SCRIBES OF ANGEL
FanFic
________________________________
Title: Secret Gods
Author: Elektra
Disclaimer: You all know that Joss and company
own everything. I own nothing and let's
keep it that way.
Archivists: Please email me if you are going to
put this somewhere
Dedication: To Fox (you know who you
are..) It is your fault I spent my 7
hour drive back to MD thinking this up instead of working on my novel!
Part 1:
Prologue
The distance
echoed still. Something died in the
darkness, was swallowed by the depths of the night. Light became a prayer to an ancient myth and he began to believe
in monsters, in demons, in the lesser aspect of humans. He knew of walls, of
tiny rooms, of hiding places, of locked doors.
He understood the rawness of fear, how it ripped into a child's belly
and tore away belief and hope.
And the
crying remained, the sobs small and close.
It seemed he
fought their legacy. Daily pulled
himself from the bed linens, tugged away the shadows and, as he slipped on his
glasses, clothed himself in the visage he wished to show the world. Yet the persistent weeping washed away the
image he wished to portray as if the tears were a great flood breaking through
his constructed dam. The moaning whispered in his ears and mocked him.
How long?
How long
before they realized? Nothing stood between the truth and the fiction. And after all, he was only just a fiction.
The door
opened and words were spoken. He
listened to the priest express sympathy, relate the events that led up to the
discovery. Wesley watched as the priest
detailed the desecration of the cathedral, followed the old priest's shaking
hand as he picked up a broken chalice.
Nodding, Wesley said all the right things, the proper things. Condolences, apologies.
Cordelia and
Gunn trailed behind them. He felt
Cordelia drag her feet as she entered the church as if Angel's demon somehow
lurked within her. He hurried her along
with a quick gesture and she only scowled at him as she eyed the crucifix. Her focus drifted back to him and she seemed
to plead with him, but he said nothing to ease her fears.
They had been
summons here. By a priest. To a cathedral.
Cordelia
stumbled and Gunn caught her elbow.
Pausing, she glared at Wesley but he refused to listen to her silent
wishes, her silent fears. He knew the
silence of fear, it weighed deep down in the pit of your stomach. A heavy constant gnawing that mimicked
hunger but made it impossible to eat.
He went to
her side and whispered, "Best get this over with as quickly as
possible."
Her lips
parted as if she might speak, but instead she said nothing and only agreed with
him. Together they walked the length of
the church to the confessional where the priest stood, waiting.
Waiting.
They had been
summons. To a church. At dawn.
And Angel had
gone missing two days ago.
A church.
Cordelia
clawed at Wesley's arm but he only grimaced in response as they stepped toward
the open door. She gasped as they
peered into the small cubicle of a room.
Shredded velvet lined the walls on the room, blackening blood stains
smeared over the consecrated pews near the confessional. Burnt flesh and scorched oil mixed to gag
him.
As they
approached the room, Cordelia cupped her hand to her mouth and dropped to her
knees. She turned to Wesley and the
glistening of tears lingered in her eyes.
"Good
Lord," Wesley said, his own hand shaking as he tried to reach out to the
balled figure in the room.
"I found
him this morning," the Priest reported. "I called Charles. I thought he might know who or what he
is." Coughing the priest stepped
back and folded his hands as if in prayer.
Wesley turned
back to the confessional. Lying curled
into a tight ball, Angel shivered and rocked.
Etched over his bare back and into his forehead crosses had been cut or
burnt into his flesh. His feet and
hands were bloodied and bruised. As Cordelia reached out to touch the vampire,
Angel jumped and attempted to squeeze himself into the tiny room.
A room, small
and narrow, reverberated in Wesley's head as he looked down at Angel. A room
under the stairs, a closet. A safe and
warm place. The tears threatened, stung
the inner corners of his eyes but he shoved them away. The memory clouded his senses, blinded him
as he knelt beside Cordelia.
The memory of
his father. Of the room beneath the
stairs. Of the distance, the number of
stairs his father would descend to find him.
Thirteen. Wesley knew. He'd counted them, listened to the creak on
the fourth step as his father came down to punish him. He remembered,
understood how one would curl into a ball hoping only to make oneself as small
as possible. He prayed then.
He didn't
now.
"Angel?"
A groan
suffered from his cracked and bleeding lips.
His focus skipped and jumped from face to face without recognition.
"Angel,
can you hear me?" Gently, he
stretched out a hand then slowly placed it on Angel's arm. "Angel, can you tell me what happened?"
The vampire's
shoulders began to tremble in great heaves.
A hoarse noise broke forth and Wesley realized Angel was laughing a fractured moaning sound as if he was an
animal caught in a trap.
"What
Angel? What is it?"
With the
broken rhythm of the laughter, Angel rocked and mumbled over and again,
"It's coming. It's coming. It's coming."
Part 2:
The moon full, round, bloated dropped out of the sky. The pale blue ball
seared the night leaving a trail of blue fire scarring the blackened sky. Raising his face to the twilight, he
shielded his eyes for the scorching light burned an after image. He would remember it forever. A winged figure juxtaposed against the flame
of the dying moon. Long black legs stretched out, a slithering tail whipped the
air, broad enveloping wings inked out the anemic rays. The harsh beat of the wings blasted his
face, caused him to stagger and fall to the pavement below.
Deep throated
laughter answered him and he shivered as the last of the waning light flickered
and died. The canopy of the sky collapsed around him and he crumpled into a
ball as he felt its breath upon his cheek.
It smelt of sulfur, oil and decaying flesh. Choking back his bile, he hid his face and turned away from the
thing.
The winged
serpent.
It laughed
again. Peering from his hiding place,
its eyes pierced him, ran him through as if a hot sword cut deep into the soft
tissue of his abdomen. Its features blurred, melted into the dark night. Its silhouette cut the stars with two horns
and spikes. A black skeletal hand reached out to him, the nail trailing along
his cheek.
"My
childe," it cooed. "Do not despair, my childe. It's coming."
