SCRIBES OF ANGEL
Fan Fiction
________________________________
Rescue Me
Willow was waiting,
waiting for Buffy, but she didn't blame her for not showing up.
Giles had already gone back to
England by then. He'd stopped in to see her, but hadn't crossed the threshold
into the room she had once shared with Tara. He'd stood at the door and she
could feel his warm, concerned eyes trace the curved length of her grieving
body. Please don't say anything to me, Giles. Please don't say a word to me.
I couldn't bear it if you said anything to me right now.
Willow thought the words in her head
and prayed that Giles would hear them. He seemed to hear them, too, because he
stood for a long time without saying a word and then left. Willow wasn't sure
how much more she could take of everyone forgiving her. She longed to have geek
Willow, shy Willow, kind Willow, follower Willow, back again. She didn't
understand this new person, this person who delighted in wreaking havoc, this
person who'd flayed the skin of a human without even considering the
consequences. This person who had sent out wave after wave of evil energy in
order to prevent Giles from interfering in her plans. She could have killed
him. She would have killed him. She almost had.
When Xander shifted his legs,
cramped from hours of sitting beside her, she reached out a trembling hand to
stop him.
"'S okay, Will," he
whispered, his voice far away. "I'm not leaving you."
She had to be content with that. She
had to believe that what he said was true and the fact that he hadn't left, not
even to get a drink or use the bathroom, had to mean something. It did mean
something, didn't it?
A long while later, Xander said:
"Willow, you should have a bath. You'd feel better. I know I would."
Willow lifted sorrowful eyes to meet
Xander's. She was shocked to see the dark circles under his, the black stubble
across his jaw and cheek, his pale, listless skin.
"Xander?" she said.
"I'm okay. But it's been six
days now, Willow. It's time to get up. Dawn's brought you some soup and you
should eat it."
She nodded compliantly.
"Will you sit up? Can
you?"
Willow wasn't sure. She stretched
out her stiff limbs tentatively and pushed up on weak arms. She felt her
stomach recoil at the movement and the thought of the soup sitting on a tray, a
handful of daisies wilting in a jelly jar beside the bowl.
"Oh, God, Xander," she
whispered, the words tasting sour in her mouth.
"I know."
"You don't know. How could you
know? I don't even know," she said. She leaned over the bed and retched
into the bucket someone had thoughtfully provided. Her empty stomach clenched
and pushed, but brought up nothing more than a sickly stream of mucus and
bitterness.
She felt Xander's hands slide
through her greasy, matted hair, moving it carefully from her face and his
gentle fingers made her weep.
***
Buffy put the last of the glasses
into the cupboard and surveyed the room with a weary smile. Days had passed
since Willow had tried to end the world. Xander had, miraculously, been able to
see past her grief, to reach into her heart and squeeze it tight, massage it back
to life. But it had only been the last couple of days that Willow had begun to
make her presence known in the house, rejoin the living.
"Are you okay?"
Buffy turned to Dawn's quiet voice
and nodded.
Dawn jerked her head towards the
ceiling. "Have you seen her today?"
Buffy touched the dishrag she'd left
by the sink, folding its wet corners together.
"No."
"I saw her. When I brought the
soup," Dawn said. "But she didn't, like, say anything to me or
anything."
"It's not going to be easy for
her, Dawnie," Buffy replied.
"I know."
And Buffy knew she did. Somehow,
Dawn had been changed by the events of the past few days more than anyone; the
loss of Tara, Willow's dark descent into hell, Giles leaving again. All of it
had almost toppled Buffy, but Dawn had blossomed, become calm and certain.
Dawn shrugged and scooped her book
bag off the back of a chair. "Well, I suppose I should go to school,
seeing as there is school to go to, you know, with the world still being here
and all." She smiled happily at the thought and left the room.
Buffy stood for a long moment. She'd
been reluctant to see Willow during those first few days, despite the gnawing
feeling in her gut that she should, that she should offer her best and most
cherished friend whatever comfort she could. Buffy couldn't remember when she
had last felt this tired. No, wait, she could.
The last time she had wanted to lay
her head down and not get up for a month, she'd just blown up her high
school...and watched Angel walk away. The smoke from the burning building had
parted before him and swallowed him up. It was almost romantic, like he was a
dashing figure from a Victorian romance novel, walking out into the moors,
through the mist, into the ether. Gone.
Buffy remembered two things
explicitly from that day: Angel's eyes and his black coat. His eyes had found
hers and Buffy remembered thinking, he's changed his mind. Then, that
coat, a fluttering reminder of who he was and what he was and why he was
choosing to walk away: a billowing exclamation point. She just wanted to lie
down right where she was, and go to sleep.
But then, like now, Buffy had
inescapable duties to fulfill. Willow needed her.
Pushing away from the counter Buffy
padded down the hall to the stairs and climbed, silently, to the top.
She rested a hand on the door to
Willow's room and hesitated once more. She hadn't rehearsed any speeches for
the first time she had seen Willow after Xander had brought her back from the
top of the world. She hadn't known what to say, she'd feared the worst: that
all the angry, venomous words that had spilled from Willow's black mouth were
true. Of course they weren't true.
Now, she pushed and the door swung
open. The room smelled stale: a sour combination of vomit and dirty socks and,
faintly, underneath it all, old sex.
"I made some tea," Buffy
said to Willow, who was sitting on a perfectly made-up bed, combing her freshly
washed hair.
Willow turned bleary eyes to her
friend and said without preamble: "I was lucky. I had something you didn't
get to and I spoiled it with magic. I couldn't just let what was between me and
Tara, be; I had to mess with it and I lost her because of it. If I hadn't
wasted all those weeks, maybe that would have changed everything," Willow
said, her eyes filling with tears.
"It might not have changed the
outcome, Will," Buffy said, gently, moving to sit beside her.
"No, maybe not, but I would
have had the extra time. It doesn't matter. How did I deal with losing her? By
calling on the dark forces. You didn't do that."
"Well, I guess that depends on
whether or not you view me sleeping with Spike as calling on the dark forces or
not," Buffy said dryly.
"No, I don't judge you harshly
for that, Buffy. I wish you'd told me, but I understand why you didn't."
"Do you?"
"I do, I think. There's been a
serious lack of communication between all of us for quite a while now. It's
like we've lost the ability to talk to one another all of a sudden."
Buffy shook her head. "I'm not
sure if it's all of a sudden, actually, Willow."
Willow inclined her head.
"Maybe not."
Silence spilled into the room.
"Do you regret me bringing you
back?" Willow asked carefully.
"Life is too short for
regrets," Buffy said.
"Maybe you could spare me the
platitudes just this once," Willow said.
"No, I don't, Willow. I was in
a wonderful place and I hope I'll be there again, but no, I have no regrets.
I'm with the people I love."
"Not all of them," Willow
said.
"No, not all of them."
Suddenly, as if the consequences of
her actions had just occurred to her, Willow started to cry. Huge, messy,
gulping sobs that crumpled her face as if it were made of tissue. Buffy reached
for the box of Kleenex beside the bed and put it between them. Willow shook her
head.
"I'm a mess and I'm never going
to be okay," she managed through her tears.
Buffy placed her hand on Willow's
and smiled, softly. "Yes, you're a mess, but you will be okay,
Willow," she said.
"How do you know?"
"I just know."
