's no winning for me, and for you there's just constant sacrifice that never leads anywhere. There's a right and a wrong answer here, and if neither of us can figure it out, then I don't know what to do. Just stop it."

"Stop what?"

"Stop - stop trying to make me showcase my emotions. Maybe it works for you but it doesn't lead to anything good for me; all it does is make me feel ashamed."

Sam seemed at a loss for words. "I'm sorry," he offered. "I'm not trying to make you do anything. Gabriel, I think you should just do what feels natural. If that means pretending everything's okay, then - then fine, I guess, except I don't think that's what you really want."

"Well, I don't know what I want; as far as I'm concerned, I don't want anything except to be more like an angel and less like a toddler."

"I don't think of you that way. You know that, Gabriel."

"Sure, fine, but let's not sugarcoat the fact that I am the way I am, and the responsibility is on me to change."

Sam looked away, contemplating. Then he asked, "Why didn't you tell me about what happened with the satori?"

"Because then I would've gotten worked up about it and so would you. You would've been worried about me."

"I'm worried about you anyway."

"Yup, I missed the mark on that one. What else is new?"

"So you think - "

Gabriel shoved himself properly upright. "Stop it, Sam! For the love of every damn good thing left in this world, just stop it! Stop trying to coach me into a breakdown!"

Sam looked aghast. "I'm not!"

"So what are you after? You want to help? Do you want to keep me in one piece or break me into a thousand? I never know with you anymore; it - " Gabriel took a shuddering breath and began to cry. "You know exactly what you're doing. I'm not here for you to play with me, Sam!"

Sam stood up. "Gabriel - "

"Is this what you want?" Gabriel raised his face so that Sam could see the tears. "You think that bullying me into showing my feelings is going to lead to success? I don't like myself like this! I don't want you to see and you keep on trying to open me up just like he did! Stop it, Sam! Stop it!"

"No, no - hey - " Helplessly, Sam took his hand and Gabriel tore it away. "I - Gabriel - should I get Castiel?"

"No!"

"I don't want you to be alone."

"Neither do I!" Gabriel pounded the mattress with his fist. "So stay, because I need you here, and I hate you for that and I hate me for that too. I hate all of this!"

"I know you do." Sam's voice shook. "But you haven't done anything wrong. Maybe I have; I don't know. But none of this is your fault. I'm so sorry if I messed up."

"You didn't! I did! I don't know! Stop it!" Gabriel took frantic breaths, tasting salt where the tears met his lips.

"You said I was like him." Sam sounded weak. "If I ever made you feel that way, it was an accident."

"You're not like him; you - you're trying to do something to me, and so was he, and I don't know how to tell the difference between you pushing me to bleed out in front of you and him ripping me open with his bare hands!"

"I had no idea that's what I was doing!"

"Because you're - Sam, you're - " Gabriel found himself unable to breathe for a moment. When he managed it again, he said, "You're not evil."

That seemed to perplex Sam. "I hope not."

"Of course you aren't. But do you have any idea what that does to me?"

"I … no, I guess I don't."

Gabriel didn't know either. He ground his teeth against the urge to scream.

No one will be here for long; it's all pretend.

"I wasn't like this before," he said.

"That's because you weren't trapped in Hell before."

"You've been trapped in Hell! And you're nothing like this! Talk all day about how you need help, about how you have your bad dreams and your breakdowns - but you're nothing like this, nothing like what I turned into."

Not one of them wants you.

"That thing knew," Gabriel wailed. "That thing knew exactly what I believe, exactly what I'm afraid of; that thing got into my head in a way even I can't get into my head! I don't have any control anymore, Sam - none."

Not one of them wants you.

"That creature thought I was human, Sam," Gabriel whispered. "Feeding on your kindness hasn't done anything except squash me."

Not one of them wants you.

"I know I can't really understand what it's like, exactly," said Sam, "But what scares you so bad about being human? Especially if you know you aren't, and your grace always comes back - even it's on the slower side."

Gabriel shook his head. "It's not about the grace." He swiped at his cheeks with his palms. "It's about this."

"About …"

Gabriel looked at him. "Do you know, and you're just trying to get me to say it?"

"No! I'm not trying to make you say anything."

Gabriel wasn't sure he believed him, but lacked the energy to argue. "Well, then it's about - it's about the stuff in my head, and how I seem to be open season for anyone who wants a shot, for better or worse. In your case, it's for the better; you don't want to hurt me, or at least I don't think you do. But you still know. You still see inside of me, and I'd give anything at all for a little emotional opacity. I'm weak, maybe as weak as I was in Hell."

"No."