He longed to
run, to move away from the winged creature yet its voice the smoothness, the subtleness, the
sensuality paralyzed and mesmerized
him all at once.
As it
caressed his cheek, his flesh opened and his blood smeared across the black oil
of the creature's skin. The colorless,
pupiless eyes glimmered in the dark and smiled. Lifting its finger to its lips, it tasted his blood and promised,
"It's coming for you."
Gasping,
Angel jolted awake and screamed out. "It's coming. It's coming."
Figures moved
toward him but he batted them away. The
thing had touched him, burnt his flesh, devoured his flesh. He struggled against the hands holding,
growled at the voices trying to comfort him.
Shifting, he let his hidden beast take over his features and bit down
clenching his jaw like a rabid dog.
A voice
called out, called to him, called his name.
The voice wrapped around his name and bathed it with a sweet
melody. He relaxed a degree, the
tension breaking from his shoulders and he slumped in surrender, shuddering
against the edge of pain.
"Angel,
can you hear me?"
As he focused
his eyes, he tasted blood in his mouth and wretched against the lingering need.
Someone's arms cradled him and he leaned into the warmth, a fragrance drifted
to him and he inhaled. A spiced caress.
Fumbling, he clutched and held on.
"Shh,
shh." He was rocked slowly,
tenderly as a hand stroked his hair, his neck. "It's okay. Quiet, quiet. You're with us now. No
one is going to hurt you."
"Cordelia,"
he murmured and realized the remnants of her blood still stained his tongue,
realized his vampire form still scarred his face. "Oh God,
Cordelia." He looked up and saw
the tear in her shoulder. "I'm
sorry." He reached toward her but
she only shook her head.
"It's
okay, quiet." She helped him to
lay back down in his bed as he transformed to his human face.
Wesley stood
over the bed, a swath of clothe in his hand.
He bent down and cleaned the wound on Cordelia's shoulder and softly
spoke to Angel. "Do you remember anything, anything at all, Angel."
"It's
night."
Pausing, Wesley
glanced to the window and agreed, "Yes, you've been asleep for a good
fifteen hours." He continued his
work, patting the wound but Cordelia only gripped Angel's hand. "We worried you might not
awake." He stopped and asked,
"Angel, can you remember the church?"
"Church?" Angel shifted his attention to Wesley for a
moment, then turned back to the window. "It's night."
"Angel,
you must try to focus." Wesley sat
on the opposite side of the bed from Cordelia. "What exactly happened to
you? You were missing for two days and
found tortured in a church."
Again, Angel
looked at Wesley and, gazing at him, confessed, "I don't like the
night." He laughed a mirthless sound. "Two days. It felt like a thousand. It'll come in the
night."
"What?"
"The
moon."
"The
moon?" Wesley took off his glasses and pinched his nose. "I'm afraid,
you aren't making much sense Angel. I
need you to concentrate. I need to understand what happened to you otherwise we
might not be able to prevent it from happening again."
"Help
me," Angel said and faced the window. "It's coming."
Sighing
Wesley started to speak again but Cordelia raised a finger and asked,
"Angel, what's coming?"
He reached up
to her, touched the line of her cheek and said, "I can't fight it. It
wants me. It already has me." A shiver ran down the length of his body.
"What
Angel?"
He opened his
mouth as if to respond but a stabbing pain streaked through his face and he
grabbed the cut slicing his cheek. He
shook his head and sank down.
Standing,
Wesley slid his hands in his pockets and said, "We dispatched Gunn and
Winifred to speak with the parish priest again. I hoped to reconstruct what happened to you, to figure out what
we are up against."
Angel laughed
and closed his eyes. "The parish priest." He slung an arm over his face and murmured, "The priest
doesn't know. The priest can't
know." He clenched his jaw, the pain bolting into his face, throbbing into
his brain. "It's unholy. It loves the night."
He felt
Cordelia's weight shift and grabbed her. "Don't. Don't leave please."
He looked out the window. "It's night. I don't want to be alone."
Wesley
rounded the bed and, in a quiet whisper, said, "We'll try to help you
Angel. But we can't unless you tell us
what exactly we are up against."
He pulled his
arm down and stared at Wesley. "Godlessness."
Part 3:
Water flowed,
flooded her senses. It cascaded like a
broken river, split and divided by a barrier of rocks. The flow swam up over her shoulders, to her
chin and she gulped back the oncoming sensation. Yet she knew, understood she was drowning. The light around her faded as if it never
existed at all. In that moment she
comprehended that she had always suffered, would always drown in the depths of
the swollen river of truth.
Opening her
mouth for one last breath, she failed and instead drank into her lungs a liquid
death. To fight pressed against her, enslaved her with too many burdens, too
many pains. Surrendering, she sank, let
her body fall, drift in the tide.
Purposefully she inhaled the frigid water as her lungs rebelled and
screamed in silent agony.
It would be
this way. To die. In the water, silent, cold, and endless.
"Endless,"
she whispered and came to herself. The
water from the bathroom sink still gushed over her hands as she stood leaning
against the basin. Glancing toward the
quiet figure in the bed, Cordelia repeated, "Endless."
His life was
endless, an eternity to repent and to apologize for past wrongs. She wondered how it would be. A demon with soul. She smiled, recalling how she reacted when she first learned of
Angel's fate. She distinctly remembered the words, the callousness of her
reaction. She said the words again, "Suck much?" It didn't sound funny anymore.
Reaching to
the facet, she twisted the knob and turned off the water. She returned to Angel's bedroom. He still lay in a deep slumber. They'd been unable to discern anything he
tried to tell them. Wesley pushed him
but she couldn't see the point and ordered him out of the room. Ordered all of them out of the room. And she began her vigil.
Watching
him. The twitch of fear shuddered
through him and she sat on the edge of his bed. His hand cradled in hers.
She understood fear, she understood loneliness. She didn't want him to suffer through it
alone. During her sentinel duty, Wesley
had called her to the hallway to discuss matters. Reluctantly, she dragged herself from Angel's side and
congregated with her adopted family in the corridor of the empty hotel.