Willow sighed and tried to believe
that Buffy knew something important that she herself didn't know, but she felt
lost.
"Come on downstairs. You're
having tea and toast. Cinnamon toast. That's what mom always made for me and
Dawnie when we were sick," Buffy said and then paused a beat before adding
in a voice so quiet that Willow could barely hear it, "Bad things happen,
Willow. People die. People go away. People change."
"I know," Willow agreed.
"None of those are excuses for acting the way that I did, though."
"Who's to say," Buffy
said. "Grief is an uncontrollable beast, I think."
"You didn't let it get the best
of you," Willow said tightly.
Buffy sighed. "I did. I so
totally did."
Willow waited.
"Spike?" Buffy said, her
mouth compressing into a narrow line. "Spike was my way of coping with
things I don't think I ever really dealt with all that well the first time
around. Mom. Giles leaving. Riley. Even Angel. You wouldn't think that would
still hurt, would you, but it does." Buffy shook her head.
"So, we're not all that
different after all," Willow said.
Buffy nodded and smiled softly.
"Not that different, no," she agreed.
"Do you still love him,
Buffy?" Willow asked after a moment of silence.
"Spike?"
Willow shook her head vehemently.
"No. Spike. God, no."
"Oh," Buffy said.
"Oh."
"Why," Willow ventured,
"did you love Spike? Have I missed absolutely everything around here in my
dark quest for vengeance and power?"
"No."
"No, I haven't missed
everything?" Willow asked.
"No. I don't love Spike,"
Buffy clarified. She shook her head for added emphasis.
Willow eyed her warily. "Really
because you know...."
"I know, Will, he claims to
love me. But he's a vam..." Buffy stopped, suddenly aware of how lame an
argument it was to discount Spike because of his demon. "Never mind."
"If things were different,
maybe?" Willow suggested.
"But that's just it, Will.
Things are never going to be any different. I'm always going to be a slayer.
Spike's always going to be Spike. Giles is never coming back. Dawn isn't a real
girl. Xander and Anya are over. Oz is gone. Tara is dead. Things are what they
are."
Willow's already red and swollen
eyes brimmed with fresh tears.
"It's harsh, I know,"
Buffy said, kindly. "But at least it's a starting point."
***
Downstairs, Buffy set a steaming mug
of herbal tea on the table and depressed the toaster button.
She moved to the fridge to get the
butter. "I even made the cinnamon sugar," she said.
"Your culinary skills know no
bounds," Willow quipped half-heartedly.
"True," Buffy agreed,
moving back to the toaster just as it popped. After spreading butter and
sprinkling the fragrant sugar across the toast, Buffy delivered the plate to
the table and set it in front of her friend with a flourish.
"I'm not sure I can eat,"
Willow said, swallowing dryly.
"I know. But you should at
least try," Buffy said, resting a hand on Willow's shoulder.
"How will I face everyone
again?" Willow asked, reaching out a quivering hand for the toast.
"Well, you've faced me, right?
And Xander. Giles is gone. There's not really anyone left."
Willow nodded and bit into the toast
delicately. The sugar made her stomach pitch forward but she swallowed, chasing
the sweet flavour down with a sip of tea.
"All these years we've fought
the good fight. I even stayed here in Sunnydale to continue to fight because I
believed in it. It seemed right to be with you and Xander and..." Willow
hesitated. "It never occurred to me to be the leader. I'm not a
leader," she finished lamely.
"Leading isn't what you think
it is, Will," Buffy explained gently. "I'm not a leader other than,
well, by birth. You should have seen me back when I still lived in LA. The only
thing I ever lead was an assault on the sale table at Bloomingdales."
Willow smiled.
"Not helping any, am I?"
Buffy asked.
Willow shrugged. "At least
you're speaking to me," she said. "That's more than I hoped
for."
"You seriously underestimate
how important you are in my life, Willow."
"Thanks."
"Now eat up," Buffy urged,
reaching for a second mug and the pot of tea. The ringing phone interrupted
her.
"Hello," she said briskly,
expecting a bill collector.
"Buffy Summers?" A serious
masculine voice on the end of the line.
"Who's asking?" Buffy
replied.
"We haven't met. I'm Charles
Gunn. I work with Angel."
For a split second Buffy had the
feeling that the floor had dropped from beneath her. She reached out a hand to
steady her suddenly wobbly legs and took a deep breath.
"Hello?" Charles Gunn
said.
"I'm here," Buffy
whispered. "Is Angel okay?"
Buffy watched Willow's head spin
around in slow motion, a look of curious concern on her face.
"That's why I'm calling,
actually," Gunn said. "Fred and I were hoping that Angel was there
with you. Cordy, too."
"I don't understand,"
Buffy said blankly.
"Cordelia Chase..."
"I know who Cordy is,"
Buffy said hotly. "I just don't understand why you think Angel might be
here with her."
"I don't...we don't...we don't
know where they are. They're both gone," Gunn explained.
"What do you mean they're both
gone? Are they together?"
"We don't know," Gunn
said.
"Well, you might not know, but
Wesley knows, right?"
There was a pause.
"Right?" Buffy repeated.
"We haven't actually seen
Wesley in a while," the man said.
"What the hell is going on in
LA?" Buffy said in a voice that caused Willow to stand and move toward
her. "Where is Wes? How could you lose Angel?"
"We didn't lose him
exactly," Gunn said. "We came back and he was gone. Cordy was gone.
Groo was gone. Everyone was just..."
"Gone?" Buffy interjected
sarcastically.
"Yes," came the simple
reply.
"Well, he's not here,"
Buffy said. "I haven't seen him or talked to him in..." Months. It
had been months since she and Angel had met, touched, talked, wept and walked
away. "In a long time," she finished quietly.
"Oh," Gunn said.
"Well, I'm sorry for bothering you."
"No bother," Buffy said,
hanging up the phone.
"Buffy?" Willow said.
Buffy shook her head. "I'd feel
it, right?" She looked at Willow for confirmation and touched her hand to
the hollow between her breasts. "I'd feel it here, wouldn't I, if he was
gone?"
"I would," Willow said.
"I do," she amended.
Buffy nodded.
"Should I go there? To
LA?"
Willow raised her hand and rubbed
the throbbing spot between her eyes. Selfishly, she wanted Buffy to stay here,
in this house, in this kitchen and never leave her side again. But it was too
much to ask and she had no right to even think it.
"Do you want to go?"
Willow asked.
"I don't know. I don't know
what to do. I never seem to know anymore, not when it comes to..." She
left his name unspoken.
"When it comes to Angel?"
"Right."
"If he's in trouble. If he's
hurt or something..."
"He's a big boy, Buffy,"
Willow said, hating her thinly veiled attempt to prevent Buffy from packing her
Jeep and heading to the city.
Buffy nodded. "Come with
me," she said.
Willow contemplated the suggestion.
Maybe a change of scenery would do her good.
"What about the funeral?"
she replied.
Buffy dropped her eyes.
"Buffy?"
"Her dad came, Willow. Right in
the middle of all the...other stuff...and took her home."
"Home?" Willow said with
incredulous disbelief. "That was never home to her. Never. I was home.
This was home. God."
"We waited to have a memorial,
Will. Waited for you to feel better."
"I'm never going to feel
better," Willow said, quietly. "I don't want to have a memorial
service. I want to go to LA."
Buffy nodded.
