SCRIBES OF ANGEL
Fan Fiction
________________________________
"Power Of
Love"
by Debbie
Nockels
(November 2000)
RATING:
PG-13
SPOILERS: Seasons 1-4 of BtVS; Season 1 of A:TS
DISCLAIMER: I don't own any of the characters from BTVS or ANGEL. They're
owned by Joss Whedon (who ought to treat them nicer), MutantEnemy, Kuzui,
Sandollar, the WB, Fox, etc.
KEYWORDS: AU/Futurefic
SUMMARY: Buffy's in a coma. Can Angel bring her out of it?
NOTES: I'm not a doctor or nurse, which is probably obvious in this fic.
Thanks to Shirlz' mother, Marie, for her advice on matters medical.
Any mistakes are mine, not hers. And many, many thanks to Anja, the
bestest beta-reader, for her suggestions and comments.
NOTES 2: The lyrics below are from "The Power of Love" by
Gunther Mende, Candy DeRouge, Jennifer Rush & Mary Susan Applegate, EMI
Songs Musikvertag (GEMA)/EMI April Music Inc. (ASCAP). It was first sung
(as far as I know) in the '80s by both Air Supply and Laura Branigan
(beautifully); then re-covered a couple of years ago by Celine Dion, who worked
her usual magic to make it a big hit.
____________________________________________________________________
The whispers in the morning
Of lovers sleeping tight
Are rolling by like thunder now
As I look in your eyes
I hold on to your body
And feel each move you make
Your voice is warm and tender
A love that I could not forsake
‘Cause you are my lady and I am your man
Whenever you reach for me, I'll do all that I can
We're heading for something,
Somewhere I've never been
Sometimes I am frightened but I'm ready to learn
About the power of love
<><><><><><><><>
WEDNESDAY, 12:15 A.M.
Joyce burst through the hospital doors, wide-eyed and tense but controlled.
Cool night breezes blew in with her, dissipating the odors of medicine
and fear lingering in the air of the Emergency Room. Giles hurried over
to meet her.
"How is she?" Vaguely she noted the group beyond him - Riley,
hunkered down, leaning back against a nearby wall, with Willow, Xander and Anya
standing around him, all looking her way with anxiety plain on their faces.
"I only know that she was unconscious when they brought her in and that
they're working to stabilize her," Giles said, his quiet voice edged with
tension and worry - and bitterness. "They won't tell me anything
else; I'm not family."
"Well, I am." With that, Joyce marched over to the admittance
desk. Giles stayed put, watching her intently. "I'm Joyce Summers.
My daughter was brought in a little while ago."
The woman in attendance glanced down at a list on her desk. "Buffy
Summers?" When Joyce nodded she picked up a phone and spoke into it
briefly, then turned a sympathetic smile on Joyce. "Dr. Martinez
will be out in just a minute, Mrs. Summers. He's the doctor who's
treating your daughter."
"Thank you." Joyce walked over to the group over by the wall.
"Riley, what happened? You were together, weren't you?"
Giles silently rejoined them.
"We were patrolling," the young man said, his voice dull.
"Five vampires ambushed us. She staked two of them and started
for the third one. It ran and she went after it, but . . . I'm not sure
exactly what happened, but I heard her cry out just as I zapped the remaining
vamp. I think she tripped or something because when I found her she was
lying next to this big rock and there was blood on her head. She was
unconscious, so I called 911 and they brought her here."
He looked up at Joyce. "They won't tell us anything."
Just then the inner doors of the ER slid open. A short, brown-haired,
brown-skinned man walked through into the waiting room, his tired, drawn face
testimony to the lateness of the hour. His dark eyes swept over the
group, then fastened on Joyce as the only possibly candidate. "Mrs.
Summers?"
"Yes." Joyce stepped forward. "How is Buffy?"
Riley scrambled to his feet, staring at the man with hope and dread
written all over his face, expressions mirrored by everyone.
The doctor hesitated, glancing at the group. "Would you prefer
somewhere more private?" Pleading gazes swung over to Joyce; Giles
tightened his lips.
"No," Joyce answered firmly. "These are my daughter's
friends . . . no, they're more than friends. They're as much a part of
her family as I am."
Giles cleared his throat, obviously touched by her statement. Joyce had
come a long way from the time when she blamed him for putting Buffy in danger
and for keeping her life as the Slayer a secret from her.
"Very well," Dr. Martinez acquiesced. "Your daughter is
still unconscious. Apparently she hit her head on a rock, resulting in
what we believe is only a minor fracture to her skull. We've got her
stabilized for the moment but we need to make sure that the fractured
area isn't pressing on her brain and that the bleeding inside the cranium has
stopped. I want to take X-rays and do an MRI scan."
"Of course; do whatever it takes," Joyce responded. She took a
shaky breath. "Doctor, what if there is pressure on the brain, or
she's still bleeding? What happens then?"
"In either one of those cases there's always the possibility that we may
have to perform surgery," the doctor told her. "But let's not
cross that bridge unless we have to. First let me see what the tests
show, then I'll discuss options with you."
Joyce nodded. "May I see her?"
"Only for a minute." The doctor's voice was kind.
"We'll be taking her up to X-Ray very soon."
Joyce hesitated, then turned to Giles. "Rupert, would you like to
come with me?" Giles looked at her in surprise, then blinked
rapidly, swallowed, and said, hoarsely, "Yes. Yes, I would.
Thank you."
Riley started to say something, but Willow touched his arm and gave him a look,
shaking her head, and he subsided with the words unsaid, although his eyes
followed Joyce and Giles yearningly as they entered the treatment area.
The two followed the doctor into a small cubicle where Buffy lay, almost as
white as the sheets and blanket covering her. A bag of saline solution
dangled from a tall pole beside her, its liquid dripping through a long tube into
a vein in the back of her right hand, and wires ran from her body to various
monitors where lights danced across screens in rhythm to blips and beeps
familiar to anyone who watched TV. An ugly, jagged cut two inches long,
bristling with sutures, marked the left side of her head, nakedly revealed by
the large circle shaved around it. Bruise marks were already spreading
outward from the wound onto her face.
Joyce made a smothered sound. Tears sprang to her eyes, but she steadied
herself and went forward. "Buffy?" She approached one
side of the bed; Giles went around to the other. "Honey, I'm here.
I don't know if you can hear me, but you've been hurt and you're in the
hospital. But don't worry; the doctors are taking good care of you."
She put her hand over Buffy's, mindful of the tube snaking from it, and gave it
a slight squeeze. Two tears trailed silently down her cheeks.
Giles cleared his throat and took her other hand. "Buffy, it's me.
Giles. We're all here, you know. Willow, Xander, Riley . . .
even Anya. You just concentrate on getting better." He turned
his head as footsteps approached. A nurse and two orderlies entered the
cubicle, pushing a gurney between them. "They're taking you to get
X-rays now, so I'll see you later." He hesitated, then leaned
forward and kissed her forehead.
Joyce also kissed her daughter again. "I'll see you in a little
while, honey. I love you." With one last backward glance at
the motionless form in the bed, they went back to the waiting room. "Does
anyone know where the pay phone is? I need to call her father."
Xander looked at her strangely. "It's, uh, right here."
He turned his head; there, unmistakably, less than a foot away, was a
telephone kiosk. Joyce gazed at it blankly. "Oh. Yes.
Thank you, Xander." She dug in her purse for her calling card
as everyone politely moved away to give her some privacy.
"Giles," said Willow very quietly. "Will Buffy be all
right?"
"She's alive and her vital signs are stable," Giles replied steadily.
"Those are encouraging signs. And as you know, Slayers possess
amazing healing powers. Yes, I believe Buffy will come through
this."
They fell silent. A few minutes later Joyce rejoined them.
"He'll be here in a couple of hours," she told them.
"We should know more by then."
Again silence fell. Riley found a chair and sat, leaning forward, arms
braced on his thighs, hands clasped between his knees, staring at the floor.
He looked as if he were praying. Willow and Giles left in search of
coffee; Xander and Anya moved back to the wall. It was almost an hour
before Dr. Martinez made another appearance. He looked even more
exhausted than he had earlier, but he smiled at Joyce as she rose from the
small couch.
"Mrs. Summers, I have good news. The fracture is only a hairline;
there doesn't appear to be any pressure onto the brain; and the bleeding inside
the skull has definitely stopped. This significantly reduces the
probability of lasting brain damage."
"Thank God." Joyce buried her face in her hands.
Dr. Martinez continued. "However, it's still possible that Buffy may
experience some *temporary* - " he stressed the word, " - memory loss
or other mental or physical impairment. We'll simply have to wait until
she wakes up and see."
"When will that be?" Xander wanted to know.
The doctor shook his head. "There's no way of knowing; every case of
head trauma is individual and unique. A few patients regain consciousness
in only a few hours; others take days or even weeks. In Buffy's case, with
only a hairline fracture, I would not expect this condition to last beyond
forty-eight hours."
"But the quicker she comes out of it, the better, yes?" Giles
asked.
"Well," the doctor admitted. "I'll certainly be happier if
she wakes up by Friday. *But* - " he held up a finger for emphasis
" - that doesn't mean we should despair if she doesn't."
"When can I see her?" Joyce demanded.
"I want to keep her in ICU for a few more hours, just to make sure she
continues to be stable," the doctor told her. "Only immediate
family are allowed - "
Joyce interrupted. "I already told you, this is her family.
She's closer to Mr. Giles here than she is to her own father, who, by the
way, is on his way from Los Angeles."
"I'm not family," blurted Anya. "But that's okay; I don't
like hospitals anyway. Or sick people. So I don't need to see
her."
This statement was so typically Anya that it caused only a slight rolling of
eyes; otherwise, the gang ignored it. The doctor, however, looked
somewhat taken aback. He blinked in confusion for a moment, then
obviously decided to ignore the blunt statement. "Uh, yes.
Very well, Mrs. Summers, I'll permit her friends to go in also. But
only for a few minutes."
Riley was the first to enter Buffy's cubicle. His eyes flew to her pale
face. Swallowing hard, he picked up the hand not encumbered with the IV
tube. It took him a minute to get his voice under control.
"Hey there." It came out as a whisper. "You
look a lot better than you did earlier. Well, except for that big bald
spot on your head, but at least they cleaned you up. You're not all
bloody now."
He managed a faint smile, but it immediately vanished. "I hate
seeing you like this, Buffy. You're so pale and, and quiet. I can't
get used to not hearing your voice. I don't mean that you're a chatterbox
or anything; I mean . . . well, you know what I mean. God, when I heard
you cry out, and then I saw you lying there on the ground . . . I think my
heart stopped. I thought you were - "
He had to stop for a second. "Well, never mind that; I was wrong,
thank God. You're going to be fine; the doctor said so. So just
rest now and get your strength back. That's an order, soldier. I
want to take you back to Iowa one of these days and show you off to my folks,
so you see you have to get better."
One of the nurses poked her head inside. "Excuse me."
Riley turned. "I'm sorry, but your time is up." Her
voice was kind but her firm expression told him it would do no good to protest.
Sighing, he turned back to the bed. "They're making me go now.
Wake up soon, Buffy, please."
He kissed her forehead just as Xander and Willow came in. The three
exchanged glances as Riley left, then the two friends arranged themselves
beside the bed, one on each side.
Xander grimaced at the sight of the wound on her head. "Ouch, that
looks really nasty. No wonder she's out cold."
"Xander." Willow frowned at him. "Just because she's
unconscious doesn't mean she can't hear us - or see us, even. How do we
know, maybe she's floating around somewhere over this bed right now."
"What? You mean like that babe in the Ghostbusters movie?
The one that unzipped Dan Aykroyd's pants?" Xander squinted
above Buffy's bed as if trying to see a transparent floating figure.
The redhead gave him a Look. "You know what I mean: we should talk
*to* Buffy, not *about* her like she's not even here." Turning once
more to her unconscious friend she said, "Buffy, we can only stay a moment
before they kick us out. We just wanted to say that we love you and we
know you're fighting to come out of this."
"Yeah," Xander agreed. "The doc says the bleeding has
stopped and everything looks good. So you rest now and when you wake up
you'll be Slay Girl again, just like usual."
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
About to enter Buffy's room, Dr. Martinez found himself waylaid just outside
the door. "What's going on?" Joyce confronted him.
"Why hasn't Buffy woken up?"
The doctor shook his head. "I don't know, Mrs. Summers; I wish I
did. Her vital signs continue to be good. The X-ray we took
yesterday showed that the fracture is healing at an amazing rate of speed, and
there doesn't appear to be any physical trauma to the brain."
"But she's still unconscious," Anya declared. "That's not
a good sign." Xander glared at her, but before he could say anything
the ex-demon continued, "It's obvious that we need to talk to her.
At least, I don't but all of you do. You're her friends. She
loves you and you love her, though I don't understand why since all she's ever
done is put you all in danger and then save you from it."
"Anya." Willow's eyes indicated the doctor, standing next to
her, listening with a puzzled expression.
"Oh. Sorry." The former vengeance demon actually looked
somewhat abashed at her slip of the tongue.
"Danger?" Dr. Martinez looked at her quizzically.
Anya rallied quickly. "Oh, not *real* danger. Only pretend
danger. I mean, you know, it's not like she held a gun to anyone's head
and forced them to go on that stupid roller coaster last month. I just
don't like heights." She gave him a weak smile.
"Oh." Dr. Martinez blinked dazedly, a not uncommon reaction to
Anya's off-the-wall remarks. "Uh . . . well, anyway, you were right
about what you said."
Anya looked pleased.
"Studies have proven that often someone who seems to be unconscious is
able to hear what is being said around them. So I would recommend that
you take turns staying with her, and just talk to her."
"Talk? What about?" Xander asked blankly.
"Anything. Everything." The doctor's glasses glinted as
he turned to the young man. "Remind her about past times - the good
times, that is."
"Good times. Oh, yeah, like staking vampires and fighting
Frankenstein monsters and averting Apocalypses," Xander murmured sotto
voce to Willow. She elbowed him sharply. "Ow!"