In a whisper,
Wesley urged, "We must move forward with the investigation. It's been over twenty four hours and we've
still no idea what happened to Angel."
"He
ain't no better than when we first got him back," Gunn stated. "Can't
see it being any use trying to ask him anything, he's gone all homeless in the
head."
Frowning,
Cordelia said, "He hasn't gone homeless in the head. He's just been tortured or something. Go get tortured and see how right in the
head you would be, dumb ass."
"Now is
not the time." Wesley placed a
hand on her shoulder. "We don't have any idea what kind of danger Angel
could be in or we could be in."
"Well
maybe, maybe," Fred stuttered, looking everywhere but at the ex-Watcher.
"Maybe whoever or whatever did this to him is done with him. You know like they couldn't find what they
were looking for."
"Sounds
reasonable," Gunn agreed. "He
was pretty much discarded in the church."
"Or
maybe he just don't want to tell you all 'cause he thinks you'll judge
him." Fred smiled and, pushing up
her glasses, nodded at Cordelia.
"I don't
judge my friends. Well, not
anymore." A flame of heat flushed
her cheeks as she glared at the girl they'd rescued from Pylea. If they could only find her family and get
rid of her. "And anyway, who made you an expert on Angel, Winnie."
Putting her
hands on her hips, Fred replied, "It's Fred not Winnie."
"Yeah
like Fred is anymore feminine."
"Claws
girls, claws."
"Oh shut
up Gunn." Cordelia and Fred said
in unison. She turned to Fred and,
clearing her thoughts, said, "Fred, okay Fred. I think your first theory is the one we should go with."
"I
heartily agree, let's not bring up Pylea again." Wesley folded his arms and directed, "We should go back and
retraced Angel's steps. Try to find out
where and how Angel was abducted."
"I'm
staying." They faced her but she
was resolute. "I'm staying with
Angel. He might need someone when he
wakes up. I don't think he should be alone." Wrapping her arms around herself, Cordelia
fended off the chill creeping through her like frozen water in the marrow of
her bones.
Wesley
considered her for a moment then, nodding, said, "Agreed." As she
turned to leave, Wesley called to her.
"Be careful, Cordelia. No
unnecessary risks, we don't know what we are up against."
"You
too." She paused before twisting
the door knob and stared at her family. "Be careful," she whispered
and entered the room.
She noticed
her shoes barely made any noise on the soft threads of the carpet. Raising her eyes to the sleeping form in the
bed, she wondered if he could hear her still.
If in the depths of slumber, the beat of a human heart disturbed him.
She regarded
him from a distance. The cuts and bruises,
the burns had faded except for the vicious cut along his cheek. It seemed to pulse with an unnatural blue
purple color. Easing herself to the bed
she slipped onto the mattress. In the
death of his repose he did not move, did not react. And for the first time she realized, she had no idea if he was in
fact still undead.
She stretched
a hand to stroke his cheek, to lend comfort to the throbbing slice in his
flesh. Yet as she moved to touch it, it
slithered.
Crawled.
Wormed about
the bone of his cheek and then settled again.
Gulping for air, she covered her mouth with her hand.
"Calm,
Cor. You haven't had any sleep. You're imagining things." She closed her eyes, took a cleansing
breath, then released it as she opened her eyes. "That's it. Imagining it." Biting the inside of her cheek, she steadied
her nerves and said, "Only one way to find out."
Again she
reached for Angel.
Hiss.
She jumped
from the bed, gasping and quaking as she stared at the thing on Angel's
face. The thing that Angel became.
Dark like
oil.
Its eyes
pupiless, moteless pinpoints.
Long bone
like fingers curled to entice her closer like a wicked wolf-grandmother in a
macabre fairy tale. She felt her feet move, stepped toward the thing in Angel's
bed.
Wings
unfurled and encompassed her.
In the dark
folds, she heard the winged serpent promise, "I'm coming for you. I'm coming."
"Angel,
no!" she cried out and realized her eyes were closed and arms were holding
her.
"I'm
here." A hand supported her head
and she looked up to see Angel grasping her.
The wound still scarring his cheek.
"You're
here?"
"You
didn't leave," he murmured into her hair.
The breath he didn't need escaped his lips and stole down her back.
"No,"
she whispered, trying to ignore the image still haunting her. She must have fallen asleep. Right?
She was asleep. That was
it. "I'm right here."
"I
thought you would leave." A quaver
ran over his broad shoulders and she tightened her grip of him. "I hate
the night."
"It's
dawn, Angel."
"It
doesn't feel like it." He gave a
small laugh. "I should have known.
Why didn't I know? You won't
leave now, will you?"
"No, I'm
here." And his head dropped onto
her shoulder. She eased him back to the
pillows and curled her body around him.
"You don't have to be afraid.
I'm not going to leave."
"I
thought you would."
"Why?"
He didn't
answer but swallowed hard.
"I'm
here, Angel." She fingered his
hand, then shifted her position so that his head lay upon her breast. So he could hear her heart. She wanted to share it with him, the
beating. "I'm not leaving."
"It's
coming Cordy." The tone of his
voice ripped at her and she tensed herself against reacting to it. "I
can't stop it. But you'll stay, won't
you?"
"I'll
stay."
"You'll
stay until it comes."
The fear
crept up her skin, sent shooting cold spears through her heart. She grappled
for air as if she truly did sink beneath the rapids of a river.
She chanced
to ask, "What's coming Angel?"
"Them,
no, It."
"It?" His whole body jittered and she soothed
him. And the crash of the water, the
weight of the water threatened and she asked him not to tell her. "You
don't have to answer. Quiet."
He shielded
his eyes with his hand and shook his head as if he fought something, some inner
pain. Clasping the wound on his face,
he said through clenched teeth.
"It. From Hell. I remember
it. It's coming. It's coming to finish it."