***
Through the long night, Gunn and
Fred sat in the Hyperion's lobby in uncomfortable silence. The phone didn't
ring. Neither Angel nor Cordelia magically appeared through the hotel's front
doors or came up from the basement. Fred and Gunn argued off and on about
whether they should call Wes. Each debate ended in a stalemate.
It was only after Fred had dozed off
that Gunn made the call to Sunnydale. In the end, he felt he might have done
more harm than good. Something told him that he could expect to see Buffy
Summers arrive at any moment, not that he would know her if he saw her. It
wasn't as though there were pictures of the Slayer on the mantle or Angel's
desk or even in his wallet, not that Gunn was in the habit of rifling through
Angel's wallet; not that he even knew for sure whether Angel had a
wallet.
Sleep deprived, Gunn moved
listlessly toward the coffee, which he knew would scald his tongue and leave a
stinging trail of bitterness in his throat. The lobby echoed endlessly and yet
Gunn had the strange feeling that he was not alone. He looked back over his
shoulder at Fred, her lovely face cradled in the crook of her elbow, her brow
creased with worry, even in sleep.
Gunn didn't want to believe the
worst: that Cordelia was dead, and Angel, dust. But he had to believe that
something pretty horrible had happened since neither of them had been in touch
in going on a week and his own calls to their respective cells had yielded
nothing more than computerized voices telling him: "the customer you are
trying to reach is unavailable," whatever the hell that meant. You'd think
in this day and age, a cell would be able to offer more information than that:
The customer you are trying to reach has been dismembered. Dead. Dust.
"Damn," Gunn muttered
around his mouthful of burnt coffee.
Turning back toward Fred, he was
surprised to see two strange women standing in the middle of the room. Well,
one strange woman. The red-head he recognized as the one who had delivered the
news of the Slayer's death. She had a tree name, poplar or oak.
"Are you Charles Gunn?"
the blonde asked.
"I am. You're Buffy." A
statement, not a question.
She nodded curtly. "This
is..."
Willow. The name came to him.
"Willow," he said.
The red-head gave him a small smile.
Gunn was about to say that it was nice
to see her again, but it didn't seem appropriate under the circumstances.
"Why isn't Wes here?"
Buffy asked.
"We...."
Fred suddenly appeared behind the
two visitors, wafer-thin and tired. "We had a falling out with
Wesley," she said.
"A falling out?" Buffy
asked.
"It's complicated," Gunn
rushed to explain.
"I'm listening," Buffy
said, crossing her arms.
"We don't have time," Fred
said. "There's too much you probably don't know."
"Who the hell are you,
anyway?" Buffy asked.
"Fred. She's Fred. Look, she's
right, there's a lot. We can't go to Wes, but maybe you could."
Buffy looked from one to the other
and then to Willow. "Fine. Where is he?"
***
Lilah Morgan stretched, arching her
back off the bed and freeing her feet from the tangle of gritty sheets. Wesley
never failed to surprise her and this night's interlude was no different. She
could already feel the bruises rising, a deadly blush under her pale skin.
"Aren't you gone yet?" Wes
said from the bathroom door, a towel slung low on his lean hips. He wasn't all
bulging muscles, but he was wiry and strong and he fucked like a jackhammer and
that was better than Lilah had been getting for a long time.
She shot him a look, moistened her
swollen lips with a pointed tongue and sat up, letting the sheet fall away to
reveal perfect breasts, nipples as red as cherries.
Wesley shook his head. He moved to
the closet and peered inside, extracting a pair of worn jeans from a hook and
sliding them on, under the cover of the towel.
"I wouldn't have taken you for
a shy man, Wes," Lilah said.
Turning to face her, Wesley smiled.
"Not shy, Lilah. Just tired."
"Oh," Lilah said.
"Of you. Go home," he
continued pointedly.
Leaning down, Lilah retrieved her
crumpled blouse and skirt. She glanced at the alarm clock on the bedside table,
relieved to note that it was only 4:17am. Plenty of time to go home, shower off
the smell of Wesley Wyndam-Pryce and maybe close her eyes for twenty minutes
before heading to the office.
When she sat back up, she felt the
bed shift and then Wes was behind her, hands snaking over her shoulders, down
to cover her tender breasts, squeezing and pinching and making her insides turn
to liquid.
"I thought you were tired of
me," she said quietly.
"I had a change of heart,"
he whispered into her neck, sliding his fingers through her slick center.
His fingers paused, stroked and
Lilah bit her lip, startled at the abruptness of her impending climax.
"Jesus," she mumbled
around her orgasm.
"Hardly," Wesley said,
before getting off the bed and walking away.
In the kitchen he poured himself a
finger of scotch and raised the blinds on the small kitchen window.
His days were this: drink, sleep,
sex with Lilah, drink, sleep. Monotony made all the more monotonous by the
knowledge that there was no end in sight; no purpose beyond getting blinding
drunk and lost in Lilah, who, as it turned out, was even more of an outcast
than he was.
He kept his face to the window when
he heard her come from the bedroom. He knew that she stood for a moment waiting
for him to say something and he knew she knew not to expect even the smallest
comfort, not from him. He had nothing to give her.
He waited to hear the click of the
door and when it didn't come and didn't come, he turned and saw Lilah standing
there, holding the doorknob and regarding Willow and Buffy with careful
curiosity.
Wesley moved to the front door.
"Wesley," Buffy said.
"Hello, Buffy," he replied
and immediately regretted it.
"Oh my God," Lilah said.
"You're the Slayer."
Buffy regarded the darker woman with
immediate dislike and slid her eyes back to Wes.
"We need to talk," she
said.
Lilah turned her keen eyes to Buffy's
companion. "Which means you must be Willow."
"Lilah was just leaving,"
Wes said, placing his hand on the small of Lilah's back and propelling her past
the two girls from Sunnydale and out into the hall. Before she had the chance
to turn around and utter a single word, Wesley shut the door and slid the
deadbolt into place.
Turning back to his visitors, Wesley
was struck by how pale and weak Willow looked and by how the connection between
the two friends was almost palpable.
"Come in. Sit," Wesley
said gesturing to the couch.
"I know there's something going
on, Wes, and I don't have time to hear the whole sordid story. I need the
Reader's Digest version because Angel is missing," Buffy said.
"And Cordy. She's missing,
too," Willow added.
"Yeah, Cordy, too."
"Oh," Wesley said.
"Is there any chance they could
be together?" Buffy asked.
Wesley contemplated the question for
a moment.
"It's possible, I
suppose."
Buffy stood up and then sat back
down.
"I don't know, Buffy. I'm very
much..."
"Out of the loop, I know.
Everyone keeps telling me that, but I don't care, Wesley," Buffy said with
exasperation. "All I care about is Angel. Finding Angel."
Wesley tipped his head toward
Willow. "Couldn't she help in that regard?" he asked.
Willow blanched and Buffy reached
over to grab her hand. "No," she said, firmly.
Wes pressed his lips together.
"I'm afraid I'm not inclined to help, either," he said.
"Fine. Great. Whatever,"
Buffy said.
"Nothing is what it used to be,
Buffy," Wesley said moving toward his scotch bottle, and twisting the cap
off. There was barely a capful left and Wes didn't bother with a glass.
Probably wouldn't have been able to find a clean one anyway.
"Nothing is ever what it
used to be. I would have thought you would have figured that out well before
now," Buffy said, sadly.
