SCRIBES OF ANGEL
Fan Fiction
________________________________
Disclaimer: the author does
not claim ownership to the characters or plot development mentioned from
"Angel" or "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" or "Fray".
These properties expressly belong to Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, Greenwolf
Corporation, 20th Century Fox Television, WB Network, the UPN Network, Dark
Horse Comics, etc. Any other characters contained in the original story are the
author's.
Historical
Note: Season three, after "Tomorrow".
Author's
Notes: Wow, it's been a long time since I've actively finished
anything! I started this one shortly after S3 ended and just couldn't get
back into it. Until one day... It's wild. You can finish the
first draft and work on a rewrite before you realize that the story just isn't
right. The subject was there, but the voice was all wrong. And then
Angel took over.
So, thanks to
Angel. Also to Ebonbird for coming to L.A. to visit for my
birthday. And to Nix for the technical advice.
No
beta. Any errors are mine and my vampire muse's. e.c. 05 Sep 02
DEPTH WISH
by
Evan Como
The
sea possesses the perpetual capacity for reprocessing waste.
How's
that's for a thought-niggling concept? It's just one of the many keeping me
from dormancy while life drones on not so very far away. Although, distance can
be considered relative when one's been soldered into an iron coffin and ditched
into the sea.
By a
relative, no less.
Would
it have been so awful -- OK, much more awful -- for my son and his redheaded
accomplice to have at least dropped me deeper into the Pacific? That way the
ocean's movements would have made this summer's version of perdition more
soothing. I could have sunk into hibernation by now, lullaby'd by the strains
of shifting sand and scuttling crustaceans -- with their faint vital rhythms.
Instead,
I'm fucking wide wake. Extremely aware of how small this goddam box is, how the
water's salt content is scouring my shriveling flesh while its meager oxygen
level tries wheedling me into relinquishing my last gasp.
But,
what's a prison, huh? The Tower of London couldn't keep me in. Hell
regurgitated me. I've climbed back into my own body after being displaced from
it. A couple of times. I even broke the shackles of my own emotional
confinement last year after Buffy died... Briefly. Briefly, but longer than the
first time which, when it comes right down to it, Buffy, proves *you're* still
the escape artist of all time. Even if I get out of this particular
predicament, I've yet to defeat undeadness.
I'm
telling ya. Nothing I learned in Sri Lanka could've prepared me for dealing
with this. This goes way beyond sorrow-preparedness training. No singing bowls
here; no mantras. And besides, unlike monastery seclusion, here I've got that
major problem of not being far enough away from civilization.
I
can't clear my head. I can't concentrate on anything...
Anything
other than...
Evil.
If
there'd ever been any doubts in my mind that Stephen was my son -- and, there
had *never* been any -- they'd expired at the first acrid flare of that
acetylene torch. As if sealing his fate while tending to mine, my young man's
genes had finally bloomed. Connor Angel, son of vampires, with all the hatred
your beloved human surrogate could cram into you...
Take a
look at yourself, lad. Take a big ugly look into that strictly-human, boyish
face of yours. Are you proud? Can you savor the revenge? Or, can you see that
you're no longer Junior...
You're
a Master of deception.
But
I'm not going to think about what you've done. I've got almost three centuries
of memories to rifle through so I don't need to dwell on you. I've got so much
macabre subject matter to brood on that I don't ever have to waste another
thought on you. In fact, I can even think pleasant thoughts. Yeah. I had happy
times, even before you were born.
This
particular pleasant memory begins at dusk. The sun had just retreated below the
horizon line as I'd approached our designated meeting place. Like most
vampires, I'd taken enough chances with pure sunlight to know how to skirt its
burn -- by drifting in and out of shadows, pausing just long enough for a ray
to shift so that I could turn another corner. I'd learned to make safe passages
of any street, any tunnel -- man-made or natural. If you inhabit a place long
enough eventually every byway can be interconnected, forming a giant labyrinth.
It
shouldn't be so surprising to the Powers That Be -- or anyone for that matter
-- that you'd found the exit I'd conjured, Connor. Escape is the family forté.