Part 4:
He remembered
the shadows, the thickness of their cloak, the security of their veil. He recalled the irregularities of their
forms, the amorphous shapes and twisted knots of shade. Yet in his memories, he
saw the shadows as a sanctuary. The
closet beneath the stairs, the shadowy corners of the attic, these were his
havens. His legs always fractured,
broke beneath him as he scrabbled to get away from his father, from the booming
voice, the heavy hand.
Wesley hated
not the memory of his father, but the memory of himself. Hiding.
Afraid. Begging for his father's
approval. He hated still that he
yearned for it, that he sought it with every phone call. He came to know a
contorted worship of his father as if in some dementia his father was his
secret god.
Easing back
against the lobby counter, Wesley gave a glance at the approaching night, the
shadows it threw and focused instead on Angel.
Angel sat on the sofa, his one hand extended to clutch Cordelia's as she
knelt at his side. Sipping a cup of tea, he cringed as he tasted the liquid but
said nothing. Wesley noted the cup of
blood remained untouched on the coffee table.
He
began. "It's good, good that you
are feeling better. We can finally get
to the bottom of this." He paced
in front of the counter as he spoke. "Do you remember your
attackers?"
Angel looked
instead to Cordelia, he handed her the cup of tea and settled back on the
sofa. His large frame wasted into the
fabric, deflated of its brawn and vitality.
Someone or something had done this to Angel and he was going to find out.
He refused to permit anyone in his family to feel so vulnerable and forsaken.
Placing a
hand on the ugly wound that slashed his face, Angel closed his eyes as if
recalling some event, some specific torture as he grimaced. He looked up at Wesley and only commented,
"It's almost night."
Though
frustration threatened, Wesley calmed when he chanced to see Cordelia's
stricken expression. She was frightened
for Angel, more so than Wesley could have imagined. He should consider talking directly to her, questioning her. Perhaps Angel had confessed something of use
to her.
"I
recall," Angel started and Wesley's thoughts vanished. The vampire's words were soft as if he spoke
a lullaby to a child. "I recall the coming of night. It wasn't like here." As he explained he glanced to the doors. "Night was something more there. Or it wasn't at all." He paused and shook his head. "I can't
explain it."
"It?"
"Hell."
Angel
squeezed his eyes closed again and Cordelia shifted to sit next to him on the
sofa. She whispered something to him
and he nodded. Reaching to the mug of blood, she held it for him as he drank.
He didn't finish it, didn't even drink half of it before he gagged and asked
her to take it away.
He cupped his
hands over his face and said, "I thought when Cordy got sucked into Pylea
she was there." His hands dropped
and he grasped her again. "I thought you were there, in Hell."
He
smiled. "But you were a
Princess."
She bowed her
head and a red flush heightened the color of her cheeks.
"I'm
glad, glad you weren't there."
Angel pushed himself to sit. "Nights are different there. The air. It isn't air. It's like a viscous liquid. It clings to you. Goes down your throat and fills you but empties you. It's fear, it's hostility." He growled. "I'm not explaining this
right, not at all." He shook his
head as he peered at Wesley. "I'm sorry."
"It
isn't a necessity for you to explain your experiences in Hell," Wesley
stated. "What we need to discern is your believe that some manifestation
from Hell is coming. How is this
happening and why now?"
A cough
interrupted them. Gunn and Fred entered the room, the three books from Pylea
clutched in her arms. "I think, yep, I think I know why. But it's probably just a guess since I don't
know any of the back story since no one found fit to fill me in on
anything."
Gunn
interrupted, "Welcome to my world."
She rolled
her eyes and continued, "Had to kinda figure it out on my own with all the
little hints everyone drops. But
anyway, I think I know."
Wesley let
out a slow breath and asked, "Would you like to fill us in Winifred?"
She frowned
at him but then said, "Yeah, sure sir." She smiled at Angel but he never glanced at her. His gaze fell to Cordelia's hand clasped
within his own. Fred cleared her throat
and started, "Well the way I see it is, Angel went to Hell before. That's what I gather anyway. How he got out and why, I don't think I
could explain except for possibly writing out a transference
equation." Pushing up her glasses,
she shrugged her shoulders. "I don't think you'd be wanting that
anyway. Going through the portal to
Pylea shifted the balance of the equation."
"But he
came back."
Fred lifted a
finger, her eyes sparkled as she explained. "True but this ain't like no
other mathematical equation. This one's
got loads and loads of unknowns. He
went through the portal and it did something to make the equation out of
balance. In other words, it pissed someone or something off. They found out you got out."
Angel shook
his head. "No, it can't be."
He was tightening his grip of Cordelia as he spoke and she stroked the
length of his arm. "They knew. The First Evil tried to drive me mad
before. No this is different, this is
something different."
"How?"
Angel
fingered the gash on his face. "It isn't any evil, it's something
less." Wesley witnessed him gather
his strength. "It's primordial. It
flays away at every bit of flesh."
He shivered. "It doesn't know evil. It doesn't know good. It
eats souls, devours them. It feeds. It just needs."
"But
that's it, don't you see?" Fred jumped up from her reclining position at
the pillar. "You got out once and now it wants you again because something
about you changed. The equation has changed and it wants what you
got." She giggled. "You have
something it wants."
"Something
has changed about your soul. Something it hungers for," Wesley finished as
he stared at the clasped hands of Cordelia and Angel. "Good Lord."
Angel had
closed his eyes as if in capitulation to the conclusion, as if he already
understood. "That's
why." His voice quaked as he
confessed. "I went to the church. It came to me, it tried to get me to
give her over to it. It wants us. It wants her." His voice was ragged, ruined. "It came from nowhere, it was
there in my head. I went to the
church."
"The
church?"
"To burn
it out of my head."
"Man,
you did that to yourself?" Gunn whispered.
"Yes." His shoulders collapsed as he admitted the
truth. "And I failed. It wants Cordelia."
Cordelia
gripped Angel's hand with both of hers. "Because of my link to the
Powers?"
Angel
couldn't look at them, only stared at the floor. "No, because of your link
to me. It told me," He stumbled in his words. "It told me and I knew
it was true." He was begging Cordelia for forgiveness. "You have to
understand. I never intended to get
this close, feel so much for you. I
never intended this to happen. I didn't
understand."