"Talk about your friendship," continued the doctor.
"Things you've done together, any future plans you might have made
with her - you know, like going on vacation together or something."
"I can do that," Riley said with determination. "No
problem." His boyish face showed the strain of the past few days.
"Me too," Willow piped up. "We were planning to go to see
a play in L.A. this summer."
Dr. Martinez nodded. "That's exactly the kind of thing I mean.
We need to give her a reason to wake up."
"Dr. Martinez," Joyce said slowly. ""Are you saying that
you think Buffy doesn't want to wake up?"
The doctor hesitated. "Mrs. Summers, maybe I'm wrong but I get the
distinct impression that your daughter's been under a lot of stress lately.
She's seriously underweight, for one thing, but I somehow don't think she
has an eating disorder."
"Not an intentional one, anyway," Joyce agreed. "But
you're right, Buffy hasn't been eating well lately, and she has had a lot of
stress this past year." She paused, considering.
"Actually, make that the last couple of years."
"I believe we can stretch that to the three year mark," Giles put in
quietly.
"Yeah, " Xander muttered, his expression grim. "Thanks to
Soul Boy's antics."
"That was four years ago and he wasn't Soul Boy at the time," Willow
reminded him. "Which was the whole problem, but anyway it wasn't his
fault. He didn't know about the loophole; nobody knew about it.
Well, except the Kalderash gypsies."
Listening, Dr. Martinez experienced a sensation he'd had all too frequently of
late - ever since Buffy Summers had been wheeled into the ER, in fact.
Not only was she herself a puzzle, with her fracture that was healing at
a phenomenal rate he would have sworn was impossible, but never had he
encountered such a strange and baffling group of people, not even during his
internship in New York City or his years of practicing medicine in San
Francisco, both of which cities prided themselves on the eccentricity of their
inhabitants.
Giles interrupted the squabbling pair. "Never mind that now."
He looked at Dr. Martinez. "So you think that Buffy has, er,
escaped into herself, so to speak . . . that, in essence, she's had a sort of
nervous breakdown."
"Well . . ." Dr. Martinez hesitated. "Well, yes, I guess
you could put it like that. There certainly is no physical reason that we
can detect for her continuing to be unconscious. And believe me, we've
run every test there is."
"Wait," Riley suddenly recalled. "When Buffy was first
admitted, I thought you said it could sometimes take days or even weeks for
someone to regain consciousness."
"Yes," Dr. Martinez allowed. "That's true - but not with a
fracture as minor as this one. So since there is no apparent
physiological cause for her condition, I have to wonder if it isn't a
psychological one."
"I'm willing to give it a try," Riley declared. He glanced a
little awkwardly at Joyce. "Do you mind if I go in to her now?"
Joyce smiled. "Go ahead, Riley. I'll relieve you in an
hour."
Riley smiled back in thanks. Pushing the door open enough to admit him,
he swung it almost closed behind him and went over to Buffy. He pulled
the chair over next to the bed and sat down. Buffy's arms rested across
the coverlet, and he reached over and picked up one hand, chafing it with his
thumb. Its almost skeletal thinness caught at his heart. He looked
at her face, seeing how sunken her features had become.
"I remember the first time I saw you," he murmured. "It
was the first or second day of school, in the university library; do you
remember? You knocked those books off the shelf onto my head, and you
were so embarrassed and flustered. Did I ever tell you how cute you are
when you're flustered?"
He gave a faint chuckle. "Probably not; ‘cute' and ‘slayer' don't really go together, do
they? Then, later on, I saw you in the cafeteria. You broke the
handle on the ice cream machine, and I remember thinking, ‘What a klutz.' Boy, was
I wrong." He smiled a little.
"I'm not sure when I started really noticing you as a person instead of
just someone who was always dropping things and stammering out inane remarks.
One day I looked at you in class and suddenly realized how beautiful you
are. And your class papers that I graded showed that you were really
smart too. Then all of a sudden it seemed as if our paths were always
crossing. Every place I went, there you were too. And I couldn't
get you out of my mind, Buffy, especially after we started dating. I've
never fallen for anyone this hard and fast before. There's a phrase I
remember hearing my father use: blonde bombshell. That's how I felt, like
I'd been hit by a blonde bombshell named Buffy Summers."
Riley smiled again. "Or maybe Hurricane Buffy is more like it.
An unstoppable force of nature that gathers up everything in its path and
sweeps them along with it." Then he shook his head. "No.
That's not it. Hurricanes leave only devastation behind, and that's
not true of you. You battle the forces of destruction, you don't cause
it.
"When everything happened with the Initiative . . . when Maggie tried to
have you killed and then when they captured Oz and tortured him . . . when I
finally realized that they weren't the guys in white hats I'd believed in, it
was like my world shattered. I didn't know who to trust, except you.
I didn't even know who I was anymore. So much of my identity was
bound up with the Initiative . . . I was lost and scared, but at least I wasn't
alone. You were there for me, just like I'm here for you now."
He pressed her hand to his lips. "I love you, Buffy, and I'm going
to bring you back to me. To us. I'd hoped you could take a little
vacation with me this summer back to Iowa to meet my folks. I hadn't
asked you yet because . . . well, the time just never seemed right, what with
Adam and the Initiative, but I was going to, soon.
"You'll like my folks, I think, and I know they'll love you. How
could anyone not love you? And you should see the farm in the summer;
it's so beautiful."
<><><><><><><><>
Buffy opened her eyes. The leaves of the huge oak she lay beneath
filtered the sun's rays and dappled her face with shadows. She stretched
lazily and blinked up at the sky where high white clouds scudded across the
dazzling blue. God, it felt good to be able to take a nap whenever she
wanted! She felt as if she hadn't slept in years. Well, she hadn't,
not really. What with patrolling and school and homework, not to mention
her tumultuous love life, she'd been short on sleep pretty much ever since she
was Called as the Slayer, five years ago.
How long had she been here, she wondered vaguely as she had numerous times
before, upon awakening. And for that matter, where exactly was
"here"? The last thing she remembered was . . . fighting vamps.
Of course; what else would she be doing? And Riley was there with
her . . . somewhere.
As usual the elusive memory slipped away before she could grasp it. She
yawned. Oh well, it would come to her sooner or later. A soft breeze
swept over the countryside, stirring the foliage overhead. Mingled with
their rustling came a faint murmurous sound, almost like voices. Buffy
smiled drowsily, picturing tiny mouths on each green leaf, and slipped back
into slumber.
"You were there for me, just like I'm here for you now. I love
you, Buffy, and I'm going to bring you back to me. To us.
____________________________________________________________________
PART TWO
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
(Two weeks after Buffy's accident)
"Please wake up, Buffy." Willow squeezed the slack hand; her
voice was slightly hoarse. She'd been with the unconscious Slayer for
almost two hours, talking about anything she could think of. "It's
really scary seeing you like this. Riley's about to go crazy worrying
about you, not to mention your mom and dad - did you know he's been here every
day? Your dad, I mean. Well, until today, but he had to go back; he has a
business to run. And Xander and Giles are worried too. And me.
"I miss you a lot, Buffy. Tara and I even cast a spell and searched
the otherworld, trying to find where you've gone. I know you're there
somewhere . . . but we couldn't find you. You're pretty good at hiding, I
guess." She searched her friend's face for any sign of returning intelligence,
but Buffy's expression remained the same: unmoving and unaware.
"Buffy, I know that being the Slayer hasn't been easy. In fact, it's
been hell for you at times. You got expelled from Hemery and had to move,
so you lost all your friends there. Then you had problems at Sunnydale
High because of the slaying thing. And of course there was dying for that
minute or two when the Master bit you, and, and then the trouble with Angel
going all evil. That was terrible, I know."
Looking down at the hand in hers, Willow missed the faint movement of Buffy's
lips. "But it hasn't been all bad, has it? I mean, you made
new friends . . . Xander and me and, and Oz, before he left. And even
Cordy, sort of.
"And after Angel left you met Riley." Willow inserted
encouragement into her voice. "I know you haven't forgotten Riley.
He really loves you, Buffy, and - "
She looked up in time to catch the motion of Buffy's throat as she swallowed.
Even though this had happened before, along with other involuntary
movements and even occasional sounds, something seemed different this time.
Willow sensed that Buffy - her essence or consciousness or whatever
- was closer to her body than it had been since the accident.
"Buffy?" Sudden hope made her heart beat fast. Riley!
That was obviously the key; she should have been talking about him
all this weary time! Willow felt like smacking herself on the head.
The pale lips opened. "Angel. . . ." It was the merest
whisper, but it was unmistakable. Then the lips stilled and the
Buffy-essence she'd sensed a moment ago was gone.
Willow stared. Angel? It was mention of Angel that had
evoked a reaction, unconscious though it was? Angel, who had loved her
and caused her more pain than anyone? Angel, who had left her without a
word after he'd almost drained her of blood?
Willow remembered the weeks, months really, following Angel's departure - the
tears, the depression, the lost, empty look in Buffy's eyes, a look that had
only been relieved when she began dating Riley. She'd thought - everyone
had thought - that Riley had replaced Angel in Buffy's heart. Now, rather
obviously, it was apparent that this was far from the case.
"Oh God." Willow's brow furrowed with distress. "How
can I ever tell Riley?"
<><><><><><><><>
". . . Buffy . . ."
What was that? Buffy raised her head. Her eyes searched the area
around her. She'd grown accustomed to the vague murmuring noises that
were nearly always present, so much a part of the background that usually she
wasn't consciously aware of them. But something had emerged from the
anonymous babble, something that caught her attention even though she couldn't
identify it. She waited to see if it would repeat itself.
". . . Slayer . . . hell for you . . ."
She turned in that direction, but saw only grass and wildflowers. She
frowned. For a moment she thought she'd heard Willow's voice, something
that had occurred several times lately, although it wasn't always Willow she
imagined hearing. Xander, Giles, her mom, Riley . . . she'd imagined all
their voices at one time or another.
" . . . Angel going all evil . . ."
Strange; for a second she could swear the wind had even whispered Angel's name.
For some reason her mind turned to the dark period after Angel had lost
his soul, when the vampire demon had regained possession of his body and was
taunting her at every turn with the fact that it was her fault it had happened.
For an instant Angelus' cocky grin and cold, mocking eyes - so unlike the
loving, albeit brooding, expression of her Angel - flashed before her eyes.
No! Buffy thrust the memory away. That nightmare belonged to the
past. It was over. It had ended four years ago when she'd stopped
Angelus from destroying the world by sending him to hell.
Except that it wasn't Angelus who'd been sucked into hell by the demon Acathla.
It had been her own Angel, his soul returning at precisely the wrong
moment, when she'd had no choice but to proceed. Using the blood of the
body he occupied, Angelus had already awakened Acathla from his long dormancy
and set into motion forces that could only be stopped with the same blood.
Angel's blood. If she hadn't stabbed Angel the souls of every
living person on earth would have been inhaled by the waking demon, as he drew
in his first breath in centuries.
Billions of innocent souls - or one soul, however dazed, bewildered and, oh
yes, innocent it might be?
It wasn't a stumper.
And so she'd sent her lover straight to the demon dimension called hell.
For the rest of her life, however long or short that might be, she would
always remember the shocked incomprehension on Angel's face as the sword sliced
into his body . . . always hear his agonized voice faltering out her name . . .
see his hand outstretched pleadingly to her as the vortex claimed him.
Goodbye, Angel. Do not pass Go. Do not collect two hundred dollars.
Instead, suffer the torments of hell for all eternity and, incidentally,
remember that it was the girl you loved who sent you there - deliberately.
Buffy blinked back the moisture collecting in her eyes. Angel had
inexplicably returned to her only a few months later, after a mere hundred
years or so in hell (rather than eternity), but nothing had been the same.
How could it be? There were too many memories, too much potential
for disaster in their love. For love each other they did, regardless.
Even now, with a hundred-plus miles between them - at least, when she was
in Sunnydale that was the case; God knew how much distance now separated them,
assuming physical distance was even a factor here - and even with a new
boyfriend she truly cared for, she knew she would never stop loving Angel.
Buffy shook her head wearily. It didn't matter. She and Angel
couldn't be together and that was that. Yearning after the unattainable
didn't help anyone. What in the world had started her on this train of
thought anyway? Oh, yes, the wind and the rustling of the leaves had
reminded her of voices.
"Right," she said aloud. "Stick Buffy in the loony bin; she's
hearing voices." She shrugged, yawning. Or maybe she'd just
dreamed it all; she was still sleeping a lot. Most of the time, in fact.
Her eyelids drooped.
Out of nowhere images swam through her mind: first, a young man, tall, boyishly
handsome, broad-shouldered, with light brown hair and frank, open eyes. Riley,
Buffy recognized without real interest. His figure faded from sight, to
be followed by that of another man, this one dark-haired with skin as pale as
marble and dark-chocolate eyes whose haunted, brooding gaze went straight to
her heart. Her lips parted.
"Angel," she breathed in the instant before sleep claimed her again.
<><><><><><><><><>
"It's not working." Willow faced Giles. His eyes, like
hers, were ringed with dark shadows. "She's not coming out of it
"They were in the hospital "cafeteria" - a
fancy name for wrapped sandwiches and limp salads and an array of vending
machines. She had gone straight there after leaving Buffy, following long
minutes of intense and disturbing thought.
"Willow, we must give her more time," Giles began.
Willow interrupted. "It's been two weeks since she hit her head,
Giles. One of us has been with her almost constantly for the last ten
days doing the Buffy talkathon. We've hardly slept and we're all
exhausted. We can't go on like this."
Anya raised an interested eyebrow. Beside her at the table, a bleary-eyed
Xander looked up from contemplating his drink as Riley whirled around from the
coffee dispenser. "So what do you want us to do?" Riley snapped
at Willow, his voice rising.
"Just give up? Just let her slip away from
us?" His eyes, bloodshot and red-rimmed, blazed. "I
thought you were her friend!"
"I am her friend!" Willow snapped back.