Anyway,
I should have noticed her first when I rounded the ice cream stand. Instead,
I'd probably zoned in on the bright aqua and neon apricot-streaked sunset. In
the split-second that I hadn't been paying attention something slithered
through the crook of my arm but, being cool like I pretend that I am most of
the time, I didn't jump. The connection came quickly enough of the lithe,
tanned forearm breaking up the monotony of my black outfit.
"You're
so early!" Cordelia'd exclaimed. Her teeth shimmered like pearls. Her
brilliant, brilliant smile.
I'd
nearly lost her two weeks prior and every time I saw her, I still marveled at
her recovery. Even if she'd only briefly left a room, her return would still
leave me dazed. If one of my instantaneous fugues had ever left her bewildered,
she'd never let on. Her near-death was as unspoken about as my near-Angelus
episode. We left it at: life would just assume more variations in our version
of normalcy.
Her
smile coaxed one out of me. "I started early. I made really good time
considering that the route isn't as direct to Venice from Silverlake."
I
don't think she waited for me to finish before tugging me towards the tiny
round table where Wesley sat. What a set! The table and chairs had a Cubist
thing going on -- tilted and foreshortened -- and, despite a tan from the late
afternoon sun, Wes looked as unfit to be out in public. He smiled uncertainly
while scooting to the edge of his chair. Palm down, he braced himself upwards,
breathed out through thinned lips.
"You're
so early," he parroted, except with his English accent. Wes' one-dimpled
expression was part enthusiasm, part excruciation; straightening his spinal
column had sent a shockwave through his lanky frame. Obviously, but more so
odorously, endorphins had immediately overpowered the perspiration and sea-air
clinging to the over-bleached oxford shirt blousing from under his tweed
jacket.
Not as
nonchalantly as I'd attempted, I wrangled my arm from Cordelia's stronghold.
"I started early -- "
"'Cause
the route from Silverlake to Venice isn't as direct," Cordelia concluded.
She batted her long lashes at him.
He
shook himself out of a fugue of his own. "We hadn't expected you for
another hour, at least."
Eyebrows
knotting with confusion, I puzzled aloud, "But you were already waiting..."
Cordelia
grinned. "Because *I* figured you'd be early." With that, she shucked
the calf-leather coat from off of my back and put it on over her gauze
peasant-top.
Wesley
clenched one fist several times then shook it out. "Really, Angel. If this
conversation doesn't cease now, we'll be here all night speaking only of your
miraculously early arrival." With its blood flow restored, the same hand
dropped to massage one thigh indiscreetly.
Before
I could finish asking, "Have you eaten yet?" his burp had answered my
question. Amused by Cordelia's hand overtly flagging in front of her nose, I
figured part of Wes' discomfort could even have come from a hot link -- loaded
with grilled onions and peppers and spicy mustard.
Shop-owners
pulled their rusty anti-theft grates into place. The crowd had thinned
considerably in the few minutes since I'd been there, making like the vinyl
handbags and $5 sunglasses that had disappeared from display, signaling the end
to another retail day.
"Looks
like there's not much going on. Maybe we could head to Century City, catch a
movie or something," I ended up suggesting to the back of Cordelia's head.
Pear-shaped rhinestones spangled her smoothed crown while her long hair dunked
in and out of several dark coils being strangeled by a jet ponytail holder.
"But,
I've already been down to that end of the Boardwalk, Cordelia," Wesley
called after her. He finger-combed the irritation twitching one eyebrow.
"Thrice!"
"What's
down here?" I asked, following. Without thinking, I cupped his elbow.
And he
froze. "Angel, please. I'm not that much of an invalid," he
cautioned.
I
swear, if he said that to me now like how he'd said it... I'd be tenderizing
him! I still can't believe how he could make an accusation out of just of
trying to be helpful. It's not like I hadn't almost lost him, too, but he never
remembered that. I should have left him to burn with my apartment; that way I
wouldn't want him so dead.
Like
always, I remember apologizing, "I -- I'm sorry. I just -- " I
crossed my arms and sunk my hands deep into the folds of my black pullover.
"I wasn't thinking."
Ignoring
me, Wes hobbled onward with his complaint. "Cordelia! Must we?
Again?"
She
skipped backwards, back to us and a woman had to swerve her baby's stroller out
of the way of a sure collision. Before the Mom got a chance to spew her anger,
Cordelia's wave at the "Keeeee-UTE Baby!" extracted a doting parental
grin.