"How
much you feel for me?" Her voice
was light as if Cordelia feared she might shatter him.
But Wesley
answered for Angel, took the weight pressing down on the vampire's shoulders
and stated, "He loves you."
"Even
more than that," Angel whispered. He wasn't looking at her. "My soul is more with you in my
life. More than it ever was before.
More. I'm more, a better man. A man, not a vampire. A Man."
Cordelia
moved, slowly, purposefully embraced him.
In low tones so not to disturb the moment, she answered, "I love
you, Angel. I love you."
Tears ran
over his face yet he denied them. His tone was desperate, pleading. "The
night is ugly, is painful. I didn't
want you to suffer it. I tried to burn
it away. But God doesn't want me,
doesn't listen to the prayers of a vampire.
I wanted to burn it from me."
"Burn
what, Angel?" Wesley sank to his knees by the couch. The shadows of the lobby seemed to broach
the perimeter, seemed to ooze toward them.
And suddenly their veil no longer offered safety to him but instead
threatened him with the power of their separate secret gods.
"Cordelia's
link to me, to my soul." Angel
peered outside. "Oh God, it's night."
Part 5:
On the rising
wind, he smelled it, the soft tinge of night descending upon the city. For all
the nights he lived and walked this Earth, for all the ages of time swept by,
the night always carried the fragrance, the pulse of life. There was a time he
luxuriated in its safety. With the fall of night, he found a certain
serenity. In the past, he hid within
the folds of its darkness and wrapped it around him like a lover's arms. He sought it out, slipped into it and
hibernated in its warmth, its obscurity, its fine thin edge. He called it that, in his head. Night gave him what sanity he still
possessed, allowed him to walk the fine thin edge of light and dark, of sanity
and insanity.
Yet as the
wind stole through the cracks of the door frame, he shuddered in remorse for
all the deadly things that rose, that crawled, that awoke upon its coming. It
was no longer a mask to hide behind, but an entity itself to hide from.
They spoke
around him, he heard only snippets of what they discussed. He needed to disappear, to slip away from
them. But his legs rebelled and he
curled into the cushions of the sofa.
Cordelia's fingers stroked his forehead, lingered at the line of his
jaw. She sat a part from the
conversation and instead wordlessly communicated with him, all that he
desired. Her smallest gesture became
his lifeline.
His
existence.
He raised his
eyes to meet hers for the first time since the confession of love had been
made. Every pain, every pleasure was there mirrored within her own. Her mouth opened slightly as she gazed at
him. Reaching for her, he grazed her
lips with his fingers but did not dare to touch her further as if he feared he
might fracture a glass blown sculpture of her. Her own hand grasped his and she
leaned toward him.
Her kiss, her
lips barely brushed his own and he felt for an absurd moment as if he were a
sleeping prince in some fairy tale and she was his warrior princess come to
rescue him. The lightness of the kiss
breathed life and she pressed forward, advancing. Her hand left his and glided around his jaw, up through his hair.
And his hand found the ridge of her collar bone, the smooth silk of her skin as
he stroked the line of her neck. There
was no right or wrong to it. It was
acceptance, it was peace, it was love.
As they
parted, a smile rose upon her lips and he steadied his own need, his rising
hunger for her. They stared for a
moment, for a minute, for an hour. This
existed for Angel, just this moment.
But the weight, the driving fear shattered their encapsulated moment.
With hands in
his pockets, Wesley stood over them and spoke as they broke away. "If what
you say is true, Angel, we've no time to lose.
The night is here and something dreadful is coming."
Angel glanced
up at the former watcher, his friend and nodded.
"Maybe
we scramble from here. You know, go
into hiding or something," Gunn suggested. "Might be better to find
out what we're up against before we try to go into battle with it."
"But the
question is where?" Wesley frowned. He glanced at the darkened doors, the
shadows of the lobby.
"The
church," Gunn suggested. "Ain't no place for a vampire I know but it
ain't no place for the spawn of Hell either, right?"
"No, it
won't work." Angel shifted and sat
up. "It came into the church before. I couldn't get rid of it."
"Then
where is it now? 'Cause I don't seem to
see it anywhere, but maybe you got it hidden." Fred shrugged as they glared at her. "Well, he musta gotten
away from it, 'cause here he is."
Shaking his
head, Angel said, "No, I don't think I got away from it." A pain streaked through his face and he
instinctively cradled the gash. It
seemed to dig into the bone. He groaned
against the growing pain.
Cordelia
tilted her head and caught his eye. "That still hurts?"
The pain
burnt tears in his eyes. Cringing, he answered, "A little”."Let me
get something for it," Cordelia stood, but before leaving him, she bent
down and kissed the crown of his head. "It'll be okay." She asked Fred to accompany her and wildeyed
the woman did.
"Gunn,"
Wesley addressed the street warrior. "While I do agree that knowing our
enemy is best in other scenarios, I also have to consider what Angel has
detailed for us. This thing has
followed Angel everywhere even broached our sacred temples and churches. Somehow, something has changed. The barriers we as men have constructed
against such beasts have broken down."
"All
this 'cause Angel and Cordy have the hots for one another?"
Wesley raised
an eyebrow and, pursing his lips, said, "In short, yes." Turning back to Angel he said, "We'll
make our stand here."
"I don't
want you to get hurt."
"No one
is going to get hurt," Wesley stated.
And for the first time Angel believed him. The strength behind those words seemed built on something other
than book know-how, seemed built on something more visceral. "Gunn get the
weapons out. Everything, including
incantation powders."
Gunn paused
before he followed the orders given to him but a firm glance from Wesley and
the street warrior left. Wesley raised
his index finger as if he might speak, stopped himself, then rounded the sofa
and sat next to Angel.
"This
thing is from Hell."
Grimacing as
the pulsating slash on his face dug deeper, Angel nodded.
"You
remember it?"