Giles and Joyce stared, startled by her display of anger. Xander,
who had seen her angry before, only watched her somberly; Anya, with detached
curiosity. "But not facing facts won't help Buffy, and the fact is
that she's losing ground. You heard Dr. Martinez. Her heart is
getting weaker."
Anya jumped in. "That's right. He's even talking about
putting her back on 24-hour monitoring if it gets any worse."
Joyce put her hand on Riley's arm before he could explode.
"Why don't you go back to Buffy?" she suggested in a soothing
tone. "We'll talk with Willow and find out what she has in
mind."
Glaring at Willow, Riley closed his mouth with an
audible snap. Turning on his heel he stalked out of the room, his
shoulders rigid with anger – and poorly concealed fear. Willow watched
him leave then turned defensively to Buffy's mother, but Joyce beat her to it.
"You think we should call Angel."
Xander stared. Willow gaped, taken aback, then stammered, "Uh
. . . well . . . yes."
Joyce bit her lip. "I've been thinking that too, for a couple
of days now."
"You have?" Giles gave a faint, humorless chuckle.
"So have I."
Buffy's mother regarded them wryly. "So I guess that means
we've all known the truth and just haven't wanted to admit it."
"Actually it didn't hit me until a little while ago," Willow
admitted, sighing. "You're right. Buffy still loves
Angel."
"Indeed," came Giles' rueful agreement. "And I have
no doubt at all that Angel feels the same."
"Hold it!" Xander held up a hand. "What are
you all talking about? Dead Boy's gone; he's out of the picture."
The others shook their heads. "No," said Willow.
"He's very much a part of the picture; we just haven't seen him
because he's behind the picture that's in front, the one that we've been
seeing. I guess the one we wanted to see."
"But . . . Riley!" Xander exclaimed. He gestured wildly.
"Remember him? Soldier Boy? The tall guy we all risked
our lives for, to rescue from the Initiative? The one that Buffy's been
joined to the hip to for over a year now? Riley?"
Joyce shook her head again. "I know that Buffy cares for
Riley," she sighed. "But she just doesn't have that . . . spark
. . . she had when she was with Angel."
Xander muttered, "You didn't see them at that frat
party." Anya stifled a snicker at the reference to the lust-driven
couple they'd finally been able to rescue from the spell in the haunted hall.
"Buffy spoke," Willow said without further preamble.
Everyone turned to her in shock. "When I was in with her just
now. She said Angel's name."
"Did she say anything else?" demanded Joyce.
Willow shook her head. "No, she just whispered the one word,
then - " She shrugged. "It was like nothing had happened."
"Why didn't you tell us before?" That was Giles, at his
most magisterial.
"Because I didn't want Riley to know," Willow answered gravely.
"Oh." The ex-Watcher looked momentarily discomfited, then
turned thoughtful. "No, it's probably best that he doesn't know.
Not right now, at least."
"Did she actually wake up?" Joyce asked. Her eyes fixed
on Willow hopefully.
Willow looked down. "No. She whispered Angel's name, but
her eyes didn't open."
"But why would she just say his name like that, out of the
blue?" wondered Xander. "Unless - were you talking to her about
him, Will?" Disapproval tinged his voice.
"No. Well, not really," Willow hedged. "I'd
been talking about how I knew she'd had a rough time, you know, with being the
Slayer and all, and I - I might have mentioned Angel turning evil, but then I
reminded her that she has Riley now, who really, really cares for her and is
really worried about her and - "
She cleared her throat then mumbled, "And that's when she said
Angel's name."
Xander looked at her. "You were talking about Riley, and Buffy
called for Angel?" When Willow nodded, he winced. "Ouch.
That'll hurt."
"Do we have to tell him?" asked Willow earnestly. "I
mean, can't we. . . ." She searched for words.
"Sneak Angel into Buffy's room without Riley finding out?"
Anya made her first contribution to the conversation. "How?
He's practically living there. What are you going to do, put
knockout drops in his coffee?"
Giles looked thoughtful. "Actually, that's not a bad
idea." As everyone gazed at him he added, "Not knockout drops,
whatever they may be, but a sedative of some sort, perhaps a sleeping pill to
make him drowsy. Then we might be able to persuade him to go home and
rest."
When his glance met only continued disbelief, he said defensively,
"Well? Does anyone have a better suggestion?" Glances
were exchanged and, one by one, heads were shaken.
Joyce sighed. "We can cross that bridge when we come to it.
But first we need to get hold of Angel. Do you have his number,
Rupert?"
<><><><><><><><><>
"Angel Investigations. We help the hopeless," Cordelia almost
sang into the phone. It had been a good week, with real money coming in
from another bodyguard position Angel had accepted. The fact that he had
only taken the job because their desperate financial situation left him no
choice didn't disturb her at all. After all, the rent on their new office
had to be paid - not to mention her salary. Oh, and Wesley's and Gunn's
too, of course.
Their firm, and Angel in particular, had been recommended by Rebecca, the
actress who'd unwittingly released Angelus the year before when she gave Angel
a drug "to relax him." Still guilt-stricken over what she'd
caused, Rebecca continued to try to make amends by sending some business their
way. An actress friend of hers was being stalked, just as she had been,
although this time the stalker hadn't been hired by her agent. Luckily
Angel had been able to catch the man in the act of attempting to assault her,
and he was currently cooling his heels in the city jail while waiting to go
before a judge. Since he had a long and violent record it seemed pretty
sure that bail would be set high enough to keep him off the streets before his
court date.
The actress friend had been effusive with her thanks, and exceedingly generous
with payment, giving Angel, Wesley and Cordelia each a hundred dollar tip on
top of what she owed.
"Is this Cordelia?" came a woman's voice over the phone.
"Yes, it is." Cordelia discreetly modulated her voice, making
it lower and softer, almost throaty. You never knew, this could be a
director wanting her for a part. "Who is this?"
"Cordelia, it's Joyce Summers." Cordelia blinked in surprise.
"Buffy's mother."
"Of course," said Cordelia in her normal voice. "How are
you, Mrs. Summers?"
"Actually, I've been better, thank you. I don't mean to be rude, but
is Angel there?"
Cordelia mentally groaned. Uh-oh. This couldn't be good news.
Buffy's mother calling was just as bad, Angel-wise, as Giles calling him.
Or Buffy. For that matter, any time one of the Sunnydale gang phoned
it always turned out bad for Angel, bringing back memories and stirring up
emotions that most of the time lay buried beneath the minutiae of daily
business. And that meant hours of brooding or bag-punching, or both.
"Um . . . I'm not sure. Let me check." Putting Joyce on
hold, Cordelia sat thinking. After a moment, though, she sighed and
started to get up. Just then she heard footsteps so she sat back and
waited. Angel appeared in the lobby. He must have heard the phone
ring and come to investigate.
"Who's on the phone?" he asked, his eyes flying to the flashing Hold
button. He walked over to the desk.
Reluctantly Cordelia told him. "It's Mrs. Summers."
Angel tensed. "Buffy's mother?" At her nod he snatched up
the receiver so fast that Cordelia jumped. "Joyce, it's Angel.
Is anything wrong?"
Cordelia watched his face grow bleak as he listened. Finally he said,
"I'll be there tonight," and hung up.
"What is it?" she demanded.
"Buffy's in the hospital, in a coma. She hit her head on a rock
while on patrol."
Cordelia shrugged. "So? Her Mutant Ninja Slayer powers will
kick into gear any moment now. She'll be healed by tomorrow and she'll
wake up. There's no need to go rushing to her side. Remember what
happened last time you showed up unannounced." Reminding him of how
pissed Buffy had been a year and a half ago to learn he'd been in Sunnydale.
Of course, most of her anger had been because he hadn't let her know
he was there. . . .
Angel met her accusatory glance. "She was injured two weeks ago,
Cordelia, and her condition is worsening. The only word she's spoken
during that time was my name."
"Oh." Cordelia knew when she was licked. She sighed and
reached under the desk for her purse. "Good thing I already
deposited that check. I'll go to the ATM to get you some cash. How
soon will you be leaving?"
Angel glanced out the window where the sun was shining brightly even through
the L.A. smog. It was a little after 3:30; three hours until it was safe
for him to go outside. He ground his teeth. "I'll wait until
sunset."
"Good thinking," she said, ignoring the frustration that edged his
voice. "You won't do Buffy any good if you get in an accident
because you're speeding, and end up getting crispy-crittered by the sun."
"That's the only reason I'm waiting." Angel turned and went
back down the stairs, presumably to pack. Cordelia watched his retreating
figure.
"I know," she sighed. Shaking her head, she slung the purse
strap over her shoulder and left, hoping against hope that everything would
turn out all right in this next exciting installment of the Buffy & Angel
Show.
NINE O'CLOCK THAT NIGHT
Angel spotted the Sunnydale Hospital and breathed an uncharacteristic sigh of
relief. He worked his jaw around, trying to loosen muscles and tendons
that had been clenched tight during the entire two-hour-plus drive from Los
Angeles. Normally the trip wouldn't have taken that long, but an accident
on the freeway had backed traffic up for miles and left him ready to spit nails
from frustration.
He'd known the taste of hell many times since the forcible return of his soul
by the Kalderash had acquainted him with the 150 years of evil he, as a
vampire, had wrought - not even counting the time two years ago when he'd
actually gone to hell. There had been the time, for instance, when
he'd almost killed Buffy by draining her blood (even though she'd pretty much
forced him into it since that was the only cure for the poison that was rapidly
killing him); then the following night when he'd silently bidden her goodbye
through the drifting smoke of the high school parking lot and walked away from
the only love he'd ever known.
The Day That Never Happened; the blessed, miraculous day when he'd been human
and he and Buffy had been able to love, and make love, without fear; the day
the Oracles took back at his request; the day only he now remembered.
That memory was a special kind of hell.
The most recent experience was last year, when she'd told him she was involved
with someone else, someone she could trust. That someone, of course, was
Riley. He'd known that her words were spoken out of hurt feelings due to
his defense of Faith, and a desire to hit back at him, but the implication,
that she couldn't trust him, had stricken him to the heart, especially
since he couldn't in all honesty deny its validity.
Because of course that was the most agonizing part of all: the knowledge
that the most wonderful night of his life, the night he and Buffy first
consummated their love, had begun a nightmarish reign of terror for her.
For that consummation, that moment of complete and perfect happiness, had
revoked the gypsies' curse, thereby freeing once again the vampire demon
inhabiting his body. His soul, along with his conscience, had fled, and
Angelus had returned, triumphant and eager for revenge.
Released from a century of impotence, the demon had reveled in his freedom, and
for Angelus that meant doing what he was best at: killing and torturing.
He'd targeted Buffy in particular, delighting in cruelly tormenting her
and those she cared for. He'd killed Jenny Calendar, the computer science
teacher at the high school who also happened to be Giles' romantic interest.
All of these deeds, and their consequences, Angel had been forced to deal
with when his soul had once more been returned to his body.
But none of these examples compared to the fear that consumed Angel now.
"She'll be all right," he reassured himself for the thousandth time
as he swung the convertible into the parking lot. "She's the
strongest Slayer in history. She's not like the others; she'll pull
through this."
She had to. Anything else was unthinkable.
Angel found a parking space and killed the engine, pulling out the keys and
opening his door in a single smooth motion. Not bothering to lock it he
started for the hospital entrance, each long, hurried step echoing in the
silence of the night. As he neared the door someone stepped forward from
the shadows.
Giles.
Angel stopped. "How is she?" He braced himself for the
answer.
"There's been no change since we talked. She's still
unconscious."
"She isn't any worse?"
"No, there's been no change at all," Giles replied.
Relief slumped Angel's shoulders. "Take me to her." Angel
started forward but Giles put a hand on his arm, stopping him.
"Wait." The vampire shot him an impatient glance. Giles
took a deep breath. "Riley's still in with her." When
Angel stiffened he added hastily, "He shouldn't be there long. We,
er, gave him a sedative in his drink and it should have taken effect by now. We
wanted him, uh, out of the way before you went in."
They'd given Riley Finn a Mickey Finn? Even in his perturbation Angel
spared a mental grin at the thought while he studied Giles for a long moment.
"He doesn't know you called me, does he? Or why."
"Er, well, no," Giles admitted. "We didn't tell him any of
it."
"Why not?"
Giles met his gaze. "Because Riley loves Buffy. We didn't see
any reason to hurt him like that when . . . er, well. . . ." He
faltered, his eyes sliding away from Angel's.
"When the situation between Buffy and me hasn't changed, regardless of how
we feel about each other," Angel finished steadily, realizing what he
hesitated to say. "I understand. They've been happy together;
why spoil it?"
Giles nodded, grateful for Angel's comprehension and selflessness. His
respect for the souled vampire, grudgingly given in the beginning but
increasing with every infrequent report from Wesley, grew even greater.
Wesley had told him about the shanshu prophecy. With all his heart
he hoped that the day would come soon when Angel would be rewarded for his
fight against evil (both in the world and within himself) by becoming human
again.
Joyce appeared, opening the doors. "They're coming." The
two men drew aside into the shadows, hidden from view when, a minute later,
Xander walked outside with Riley, whom he was practically supporting.
Unobtrusively Xander scanned the area until he caught sight of them,
giving Giles a slight nod of his head.
"I'm sorry," Riley was saying . . . mumbling, rather. Xander's
attention hastily returned to him as the taller man stumbled a little, almost
missing the first step down. "I dunno what hit me
all'fasudden."
Xander cocked his head. "Well, how about lack of sleep for starters?
Followed by worrying about Buffy and, of course, not eating enough.
Can you say ‘complete
physical exhaustion'?" He helped Riley down the steps.
"Okay, G.I. Joe, just a little way more and then we'll have you home
before you know it. You can sleep tonight and see Buffy in the morning,
all bright and rested and ready to do battle for her."
Turning his head he shot Angel a sly, sidelong glance, then turned his
attention back to his charge. Giles, Joyce and Angel watched in silence
while Xander maneuvered Riley into Joyce's car and drove off. As the tail
lights receded Joyce turned to them. "Angel. Thank you for
coming." Her voice, like her face, betrayed the strain of the past
two weeks.