By
then, we'd caught up. She parted me and Wes, turned, and glommed onto us both.
For an early-June L.A. night, it was warm. The deepening sunset dusted
Cordelia's hazel irises cinnamon. Her weight shifted more left to compensate
for Wesley.
"We
should go," I whispered into her ear. For my suggestion, a wild curl
flopped across my lips.
"No
way!" she replied, putting her brakes on. "What we need to do is take
a picture!" Pinwheeling, she aimed us at a photo booth that promised
"Full Color Portraits in 5 Minutes!"
"And,
instead of '3 different poses', we can get 3 copies of the same pose!" She
beamed at us.
I
broke formation.
Her
voice sounded a mile away. "Angel!" she kept shouting. Finally she
latched onto me and pulled hard.
But I
didn't stop. After all, I'd only distanced myself from them by about eight
paces, if that many. "I don't do pictures," I said, firmly
enough to mean 'no'.
Which,
of course, is the one word in any language that Cordelia cannot comprehend.
"C'mon, Angel! It'll be fun!"
A
roller-skater, with long dreads that looked like tentacles reaching out of the
top of his turban, cut off Wesley's approach. I couldn't decide if the guitar
slung across the guy's torso was there for strumming or if it was being used to
weight his center of gravity. Annoyed, Wes finally waved past the offer of
"Premium Incense, six for one dollar!"
Surprisingly,
the ex-Watcher took my side in the matter. "I don't blame you, Angel. I
know I certainly don't look my best. And I'm sure this creeping humidity isn't
just playing havoc with your hair."
I
willed myself not to coif. "This isn't a vanity thing, you two." And,
it wasn't. I just...
Couldn't.
I
bowed my head to the disappointment that'd consumed Cordelia. I knew her well
enough to guess that her request probably wasn't being based on sentimentality
-- that used to be strictly Wesley's M.O. But since her recurring-vision coma,
she'd been changing. At first I thought all that caring she'd been directing at
me and Wesley was an act -- one she was finally good at, but still just an act.
Watching
her reclaim Wesley's arm made me realize -- with the same startling impact of
being slammed to a flagstone floor -- that caring, sharing persona she'd
affected...
Was
who'd she'd actually become.
Avoiding
eye contact, I mouthed, "I'm sorry."
"No.
Excuse *me*," Wesley remarked. Sand beneath his crepe-sole loafers
skritched across the pavement as Cordelia pulled him aside.
"No
problem, my man." The pedestrian doffed his Kangol and plucked at a bold,
Kente-cloth sling keeping a drum at the small of his back.
"Why's
he carrying that candle snuffer?" Cordelia asked way too loudly.
The
drummer stopped. He had inclined his head slightly in greeting and, when he
raised it, there was a bemused expression wrinkling his brown, Vaselined skin.
He wasn't as young as he'd first appeared; the youthful buoyancy to his step
and congeniality had fooled me, which actually felt kinda neat.
He
raised the object of Cordelia's fascination -- his drumstick -- and pointed to
the sea. "For out there," he announced before moving on.
"There
are candles on the sand?" Cordelia asked, much more softly into Wesley's
bicep.
When
Wesley directed his chin towards the water the balmy cross-breeze tousled his
wayward hair. Daylight's petering embers blazed off his retinas, making dual
red suns with grey coronas of his eyes. His arm, like a movie Moses', rose at
the water, commanding.
"Candles
on the sand," he hushed, reverent.
They
took off and I trailed them. Actually, with Cordelia increasing her lead each
time she kicked the beach out of her way, I ended up behind Wesley -- just in
case. I don't know how she'd managed it but she'd smoothed our way and, each
step closer to the noisy assembly, Wesley's footfall had become stronger as if
to mock: sand, what sand?
By the
time we'd joined up, the sabar-drummer we'd been following had already taken
his place on the outside of the drum circle and begun adding his rhythm.
Tentatively, his right palm cupped the shell of his instrument to test several
tempos comprising the cacophony.
Gourds,
tambourines, maracas, bells, cymbals accompanied percussion instruments of
every other shape, sound, origin. A round, hassock-sized drum droned a steady
stroke-stroke basso when walloped with a fleece-headed beater. Two men --
brothers by their features -- shared conga duties, making a duet of a samba.