He nodded
again. He didn't want to remember it,
wanted always to forget it. Every
memory he forged he hoped would someday cut away at the horror of Hell like a
sword slicing his enemy in two.
"You
fear it?"
Swallowing,
Angel said, "Yes."
"It
knows you fear it." Wesley leaned
toward Angel, his forehead nearly touching Angel's. "It understands your
fear. It feeds on it. Becomes more powerful because of it."
"How,
how?" Angel stammered. "How
do you know?"
Wesley bowed
his head but after a moment's pause looked up at Angel. "I know."
Angel asked
no more.
"Don't
let yourself fear it Angel," Wesley gripped his fisted hand. "It
wants you to fear it so it can control you.
If it controls you then you become subservient to it. You give it what it wants."
"It wants
my link to Cordelia." The pain
throbbing in his head deafened him so that the words sounded muffled, worlds
away. "It wants Cordelia."
Wesley
cleared his throat and in low tones said, "Fear controls Angel. You know that. You imparted that into your victims for one hundred and fifty
years. Absolute fear controls
absolutely." He paused then after
a breath said, "If you fear it, you worship it. It becomes your secret god.
Don't. You have to overcome the
fear."
Angel shook
his head as Cordelia walked back into the room. "I can't. I can't not fear for her, for all of
you."
"Then
we've already lost."
Angel hung
his head and folded his hands. In a
whisper he said, "It can find me where ever I am. It haunts me not hunts me." Cleansing himself with an unneeded breath,
he added, "If it comes the only way to defeat it will be to sever its link
to me."
Cordelia
knelt at his feet again and reached up with a cool clothe to his face.
"Kill
me."
She snapped
back her hand and said, "Oh no, no!
Can we say martyr much?"
She grabbed his chin and stared into his eyes. "You are not going
to throw yourself to the wolves again.
We *will* find a way out of this."
"You
better listen to her," Gunn said as he entered the room with an axe in
hand. "She's using her important voice."
"'Cause
you know, *she's* a princess and all," Fred mumbled from behind the lobby
counter.
"Focus,
people, focus!" Wesley said. "I agree with Cordelia, we will find a
way out of this. I will hit the books."
Cordelia slipped
onto the couch next to Angel and raised the clothe to his face as she said
under her breath to Fred, "Jealous much."
"No,"
Angel stated simply.
His words
stopped them. He lowered Cordelia's
hand and in turn glared at each of them.
"There isn't going to be any other way. You have to kill me."
"No!" Cordelia stood. Her shoulders were shaking.
Her fists clenched as the heat of anger reddened her cheeks. "No,
we are not going to promise you that. I
am not going to kill you!"
He heard her
speaking, understood the words, but his attention drifted, fell, and landed.
Whispers, murmurs ruptured in his head.
Its whispers, its words.
"I'm coming childe. I
coming for her." It said it like a chant, a prayer. "I'll take her,
devour her and you can have her."
Angel jumped
up, pushed himself away from Cordelia, away from Wesley. "No, no."
"What
Angel?" Wesley followed him. "What's happening?"
"It's
coming, coming. Promise me to kill me,
promise me!" He turned as the
voices screamed louder in his head. He mumbled the words outloud. "Her
soul, so succulent, so alive." He
stumbled, staggered around the divan. "It's coming, Wesley."
As if a
thousand fingers raced over piano keys, the noise grew in his head and drowned
out their calls to him. Before him the
world warped and contorted. It seemed
the world plunged into the waters, the depths of a river. Their words grabbled
and their forms wavered and misted. Something touched him and he screamed. But the flood of night overtook him,
streamed down his throat. The shadows crept over him as a multitude of spiders
danced over his flesh. With his last conscious thought he shrieked, "It's
here."
He released
his hold and recalled only the cold cackling as *It* emerged.
Part 6:
She
remembered it only in segments. The
kiss. Xander leaning close to Willow.
Their lips touching. The shadows of the
factory thrown off kilter as she ran. A
creaking. A crash and she plunged. She knew the bar jutted up through her
abdomen like she was a prized butterfly forever pinned on display. The horror of her despair etched over her
broken wings exhibited for everyone to witness.
Her world
closed around her that day, collapsed in an avalanche as the pain grew outward.
Her belief in herself spiraled down and was impaled by the bar, stabbed through
and splintered apart. The dissolution
of Cordelia Chase began on an autumn night in Sunnydale during her senior year.
She perished
that night. But like a phoenix she rose
up from the ashes, from the dust to rebuild her image, rebuild herself. It surprised her still, that she was loved,
could love. Yet the foundation she built upon crumbled as she watched and only
wished to remember the events in segments.
Or not to remember it at all.
Angel stumbled
backward, his arms outstretched as if trying to gain purchase, as if trying to
grasp his last hold of this world. He
screamed, a shriek more of a dying terrified animal than of a man in pain. Gasping, she raced around the sofa if only
to be at his side. It was Wesley that
caught her arm, pulled her back. It was
Wesley that ordered weapons be aimed.
She heard
them readying for battle yet her eyes never left him. Her foundation, her Angel.
He fumbled to
his knees, his hand clasping the wound on his face. His shoulders shuddered, jittered. His begging dug a hole in her chest, squeezed the breath from her
lungs. He begged for them to stop it,
to kill it. He begged for her to
leave.
It's
coming. It's coming. It's coming. He chanted as if he heralded in the twilight of the world, of the
anti-Christ.
She moved to
go to his side, but Wesley jumped and shoved her behind him. "We stand. We stand together as a family."
Tugging at
his hand, she growled, "Angel is family." She yanked away from him and rushed to Angel's side.
She stopped,
paused.
It oozed,
bled outward. The gash on his face
gushed a blue black fluid. It did not
flow as if commanded by gravity but spread over his hand, crept over his face.
"It's
alive, Cordelia," Wesley hissed and jerked her back to him.
As it
expanded like a plaque of flesh eating bacteria, Angel glanced up at her one
last time. His eyes flickered to amber
and he fell forward. Holding himself up
with only one hand, he murmured her name, then succumbed to It.