Angel gave a little shake of his head. "You don't have to thank
me," he said quietly. "You know I'd do anything for her."
"I know." She offered him a tremulous smile. "But I
still thank you." She put her hand on his arm. "Come
on."
"Wait." It was Giles again. Angel faced him.
"What is it this time?" he asked warily.
"We, er, that is, I haven't told you the entire situation."
Angel's eyes narrowed. "You said Buffy hit her head on a rock and
has been unconscious ever since. That wasn't true?"
"No," Joyce put in hastily. "I mean, yes, it's true.
She did hit her head and she is in a coma, but what Rupert apparently
hasn't gotten around to telling you yet is that the fracture to her skull was
very minor, only a hairline in fact. And it's completely healed."
Angel frowned. "Then why is she still in a coma? She should
have regained consciousness within a day or two."
"Exactly." Giles pulled off his glasses and began
absent-mindedly to polish them with his handkerchief. "Her doctor
thinks Buffy hasn't awakened because . . . well, because she doesn't want to.
He, er, gathered that she's been under a lot of stress lately and he
believes her continued coma is an unconscious attempt - sorry, poor choice of
words. In short, he believes it's an escape mechanism."
Angel turned away abruptly. Giles gave him a thoughtful look.
"You don't, er, seem surprised by this. I confess that
surprises me." He replaced his glasses, adjusted them
slightly.
There was a long moment of silence. Joyce and Giles both waited.
Finally Angel turned and faced them again. "I've been afraid
something like this would happen. That's the real reason I left, to give
Buffy a better chance to survive. I hoped that with me out of the picture
she'd have at least a portion of her life that was normal." His face
was grim.
"I don't understand," Joyce said. Angel hesitated, glancing at
Giles. "Joyce, are you aware of what the average life expectancy is
for a Slayer?" Giles suddenly looked uneasy.
Joyce blinked. "Well, no, not exactly. Buffy said something
once about Slayers not having to worry about drawing Social Security, but -
" She stopped, braced herself. "Tell me."
"Twenty-five."
"What?" Joyce stared in shock, then slowly turned to Giles.
"Is that true?"
"Er, yes. I'm afraid so," Giles confirmed, with obvious
reluctance.
"Almost seventy percent of the Slayers die before their twenty-fifth
birthday," Angel continued. There was something relentless in his
quiet voice. "Isn't that right, Giles?"
Giles hesitated, then nodded even more reluctantly. "Yes."
"Seventy percent?" Joyce was still incredulous.
"The remaining thirty percent - " Angel paused. "Well,
let's just say that in the twelve hundred years since the Watcher's Council
began keeping records, only one Slayer has lived to see thirty."
"One?" gasped Joyce.
____________________________________________________________________
PART THREE
"Anjanette Dubois," murmured Giles. "She died in 1872, two
months after her thirtieth birthday, at the hands of one of the Order of
Taraka. She killed him after a long battle, but her injuries were so
severe that. . . ." His voice died away, then Giles roused,
blinking. "What does any of this have to do with Buffy being in a
coma?"
"Yes." With some effort Joyce, too, came back to the matter at
hand. "Angel, I don't understand why you brought this up now."
"Giles, didn't you ever wonder why every Slayer has died young?
Every last one of them?" Angel glanced at Joyce. "I
mean, so far."
Giles' eyes flickered. "Slayers lead extremely dangerous lives; you
should know that better than most."
Angel nodded. "Yeah, killing demons is risky work. But so is
fighting fires, and look how many firemen there are in their thirties and
forties. Doesn't it seem just a little unbelievable that in more than a
thousand years not one Slayer has managed to survive to see even thirty-one?
Especially considering the kinds of recuperative powers the Slayers have?
Hasn't anyone in the Council ever wondered about that? Haven't
you?" His gaze at Giles was pointed.
Joyce massaged her temples. "Angel, please. I'm too tired for
guessing games. What is your point?"
Before Angel could reply Giles heaved a deep sigh. "Of course I've
wondered; many of us have - many Watchers, that is. The Council is well
aware that the mortality rate for Slayers is unusually high. Many of the
deaths can be attributed to inexperience and carelessness, especially in the
case of the younger Slayers."
"That's probably true," said Angel quietly. "But what
about the more mature Slayers? They're stronger, more experienced; their
reflexes are quicker - but still they die, so many of them that an insurance
company would take one look at the statistics and raise its hands in horror.
Why, Giles?"
Giles was silent.
Angel persisted. "Could it be that the stress level simply becomes
too much, especially since unlike firefighters or policemen, Slayers
traditionally have had no support group? Even their Watchers are
forbidden to become too emotionally involved with their charges, as you know
only too well. You also know as well as I do that Slayers usually become
estranged early on from their families and friends. In fact, I believe
the Council encourages that to happen."
"Yes," Giles agreed heavily. "It's believed that the fewer
distractions a Slayer has from her calling, the better."
"But Buffy's friends help her," objected Joyce, frowning.
Angel smiled a little. "Yes. Buffy is unique in that, as she
is in so many other areas. Her relationship with you, Joyce, and with
Giles and her friends - all of you know about her and are there for her, and
she knows that. She knows that she can count on all of you, and that
gives her strength." He paused. "She loves you."
"But that's also her weakness," Giles pointed out, quietly.
Angel nodded, sighing. "Ironically, yes. Because she cares
about all of you, a part of her is always worrying about your safety,
especially Willow and Xander and, and Riley-" He stumbled a little over
that last name, but forced himself to continue. "Since those three
are the most actively involved with her in the slaying side of things, that
puts them in the most danger."
"Which they wouldn't be in if it wasn't for her. At least, that's
the way Buffy sees it." Leaning against the wall Joyce exhaled loudly.
"So she's not only risking her life battling evil demons every night
and saving the world two or three times a year, she feels personally
responsible for the safety of her best friends."
"That's why I left," Angel repeated. "I thought if she
could have a normal relationship with a normal man it would take at least one
stress out of her life." Then Angel gave a short laugh.
"It never occurred to me that she'd fall in love with a demon hunter
and just add one more person to her list of people to worry about."
"Do you think Buffy didn't worry about your safety, Angel?" Giles
asked, giving him a curious glance. "I can assure you that she did.
That she does."
"Yes," Angel acknowledged, "but she knows I can hold my own in a
fight with demons. I'm not mortal; Riley is."
Joyce said quietly, "Buffy isn't in love with Riley. She cares for
him, maybe she even loves him, a little - but it was you she called for, Angel,
not him. And I think that's just one more stress added onto all the
rest."
"What do you mean?" Angel was more than just confused; he was
clueless. "Sure, Buffy said my name, but she was probably just
dreaming or - or something."
"I think it was more than that, Angel. A lot more." Joyce
smiled a little, but it was a sad smile. "Deep down, maybe even
unconsciously, I think Buffy realizes that Riley is only a make-do boyfriend
because she can't have you, and she feels guilty about it." Again
she put her hand on Angel's arm. "Come on, let's go in."
She led the way inside, through the almost empty lobby to the large reception
desk where a security guard was seated. "Hi, Mr. Adams."
"Mrs. Summers, you're back again? I thought you left for the night.
I thought everyone had left," the middle-aged man said, his tone
surprised, while his shrewd brown eyes gave Angel a swift but thorough
examination. "Hoped maybe you were all going to get a good night's
sleep for once." He cocked a meaningful eyebrow at her.
Joyce gave him a weary smile. "Not tonight, I'm afraid. At
least, not right away. Mr. Adams, this is Angel. He'll be going in
with us to see my daughter and I want him to have the same access to her that I
do."
"Sure thing, Mrs. Summers," the guard said genially. He jotted
something down on a long notepad. "Angel . . . what's the last name,
son?"
"Jones," Angel replied shortly, suddenly impatient to be done with
all the delays and in with Buffy. Giles shot him a surprised glance.
Of course, Angel realized, he probably knows my real name; it must be in
the Watchers' Diaries.
He gave a little shrug. There'd be time later to explain about the family
with the possessed son, when he'd first used the name Jones (actually it was
the first name that came to mind) while trying to determine just what exactly
was possessing their child. He quickly banished that unhappy memory, not
wanting to dwell on it.
Formalities completed, he followed Giles and Joyce through a set of double
doors, then down long, echoing corridors where glimpses into the few open doors
revealed only curtains drawn around beds or motionless, sheeted forms
surrounded by monitors and/or IV bags. They stopped outside Room 114.
The door was open but long curtains concealed the bed from sight.
"Before we go in," said Joyce, looking up at him earnestly, "I
want to prepare you. She's been unconscious for two weeks and she's lost
weight - "
"Joyce." Angel cut her off, but gently. "I've seen a
lot of sick people in my time. I know what to expect." He gave
her an encouraging smile and walked into the room.
Despite his words to Joyce, his first sight of Buffy was a distinct shock.
He felt it like a kick in his stomach. It wasn't just the weight
loss, though he hadn't thought she could get any skinnier than she'd been the
last time he saw her. No, it was the absolute paleness of her skin (how
could she lose her tan so quickly?) and the unfamiliar stillness of her body as
she lay in the bed.
They'd turned her over onto her right side, to avoid putting any pressure on
the injury site. She was facing him, and the faint, barely perceptible
motion as she breathed was the only movement Angel could detect. The hair
that had been shaved was beginning to grow back, but the ugly wound still
showed pink against the now bristly patch of skin. A closer look revealed
tiny holes where the sutures had been, but they'd been removed. Even the
bruise marks had faded until they were barely visible.
The doctors must be puzzled at how fast she's healed, Angel thought,
wondering if at some time in the near future Buffy's case would be written up
in the journals as a medical mystery.
"Angel."
The vampire blinked. Willow rose from the chair next to the bed. He
hadn't even noticed her sitting there. "Willow. How are
you?" Even as he spoke his eyes returned to the figure in the bed.
Willow didn't bother to reply. Instead she walked around the bed, then
paused beside him. She reached for his hand, digging into her pants
pocket, and deposited something into his palm, something that gleamed silver.
It was a claddagh ring, the one he'd given Buffy on her ill-fated
seventeenth birthday.
Angel gazed at it dumbly. There wasn't a speck of tarnish to be seen on
it; obviously it had been well cared for. His eyes flashed to his own
hand, where an identical ring decorated his left hand, its heart pointing
inward to his heart. He'd taken it out of his dresser drawer before
leaving Los Angeles, obeying the little voice in his head that was urging him
to take it with him.
"I found this in Buffy's jewelry box," Willow told him.
"She loves you, Angel. Bring her back. Please."
Her eyes pleaded with him, then she left the room, closing the door
behind her.
Angel sat down in the vacated chair and carefully took one of Buffy's hands in
his. It was cool, and the ebb and flow of her life force weaker than he'd
ever known it. He had to listen carefully to hear her heartbeat, so slow
and feeble was it. "Buffy. Buffy, it's me. Angel."
Not a flicker of an eyelid, not even a hitch in her slow, shallow breaths to
indicate that she'd heard him. Of course he hadn't expected that easy a
resolution either.
That would be a little too much to hope for, he thought wryly. He
looked at the ring Willow had given him. That same little voice was
telling him to put it on her finger where it belonged, but this time he
hesitated. It was one thing for him to wear his ring, with all that it
symbolized; he knew he would never love another as he loved Buffy. But he
had no right to impose that on her.
Those days are long past, he reminded himself. Buffy doesn't
know that in my time this was used as a marriage band. She just thinks of it as
a love token. And it just might help me reach her. Firmly he
placed the claddagh on her ring finger. She'd lost so much weight that he
had to hold it in place by twining his fingers in hers. Which he'd
planned on doing anyway.
"You know what this means, Buffy. It stands for friendship, loyalty,
and love. I love you, and I'm not letting you go, just as you wouldn't
let me go when I tried to kill myself that Christmas. I know you remember
it. I was on the hilltop waiting for the sun to rise. . . ."
Settling himself more comfortably, Angel began talking, reminiscing about their
times together, chuckling about how she'd knocked him on his ass at their first
meeting. For the first time he admitted how scared he'd been when he
suddenly recognized that the emotion he was feeling every time they were
together (the same emotion he'd experienced almost since his first sight of
her) wasn't just feeling protective and wanting to help her.
It was love.
He also admitted his near-panic when it dawned on him that she loved him in
return. "I almost left right then," he now confessed.
"My bags were packed and I was only waiting for the sun to go down.
I remember pacing the room, cursing, because it was still daylight
outside and because I was trying not to think about how I'd just killed Darla.
"We never talked about that, did we, Buffy?" He was silent a
moment. "This isn't the time or the place for a lecture, but Darla
was my sire and, for vampires, killing your sire is not only unheard of, it's
almost inconceivable. Vampires can leave their sires, and usually do
sooner or later, but killing them?"
He shook his head. "I don't think it's ever happened before.
It isn't even supposed to be possible; the bond is too strong. But
that afternoon, all at once I realized that I had actually done it. I'd
driven a crossbow bolt into Darla's heart and killed her - because of you,
Buffy. Because I was protecting you. It was then that I realized
that whatever we had between us was out of the ordinary, and I knew something
that special shouldn't be thrown away. Or run away from."
Angel sighed, chafing her hand. "So I unpacked my bags. I
wasn't thinking very clearly, I guess, because I also decided that I would keep
on helping you, but we shouldn't see each other again because a vampire and a
slayer falling in love was just too weird."
He chuckled ruefully. "Confused much, as Cordelia would say.
Anyway, as soon as it was dark, I went to the Bronze and waited for you -
to say goodbye. And then we kissed . . . and I thought my heart would
burst from everything I was feeling. I couldn't leave; do you remember?
You were the one who walked away that night; and I just stood there and
watched you go."
Angel stopped, aware he was treading on dangerous ground. "Well,
maybe this isn't the best subject to be talking about right now. I
remember when Xander came and told me that you'd gone to hunt the Master. . .
."