Wes, laughing, stopped clapping long enough to point out one of the few women
in the group; rising high on knees burrowed into the sand, her wide hips and
round shoulders toggled sideways while the heels of her palms and the pads of
her chunky fingers danced across her skins.
I
patted Wesley across the back agreeably and his heart fluttered before
recommencing his own internal rhythm. Feet apart, he swayed with the tide.
"What do you know? Englishmen *can* find a beat!" he snickered.
I
would have hugged him for surviving that blast if I could have found the
courage. By the time I thought I'd actually accumulated some, his eyes had
dropped, his smile had waned. I peeled my hand from his back but not before
it'd been slicked by his uneasiness.
I
should have killed him then.
Oblivious
to all, like raindrops would've been to the crashing surf, a teen's snare drum
tapped away in the background. Unable to find the source of the offensive beat,
a crouching djembe-player discovered Cordelia instead and nodded approvingly.
Ringed by her fallen hair gems, she'd dug her heels in to anchor herself while
her slender hips swayed without shame. The candles that had been our beacon to
this place, being attended to by the circle's admirers, bathed her bare legs
with soft light.
"Thunk.
Thunk." The djeli slammed the drumhead, rousing a deep, booming sound.
"Thunk.
Thunk. Thunk. Thunk." Each of the conganeers answered.
I'd
become mesmerized. The djeli's ten human fingers plied his goatskin head too
rapidly and I was the only spectator with the eyes and ears capable of
detecting each individual sound.
"Sounds
like a stampede of woodpeckers!" Cordelia laughed, slapping the tops of
her thighs.
"Gun
godo godo gun," the djembe questioned.
"Gun-GUN,"
the sabar replied.
Not
one to be left out of a conversation, Cordelia added, "Pata pata."
Puffing
out his tie-dyed tee-shirted chest, the lead drummer took stock of the circle.
"THUMP," his drum decreed, calling for obedience.
Which
the djembe instantly acknowledged. The bongo quartet fell in time, too. With
their belled anklets jangling, dancing children mimicked the fleeing shoreline
birds with gleeful cries. A legion of replies wafted on the air.
"Gun
godo godo gun pata gun godo godo GUN GUN," the djembe laid down
repeatedly.
Compelled
to answer, a fair-haired man scuffed closer and I recognized him immediately.
In a thousand years, I'd still be able to close my eyes and see that tipper
dance across that drumhead -- no differently than I'd witnessed it centuries
before. He executed a baton-major's gestures; his elbow flailed, evoking a
precise, hollow song. Strong notes were complemented by a rush of softer ones,
a right proper introduction for his bodhran.
Of my
country. Your ancestry.
Without
thinking, a smile as wide as the djembe-owner's face overtook my own. "You
play dat t'ing well," he'd yelled, increasing the volume of his cadence. I
had to nod in agreement.
"I
do a' right," the man replied, revealing his roots as not from Eire but
Arizona. At the flattering comment, the sunburn that had seared the tips of his
ears seized him from the neck up.
"Someone
best t'ink about beatin' down dat snare drum." The djembe resonated quads.
The
bodhran-player tick-a-tatted his frame-drum's rim. "Ah, c'mon. Why take it
out on the poor snare? Drums don't kill tempos, inattentive drummers do!"
That
made me laugh.
Your
mother's laugh had been no different while we'd aimlessly floated across the
Keta lagoon. I'd joined her and our singular voice cut through the raucous air
-- rife with danger warnings, beating between all the islands we'd tasted.
All
those tribal voices, not a human one among them -- only their drums, wailing in
a tongue we completely understood. We added them to the count. Since landing
upon African soil, we'd heard the same serenade many, many times.
Darla
wouldn't let me throw our canoeist overboard. "It's part of the
romance," she'd whispered against my lips. Slumped in the prow, four
lifeless fingers trailed through our leeward wake, raking the full moon's
reflection.
Ebony
water shimmered -- "THUMP!" -- Candles flickered. A few of the
drummers fell off of the swell, returning for its crest.
Without
warning, Cordelia's hand clipped my nose. "Sorry," she said without
contrition. Parallel to her collarbones, pancaked hands hammocked her face. Eye
shadow twinkled in the corners of her closed lids and on the apples of her
happy cheeks.