Wesley shrugged and pitched the
empty bottle across the room, where it clattered into a tin garbage can filled
with the reminders of his previous drinking. "If I hear anything...."
he said, but when he turned back to the room, Buffy and Willow were gone.
***
On the street below Wesley's
building, Buffy sucked in a smog-heavy breath of LA night and glanced down the
street, her fingers itching to kill something.
"We're never going to find
him," Willow said hopelessly.
"He's alive, Willow, and I will
find him."
The sky was beginning to lighten,
pink light behind white light, layers and layers of light hidden behind the
curtain of smog that hung over the sky.
"I could try to..."Willow
started.
"No, Will, that's not why I
brought you. I don't need you to work any mojo here, I just need you. And I
think, right now, you need me. It's better if we're together," Buffy
interjected.
"But what if he's really in
trouble?" Willow asked.
Suddenly, the woman from Wesley's
apartment materialized in front of them. She had the rumpled look of someone
who had just rolled out of bed, albeit a very expensive bed.
"We weren't formally
introduced," she said directly to Buffy. "Poor form on Wesley's part,
but not all that surprising given who you are." Lilah held out a long
slender hand, unpolished nails perfectly manicured.
Ignoring Lilah's gesture, Buffy
stepped forward into the taller woman's space. "Look. It's late. I'm tired
and I've had a really bad day. What do you want?"
Lilah laughed mirthlessly. She
reached into the pocket of her suit jacket and retrieved a business card and
handed it to Buffy.
"I don't need a lawyer,
thanks," Buffy said, handing the card back.
"You don't understand,"
Lilah said. "I work for Wolfram and Hart. Perhaps you've heard of
us?"
"Let me think about that for a
minute," Buffy said with fake interest. "Nope, can't say as I
have."
Lilah clucked her tongue.
"Well, that was Angel's bad, then, wasn't it?"
Buffy tried not to let the casual
mention of Angel's name reflect in her eyes.
"You and Angel were...a couple
weren't you?" Lilah said, conspiratorially.
Buffy remained silent.
"He's quite a guy," Lilah
continued, watching Buffy carefully, knowing intuitively that she had the upper
hand. "Missing, I understand. Poof. Just vanished like a cloud of..."
Before Lilah could blink, Buffy had
swept her feet from under her and was sitting on her chest, small, strong hands
around her neck exerting just the right amount of uncomfortable pressure. From
behind her, Buffy's red-haired companion was stoic.
"Buffy," Lilah panted out.
"I can help."
Buffy released her hold on Lilah's
neck, but didn't crawl off her. Lilah shifted under Buffy's slight weight and coughed.
"What?" Buffy said.
"Nothing," Lilah said.
"You're strong."
Buffy smirked. "You're a
moron," she said.
"Perhaps," Lilah said,
carefully, "I could be of more use to you if you weren't sitting on
me."
Buffy considered the woman lying
beneath her, then she stood gracefully. She did not offer her hand to help
Lilah up.
Lilah pushed herself up awkwardly,
as only a woman in a tight designer skirt and stiletto fashion pumps could and
brushed herself off, humour clearly apparent on her face. "I can see the
attraction, actually," she said.
"Are you going to Dr. Phil me
to death or do you actually have something worthwhile to say?" Buffy
asked.
"I have Angel," Lilah
said. "Is that worth something to you?"
***
It took Lilah a full minute to get
up off the ground after Buffy slammed her in the face with a balled up fist.
Tiny hands, maybe, but they sure could pack a punch. She would have a shiner,
she knew it. And Gavin would have something snide to say about it. She knew
that, too.
"Play nice," Lilah
cautioned, regaining her footing.
"Mmm," Buffy replied.
Willow moved to stand beside her
friend. "Look, Lilah, I don't know who you are, but you might want to
reconsider the cryptic here. Buffy doesn't appreciate it," she said.
Lilah chuckled humorlessly. "I
can see that," she said. "Right. Angel's son and the slut who was in cahoots
with Holtz ambushed your precious boyfriend and dropped him to the bottom of
the sea," Lilah said.
Buffy kept very still. Lilah's words
washed over her, floated by her, distant and meaningful and sharp as daggers.
Son? Holtz?
"Ex," Willow said.
"Pardon?
"Ex. Angel is Buffy's
ex-boyfriend," Willow reminded the lawyer.
Lilah shrugged. "I don't care
what you are to each other," she said directly to Buffy. "I only care
that I have him and you want him."
"Does Wes know?" Buffy
asked.
Lilah snorted. "Shit, no,"
she said. "Do you think I'd actually tell him anything?"
"But aren't you...well, you
know?" Willow asked.
"Screwing each others brains
out?" Lilah said, caustically. "Yeah. But that doesn't mean we talk.
God. How old are you?"
"Old enough to kick your sorry
ass," Buffy interjected.
Lilah nodded curtly. "Do you
want him or not?"
"I want him," Buffy said.
"That's what I thought. Get in
your car and follow me," she said, moving toward her own sleek, black BMW.
"It's not far," she tossed back over her shoulder before pressing a
button on her keychain and disengaging the car's alarm.
Willow and Buffy exchanged a look
and then moved quickly to Buffy's Jeep. Moments later they were speeding down
the freeway.
***
Lilah could already see the faint
bloom of Buffy's handiwork painting the hard line of her tilted cheekbone and
she grimaced. Peering into the rearview mirror she could see the Jeep behind
her, keeping pace with her much faster sports car.
Could this day possibly get
any better? she wondered. She had Angel. She had Buffy wanting Angel. More
importantly, she had Willow. Until the moment she saw the witch she hadn't even
contemplated a use for her, but as she drove along the coast it suddenly
occurred to her that Willow Rosenberg might actually be very useful indeed.
***
Although he hadn't seen anybody
since he'd been pulled from the ocean, Angel knew for certain that his rescue
and subsequent imprisonment were the work of Wolfram and Hart. He could smell
their stench all over the warm bags of blood that were inserted through the
little sliding door of the cell they kept him locked in. They'd rescued him,
sure; but all they'd done was replace one prison for another.
Angel couldn't be sure how long he'd
been under water before divers with flashlights had attached chains to his
underwater coffin and he'd been hauled to the surface. The coffin had clunked
down onto the surface of a boat and Angel wasn't surprised that his rescuers
had thoughtfully undertaken their mission under cover of night. Who would be
that thoughtful, he wondered?
When he wasn't immediately released,
he knew that it wasn't Gunn or Lorne or Cordy who had come to his rescue. They
would have pried off the huge padlock that kept him in place. They would have
wrapped him in warmth and fed him.
But that was not the case. The
boat's engine chugged to life and soon after he was hoisted off the boat into
the back of a transport truck and soon after that he was here: dry and
deliriously hungry. He'd floated in and out of consciousness and he couldn't be
certain when the first bag of blood had arrived.
Ravenously, he'd sunk his teeth into
the plastic and sucked until the bag had collapsed in his hand. It hadn't been
enough, hadn't even begun to make him feel half-way fed, but it was all they
gave him. One bag a day: just enough to keep him bitterly hungry all the time.
In the hall outside his cell, Angel
heard noises and he stood and moved toward the door. The sounds were muffled
and he couldn't hear actual words, but the hairs on the back of his neck stood
up anyway. From out of nowhere, his crotch tightened, and when the door opened
and a blur of blonde flew into the room, Angel knew it was her before she even
came to a full stop.