An hour passed, and still Angel talked on. He sipped water from Buffy's
carafe when his voice began to fail, and then continued. Another hour
went by, with no change in Buffy's condition. Finally Angel fell silent.
She was there, somewhere, and he knew - how, he couldn't have said, but he knew
- that he could reach her. But it was clear that this plan wasn't
working. No, this battle wouldn't - couldn't - be fought in this world.
He had to follow her to whatever corner of the otherworld she'd fled to.
Planting his elbows on the bed, Angel sandwiched her hand between his and
rested his forehead on their clasped hands, as if he were praying. He
closed his eyes and stilled his thoughts, allowing his memories of Buffy to
rise in their multitude. For he remembered every moment of their time
together; good, bad or indifferent, not one second, not one movement or one
word, was lost to him.
(Buffy, sitting on the steps of Hemery High, learning about her destiny from
her first Watcher, Merrick . . . Buffy, at their first meeting, telling him she
wanted to be left alone . . . Buffy at the Bronze, her lips telling him
she understood that they had to stay apart, while her eyes spoke volumes of
denial . . . Buffy, drained by the Master, lying lifeless in a pool of water,
her white dress spreading out around her like broken wings . . . Buffy fighting
vamps, her motions swift and sure and graceful, turning a grisly duty into a
deadly ballet . . . Buffy in his arms, soft and yielding and eager, as he was,
to finally consummate the love that consumed them both . . . Buffy's trembling
voice whispering that she loved him, then telling him to close his eyes, an
instant before stabbing him and sending him to Hell . . .
Buffy sending him sprawling with one shove, tearfully demanding, "What
about me? I love you *so* much" . . . gawking along with him in
wonderment at the snow-filled sky that prevented the sun's rise from killing
him as he'd planned . . . Her sorrowful gaze as together they tricked Faith
into revealing her betrayal . . . "Are you still my girl? he asked her,
and she instantly replied, "Always" . . . Buffy's face, filled with
steely determination as she bade him drink from her, that it was the only way
to cure the poison of Faith's arrow . . . Her eyes staring at him through
the smoke and mist of the smoldering school, silently remembering and bidding
him goodbye until he forced himself to turn and walk away from her . . . Buffy,
clutching at him, sobbing that she'd never forget the day he was human . . . .
With each memory, the sense of Buffy that Angel carried in his heart grew
stronger, the warm amber glow that accompanied that sense, as much a part of it
as the memories, became deeper, brighter. With the very last memory that
came, of Buffy standing in the dormitory corridor, thanking him for not liking
Riley, an amber spark shot before his closed eyes, bobbing and weaving before
him. In his mind, Angel followed it.
<><><><><><><><>
Buffy sat with her back against her favorite tree, the one at the very edge of
the hill overlooking the lush valley below. Not that there's anything
there to see, particularly, she thought, her mouth curving up in a faint
smile. Although horses wandered here and there, grazing the dark green
grass, no houses or barns, or dwellings of any kind, were in sight. Or
people. She hadn't seen a soul since she got here, except for the horses
and other assorted wildlife, none of it threatening.
It was strange that she'd ended up someplace like this, she mused. She'd
never been the outdoorsy type, never gone in for hiking or bike riding or
camping or stuff like that. No, her preferences for spare-time activities
had always been for shopping malls or movies or just an evening at The Bronze
with the Scoobies, yet ever since she'd first woken up to find herself in this
place (wherever it was) instead of Sunnydale, she'd been entranced by the
tranquility of her surroundings. The weather was always perfect, too; no
rain and just the right temperature, neither too warm nor too cool.
At first she'd mostly slept, catching up on what felt like years of
deprivation, waking up only to yawn and stretch, then roll over and sink again
into a slumber so deep it felt like falling into thick, dark water. But
after a while - days? weeks? - she'd begun having short periods of wakefulness
in between her long naps. The wakeful periods grew longer until now they
edged past the time spent sleeping.
It was easier when I slept all the time, she thought, gazing with
unseeing eyes at the pastoral scene below. Then I didn't have to think
about anything. Now. . . .
Now she had no excuse for not noticing the oddities that occurred at frequent
intervals. Such as the voices she continued to hear; familiar, loved
voices, twining their way in and out of the constant background noise of wind
and leaves and . . . well, she wasn't entirely sure what other sounds
contributed to the ceaseless murmur; she only knew they were there. Just
as she knew, now, that the voices too were real, and that they were talking to
her. She heard them and understood what they were saying; she just didn't
want to listen.
They wanted her to leave this peaceful land and return to them. Return to
a life of the unending violence and danger that came with fighting evil; a life
of constant fear that those she loved would come to harm because they insisted
on helping her in that fight, or because some evil entity realized that hurting
them would hurt her. A life where she rose in the morning wondering if
she'd live to see the next day.
A life where she couldn't be with the person she loved most in the world
because that would endanger his soul and release another terrible evil into the
world, an evil she would then have to fight - again. Ever since the
moment Angel had silently bidden her goodbye and she'd watched his back recede
through the haze over the high school parking lot, there had been a void in her
life, an empty, aching space that refused to be filled.
Her friends helped; in fact, she couldn't have made it without them.
Willow, sweet yet tough; Xander, always ready with a quip to relieve the
tension - she knew she could count on their unflinching loyalty even in the
worst of times. Tara, Willow's lover, had also become a friend, though
there wasn't the bond with the shy young witch that she had with Willow.
Anya . . . well, Anya was Anya. Not exactly a friend, but as long
as the former demon and Xander continued as a couple Anya would lend her
assistance, complete with loudly voiced complaints and acidic comments.
Riley. Buffy shut her eyes and rested her head against the tree.
Riley helped too, and not just with the demons. She couldn't deny
the feelings she held for him. His generous heart and devoted nature had
attracted her almost from the beginning - not to mention his boyish good looks
and impressive physique (buff without being all Schwarzeneggar Guy).
Riley loved her; she knew that. And she -
Buffy sighed, feeling a deep sadness saturated with guilt, a tangled web of
emotions she'd only recently become aware that she'd been carrying for some
time. She cared for Riley. She did. She worried about his
safety, fretted if they became separated during patrol, and counted on his
presence. He made her feel cherished; he eased the soreness in her heart
so she felt less lonely. Surely that was love . . . wasn't it?
Two tears escaped beneath her closed eyelids. It didn't matter.
What she felt for Riley might be a love of sorts, but it didn't even
begin to compare with the love she had for Angel, even when, as now, she hadn't
seen him for almost a year. Maybe she loved Riley - but she was in love
with Angel. And Riley deserved better than someone who couldn't give her
entire heart to him. She knew that, had known it for a long time.
She'd just never had the courage to break it off with him, to give up the
comfort he gave her.
She heard footsteps coming up on her left but didn't bother turning her head;
somehow she already knew what she would see.
"Buffy."
<><><><><><><><>
Straight as an arrow the brilliant amber spark shot ahead of him, but not so
fast that Angel couldn't keep up as it led him through the otherworld.
Under other circumstances he might have enjoyed the journey; certainly
the glimpses he was afforded of other realities intrigued him and at any another
time he would certainly have stopped to investigate more than a few of them.
But not now, not when Buffy lay dying in a cold, sterile hospital room,
and it was up to him to persuade her to return to her life.
Abruptly, between one footfall and the next, the scenery changed. No
longer was he hastening through a kaleidoscope of land- and cityscapes.
Suddenly he was surrounded by fog; great billowing banks of it. But
this was no gray, dreary, mundane fog such as he was familiar with. All
the colors of the rainbow and then some, shades he had no name for, coruscated
within its roiling banks; every few seconds different sections of the cloud
would light up as a dazzling colored sparks blazed into brief life and then
faded.
Angel's determined stride faltered. For a moment he gazed around him in
wonderment. This, he realized, wasn't fog at all. No, this was the
matter of which reality was formed - literally. He reached out and cupped
his hands together, capturing a small amount of the fog between them. If
he desired, and if he had the ability, he could create whatever he wanted out
of this. . . .
He let his hands fall apart. All he wanted right now was Buffy, and he
wasn't going to find her standing around here. With one last lingering
look, he marched through the haze. On the other side of it, he panicked.
Where was the spark he'd followed? It took several long moments
before he spotted its faint glow. He sprinted after it, determined not to
be sidetracked again. How long he walked Angel never knew, only that at
long last he emerged into brightness, and a landscape as lovely as any he'd
ever seen. Then he spotted her.
Buffy was at the top of a hill, sitting beneath one of the numerous trees
dotting the landscape, gazing out over the valley. The surge of relief
left him lightheaded and he had to pause a second to let the dizziness pass
before tackling the path that led up to her.
She was in profile to him, and as he drew closer Angel grew even more anxious.
If it hadn't been for the occasional blink of her eyes and the rise and
fall of her chest as she breathed, he would have thought she was carved of
marble. His footsteps slowed and he crossed the final yards separating
them almost hesitantly. Wetting his lips he said her name. "Buffy."
"Angel. What are you doing here?" Her greeting, if it
could be called that, was quiet. No, not just quiet. Listless.
"Buffy, you have to come with me. Please."
"Do I?" She still hadn't looked at him, her gaze fixed,
trance-like, on the vale below them.
"Yes, before it's too late." Compelled by his sense of urgency,
Angel knelt beside her. "Buffy, do you know where you are?"
Her shoulders moved in a faint shrug. "Not really. I know I'm
not in our world, if that's what you mean." The apathy in her voice
sent a wave of fear through Angel as she continued. "Am I
dead?"
"No!" Angel caught himself; he hadn't intended to be so sharp.
"No," he repeated, more gently. "You're not dead,
Buffy, but you have been in a coma for two weeks and - "
He hesitated, not wanting to come right out and tell her that back in Sunnydale
she was dying. " - and your vital signs are getting weaker."
"Oh." There was a pause. "So I'm dying."
Angel grimaced slightly. That was Buffy, blunt and to the point.
"Yes," he conceded with a sigh. "That's why I need
you to return with me."
For the first time Buffy moved, turning her head toward him. In the same
lifeless tone she asked, "Why?" Her eyes too were dull, with
none of their usual spark.
Angel took a deep, unneeded breath, knowing this would be the hard part.
How to persuade her to come back to a life she was trying to escape?
Appealing to her sense of duty wouldn't work. She knew as well as
he that another Slayer would be called as soon as she died. No, he would
have to approach her from a different angle.
"Because you have people there who love you, Buffy; people who need you.
Your mother and father. Giles. Willow. Xander.
And - and Riley. He's almost out of his mind worrying about
you."
He tried to smile. "They had to put a sedative in his coffee to get
him to rest before he ended up in the hospital too."
"And you?" Her voice was thin. "What about you,
Angel? Are you worried? Do you need me too?"
Looking into her too-old eyes, Angel had never felt such a sense of futility as
he did then. What good would it do to rehash their hopeless situation?
It wouldn't make either one of them feel any better. Frantically he
searched for words. There had to be something he could say, some magical
answer that would free her from this suicidal depression.
Her thready voice continued. "Do you pray each day that the ache
will start to get better, the way I do? Do you dream about me, about
kissing me and making love with me, the way I do about you? Are you living
a big fat lie because everyone thinks you've moved on, that you're over it . .
. and you let them think it because it's easier than making them understand
that you'll never be over it? Are you letting someone who loves you
believe the lie too because you're too much of a coward to tell him the
truth?"
____________________________________________________________________
PART FOUR
Joyce was right, Angel realized. Buffy's guilt at not being able to
return Riley's wholehearted love far outweighed any relief from loneliness his
companionship afforded her. The realization brought a tangled surge of
emotions: Renewed exultation that despite two years of physical separation,
years during which they'd seen each other only a handful of times, she still loved
him as he did her. Bitter, impotent anger because their situation
remained unchanged. But most of all there was fear.
Fear, because he knew her so well, and he understood completely that it wasn't
the unending savagery and danger she faced as the Slayer that was the real
problem: it was her guilt and remorse and shame over Riley that was
eating her alive. Those emotions had reduced her to a physical shadow of
her former self, even before the accident, and the self-loathing they had inevitably
generated was now sapping her of the will to keep on living.
"Buffy." He cleared his throat, knowing he had to do this, for
her sake. "You say you're living a lie, but haven't you been happy
with - Riley? Haven't you enjoyed going on picnics with him, lying
in the sun beside him . . . hearing his heart beat when he holds you?"
Anger sparked briefly in the depths of her eyes, but just as quickly faded,
leaving only a soul-deep weariness behind. She turned away.
"You still don't understand, do you? You still think sunlight
and beating hearts and picket fences are important."
"Aren't they?" Angel's throat felt tight. "Didn't
you ever long to walk in the daylight with me? Didn't you ever wish that
when we touched, you could feel warm, living skin under your hand, and not the
cold flesh of a walking, talking corpse?"
Buffy looked at him, her expression unreadable. Then, with slow
deliberation she raised her hand and placed it flat against his chest.
"No," she said, simply.
Angel blinked. The warmth of her palm seemed to permeate his entire body,
distracting him, making it difficult to concentrate. "No what?"
he asked stupidly.
"No, I never wished that your skin was warm or that your heart beat.
I never regretted that we couldn't walk together under the sun.
Those were your wishes, Angel, and your regrets, not mine. And to
answer your other question, yes, I enjoyed my times with Riley. He's a
wonderful person, which is why he deserves someone who can really love him.
I can't be that person because I'm in love with you."
Helplessly he reached for her. She fell into his embrace with a
sound very like a sob. He kissed her hair, whispering her name over and
over, repressing another stab of fear at how fragile she felt in his arms, so
light, as if she weighed nothing.
"Hold me, Angel," she wept. "Just hold me and tell me that
you still love me."
His heart bled. Shuddering, he tightened his arms about her frail form
until her ribs creaked. She only moved closer, her face nestled into his
neck. "I love you, he said roughly. "God help me, there
hasn't been one second since I first saw you that I haven't loved you.
Yes, I dream about you, almost every day; and, yes, I pray that being
apart from you will stop hurting so much. Because the pain is always
there, Buffy. I wake up with it, I work with it, and I go to sleep with
it."