The
snare drum found the collective tempo. Only for a bar.
"What
time is it?" Wesley asked. He massaged his bare wrist with a hot palm;
he'd never stopped clapping.
I
checked my watch and it ticked to match our deafening background. The sun had
long since meandered towards Hawaii. Over an hour had passed.
Cordelia
collapsed at the waist then threw herself back up. It wasn't until she hugged
herself that I realized she'd long since dropped my coat. I picked it up off my
shoes, shook it out, and draped her shoulders with it.
"We
should go, Angel, and get this old man home," she joked, patting Wesley's
arm. "This was a long, long day and EW! Repetition, much? You so shouldn't
have eaten that hot dog, Wesley!"
"Hot
link," I murmured. Just because.
At
absolute dark, the last beat fell; the crowd cheered. As they said their
goodbye's, Cordelia and I scooped up Wes with my arm resting over hers. Wesley
didn't make a peep, probably to conserve what little energy he had. When we got
to the bike path, I let go but I could still feel them coursing through me. The
one heart pounding, exhausted, the other...
Compassionate.
"That's it, Wesley. Just breathe in what you can," Cordy soothed
against his matted temple, matching her decade and a half-senior's
hands-on-knees position. "You'll be OK."
Wesley
followed her instructions attentively, needing to believe.
She
shrugged. "And if you're not OK, Angel will have to carry you the car like
a bay-beeeeeeee." She yanked the Plymouth's keys from the pocket of her
cargo shorts and jangled them in front of his eyes.
I
cradled my arms.
Wesley
reared. "Look at that! All better." The step he took wasn't the most
convincing, but he was adamant about any volition he made being his own.
"Very much improved!"
Back
on our way to where Cordelia had parked, I lagged a half-step behind.
"So,
what'll we do now?" she asked over her shoulder.
When I
stopped to think, they stopped. The drummers dispersed around us; Cordelia
cumbia'd to a beat she'd memorized; Wesley, grateful for rest, just waved.
I
leaned against a palm tree, watching, remembering wanting to listen. I wanted
to treasure every sound. I wanted to remember the lathered bike rider who
passed us, walking his messed-up bike -- the clack-clack of its disengaged
derailleur, air sputtering through its spokes. I wanted to take that and every
moment before and make them all my prey.
I
gathered Cordelia and Wesley by their shoulders and rotated us. "So, you
want to know what we're going do now?" I proposed, hurting my cheeks from
trying to be serious.
Wesley
nodded, not to agree but as if he knew why. That's always been his
problem -- always assuming how much he knew.
Cordelia
smooched my cheek. "We're going to take a picture!" she squealed,
racing for the booth. "I've got dibs on the crappy mirror!"
So
that's what we did. And now while I'm deteriorating beneath this brownish-green
brine, and Cordy's getting more pissed that, not only did I not meet her, I
split without saying good-bye, and, hopefully, Wesley's putrefying in a stew of
betrayal, there's a $5.00 pose that's holding our place in time.
A
reminder that I should have known better.
Like I
should have known better on Pylea than to prance in the sun. Like I should have
known better than to hold you in my arms and assume that I'd ever get to be
your real Dad. And love? FORGET love! Love is a cherry ride geared up to
backfire. I can't even manage friendship.
Why
the fuck am I telling you any of this? I can be dense, but you've more
than gotten it through to me how much you're not interested in anything I've
got to say. So I'm done talking to you, Connor.
Now
here's a prayer to whoever's listening: God, PTB's, Rama, The Top Tortilla --
ANYONE! A deal: I'll stop being something other than what I am, falling
for the delusion that I can have the good life that everyone's been giving
permission for me to have. I'm not asking to be let out of here; I'm pretty
sure that wouldn't be a good thing for the world because -- just from personal
history -- I'll either murderize someone or I'll be, pretty much, really insane.
If
it's at all possible, I just want to get a good-bye message to Cordy. And then
I want some quiet. You'll never have to hear from or about me again; I'll shut
up and go to sleep. If this is retribution for my past, I'm accepting it. No
redemption? OK. I knew it didn't actually exist.
I just
need an end to the thumping.