"Buffy?" he said at the
exact same moment she said, "Angel."
And then they fell silent, just
stood across the room from each other, watching for some sign that this was a
practical joke being played on them both.
Outside in the hall, Lilah crooked a
finger at Willow and said, "Come on." She led Willow down the hall
and into a little room fitted with monitors and other technical looking
equipment. "We can watch it all from here," Lilah said, settling into
a leather chair in front of one of the TVs.
"I'm not watching
anything," Willow said. "It's private."
"Suit yourself," Lilah
smirked.
***
He didn't look good, Buffy thought,
running her eyes up and down the long, lean length of him. His cheeks were
carved out of his alabaster skin and his eyes were dark and dangerous, hungry.
His wrinkled, black shirt hung open to reveal his smooth, hard chest and
countable ribs. It wouldn't take long for him to fill out if they would just
feed him.
Or I could feed him, Buffy thought.
He rubbed his eyes thoughtfully,
blinked twice and looked back at her.
"Nice friends you've made here
in LA," she said.
"No friends of mine," he
replied.
"They saved you from what I
gather was not a nice predicament," Buffy replied.
"They didn't do that out of the
goodness of their hearts, I assure you," he answered, looking away.
She nodded. "Are you
okay?"
"Yes."
"She told me that your son did
this to you," Buffy said, careful to keep her voice devoid of emotion.
But she couldn't hide her feelings
from Angel. She'd never been able to. He'd always been the one person with whom
she didn't have to pretend, with whom she could just be and he saw the hurt and
confusion when she said "son."
"Lilah seems to know quite a
lot more than I gave her credit for," Angel muttered.
"Yeah, well, she wasn't all
that forthcoming with the information, but she still did better than anyone
else."
"Well, no one else knows, I
guess," Angel replied.
"No, I guess not since Gunn
called me in Sunnydale last night asking where you were. And where Cordy was. I
thought that when I found you I might find you together," Buffy said.
"Why?" Angel asked, a
little too quickly.
"I dunno. It just seemed that
everyone assumed that you'd be together," Buffy said.
"Well. We were supposed to be
together, meet, I mean," Angel said. "She didn't show up and then I
got, well, taken, and here I am,"
"What does she want from
you?" Buffy asked.
"Lilah?" Angel replied. He
looked around the room, looking for the miniscule camera he knew watched his
every move. "It's a long list," he said.
"I don't think I'm going
anywhere," Buffy replied, settling on the cot nestled against the blank
white wall.
"It's complicated," Angel
said dismissively.
Buffy's eyes hardened. "What
the hell isn't, Angel?"
Angel smiled. "Well, that's
true enough," he said.
Settling on the floor, across the
room from Buffy, he let out a long sigh and began his story.
***
"Well," Lilah said,
"that was quite a performance."
"What do you want?" Willow
asked.
Lilah smiled sweetly. It had been a
long time since anyone had asked her that question.
"What do you want?" she
said, flinging the question back at Willow.
"I don't want anything,"
Willow lied.
Lilah twisted around in the chair
and leaned forward. "Everyone wants something," she said.
"Well, I don't," Willow
said, sliding her gaze past Lilah's too interested eyes.
Lilah shrugged. "But they
do," she said, jutting her chin toward the TV screen. "Don't
they?"
Willow's eyes narrowed.
Lilah turned back to the row of
monitors and smiled.
Over Lilah's shoulder, Willow could
see the grainy image of Buffy, head bowed and Angel kneeling before her.
"What do you want?" she repeated to Lilah's head.
"Personally or
professionally?" Lilah said.
Willow could feel a little bubble of
black anger rising up through her chest. "With them," she clarified.
"Oh," Lilah said.
"Them. Nothing really."
"Then let them go," Willow
said.
"Is it true that Buffy brings
out the very best in Angel?" Lilah asked with feigned innocence.
Willow stood up.
"Don't get your panties in a
twist," Lilah said. "I need him and he needs her, so we're good
here."
"They. Aren't. Together.
Anymore," Willow said, slowly, enunciating each word as if Lilah were too
stupid to understand them.
"Not what it looks like to
me," she replied.
***
The minute she started to cry, Angel
felt his resolve give way. He could have stood her anger, her recrimination,
her hatred; but he could not stand her tears. And they were the worst kind of
tears: silent, hopeless, beautiful. He was lost in them.
"Buffy," he said. "I
should have told you."
"How could you tell me? I
wasn't anywhere for you to tell," she whispered. "I don't blame
you."
"I should have come to
Sunnydale and I should have told you," he repeated.
"No. You don't owe me
explanations," she said, swiping at her tears ineffectually.
Angel leaned forward and used the
tail of his shirt to wipe her cheeks dry. The gesture, simple and intimate,
caused a fresh flow. "It's no use, Angel," Buffy said. "This
isn't ever going to get any easier."
Angel sat beside Buffy on the cot
and took her hands in his. He had no answers for her, could barely believe he
was touching her.
"Do you feel it?" he
finally said, close to her ear, away, he hoped, from the attentive ears of
hidden microphones.
She nodded.
"Me, too," he said and
squeezed her fingers. "So, no matter what happens we always know that it
will be there."
She shifted slightly so she could
look into his face and see what she always saw whenever she looked at him:
everything she was, everything she wanted, everything that was always just out
of reach. She reached up a hand and lay it against his slanted cheek, sharp and
beautiful, like a jewel.
Before he could stop himself, he
leaned forward and smoothed his lips across hers. The taste of her, the smell,
the feel of her mouth against his was almost more than he could bear. But he
would bear it. He would. This and more.
Her lips trembled beneath his and he
felt his heart stretch wide. "It's all right, love," he murmured
against her mouth without even really knowing that what he said was true.
Things had gone to hell in the proverbial hand-basket.
Buffy pulled back slightly and
whispered, "What does she want with you?"
"She doesn't want me,
exactly," he whispered back.
Buffy's eyes widened. "But she couldn't
have known...I mean, I wouldn't have come if it weren't for Charles calling me.
I didn't know," Buffy said so quietly that had it not been for Angel's
acute hearing he wouldn't have been able to make out the words. Soft breath
across his face, that's all the words were.
"She may have known or maybe
not. Keeping me here is just part of the fun for Lilah," Angel said. Then,
looking up at what he presumed was the camera he said, clearly, "Right,
Lilah?"
In the room down the hall, Lilah
nodded.
***
"I'm bored now," Willow
said.
"Really? I find this endlessly
fascinating," Lilah said, turning to face the younger woman.
"You really don't get it, do
you?" Willow said.
"Get what? Theirs is the doomed
love of all time. They can't be together because of the curse," Lilah
said, sniffing. "I read the Cliff's notes, actually."
"Ha. Ha," Willow said,
leaning forward in her chair. "They won't do anything, if that's what
you're hoping for," she said authoritatively.
"I don't care about that,"
Lilah said. "In my line of work, Willow," Lilah explained, "you
have to be able to roll with the punches. You have to be able to change
direction quickly and without hesitation." She tapped her fingernail
against the monitor and smiled. "Don't get me wrong, he's infinitely
interesting to me. Her, too. But it suddenly occurs to me that you might be
better suited to another of my little projects."
"Really?" Willow said.
"I can't help you."