"At least in my stupid cage I had a consistent idea of what the next day might bring. I anticipated chaos. He'd destroyed me, on purpose, for fun - so after a little while, I didn't have to pretend I was holding myself together. Giving up the effort was easy enough; I had no choice. Well - no - unless I did have a choice, and made the wrong one. But he had power over me and I was used to being hurt. I didn't have to play at not being vulnerable. It's not like that anymore, Sam."

"Shouldn't that be a good thing?"

"You'd expect so, wouldn't you? Me too. I've lost track of what's good and what's bad. So it's not my grace I'm worried about. Or - no, that's not true. I do worry about my grace, because I don't know what the heck I'm supposed to be without it. It's more like - it's that worrying about my grace is almost a luxury right now. If I get to lose sleep over how much grace I have instead of how easily I get scared and lose control of myself, I count myself lucky."

Sam frowned, trying to grasp what Gabriel was telling him.

Sometimes Sam understood, and sometimes he couldn't relate. In this case, Gabriel suspected, Sam was at a loss because at no point in his life had he ever known genuine autonomy. With Gabriel, it was different: independence and secrecy were everything to him.

"I'm sorry," Gabriel muttered. "I know I don't make this easy for you."

Sam was silent for a moment longer, then asked: "Can I tell you something?"

Gabriel froze. This wasn't the first time he'd become immobile over the possibility of Sam explaining that no, he really couldn't do this anymore. Perhaps this was the paralysis to which the satori had referred.

"It's nothing bad," Sam added hastily, in yet another demonstration of how naturally he could read Gabriel. "I just wanted to say that I don't look down on you for being affected by your time with Asmodeus. Of course you freak out sometimes; who wouldn't? And don't say anything about me," he added as Gabriel opened his mouth. "I've been out of Hell a lot longer than you, and you were gone for so long … there's a lot you didn't see." Bitterness crept into Sam's voice. "Anyway, you can't help what this has done to you. But hey, you know who would judge you for struggling? Asmodeus. Not me. Not any of us, but especially not me."

Gabriel tried to respond, but there was no way to speak around the tightness in his throat and chest. The sincerity in Sam's voice hurt him.

Finally, he managed: "You set that up to sound so dramatic."

Sam smiled. "Sorry."

Neither of them spoke for a while after that, although the break in conversation felt natural, not awkward.

Gabriel was fighting sleep when Sam broke the silence. "You're convincing, you know that?"

"I'm what?"

"The way you just … slipped into your old role. I was surprised, but it didn't seem forced. The way you spoke up for yourself at dinner last night was impressive. Normally you would've been scared of getting in trouble."

"Hm." Gabriel considered. "Well, I've said it before, Sam: I don't know who or what I was before Asmodeus. Something changed; that's all I can tell you."

"And I was thinking - you know, even before we got back from the mountains, I saw something different. You pushed to come, and then you broke your promise about staying in the motel. I don't know, maybe I'm off, but that's a decision you might not have made before."

"It was important. If something happened to you because I was too afraid to help, that would've been punishment on its own. It was a no-win situation so I took the option that I knew would keep you alive."

"But you probably weren't so sure about whether you would come out okay." There was no accusation in Sam's voice; he was merely making an observation.

"No," Gabriel agreed, "I didn't."

Sam went on, "And it says something, doesn't it, that you were able to put on such a good act? That's an old talent that maybe you haven't tapped into in a while."

"It must not have been as good as you say, because your brother picked up on it somehow."

Sam looked surprised. "When?"

"Last night he cornered me about how it isn't standard to switch from empty to full in such a short span of time. Said I should go to you if I needed help."

"Wow." Sam blinked. "I guess I don't really know what to make of that."

"Well, to me it means that some lucky winner always has access to my cesspit of a brain. Whether that's you, or Dean, or Asmodeus, or a mountain-dwelling monster."

"Oh geez, Gabriel …" Sam reached out to squeeze his shoulder. "It's not like that, buddy."

"Of course it is. Everybody gets a piece of me if they want it." Gabriel turned his eyes to the sheets again, fighting tears. "And when I wasn't whatever I am now, the satori couldn't get into my head. Like I said - proof, Sam. Proof so concrete you could draw chalk around it. Proof."

Sam shook his head, but didn't seem to know what to say.

"I can't stay awake," Gabriel muttered, because it sounded more reasonable than When you look at me like that, you're proving my point. "Can I rest a little bit?"

Sam hesitated. "Let me wake you up in twenty minutes. Just to make sure you're not out cold again. Then, if you're okay - another hour, and we can take it from there."

"Fine." Gabriel hated the idea of being shaken awake in such a short time, but hadn't the stamina to argue.

Sam helped adjust Gabriel's position so that he was lying down, then pulled the blankets around Gabriel's shoulders. He didn't move to leave.

If this was an instance of Sam being able to read him too easily, he didn't want to know.