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Far From Heaven
When he heard that the angel Raziel had returned from a mission on Earth, Aziraphale wavered and pondered and considered and decided to surreptitiously drop by for a visit. It wouldn�t be Crowley, but he was utterly sick of bland holiness and ethereality. He found Raziel huddled over a sad pile of dough and sauce, sobbing. The angel�s wings were black�like Crowley�s, Aziraphale thought, with a slight pang�and slumped. He radiated idiotic misery. �Raziel?� Aziraphale said uncertainly. He hadn�t expected the angel to be that homesi�Earthsick after such a short time dirtside. Raziel blinked tearfully up at him. �Oh. Aziraphale, isn�t it? Hullo.� �I just thought I�d stop by and welcome you back to Heaven,� said Aziraphale, a bit lamely. �I�m usually on Earth myself, and I thought I might be able to help you�adjust, as it were. Er. How are you doing?� �I�m fine.� Raziel poked the tomato pastry morosely. A glop of sauce fell onto the table. �Just a bit, well.� He looked around anxiously and leaned forward, muttering, �I miss him.� For one wild moment Aziraphale thought that Raziel had somehow met and befriended Crowley; after a few moments of astonishment he remembered that Raziel was a complete idiot. He couldn�t imagine that Crowley would tolerate the pile of soggy feathers in front of him. �Who?� he asked. Raziel sniffled and wiped his nose. �Biff,� he said. �You know. His friend.� �Oh. His friend,� said Aziraphale, nodding with polite incomprehension. Realization dawned. �Oh, Levi who is called Biff. Why do you miss� That is, er, I thought you weren�t very fond of him?� �I wasn�t.� Raziel dragged a sodden sleeve across his nose. �Is he nice, then?� Aziraphale hadn�t really gotten to know the man, but what he�d heard had hardly been complimentary. Even the Disciples had nothing nice to say about him. Especially the Disciple had nothing nice to say about him, and they�d known him for years. �He�s an evil little bastard,� said Raziel, wretchedly. �But, you know. He was my evil little bastard. For a while.� Aziraphale patted him consoling. �I know how you feel,� he offered without thinking, and was relieved when the angel didn�t seem to notice. �I fed him, I cleaned up his ca�his room, I taught him about the world. Like miniature golf and stuff.� Raziel buried his face in his hands. �Humans have pets, did you know? They take animals and care for them and name them and the animals are so cute and even when they bite you can�t help getting a little fond of them. . . . I�ve never had a pet,� he added mournfully. �Not until they told me to take care of Biff while he wrote the new Gospel.� Aziraphale made a strangled noise. A new Gospel? That would make collecting Bibles considerably more interesting. He wandered off down that train of thought, only half-listening to Raziel�s tearful monologue. �They�re bloody annoying, humans, but they�re sort of endearing and, and, and little,� Raziel told him. �Fragile. I hope he doesn�t die,� he continued, tremulously. �That would make me very sad.� �He�s already died,� said Aziraphale, vaguely. �He�s probably very good at it by now, I shouldn�t worry. About this new Gospel�� �I�ve never had a pet before,� Raziel repeated. His eyes were dreamy. �It makes you feel nice, when they�re not being annoying. Big. Strong. Kind of like Go�� He stopped short. �Never mind. But here all we do is worship, you know? We�re angels. We don�t get to have pets. It was kind of nice being superior to somebody for once. And he was cute when he was angry, like a little yappy terrier. And I sort of got to feel sorry for him.� Aziraphale looked at him closely, and sighed. �You�re drunk, aren�t you?� �Not very,� said Raziel, sulkily. �And what is that?� Aziraphale added, pointing to the platter in front of Raziel and the gloopy mess it held. It smelled familiar, like a mix of tomatoes and cheese, but he couldn�t place it. �Pizza. At least it�s supposed to be.� Raziel�s lower lip wobbled. �They don�t have pizza here. Or professional wrestling. Or Spider Man. Or MTV.� �Or books,� said Aziraphale, sighing wistfully. He thought MTV sounded familiar; Crowley had probably had a hand in it. �Or The Sound of Music. Or good wine. Or classical music.� Or Bentleys, he added silently. They looked at each other, and Aziraphale felt a kind of desperate kinship. It wasn�t Crowley, but he supposed it was the next best thing. �I miss it,� Raziel said simply. �And him. It�s not the same up here.� Aziraphale examined his elegant nails. �I know how you feel.�
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