With the last
breath of her name still on his lips, the fluid rivered down his throat. It muffled the last of his cries and he
balled up against the pain.
"Stop it
Wesley, stop it!" She glared at him, wanting so much for her anger, her
frustration to force him to act.
Looking up at him, she knew though the terror throbbing her heart,
pounding at her temples afflicted him as well.
He paled as he watched the transformation, stuttered and stammered to answer her.
"Yo
English, what you want me to do?"
Gunn yelled as he shoved Fred beneath the lobby counter. "You want me to wack it with
something?"
Before Wesley
answered, a moan shifted their attention back to the writhing figure in
the middle of the lobby. He was covered in the dark liquid as it
wormed its way into his flesh, bore down into the bones. Skin flayed away, and the white of bones
dripped with its ooze.
In one
movement as the remnants of Angel crawled and reached out a hand to them, his
body arched, quaked and wings broke through his back. The blue black fluid whirled about his body and long boney claws
were formed, a tail slithered and slapped the floor. Horns crowned his skull.
"Angel,"
she whispered and knew he no longer existed.
"All in
all, that'd be worse than Pylea," Fred commented before Gunn pushed her
below the counter again.
A low throaty
growl issue forth as it moved, slid toward them. "I've come for
you." It stared only at her; its
eyes mesmerized with their shallow depths.
Like a mirrored lake.
Its wings
spread outward and it slithered.
"His soul fed me for a hundred years. Now your link to his soul will feed me for a thousand more."
Wesley raised
the crossbow and stepped in front of her. "You have no power here."
A corner of
its mouth turned upward as if it smiled and it looked down at Wesley like a
parent considered a child. "I've always had power here. In each and
everyone of you, I reside. I already
have her, I already have you." It cackled. "How's the closet?"
"Bastard,"
Wesley said and added, "You won't take her, you won't hold Angel."
"You
can't kill me." Its voice wrapped
around the words in slow sensual whispers. "You kill me, you kill
him."
It leapt.
Crashing into Wesley, it grappled with him as she rolled away. Gunn swung his axe, cutting at the expanse
of wings. It snarled at Gunn and,
leaving Wesley, seized the street warrior, ripped the axe from his hand and bit
into his neck in one movement. A book flew through the air, knocking the winged
serpent in the head. It tore away from
its feast to glower at the girl behind the lobby counter. Fred whined and ducked again as it dropped
Gunn and jumped toward her. Cordelia grabbed Gunn's forgotten axe and, pulling
her arms all the way back, slashed at it with a brutal slice. It screamed and averted its attention to
her. Its wings spread, it encompassed
everything, the world darkened as it closed in on her.
"You
will be my nourishment, my amusement, my lover for a thousand
centuries." It leaned to her, its
breath hot and acidic. Swinging, she hit it with the axe. It grabbed the weapon from her wrist, twisting
her joint until it shatter. She toppled
to her knees, cradling her wrist. A bolt from a crossbow stabbed it in the leg
and it turned from her to Wesley.
"Get
out, Cordelia, go!" Wesley yelled.
She stumbled
to get up, the pain in her wrist causing the room to spin. Before she could
make it to the door it was upon her again and blocking the exit. She kicked and punched, not protecting her
injured wrist. Its hands moved over her body, touching, feeling, exploring. She
quelled a scream and bit down into its velvet skin. It growled at her and lifted
its lips to bare its fanged teeth. She
kneed it in the groin and twisted around to escape up the stairs.
Rounding the
mezzanine pillar she raced to the landing of the second floor of the
hotel. It glimpsed her and, pausing,
smiled. "My lover."
It launched
and flew to her on the mezzanine. The
beat of its wings took the air from her lungs, knocked the strength from her
legs and she dropped to the floor.
Settling over
her, it gathered her to its chest and held her. Its wings enfolded her and, as it stared down at her, she knew
the purity of darkness, the purity of pain, the purity of fear. She could not
fight, she would not fight. It leaned
down to consume her.
"Bastard,"
Wesley said as he mounted the landing with crossbow in hand. "I told you
to leave my family alone."
The arrow
left the bow before she could protest. It struck the winged serpent. In the chest. In the heart.
The heart.
It burst into
dust. And the dust fluttered about her,
sprinkling her with its death throes as she heard it whisper in Angel's voice,
"Cordelia."
And it was
gone. Dead.
And there was
only silence.
As they stood
there, looking at the ashes, realizing Angel was dead.
Wesley
shuddered as the crossbow dropped to the floor. His whole body heaved and he began to weep. She pulled herself up from the ashes, her
mind numb and frozen. She wanted only to remember this day in segments. Or not at all. Yet she knew she would remember every detail, every nuance, every
fragrance. Wesley fell into her arms
and they crumpled to the floor on their knees.
She couldn't
blink, couldn't cry. There was
something dead inside her. Dead
forever. She saw Fred help Gunn to a
chair, saw the rain start to pour outside.
Yet nothing seemed a part of her anymore. She was dead, pinned to a wall, for all to see.
Part 7:
A certain
separation shielded her, kept her safe from the motion, the world around
her. She'd heard of people that lived
in plastic bubbles isolated from disease and she knew now that in a way she too
had lived in a bubble. Yet it had not
been plastic, but glass. As she stood
perched on the top step of the landing to the mezzanine in the Hyperion,
Cordelia Chase realized the moment the glass around her shattered.
Even now, she
could picture it fracturing and the shards splintering her world apart. It was
the moment he had walked into their office, unwelcome and strident. Marching past the wheelchair bound Wesley,
he swept past her and went to the book shelf.
She blocked his way, preventing him from stealing the book. His stare.
The energy vibrated and she felt as if cold fire sizzled over her
skin. Glaring down at her, he
threatened her, told her not to make him move her. In that paralyzed moment, she wanted him to try, to grab her, to
reach across the chasm that divided them.
The world
cracked as the heat of his gaze burned into her, as she fought not to inhale.