"I think you can help me,"
Lilah said, focusing her predatory attention back on Willow. "And, by
doing so you help them."
Willow turned her eyes back to the
monitor, to Buffy and Angel. They were whispering, heads close together, hands
entwined.
It only took Willow a second to
dismiss the potential consequences for aligning herself with Lilah Morgan and
her evil law firm. Willow could feel, even from this distance, the warmth that
radiated between Buffy and Angel: the longing, the desire. She knew she would
never again bask in that kind of warmth, but there was no reason not to reward
someone else with it. What did she have left to lose?
"What do you want me to
do?"
"Smart girl," Lilah said,
clapping her hands together once for emphasis.
***
When the door slid open, Buffy and
Angel looked at each other in stupified amazement.
"Come on," Angel said,
pulling Buffy up off the cot.
"I need to find Willow,"
Buffy said, following Angel out the door and into an empty corridor.
"Willow's with you?" Angel
said. "You didn't say."
"Sorry," Buffy said.
"It's a whole big thing. Story for another day."
He nodded and started off down the
hall. The building seemed empty and they couldn't find Willow anywhere.
"If anything's happened to
Willow," Buffy started and then stopped, pausing before a door from which
sounds emanated.
"Let me go first," Angel
said, placing a large hand on the door and nudging it open. Inside they found
the room Lilah and Willow had only recently left.
"I knew they were
watching," Angel said, stating the obvious.
"Look," Buffy said,
reaching for an envelope that had been taped to one of the TV screens.
Willow and I have made a little
bargain, the letter
began. In exchange for your freedom, she's offered to do a little work for
me. I think I've made a very good trade here. You should, too.
"What was she thinking?"
Buffy said. "What could she do for that bitch?"
Angel sat heavily on the edge of a
chair. "Magic," he said, simply.
"No, she can't do magic
anymore. She has a problem with magic."
"Yeah. It's just the kind of
problem Lilah would take advantage of, too," Angel said.
"This is just a mess,"
Buffy said.
"What time is it?" Angel
asked.
Buffy glanced at her wrist-watch.
"Three fifteen," she said. "Hours to go before we can get you out
of here safely."
"Did you drive? Can you pull up
to the door?"
"Yes, of course," Buffy
said, crumpling the letter into a ball and letting it drop to the floor. Why
did one sacrifice always require another?
***
The hotel was silent when Buffy and
Angel came up from the basement.
"Cordy?" Angel called,
forgetting that she was still missing. "Gunn? Fred?"
Lorne's green head peeked out from
around the corner. "No sweetcakes, just little ol' me."
"Lorne. I thought you went to
Las Vegas," Angel said, reaching out to shake the demon's hand.
Lorne reached for the proffered hand
absently. His attention was keenly focused on Buffy who was eyeing him with a
great deal of interest of her own.
"The Slayer, I take it?"
Lorne said, smiling.
"Buffy Summers. This is
Lorne," Angel said by way of introduction.
"Hi," she said, before
turning back to Angel. "Look, I'm bone tired. I wouldn't say no to a
shower and a place to close my eyes for a few minutes before we do whatever it
is we have to do."
"Sure. Use my room. Down the
hall to the left," Angel said, pointing to one of the regal staircases.
Buffy shifted her knapsack, smiled
at the two men and headed up the stairs.
"Oh, cupcake," Lorne said
after Buffy was gone from sight.
Angel grimaced. "What?"
"You're humming like an
electrical tower," Lorne said, shaking his head in distress.
"Well, let's see. I've been
trapped in a coffin under water, rescued by Lilah Morgan, imprisoned in some
warehouse and then Buffy shows up. It's been a busy few..." Angel stopped.
He didn't have a clue how long he'd been gone from the Hyperion. "What's
the date?"
"The 18th of June," Lorne
said.
"A busy few days, then,"
Angel continued.
"That's not what I'm talking
about," Lorne said.
Angel sighed. "I know."
Lorne sat down on the circular sofa
and crossed his legs demurely. "I had no idea," he said.
"I know," Angel repeated.
"I thought, well, you know, you
and Cordy," Lorne said.
"I know."
Lorne shook his head. "I'm not
usually wrong about these things," he said. "Must have been residual
stuff from Cordy and Groo. That explains part of it. But you, I was getting
vibes off you, too."
"I can't talk about it, Lorne.
There's no time anyway. Buffy came with Willow and Willow is currently with
Lilah."
"Oh dear."
"Where are Gunn and Fred? And
where the hell is Cordelia?"
Lorne stood up. "Don't you
know? I mean, I thought you knew. The whole town's abuzz."
"Kinda been outta the picture
here, Lorne," Angel said impatiently.
"Oh, right, sorry sweetcheeks.
She was called by the Powers," Lorne explained quickly.
"Called to do what?" Angel
asked.
"Well, to serve them, as we all
do," Lorne said, as if this should be the most obvious thing in the world.
"But she was already serving
them. She was helping me," Angel said.
"Well, I guess she got a
promotion. According to Skip, it was a dazzling ascension."
Angel rubbed his jaw. Well, that was
one mystery solved. Cordy wasn't missing, she'd just blown him off. Just as
well, too, considering what had become of him. Who knew what Connor and Justine
might have done to her if they'd actually been at the same place at the same
time.
"I need to go check on
Buffy," Angel said.
"Okay, well, I'll get hold of
Gunn and Fred. They're gonna be thrilled you're back, Angel. We were all
worried."
Angel climbed the stairs slowly. He
was bone tired and hungry. Opening the door to his room, he was not surprised
to see Buffy curled under his velvet covers, hair spread damply across his
pillow. She was sound asleep.
Angel stepped inside and closed the
door softly behind him. He padded silently across the room and checked his
fridge. Six bags of relatively fresh blood hung neatly from the refrigerator's
metal shelves. Angel reached in and took one, biting off a corner of the bag
and reaching for a clean mug. Habit now, to drink from a cup. He warmed the
blood in the microwave, removing it before the timer went off, and then
finished off two more bags in the same fashion before he headed to the shower.
The water wheezed through the
hotel's old pipes and Angel stood under a steady, hot stream for a long time
before reaching for the soap. He tried not to picture Buffy standing here,
naked, only a few moments before; tried not to imagine this same bar of soap
traveling over her firm, perfect body: stomach, elbows, calves, secret places
and public places and all the places he couldn't touch. But it was useless. Too
long denied, Angel felt his body growing tense, his muscles bunching around the
memory of touching her. He lingered over his manhood with the soap, an act he
very rarely indulged in, and stroked himself with a firm hand until he came,
moaning silently under the cooling water.
***
"What are you doing?"
Buffy asked sleepily. Her barely opened eyes could just make him out, slouched
in an armchair that looked none too comfortable.
"I was thinking," Angel
said, "about the last time someone had Willow. Remember?"
"Faith," Buffy said.
"The Mayor."
Angel nodded.
"Willow held her own,"
Buffy said, sitting up. The blanket pooled around her waist, revealing the
T-shirt she'd pilfered from Angel's drawer.
"She did," Angel agreed.
"I'm not so sure she will in this case."
"Me neither," Buffy said.
"After everything she's been through, she's pretty fragile."
"She really loved Tara?"
Angel asked.
Buffy looked Angel straight in the
eye and replied: "She really did."