"Yes," Buffy whispered.
Looking down at her, Angel braced himself. "But I live with it,
Buffy. I have to. You told me once that being strong meant
fighting; that it was hard and it was painful and it was every day."
"But we have to do it," she nodded sadly. "I
remember."
"You also said we could do it," he added.
"Together," Buffy interjected.
"What?"
"I said we could do it together. That's the difference. As
long as you were in Sunnydale and we could see each other, even if it was only
once a week, I could stand the pain of knowing that we couldn't . . . be as
close as we want to be. We were still fighting the pain
together."
Buffy's voice went flat again. "But then you left, and I had to
fight it alone. I guess I'm just not as strong as you are, Angel. I
don't want to fight anymore. I can't."
"Buffy, it's been two years since I left." Angel ran a
distracted hand through his hair. His emotions were in greater turmoil
than ever. "All that time you've been coping, no matter how hard it
might have been. What happened to change that all of a sudden?"
She was silent for so long that Angel glanced down in alarm. Finally she
whispered, "Riley asked me to marry him."
Why this should come as such a shock, Angel couldn't say. It took a few
seconds before he had his voice under control. Ignoring the sudden
clenching of his stomach, he asked, "What did you tell him?"
He felt Buffy stir. "I took the easy way out – the coward's way.
I told him I had to think it over." The contempt in her voice
– contempt for herself – snapped Angel to attention. "For over
a year I've lied to Riley and led him on. For over a year I've let a
good, decent man fall deeper in love with me, knowing that I didn't return the
feeling, that I couldn't return it. But I didn't tell him that. No,
I let him think that I loved him, even though I never actually said the words.
I deceived him, Angel, for a whole year." Slow tears wet her
cheeks. "And now he wants to spend the rest of his life with
me."
It was Angel's turn to be silent while he thought harder and faster than he'd
ever done in his existence. Finally he shook his head and with certainty
said, "No."
"No what?" Buffy asked dully.
"No," repeated Angel. "It didn't happen that way."
Buffy moved back, looking at him. "What do you mean? You think
I'm lying?"
Angel shook his head. "No, I think you believe what you're saying.
But I know you, Buffy, and you would never deliberately lie to Riley.
You've never done that in your life. "
Buffy looked away. "People can change."
"You haven't ," he stated flatly. "Not that much.
I'd know if you had. Buffy, maybe you weren't completely honest
with Riley, but the person you've really deceived is yourself. You wanted
to love Riley."
Buffy started to speak, but he put his finger on her lips. "You
wanted to love Riley," he repeated. "As you said, he's a good,
decent person, and you liked him. You still like him. You - you
were lonely and hurting and he made the pain go away - "
"Only some of it," she whispered, making Angel's own heart ache.
He continued, " - and you made yourself believe that what you felt for him
was love. You managed to keep believing it, until Riley asked you to
marry him. It was the idea of making that kind of commitment that shocked
you into realizing you don't really love him. I'm guessing that he
proposed only a short time before your accident?"
"The day before."
Angel nodded; it all made sense now. But Buffy went on, her eyes filling
with tears. "I tried to love him. I really did."
"I know you did," Angel gently told her. "Buffy, love
can't be forced. Stop beating yourself up for something you couldn't
help. Stop hiding from an honest mistake. Come back to Sunnydale.
Face the music . . . face Riley and tell him the truth. Or are you
really too much of a coward to do that?"
If he had need of breath, Angel would have held it at this point. After
several long minutes during which Buffy stared into space, silent and unmoving,
she pulled away from him.
"You're right," she said in a flat monotone. "I have to go
back; I owe Riley that much at least."
"Yes," Angel agreed softly. "You do." Just as
he knew there was something he had to do, something he'd been uncertain about
until now.
"So how do we go about it? Getting back, I mean." Her
voice was still devoid of expression, and she avoided his gaze.
"Buffy." Still she refused to look at him, but Angel barged
ahead anyway. If he didn't tell her now, his new-found courage would
desert him. So he took a deep breath and plunged in. "There's
a prophecy that sometime, after the End of Days, if I survive, I'll be rewarded
by becoming human."
That snapped her head around. "Human?" He nodded, and she
stared at him. "And you didn't think I deserved to know this?
You weren't even going to tell me?" Guilt flooded him at the
hurt look on her face. He reached for her, but she drew back. His
arms fell back to his sides.
"I thought you were happy with Riley," Angel quietly told her.
"And we don't know how many years it might be until this happens.
If it happens. It could be decades, Buffy. How could I
disrupt your life over something that might never be?" He hesitated.
"Besides, I didn't know if - "
"If I would even care," Buffy finished for him. "If it
still mattered to me."
Angel nodded. "I thought you had made a new life with Riley,"
he repeated. After a second Buffy also nodded, reluctantly. "I
guess I understand," she whispered. "But it still hurts."
"I'm sorry. I didn't know how things really were."
"Well. Now you do." She started to get up, but fell back
onto the grass with a startled look.
"Buffy?" Angel frowned in concern. Buffy gave a shaky
little laugh. "Sorry. I don't know what happened. I felt
– I don't know – dizzy or something."
Angel stood. "Let me give you a hand."
Buffy reached up and Angel clasped her hand. It was cold. His
glance flew to her face, which was pale. He pulled, and it took more of
his strength than he was happy about to get her standing, for she was able to
help hardly at all.
"Angel, what's happening?" She swayed, clutching at his coat
lapels to keep upright. "Why am I so weak?"
"We have to get back," he said urgently. "Right now."
"Why? What's going on – " Her voice failed. Her
knees buckled. Angel grabbed for her, but she was dead weight and he
staggered. "Buffy!"
Gently he lowered her to the ground, kneeling beside her. Her eyes were
closed. He laid his head against her chest and listened. Several
long seconds dragged by before he heard the alarmingly faint thub-dub of
her heart. He knew what it meant: back in Sunnydale her body,
separated for too long from her soul, was giving up its laborious struggle for
life. Buffy was dying.
"No!" He pulled Buffy into his arms, tangling his hands in her
long golden hair. Her eyelids fluttered, only half-conscious.
"Stay with me, Buffy. Don't you dare give up now! I
won't let you!"
Deliberately Angel kissed her lips – as deliberately as she had kissed his
fanged, vampiric mouth years ago at the ice rink, after fighting the Tarakan
assassin sent to kill her. There was no response, but he persisted,
kissing her softly and whispering her name. After a few moments her body
twitched a little. Then she drew in a long, shaky breath, and Angel felt
the pulse of her life force return.
"Don't leave me, Buffy," he whispered. "I love you; I've
never loved anyone but you. I need you." He stretched out on
the ground, holding her, and rained kisses on her face and neck. She gave
a deep, shuddering sigh.
"Hold me," was all she said. "When we get back we won't be
able to do this, so hold me now, as long as you can." Angel held
her, tightly, as her thin arms strained to embrace him and she pressed herself
against him. They stayed like that, moving only to exchange tender kisses
that slowly grew more passionate.
Suddenly, without warning, Angel felt himself being pulled away from Buffy by a
force that reminded him of Acathla's vortex, so powerful was it and so helpless
was he to resist. "No!" he tried to yell, but the word
strangled, unvoiced, in his throat. There was several moments of extreme
disorientation, then the world grew steady again. Blinking dazedly, Angel
lifted his head.
He was sitting beside Buffy's hospital bed, his hand still clasping hers.
His eyes flew to her face. Her eyes were still closed, but her
respirations seemed stronger than they had been earlier. Lifting her hand
to his lips, he kissed it. "Buffy?"
Her eyes moved beneath their closed lids, then the lids twitched. Her
head tossed on the pillow and she drew in a deep, ragged breath.
"Buffy, it's okay. I'm here," Angel said encouragingly.
Leaning forward, he brushed strands of lank hair back from her face, then
kissed her mouth.
A long sigh came from between her lips, then slowly Buffy opened her eyes.
It took almost a minute before she was able to focus on his face.
Her dry lips moved, but only a faint croak emerged. She struggled
to sit up.
"Here." Angel poured some water into the plastic glass on the
bedside table, then sat down next to Buffy and held the glass to her lips,
supporting her against him while she drank thirstily. "Not too
fast." He allowed her only a few swallows before replacing the cup
on the table.
Buffy moistened her lips, swallowed a couple of times, and tried again.
This time her voice made it through, although it sounded rusty. Not
surprising, Angel mused, since she hasn't used it in two weeks.
"Testing one-two-three," she rasped.
He smiled at her, so relieved that tears sprang to his eyes.
"Welcome back, Sleeping Beauty."
Her lips moved in a slight answering smile. "Did you wake me with a
kiss?" She moistened her lips again and swallowed, then made a face.
"Uck. Actually, I kind of hope you didn't. I don't
suppose there's a bottle of Scope handy, is there? The inside of my mouth
tastes like a litter box." Her voice sounded better, less like a
creaky gate and more like herself.
"Does it?" He tilted her face up, and then he echoed words from
their past. "I didn't even notice." Deliberately he bent
down and kissed her again. A voice inside his mind was warning him that
this wasn't smart, that it would only cause more problems, but Angel ignored
it. He knew their time together was limited, and knew that Buffy knew it
too. By God, he was going to make the most of it, within the limits of
his soul's safety.
Her lips were soft and warm, but she kept them closed (no doubt because of her
admittedly rank breath). Even so, his kiss was willingly returned; with
eagerness, even. As much eagerness as she was capable of, anyway; she was
very weak.
Angel placed another soft kiss on her mouth. "Sleep now," he
murmured. "You'll feel stronger after you've had a good night's, I mean
day's, rest."
Buffy ignored his little sally. "Will you still be here when I wake
up?" she whispered, looking at him with shadowed eyes.
Angel hesitated. Reason told him he should return to L.A., but love
pleaded with him to stay. Love, and his own wishes. "I'll come
back this evening," he finally said. "After the sun goes
down."
Her eyes brightened, but Angel's attention was caught by the motion of her door
opening, slowly, almost stealthily. He tensed, releasing Buffy and
readying himself for action. Sunnydale's demonic residents could only be
delighted at the Slayer's incapacitation. It was a mystery to him why
none of them had yet tried to make her condition more permanent - as in dead.
Maybe this was that attempt.
A head peered around the door, and Angel relaxed. It was Joyce. Her
eyes widened at the sight of Buffy sitting up in the bed.
"Buffy?"
Buffy smiled weakly. "Hi, Mom."
Joyce hurried into the room and sat on the other side of the bed. She took
Buffy's hand. "Oh, honey, thank God you're back." Then
she turned her head. "And thank you, Angel. You're the one who
did it. You brought her back to us." Tears swam in her eyes,
spilling down her cheeks.
Embarrassed by her gratitude, Angel only shook his head. He searched for
something to say. "I didn't do it for you" didn't seem quite
the appropriate response. Before he found any words, Buffy spoke.
"Where's Riley?"
In the act of wiping her cheeks, Joyce stopped. Her eyes flashed to Angel,
then back to Buffy. "We, uh, sent him home to get some rest.
Not his home - he's sleeping in our guest room." She sounded
uncertain, and gave Angel a matching glance.
"What did you give him to make him sleep? How strong was it?"
Angel realized Buffy was trying to estimate how long Riley would sleep, and
smiled to himself. It was a sad smile, though, recognizing that even as
weak as she was, Buffy's stern conscience was pushing her to "face the
music" with Riley as soon as possible, and that wouldn't be an easy scene
to go through. Not at all.
Joyce blinked, taken aback that Buffy knew about the sedative. "I
don't know. It was something Rupert had. He, uh, said it was strong
enough to knock a horse out, so it ought to work on a thick-headed soldier."
"Especially one who was already exhausted." Buffy's pale lips
moved in a faint smile. "So Riley probably won't come barging in til
later this morning?"
Barging in? Angel looked at her curiously. Joyce shook her head.
"Rupert said he'd be astonished if Riley shook off the effects
before ten or eleven o'clock."
"Good." Buffy yawned. "So, Angel, you can stay with
me for a while." She yawned again. Caught by surprise, Angel
hesitated. He looked at the clock on the wall. It was ten to two.
"The sun won't be up for hours yet," mumbled Buffy.
"You're not in any danger." Turning on her side again,
she slid down in the bed, nestled against him, and was asleep in about two
seconds flat.
He stroked her hair, thinking vaguely how horrified she'd be when she was awake
enough to be aware of its neglected condition, not to mention the huge bare
patch on the left side of her head, and looked at Joyce. What was her
reaction to Buffy's . . . request?
Joyce smiled and gave a little shrug. She stood. "I'm going to
tell everyone the good news. Angel, I'll come back at six to relieve you,
if that's all right?"
Angel smiled gratefully in return. "Thank you. Yes, that'll be
fine. I can spend the day at the mansion and come back here after
sunset."
Joyce walked to the door, then paused. "Angel." He looked
up from his contemplation of Buffy. "What's going to happen
now?" Her gaze was gentle, and worried.
He knew what she meant. What kind of relationship would he and Buffy
have? How much more complicated would her daughter's already complex life
become? How much more stress and heartache would be added? Angel
could only shake his head. "I wish I knew the answer to that,"
he said quietly. "I only know that things won't be the same.
They can't be."
She regarded him for a long moment, then sighed and nodded her head.
Casting one more look at her sleeping daughter, she said, "See you
at six," and vanished out the door.
Angel settled himself more comfortably beside Buffy, moving carefully even
though he was pretty sure it would take an explosion to wake her now.
Wryly he hoped that the End of Days wouldn't occur any time soon.
He'd intended to spend this time while Buffy slept thinking over their
situation - brooding, Cordelia would call it - and hopefully coming up with
possible solutions. But not long into his deliberations, to his surprise
Angel found his own eyelids drooping. Then he yawned. It had been a
long and stressful night for him too, especially since he no longer slept all
day, every day. Or what passed for sleep with vampires.
Since opening Angel Investigations he perforce stayed up later in the mornings,
and more often than not rose before sunset. There was research to be
done, clients to meet with, witnesses to question, sites to be investigated.
