Castiel (celestialintent) wrote in thedoorway, @ 2013-10-04 21:22:00 |
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Entry tags: | castiel, temperance brennan |
Who: Castiel and Temperance Brennan
What: Literal and blunt meets literal and blunt.
When: Backdated to their original conversation or whenever's feasible.
Where: Brennan's room, presumably
Warnings: None
When it became clear that this woman he was speaking with did not believe in angels, Castiel took no offense. Given that very few held any real faith, he'd quickly learned to accept it, but when it became clear that she believed he was lying, he immediately sought to prove a point. It was through no act of pride or desire to be right, however. It merely seemed that this Temperance Brennan was a woman who valued the truth. And Castiel, being much of the same nature, merely wished to clarify something that she was not understanding. One not having faith didn't mean that beings such as angels were non-existent. In his eyes, it was similar to trying to deny the existence of a creature such as the elephant.
"Temperance Brennan?" he asked, landing in front of her. "I am Castiel. We've been speaking on the network."
He readied himself for any form of potential attack, despite the fact that he would not be able to feel it. And he'd clarified his identity just in case, though he felt she would remember him, given that they'd spoken to one another seconds ago. "If this is a bad time, I can go elsewhere and meet you when it is feasible."
He'd forgotten, in his haste, that humans often had other activities to busy themselves with. Though seeing as she'd only just recently arrived through the tesseract, he didn't believe that there would be much. Aside from meeting any friends from other realities, of course, but that remained to be seen. He was avoiding looking into her mind for propriety's sake. He was remembering his conversations with Dean. With Nilin. They'd all been very helpful in terms of etiquette when dealing with humans, even if he only adhered to it when absolutely necessary.
Castiel did not expect humans to behave like angels when he interacted with them. It stood to reason that they should not expect him to behave as a human might, save for customs of personal liberty and privacy. Those were not things he wished to violate.