Angel looked down at his hands. They
were aching to touch her, to slide through the tousled hair, to burrow under
the too-large T-shirt, which he already knew he wouldn't wash for as long as
her scent remained.
"What do you think Lilah wants
with her?" Buffy asked, breaking the pregnant silence.
"Her power, I guess."
"Not good," Buffy said.
"I figured as much," Angel
said.
"But she's a big, powerful
lawyer with lots of resources, right? Why would she need Willow?"
"Maybe she has a job that she
doesn't want to go through corporate channels to do," Angel suggested.
"She's a bit of a snake."
"How can we find out...wait a
minute, she's," Buffy took a second to blush, "you know, with
Wesley."
"Figures," Angel said
crossly.
"But he could help us
maybe."
"He won't," Angel said
tersely.
"He might," Buffy said
softly. "If you asked him."
Angel crossed his arms firmly across
his chest.
"Angel," she said. "I
almost lost Willow a while ago. I can't afford to lose her."
Angel knit his eyebrows together and
sighed. There was no way he was going to be able to deny what, to Buffy, was a
simple request. She had no way of knowing, or understanding, how betrayed he
felt by Wesley's actions. Still, in some small way he understood why she would
ask. She'd already lost so much. If he could help, he would.
"Alright. We'll ask," he
said. "But there's no guarantee that he'll know anything, or help us if he
does."
"Thank you," she replied
simply.
***
"Bollocks," Wesley
muttered, moving through the remains of another afternoon of drinking and
heading toward the persistent sound of knocking on his apartment door.
"I'm coming."
He pulled open the door to reveal
Buffy, and just behind her, Angel, scowling.
"Bloody wonderful," he
said, rubbing his aching eyes.
"Wesley," Buffy said.
"Can we come in?"
Wesley considered Buffy for a long
moment. "No, I don't think you can," he said.
For a moment, he thought he heard a
menacing rumble from deep in Angel's throat.
"It's important, Wes,"
Buffy said. The plaintive tone of her vice surprised Wesley.
"I see you found him," Wes
said, nodding towards Angel.
Buffy smiled tightly. "Found
Angel, lost Willow," she said.
Wes remained silent.
Angel stepped forward. Wes stepped
back. Despite the fact that they were of similar height, Wes was reminded of
how much heavier and more imposing Angel was. It had been a long time since he
had seen the vampire.
"Invite us in, Wes," he
said, his words a command, not a request.
"Keep him on a short leash,
then," Wesley said to Buffy. "Come in."
Buffy moved past Wesley into the dim
apartment. Angel moved closer to Wes and whispered, "If I wanted to get to
you, Wesley, I could. Buffy couldn't stop me."
Wesley shut the door behind his
guests and joined them in the living room.
"Lilah has her," Buffy
said, without preamble.
"Pardon me?" Wesley said.
"It's a big, long thing, Wes.
Lilah had Angel, now she has Willow," Buffy explained somewhat
inadequately.
Wes leaned forward, resting his
forearms on the straight line of his thighs. "I'm not sure I understand
what you think I can do," he said.
"Well, you and Lilah seemed to
have a relationship," Buffy said.
Wesley snorted, a short, sharp
sound. "Hardly."
"You sleeping with the enemy
now, Wes?" Angel asked, his voice low and hard.
"Bugger off, Angel," Wes
said.
"Please, you guys, this isn't
the time or the place," Buffy pleaded.
Wes sat back, frowning. He was
liking this less and less. He hadn't seen Angel in weeks, hadn't wanted to see
him. Buffy's arrival in LA had been a painful reminder of all that he had lost.
He wasn't a part of anyone's world anymore and it hurt, more than he cared to
admit.
Lilah had offered him the
opportunity to switch sides, exchange his white hat for a black one. To say he
hadn't been tempted by her offer would be a lie. Still, underneath the scar and
the grizzled jaw, and the hollow eyes, Wesley was still the same man: a man
always seeking approval, a man who wanted to do the right thing, even when he
wasn't sure what that was.
"She hasn't said anything to
me," Wesley said, looking straight at Buffy. "I doubt if she would.
She comes to me for one reason only. We don't talk. It's not that sort
of..." Wesley hesitated, loathe to use the word 'relationship.' "It's
not that sort of thing," he finished.
Wesley caught Angel's smirk from the
corner of his eye. "I hardly think that you're in a position to judge me,
Angel," Wesley said.
"Maybe not," the vampire
agreed. "Doesn't mean I'm not going to."
"Well, people in glass
houses..." Wesley said.
"Have we really been reduced to
slinging clichés at each other?" Angel replied, tartly.
"So it would seem," Wesley
replied.
"Boys!" Buffy interjected.
"Can we call a truce for the time being and try to figure out what Lilah
might be up to?"
Wesley relaxed into his chair. Angel
glowered. The room filled with uneasy silence.
"Well, there was that
ritual," Wesley said suddenly.
"What ritual?' Buffy asked.
"No, never mind. She didn't
need a wicca for that," Wesley said, shaking his head.
"Maybe you could call her
up?" Buffy said, hopefully.
"I could, but I doubt it would
get me anywhere," Wesley said.
"But you could try," Angel
said.
Wesley met his former friend's
serious gaze and nodded. "I could try."
Wesley reached into his shirt pocket
and extracted his sleek cell phone. Flipping it open he pressed a single digit
and waited. He didn't bother to turn away or speak quietly; when the phone was
answered on the other end he simply said: "It's me."
***
"Well, it seems your friends
are worried about you, Willow," Lilah said to Willow. The younger woman
was seated on a loveseat next to the window, which overlooked the twinkling
lights of downtown Los Angeles.
"Are they?" Willow said
absently.
"Human relationships never fail
to amuse me," Lilah said.
"Maybe that's because you don't
have any," Willowed offered dryly.
"I have those that count,"
Lilah said.
"I sincerely doubt that
somehow," Willow said, with a small smile.
"And yet, here you are, Willow.
That strikes me as odd, that you would offer yourself up for the sake of Buffy
and Angel whom you claim aren't even together anymore."
"They're not," Willow
said, firmly.
"Well, you're not a prisoner.
Do me this little favor and you're free to go," Lilah said sincerely.
Willow shrugged. She felt strangely
removed from her surroundings, from Lilah's strange request, from her life. Was
this all that was left, she wondered? Am I always going to feel so
disconnected?
Lilah's request hardly seemed worth
the trouble. All she wanted was a simple love-spell. A dime-store witch plucked
off the corner of Hollywood and Vine could have accomplished the same thing and
Lilah wouldn't have had to give up Angel in payment. None of it made any sense
to Willow.
Lilah had only requested that Willow
keep the details of the spell to herself and Willow had had no trouble making
this particular promise. No matter how benign the spell seemed, Willow did not
trust the flashy lawyer, her motives or the fact that she seemed to have just
made another bargain with her friends.
She couldn't prevent herself from
thinking about Warren, lashed to a tree, lips sewn together with thread she'd
manufactured with her mind. All that evil power coursing through her: hate,
revenge, bloodlust, anger, grief. So many emotions and no place for them to go
and so she had poured every ounce into him. Did he deserve his death? Willow
couldn't be sure that the answer wasn't the same now as it had been that night.