Sometimes these could only be accomplished during daylight hours, and
Cordelia and Wesley couldn't do everything, so slowly Angel's sleep habits had
altered to accommodate the needs of his business. Now he "slept"
whenever he could fit it in.
Or, as now, when his body demanded it. Vampires had exceptional powers,
but even they needed to rest eventually. I'll just close my eyes for a
while, Angel told himself. Besides, even if he did drop off Joyce
would wake him before dawn. Within a few minutes he lay in the trance
that was the vampire equivalent of sleep.
He was walking with Buffy, in one of the many cemeteries they'd patrolled
together for two years. Something, however, was different: The sun was
shining directly on them, and he hadn't burst into flame.
"I can't get used to it," he told Buffy, his head raised to look at
the blue sky. "It still feels like a dream that I'm going to wake up
from."
She smiled indulgently. "It's not a dream, Angel. It's real.
I'd think that would have sunk in by now. I mean, it's been two
months since your shanshu prophecy came true."
Basking in the sun's warmth, he laughed out loud with sheer delight. Two
months that he'd been human. Two months of uncursed, ensouled humanity,
which he and Buffy had taken complete advantage of by going away on their first
vacation together. It had actually been only for two weeks and they
hadn't gone far, just to Acapulco, but they'd stayed at a luxury hotel where
they could sit in the bar, under a canopy to protect Angel's delicate skin, and
sip tall, cool drinks while looking out over the ocean.
Two months during which they'd made love so often that the quart jar Buffy had
insisted they drop a penny into every time they "did it" was filled
almost to the brim with copper coins. Two months in which to discover
that their love wasn't dependent on them being Vampire Warrior and Slayer; that
being just Angel and Buffy worked just fine. Although, of course, Buffy
was still the Slayer. Nothing would change that but her death, and he was
determined that event would be many, many years in the future. He'd begun
training, both with Giles and with Buffy, to get himself in the best physical
condition possible so he could help her, as he'd always done.
Suddenly the sky darkened. "What the - ?" They gazed
upward. Huge black clouds had appeared out of nowhere, blocking the
sunlight. Suddenly Angel felt a hand on his shoulder, yanking him away
from Buffy -
The floor came up and hit him. Dazed and disoriented at being jerked from
a sound sleep, he didn't resist as someone pulled him to his feet and sent him
crashing into the wall.
"What the hell do you think you're doing!"
Blinking, he looked into the enraged face of Riley Finn. Riley's lips
were drawn back in a snarl, exposing his clenched teeth, and contempt blazed
from his bloodshot eyes. Angel's sweater was bunched in his fists, and
with each sentence he banged the vampire against the wall.
"You just couldn't resist it, could you? Couldn't resist coming here
and forcing yourself on her! You just had to get your foul hands on her!
Knowing that she's unconscious, that she wouldn't be able to tell you to
get lost!"
____________________________________________________________________
PART FIVE
"Riley, stop! What are you doing?"
Riley's head whipped around, his eyes huge with shock. "Buffy?"
His hands loosened their hold on Angel's sweater, and the vampire took
the opportunity to slip out of his grasp. Riley paid no attention; all
his attention was focused on the figure sitting up in the bed. "Oh,
my God. Buffy. You're awake!"
He started toward her, stumbling a little and almost falling onto the bed.
He gave a little laugh. "Sorry. I'm still a little
groggy; I can't seem to wake up. God, Buffy . . . I can't believe
it!"
Riley sat down next to her and gathered her up in an embrace. "I
mean, I do believe it, I kept telling everyone that you'd wake up and you'd be
all right, and . . . you are!"
He released her, cupping her face lovingly. "You're here.
You're awake and alive and conscious and you're fine, and, and God, I'm
really babbling, aren't I? I can't help it, I'm so glad to see you.
Oh, Buffy! Thank God. Thank God." Tears of joy
streamed down his face, and he hugged her again.
Angel winced. Buffy's eyes met his over Riley's shoulder, silently asking
him to leave. Fighting an irrational surge of jealousy, he nodded.
It was unlikely that Buffy would take this moment to tell Riley they were
through, not after this highly emotional display, but even so she didn't need
him lurking around right now. He took a step toward the door. Just
then there came a tap upon it, followed by Giles' diffident voice.
"Angel, it's six o'clock." The door opened and Giles peeked
around the corner. "Joyce asked me to make sure you -" His
smile vanished as he caught sight of Riley. "Riley! What, what
are you doing here? I mean, uh, I thought you'd still be sleeping.
At the house." He cast a quick glance at Angel, who shrugged
resignedly.
Riley released Buffy, turning to face Giles. "I was, but I woke up
and was worried about Buffy, so I decided to come here. Why didn't
someone call and let me know Buffy was awake?"
"Well." Giles cleared his throat, coming into the room.
"Well, it only happened a little while ago and I, we, knew how
exhausted you were, so, er - "
"Shh, be quieter, Rupert. We don't want to wake Buffy."
Joyce crowded past Giles and stopped cold. "Riley!"
Her tone of voice exactly matched what Giles' had been. Riley gave
her a curious look as she stared in consternation from him to Angel and back
again.
"Yes," Giles said, too-brightly. "He woke up and came to
check on Buffy."
"Oh!" Joyce's voice, too, was bright. "Well, that
was good of you, Riley, but you really should have rested longer."
"Wakey, wakey, rise and shine, Angel o' mine! It's time for all good
little vampires to go back to their coffins." It was Xander's bright
and utterly annoying voice, followed a second later by the young man himself.
Angel groaned to himself. Could this situation possibly get any
worse?
Xander took one look at the occupants of the room and rocked to a standstill.
"Ah. Riley. You're, uh, here. And Angel.
You're here too. Uh-huh. Well, if anyone needs me I'll be in
the lobby where it's safe. Buffy, great to see you're not drooling onto
your pillow anymore. Toodles, everyone." With that he
vanished.
"All right, what's going on here? Why is everyone acting so
weird?" Riley got to his feet, looking both puzzled and grim.
"First I walk in and find him lying on the bed with my
fiancee, touching her with his filthy hands." He shot a furious look
at Angel, who glared back.
"No one was doing anything except sleeping," he reassured a startled
Giles and Joyce. "I fell asleep, that's all."
"That wasn't all." Riley flushed angrily. His hands
clenched. "I saw you. You were draped over her like - like -
"
"Like he'd been holding me and had fallen asleep," Buffy cut in.
"That's all it was, Riley."
"How would you know?" Riley shot back. "You were
asleep!"
Buffy sat up, folding her legs under her. Already, with only a few hours'
rest, she looked stronger. "Because I know Angel. And let's
get something straight, Riley. I am not your fiancee."
Riley's flush subsided. "What?"
"I never said I would marry you. That makes me not your
fiancee."
Angel decided now was a good time to leave. "I, uh, have to go now;
the sun will be up soon."
Riley's arm shot out and grabbed Angel as he passed by, spinning him around.
"Hold up." He sounded grim. "Why are you here
at all, Angel? You have no right to be here."
That was too much. Metaphorical hackles rising, Angel stared directly
into his face. "I love her. That gives me the right."
Riley's eyes flashed, but before he could reply, Joyce said, "Angel is
here because I called and asked him to come." Riley stared at her
incredulously. "What? Why would you do that?"
Joyce hesitated. "Because Buffy asked for him.
Yesterday, when she was still in the coma, she said his name."
Still Riley stared. "So because she was having a nightmare about her
ex-boyfriend and said his name when she wasn't even conscious, you asked him to
come see her in the hospital?"
Giles stepped forward. "It's because she was unconscious at
the time that we did it."
" ‘We'?" Riley's glance went from Giles back to Joyce. He
swayed, giving his head a little shake, obviously still under the influence of
whatever sedative he'd been given.
"It was my decision," said Joyce. "But I agreed with
it," Giles said firmly.
"So you sneaked him into her room behind my back when I finally collapsed
from exhaustion." Riley stopped suddenly. "No. No,
it couldn't be." His now-suspicious gaze again traveled between
Joyce and Giles. "Tell me you didn't put something in my coffee to
make me sleep."
Giles immediately looked guilty and began to fidget with his glasses.
"Well . . . er . . . yes. I'm afraid we did. It was just
a sleeping pill, that's all."
Riley's eyes flashed. "So that's why I'm so groggy right now."
"Yes," admitted Giles. "By rights you should have slept
until at least ten o'clock, by which time you would have been rested, Angel
would have been gone, and - " He made a comprehensive sweeping gesture
with his hand - "none of this would have happened. You would never
even have known that he was here."
"Yes, he would," came Buffy's voice. "Because I would have
told him."
Riley turned to her gratefully. "Thank you. It's good to know
that one person at least wasn't planning to lie to me."
Angel saw Buffy flinch and sent her a sympathetic look. Then he glanced
at the window, knowing it would confirm what his vampiric senses were screaming
at him. The area around the edges of the blinds was no longer dark but a
pearly gray. It was almost dawn.
Giles noticed it too. "Angel, you better go now, before the sun
comes up."
Angel hesitated, torn between wanting to stay because of Riley's unstable
emotional state and knowing that his presence only made matters worse.
"Please, Angel," Buffy said. "It's okay."
Still he hesitated. Buffy, although stronger now, was still weak.
Weaker than normal, anyway. "Are you sure you'll be all
right?" He glanced at Riley, who glared.
She smiled at him. "I'll be fine. Now go." Her eyes
relayed a silent reminder of his promise to return that evening, and he gave
her a reassuring nod. "All right." Nodding to Joyce and
Giles, he glanced again at Buffy, ignoring Riley, and walked out of the room.
"What was all that about?" Riley demanded as soon as the door swung
shut behind the retreating vampire. "Why wouldn't you be all right?
What did he think I was going to do, beat you up or something?"
"Riley," Buffy tried to soothe him. "Angel didn't mean
anything; it was just . . . the male in him coming out."
Riley looked at her, then a reluctant smile twitched at his lips.
"Somehow that doesn't make me feel better about it. Besides -
" He paused.
Buffy's right eyebrow rose. "Yes?"`
"Well, I was going to say that he had no business feeling male around you,
but then I decided that might not be very smart." He walked over to
the wall and leaned against it.
"Good decision," she murmured. Her eyebrow descended to its
usual position.
The tension in the room began to dissipate. Joyce breathed an unconscious
sigh of relief; Giles visibly relaxed. Someone tapped on the door and he
opened it a few inches.
"Willow? What are you doing here at this hour?"
"Giles? I didn't expect to see you here," came Willow's voice.
"I just came to see if Angel was still here and, and if he'd had any
luck." Her voice faltered. "Did he? Did it
work?"
"You know," Giles interrupted hastily, "I could really use a cup
of coffee. Why don't we go to the cafeteria together and get one?"
With a brittle smile over his shoulder at Buffy, he slid through the
barely open door and closed it firmly behind him, but Willow's voice came
through anyway.
"What's wrong? Is she still in the coma? Couldn't Angel bring
her back? Ow!" Then there was only the sound of footsteps
hurrying away, leaving the three left in the hospital room looking at each
other in silence. That is, Joyce (after one swift glance at Riley) looked
at nothing in particular, and Riley looked at Buffy.
Buffy closed her eyes. Damn. Why did this have to happen now?
She wasn't ready for it. She opened her eyes again, straight into
Riley's gaze. He looked as if someone had punched him.
"So that's why Angel was here. To reach you when we couldn't.
When I couldn't. And he did it. He called you
back."
Joyce slipped quietly out of the room. Buffy couldn't look away from the
honest eyes that normally revealed only love and kindness, but now held
deepening realization and naked, rapidly growing pain. Her heart
twisting, she reached out her hand. "Riley - "
"No." He moved away from her touch, sliding off the bed, and
stood facing her. "Don't. Not any more. I've been a
complete fool, haven't I? All this time I thought you loved me. I
thought I'd made you forget him, but - "
Now Buffy interrupted, although as gently as she could. "Riley, I've
never told you that I loved you."
Riley stared at her without speaking for a long moment. Finally he looked
away. "No, you never did. I should have known from that.
You can live a lie but you can't tell one."
Buffy flinched, feeling like he'd slapped her. Almost immediately Riley
said, "I'm sorry. That wasn't fair. I know you didn't
purposely deceive me."
In a low voice Buffy said, "I tried to love you; I really did. I
like you so much, Riley. You're fun to be with, and sexy, and nice.
I honestly thought I loved you. I wanted to love you."
Her eyes filled.
"But you couldn't," he said in a flat voice.
"No," she whispered. "Not the way you want me to."
"Not the way you love him," Riley finished. "Angel.
It's always been Angel, hasn't it? All this time." He
didn't wait for a response, but walked over to the door and opened it.
"Goodbye, Buffy. I hope things work out for you," he said
heavily.
"Riley - "
He was gone. Buffy stared at the door until her tears obscured it from
sight.
<><><><><><><><><>
Angel watched from the shelter of the parking garage overhang. Several
people had come out of the main building, but none of them was the one he was
currently endangering himself for. He was certain the young man would
show up before long, though.
So why am I standing out here, inches away from being fried by the sun,
waiting to talk to a man who might hate me now, instead of just being jealous
of me? Not a logical thing to do. So why am I doing it?
He knew the answer. It was because he had to let Riley Finn know that
Buffy would be in good hands, even if they were his. If Buffy had told
him, that is. Just then Riley emerged from the double glass doors.
One look at his face told Angel that he knew the truth, and reluctant
compassion filled him for the pain the young man was enduring. He knew
what it was to feel as if your heart had been ripped from your body. As
he'd hoped, Riley's path brought him within hearing distance.
"Finn."
Riley stopped, looking around. Angel stepped out of the shadows, careful
to remain beneath the overhang. Riley's face tightened; his hands
clenched. "What do you want?"
"I do love her, you know," Angel told him quietly. "I
always have and I always will."