She knew only one thing for certain
and that was that she would never, ever replace Tara in her heart. That bright,
afternoon in her room, Tara's sweet light pouring golden off her skin and
Willow, so close to reaching out and making all the bad things disappear. Then:
pop. Like a pin pushed through the prettiest balloon at a child's birthday, the
splash of warm blood across her face and Tara's startled eyes.
Lilah's request didn't seem so bad,
not after everything that she'd done. Horrible words to Buffy. Hurting Giles.
Killing Warren. Well, it couldn't get any worse could it?
"Are you ready?" Lilah
asked and Willow realized that the woman was standing right beside her.
"I'm ready," Willow said.
***
"She says it's nothing,"
Wesley said, closing his phone.
"Do you believe her?"
Buffy asked anxiously.
Wesley and Angel exchanged a brief,
conspiratorial look.
"No," they said together.
"Well, great," Buffy
moaned.
"We don't have a lot of
options, here," Angel said, quietly.
"We have one," Wesley
said.
***
It was a typical cloak and dagger
exchange. Lilah and Willow emerged from Lilah's BMW; Angel and Wes stood
waiting at the end of the alley. For effect, Angel was in game face, his long,
black coat whipping around his thighs. Wesley hadn't shaved and his scowl was
bordering on comical, or would have been if it didn't make Lilah so hot.
"All this for a little dime
store magic, Lilah?" Wesley said, his voice tinged with disbelief. "I
thought you were above all this. I'm very disappointed, actually."
Lilah fluttered her eyelashes
demurely and walked closer to the two men, Willow trailing behind. Pointedly
ignoring Wesley, she regarded Angel with open hostility. "Glad to see that
you two boys have kissed and made up."
Angel shrugged. "Are you okay,
Willow?" he asked.
She nodded, her eyes vacant and
unfocused.
Wesley looked at Angel and the
vampire nodded. He handed Lilah an ornate book and said: "This concludes
our business, I believe."
"Believe what you want,"
Lilah said, pushing Willow toward the men.
"Get in the car, Willow,"
Angel said.
For a moment Willow hesitated and
then she drifted, as if asleep, toward Angel's car, where Buffy was watching
the proceedings from the back seat. With a sad glance back at the threesome
that stood in the street, Willow crawled in beside Buffy and started to cry.
"Willow?" Buffy asked,
taking her friend's hand. "Are you okay? Did she hurt you?"
Willow shook her head somberly.
"You rescued me."
Buffy squeezed Willow's hand
reassuringly. "Of course."
"I didn't need rescuing. She
wasn't going to hurt me. She wasn't going to do anything. She just needed me to
do a little spell," Willow said, wiping stray tears from her face.
"But magic, Will? I mean,
you're not..." Buffy was at a loss.
Willow turned to look at Buffy. Her
eyes were opaque and difficult to read. "It doesn't matter," she
whispered. "Not anymore."
***
"You're starting to get on my
nerves, Lilah," Angel said.
"Oh, good. And here I was
thinking that I didn't have any affect on you at all."
Wesley shot Lilah a warning look.
"Are we done here?" he said to the both of them.
"We're done," Lilah said.
Angel merely nodded and turning,
headed back to the car. Almost as an afterthought, he wheeled around and said,
"Are you coming, Wesley?"
Wes hesitated. It was the moment of
truth. Did he go with Angel, take the proffered olive branch, if that was
indeed what this was, and try to sort things out? Or did he stay, rooted to the
spot, caught between a rock and Lilah's hot body?
He tried to keep his expression
blank, but his hesitation was all that Angel needed. "Suit yourself,"
the other man said and got into the car.
"You're really going to let him
drive away?" Lilah asked.
Wesley watched the taillights on
Angel's car wink in the distance.
"Piss off, Lilah," Wesley
said, turning towards her and grabbing a slender wrist in his hand, he yanked
her forward and kissed her, hard.
***
"What happens now?" Buffy
asked Angel.
They were seated in Angel's upstairs
room, in two armchairs on either side of a small table. The rooms weren't as
homey as his place in Sunnydale had been. Buffy thought it was almost as though
Angel hadn't really settled in yet, as if, at any moment, he might pack up his
meager possessions and leave.
He wouldn't meet her eyes.
"I don't know?" he finally
said.
She nodded.
"Did Willow tell you what Lilah
wanted with her?"
"Some spell or something,
I..." Buffy paused. "I don't want to be here anymore, Angel."
"Oh."
"Sorry. That came out
wrong," Buffy said. "Look. Let's face it, we haven't spoken in a very
long time."
"I know," Angel agreed
softly.
"Maybe that's for the
best," she went on.
"Maybe."
Buffy shook her head, slid her
fingers into the hair at her temples and pushed, massaging the ache there.
"When you look at me, what do
you see?" she asked.
Angel closed his eyes. Images of his
imprisonment slid through his brain, picture after picture. When he opened his
eyes again, Buffy was watching him carefully.
"You saved me," he said.
"Even when I don't deserve it, you rescue me." His words held the
aching weight of their history and their meaning was not lost on Buffy.
"You would have done the same
for me," Buffy said with conviction.
"Yes," he acknowledged
simply.
"That's enough for me,
Angel."
"Is it?" he mused, almost
to himself.
"For now," she assured
him.
***
Lilah lay curled against Wesley's
back. She was exhausted, but so keyed up she knew she would never sleep.
"Feeling pretty proud of
yourself, aren't you?" Wesley said, turning to face his lover.
She smiled broadly.
Wesley shook his head.
"It's all about karma, right,
Wes? Isn't that what you've been harping on for the last few weeks. What goes
around comes around?" She lifted her eyes to his. "I'm already going
to hell for all the things I've done."
"I doubt that anything you
could do now will change that fact, Lilah," Wesley said.
She traced a lazy fingertip around
Wesley's nipple and watched with amusement as his eyes darkened. She leaned in,
drawing his lower lip between her teeth, biting lightly and then withdrawing.
"You are a puzzle," Wesley
sighed, pulling her leg over his hip and sliding into her with a small groan.
Lilah laughed. "Well, I know at
least two pieces that fit together quite nicely."
"We shall see."
***
Willow slept.
In the dream, Tara was standing in
their room, a look of calm repose on her face. She was speaking, but Willow
couldn't hear her words. She stepped closer. Tara's eyes beckoned her closer
still. Willow moved forward.
"I can't hear you," Willow
said sadly.
Tara's eyes smiled, but her lips
kept moving.
Willow shook her head. Behind her
someone said: "You're not listening properly."
She turned to see Lilah standing
there, arms crossed in front of her immaculate Armani suit.
"What do you know about
it?" Willow asked scornfully.
"I know that you have to really
listen to hear what people want," Lilah said, sincerely.
Willow nodded and turned back to
Tara. She watched her lover's mouth move, slowed her lips down and tried to
read the words without actually hearing them.
I love you.
***
Just before sleep claimed her, Lilah
was sure she heard Wesley say: I love you.
She curled around the knowledge,
comforted by his words and their potential. Magic had its own particular
charms. She'd have to remember to send Willow a fruit basket.
***
"We should get some
sleep," Buffy said.
"You stay here," Angel
said. "There's plenty of other rooms."
"Okay," Buffy agreed.
"Maybe that would be..."
"Don't say better, Buffy,"
Angel said. "It's never better."
She reached out to stroke the hollow
of his cheek.
"I know," she said.
Angel placed his hand over hers,
trapping her warmth against his face, and for a moment, it was like standing in
the sun.
The End