Riley moved closer and looked him calmly in the eye, although his hurt and
grief and anger were plain to see. And, yes, there was even more than a
touch of resentment. "I guess you do. But frankly, right now
all I want to do is drag you out into this nice bright sunlight and watch you
go up in smoke. How can you possibly make her happy? You can't even
make love to her."
"I don't know," Angel returned, still quietly but with a sudden edge.
"But it didn't work out too well when we were apart, now did
it?"
Bitterness spasmed over Riley's features. "Touche."
Without another word he turned and walked away, still composed, still
suffering.
Damn! Angel looked after him with regret, cursing himself for losing his
temper. It didn't matter that he knew Riley Finn was a thoroughly decent
young man who loved Buffy probably as much as he did. Let him get within
ten feet of the guy, or talk directly to him, and something inside seemed to
snap.
"Way to hit a guy when he's down and damn near out," came a voice
from beside him. It was Xander, who somehow had come up without Angel
hearing him. "Why didn't you beat on your chest and do a victory
dance while you were at it? Because, you know, I'm not sure Riley's feeling
bad enough yet." He stared at Angel, his brown eyes accusing.
Angel controlled the irritation Xander always seemed to evoke. "That
isn't what I intended to - " He stopped and started over. "I
wasn't trying to make him feel worse. I know he loves Buffy and I thought
he would like to know that I wouldn't walk out on her again."
"Yeah, ‘cause
he so wants to hear that right now," came Xander's dry response.
"Angel, Riley's just found out that the woman he loves never really
loved him at all, and worse, she never stopped loving her ex-boyfriend, who
just happens to be an undead creature of the night like the kind they normally
killed together. Do you really think anything you can say is going to
make that better?"
"No," Angel admitted, then sighed. "I should have known
better. Pretty much the same thing happened the last time we met."
"It did?" To Angel's surprise Xander didn't seem to know about
his confrontation the year before with Riley. And Buffy.
"I see one more display of testosterone poisoning and I will personally
put you both in the hospital!"
Buffy's words ran through Angel's mind, prompting a wry grin. It was
true. One look at Riley Finn and instinct surged to the fore,
overpowering any puny little emotions like compassion or understanding that lay
in its path. Unfortunately for Angel's peace of mind, however, not all of
that instinct could be blamed on the demon residing within. A good
portion of it was born and bred in the bone through generations of proud,
possessive males. This man had dared to touch his woman (never mind that
he himself had walked away from her because he thought she was better off
without him) and for that he should pay.
Angel shook his head in disgust. Stop it, Angel. You're not in
the eighteenth century anymore. You're not even in the *twentieth*
century! Besides, you know you're not going to harm Riley Finn. For
one thing, Buffy would probably beat you to a pulp if you did. For
another, you don't *want* to hurt him. Not really. Well, not very
much, at least. And nothing permanent.
"Xander!" A young woman about Buffy's age was almost running
toward them across the parking lot.
"Who's that?" Angel asked.
"That's Tara," said Xander, frowning. "Willow's
girlfriend." The young woman stopped in front of him, breathing heavily.
"What's up, Tara? Is anything wrong?"
Instead of replying, Tara looked at Angel. "Y-you're Angel."
Angel acknowledged his identity. There was something about this
young woman - something different - but he couldn't put his finger on it.
She wasn't especially pretty, yet her face was one that would stay in
your mind; the eyes in particular. Something appealing and shy and
vulnerable looked through those eyes.
‘N-nice to finally m-meet
you," she said, offering him her hand. A bit surprised at the
gesture - most folks weren't that anxious to get touchy-feely with a vampire -
Angel took it. He intended only a quick shake, but got another surprise:
Tara put her other hand on top of his, sandwiching it between her own, staring
him in the eyes all the while as though trying to read his mind. Or his
soul.
Finally she gave a tiny, almost imperceptible, nod and released him.
"Willow was right."
Angel blinked. "She was?" he couldn't resist asking.
"About what exactly?"
"That you're a good person trying to make the best of a terrible
situation."
Angel couldn't think of a reply to that. While he was trying to come up
with one, Xander broke in. "Tara, you didn't answer my question.
Is something the matter?"
"Oh, s-sorry." She gave him a deprecating smile.
"No. I was just w-wondering where Willow is. There's,
uh, s-something I need to talk to her about."
"Oh. Well, last time I saw her she was in the cafeteria with
Giles," Xander offered.
"Thanks." The young woman hesitated. "Um, X-xander,
why don't you join us there, when y-you're through talking to Angel? We,
uh, can f-finish making our plans."
‘Plans?" Xander
looked blank. Tara sent him a look. "Yes," she said
firmly. "Our p-plans. You know the ones."
Xander stared at her, and Tara frowned at him, a frown Angel recalled seeing
many times on Willow's face when the young man was being particularly obtuse
about something. He wondered what Xander had forgotten about this time.
‘Oh!" Xander said,
brightly. "Yes. Our plans. For the . . . thing that
we're planning . . . together." It was obvious that he still hadn't
a clue what she was talking about. Angel raised an eyebrow, hoping it
wasn't anything very important. "I have to go," he told them. "It's
past my bedtime." He cast a glance at the sky.
"Yeah, you could get a nasty sunburn if you're not careful," Xander
put in. Tara said, "Y-you'll be back this evening, won't you?"
Her tone was anxious, and Angel looked at her curiously as he told her he
would.
"G-good!" She smiled broadly. "S-see you then,
Angel." She was obviously waiting for Angel to leave, so he pulled
his coat over his head and ran like hell for his car.
"Good," Tara sighed. "He's gone. N-now I can tell
you."
"Tell me what?" Xander demanded. Tara shook her head.
"N-not here. Let's find W-willow first."
Willow was still in the cafeteria, as was Giles. "How could I be so
stupid?" she groaned as Tara and Xander came up to the table.
"Willow, you didn't know he was there," Giles said comfortingly but
with an air of having just repeated himself for the umpteenth time. He
looked up. "Hello."
Concerned, Tara immediately went over to Willow. She put an arm around
her lover's shoulders. "What's wrong?"
Willow groaned again. "Oh, nothing much. I merely informed
Riley that Angel had brought Buffy back from the land of the
wanting-to-be-dead, that's all."
"Riley w-was here?" asked Tara. "I thought y-you guys
knocked him out."
Giles sighed. "It appears that his worry over Buffy prevented the
sleeping pill from working the way it should have. He woke up and decided
to come back here. Angel was still in with Buffy, and they were sleeping
together."
"What?" exclaimed Xander.
Giles quickly corrected himself. "I mean they were asleep in the
same bed, not - anything else. Riley walked in on them."
"Oh no," Tara sighed.
"Unfortunately it's 'oh, yes,' " returned Giles drily.
"Then Joyce and I came in to warn Angel of the sunrise in case he
had fallen asleep. Things were a little tense. But then Angel left
and Riley was starting to calm down when Willow - " He broke off.
Willow continued, dejectedly. "When I popped up and announced how
grateful I was that Angel had been able to bring Buffy back. And I was
hoping Riley would never have to find that out. I've ruined
everything." Her forehead hit the table with a thump.
"You've done nothing of the sort," Giles told her firmly, as Tara
placed a comforting hand on Willow's hair. "Riley would have
found out before long."
Willow looked up. After a moment she said, slowly, "You mean Buffy
would have told him anyway?"
Giles nodded. "Buffy wouldn't deceive Riley once she realized the
truth."
"That sh-she doesn't love him, and she still l-loves Angel," put in
Tara. "No, Buffy's too honest to go on l-living a lie, once she
r-recognized it was a lie, anyway."
"You're absolutely right," Giles said, with some surprise.
"Although I think she might have postponed it until she was feeling
a bit stronger. Willow, all you did was make the inevitable happen sooner
than it might have otherwise." Willow didn't look consoled.
"Willow, I n-need to talk to you," Tara blurted out. "And
you, Giles. I think I've found out s-something, but I w-want you to
double-check it for me."
"Sure." "Of course." The two voices came
simultaneously. Xander pulled up a chair and parked himself on it with an
expectant air.
Tara sat down at the table and pulled a couple of papers from the canvas bag
slung over one shoulder. "L-last n-night I asked a f-friend of mine
to translate the curse Willow used to bring Angel's soul back."
"Why?" Xander asked. "It worked. What else do you
need to know?"
Tara cleared her throat and looked at them nervously. As always when she
was apprehensive, her stammer grew worse. "M-my f-friend is an
e-expert on Romany c-culture and the occult, and she s-said she'd never h-heard
of a happiness l-loophole in the S-soul Curse like the one Angel h-has.
Th-that's why I a-asked her to take a l-look at it and t-translate it for
me."
"She knew about the curse itself, though?" asked Giles, interested.
Tara nodded. "She s-said it's a very old curse, that's only been
cast a f-few times in the entire history of the R-romany."
Giles looked extremely interested now. "Indeed. I had no idea.
Er, please go on, Tara."
"Anyw-way, what Karla - my friend - said made me w-wonder if maybe the
curse that was originally used on Angel - I mean Angelus - wasn't the
traditional one." Tara was more at ease, the stammer less obvious.
"So l-last night I e-mailed her the one that Willow found on M-miss
Calendar's diskette."
"And? What did she say?" Willow prompted her.
Tara took a deep breath. "The c-curse I sent her *is* the
traditional Romany Soul Summoning Curse."
Giles shot straight up in his chair. Xander looked blank.
"What are you saying?" Willow asked, slowly, her eyes huge with
disbelief. "Tara, do you mean that the curse I did to bring Angel's
soul back - "
"H-had no anti-happiness clause." Tara handed her the papers.
"H-here's the original printout of the one that M-miss Calendar had
on her disk, and here's my friend's translation. S-see if I'm wrong.
If we're wrong."
Giles and Willow bent over the printouts together, starting with the
translation. After a minute they looked at each other, then at the
others.
"The translation certainly contains no mention of a moment of true
happiness," Giles admitted, sounding stunned. "Not even a hint.
And the curse itself appears to be quite straightforward. It calls
the soul back to the body as punishment for sins committed by the person while
still alive, so that the person can endure further retribution. Also, it
sets a time limit of - " He looked at the paper as though he didn't
trust his memory. "Yes, of one month."
"One month!" Xander exclaimed. "But - Angel's had it for
more than a hundred years!"
"Yes." Giles looked thoughtful. "I imagine that one
month is the point at which death can no longer be held off." He
glanced at a confused Xander. "This is not a nice curse, Xander, even
as curses go. I would guess that it was used only for the most heinous of
crimes. Basically it calls a guilty soul back into a body which has
already died. The natural processes associated with death are slowed when
the soul returns, but they're not stopped, merely delayed."
Xander looked sick. "You mean they'd still decay . . . and they'd be
there? In the body?" At Giles' nod he looked even greener.
"Excuse me while I puke."
"And Angel, the real Angel with the soul, wasn't alive when the
sins were committed," Willow said. She too looked stunned, and
slightly sick. "It was the demon who was the bad guy, not the real
Angel. I - I never thought about it before. Giles, this curse
should never have been used on a vampire. It's completely unfair, because
it punishes the wrong person."
"If this translation is accurate," Giles said slowly, "I don't
believe it was ever intended to be used on vampires, although one could argue
that the demon is being punished by not being allowed to act on its evil
nature. However, it would appear that the curse laid on Angel - Angelus -
was a, a viciously bastardized version of the traditional curse, one that the
Kalderash tribe adapted to accomplish their desire for revenge. But - I
have no way of checking that the translation is accurate. The original -
"
He perused it. "The original is a mixture of Latin, medieval
Rumanian, and what I'm guessing is Romany. I know Latin, but the others -
" Giles shook his head. "Tara, I'm not doubting either
your or your friend's honesty, but you must see that we can't take this at face
value. There's simply too much at stake. I must know what her
credentials are."
Tara nodded. "S-sure. Karla's the h-head of Eastern European
Studies at Oxford."
"Karla?" Giles opened his mouth and closed it again.
"Oxford? Eastern European Studies? You - surely you
aren't referring to Karla Lowesky?" His voice was faint.
"Uh, y-yes," Tara replied, her eyes widening. "D-do you
know Karla?"
Giles sat back in his chair. "She's probably the greatest living
expert today on Eastern European history and languages, not to mention its
occult traditions. Are you telling me that this translation was done by Karla
Lowesky?"
Tara nodded. "She's m-my godmother, s-sort of.
Unofficially."
"Good lord," Giles said faintly. He set the two papers on the
table. "Well then, there's certainly no question in my mind that
this translation is accurate. The only question now is what to do with
the information."
"We have to tell Buffy." Willow had her Resolve Face on.
"And Angel." Then she looked sick again. "Do
you realize what this means? What I did to them?" Groaning,
she buried her face in her hands.
"They could have been together ever since Angel returned from hell,"
muttered Giles. He took off his glasses and began polishing them with
agitated swipes of his handkerchief.
"Almost three years ago," contributed Xander grimly.
Tara glared at them both and put her arms around Willow. "Willow,
you didn't know. No one did. Probably Ms. Calendar didn't even
know, and it was her clan that set the curse in the first place."
"Either that," Giles said thoughtfully, "or Jenny was trying to
make amends for the injustice the Kalderash visited on Angel by doing away with
the happiness clause. Unfortunately, before she could tell anyone -
"
He fell abruptly silent, then replaced his glasses. "Well, I don't
suppose we'll ever know. Right now I'm concerned abut Buffy's state of
mind. She's still weak from the coma, and I'm sure she's upset about
Riley. News like this might be too much for her to handle at this time.
Perhaps we should wait a few days, just until she's stronger."
Willow uncovered her face. "No," she said flatly.
"We have to tell her right now. And Angel, as soon as we
can."
"Giles," said Xander pointedly, "You know Buffy. She'll
find out how long we've known all this. Do you really want to be the one
who decided she shouldn't know as soon as we did?"
"Good point," Giles replied at once. "Er, yes. An
excellent point, in fact. Very well, I shall go up right now and let her
know what we've discovered. Er, what Tara discovered. Good job,
Tara, I must say. Thank you."
Tara looked embarrassed. "Y-you're welcome."