And the flames within his stare burst the glass around her, melting it as it
exploded. She needed him away from her,
needed to escape him. She shoved the book
at his chest, not because of Wesley's insistence but because she felt Angel
inside. Felt a sensation brush over her
skin, glide through her blood. She felt
him.
Stepping
forward, Cordelia looked down at the ashes, the dust of his soul.
In those
first few days after he died, there was a fury about them, a storm. Wesley buried himself in books, tried
incantations, called every resource. He
worked until his shoulders sagged and his body moved with guilt ridden
jerks. He promised her everyday and
when he failed, he disappeared into the night without a word. She finally told him to stop.
"Stop,
Wesley, just stop." She doubled over on the sofa as if a vision plagued
her. Gunn crouched by her side, his
rough hand on hers. They peered at her expectantly as if they wished she had
been struck with a vision. "No, no
vision." She struggled away from
their touches, their condolences. She held back the tears as she pronounced
it. "Just stop trying Wesley. He's," she paused, the thought choked
her and seemed to blast in her head.
She bit her lip to stop the tears. "He's dead. He's gone.
The visions are gone.
Every." Her voice broke.
"--Everything is over."
"If I
try one more resource, there's a bookstore I've come to hear about,"
Wesley ignored her. "It isn't in LA.
Seems to be in New York, not the city but the state. A city near Niagara
Falls, you might like a trip there. I heard there are books there, quite
rare."
"No, no
Niagara Falls, no rare book stores."
She fisted her hands until she felt her nails puncture the flesh of her
palms. "It's over. He's
gone."
"I still
ain't gripping reality much myself.
But," Gunn caught himself, clenched his jaw and forced out.
"But it's over, Cordy's," he cleared his throat and the continued,
"Cordy's right."
Slamming the
book down, Wesley grimaced as he round the lobby counter. His finger shaking as he pointed at them, he
said, "No, we are not quitters. We
do not quit. Even when Angel fired
us. We fought the good fight. We persevered."
Gunn stood
and went to his side, clasping a hand on his shoulder. "The good fight's over English. They won."
Wesley yanked
away from Gunn, glaring at him. "I cannot believe you would give up so
easily. You would just abandon all
hope. We have a job to do and I am
going to do it." He regarded her
then went back to his sentinel duty over the dusty books at the desk.
"Even if you won't."
Taking in a
breath, she rose and walked past Gunn.
He moved to speak but she just shook her head and went to Wesley. She reached over to the book he studied and
closed it. Her hand drifted to his and
she grasped it. "It's over."
"No, I
will not accept that." His words
were barely audible.
"You did
what you thought was right, what you had to do," Cordelia whispered, never
looking at his face, knowing if she raised her head the tears would fall.
"I acted
in anger, in hatred." He stiffened
his shoulders but she understood it was only a facade, a fiction.
"It
isn't your fault." She didn't blink
for fear of the weeping.
"No, it
is." He stepped away from her,
their clasped hands outstretched to hold on to one another. Slowly, he untangled his fingers.
"You
saved me, Wes." She gaze up at
him, finally letting the tears stain her cheeks. "It had nothing to do
with anger. You saved us all."
He nodded.
"And yet somehow I feel as if I failed again." He retrieved a handkerchief from his pocket,
refolded it and handed it to her. He
gave her a weak smile and said, "Goodnight."
She nodded
and he left.
The storm
over them cleared and settled then.
Glancing around the hotel, she glimpsed only mire traces of her friends,
her family. The days had lengthened to
weeks. And life moved on, as it
does. There was no memorial for Angel,
nothing, no place for her to weep, to mourn.
She came to this place. This
hotel. The empty rooms seemed to echo
her heart, her soul.
Bending down,
she glanced at the dust still patterned after him. It amazed her that the outline was of Angel and not of the Hellbeast.
She wanted to give him something, some small gift. Opening her purse, she dug in the bag until she found it. She carefully unwrapped it. The glint of the razor's edge was barely
visible in the moonlight. The blade
flickered as she held it.
Tear began to
flow, dropped over the razor and onto her hands. The glass bubble was broken.
She wasn't planning on death, she wasn't planning anything at all when
she put the razor in her bag.
Curling into
the dust, she laid upon the soft carpet and pushed the razor into her wrist. It
wasn't supposed to hurt, not if you were really intending on killing
yourself. That's what she heard. Suicides victims are numb to the pain. Victims.
And she understood the paradox of a suicide victim. She sliced into her flesh and cried
out. The pain jarred her. She only made a small jagged cut and let the
blood leak out. It was slow. It was not a killing slice.
She wanted to
give him something in her grief. Some
memorial. The fire he put in her veins,
the fire that burst the glass bubble, she wanted to give back to him. She wanted to give him her soul. But she only had this to give her blood.
And so with
tender small cuts, she bled herself for him.
Gave his
memory, her blood.
Gave his
soul, her soul.
As night
descended, she knew she had no secret god.
No, no secret god at all.
Part 8:
He stayed
hunched over, his back bent, his shoulders crooked from the pain. His mind
wandered now, spiraling with the pain as it speared into him. He was one of the lucky ones, he'd found a
corner to hide in, to curl up against, to find refuge in. As he leaned his head
against the cold amorphous wall, he closed his eyes and for a moment felt her.
He imagined
in the rare silences that she came to him, that her hands covered the swelling
wounds, that she tended to his scarred skin.
He went over it once and again in his mind, focusing on every memory of
her. The grace of her touch as she
cleaned his wounds, the warmth of her smile as she whispered he should
rest. It was the little things that he
remembered, that he focused on.
It came to
him. The Hellbeast. It survived within the womb of Hell. It could not perish for it thrived on the
weaknesses of human souls. It licked his wounds but ripped away at his
sanity. It seared his flesh, slowly,
methodically.
It used his
despair.
It broached
the fragile memories within his mind and wove them into figments. The Hellbeast robbed the last fragments of
Cordelia from him, used them to fool him, used them to taunt him.
He would
plead. Beg.
And she would
come to him. Aglow in a wash of life
and tend to his injuries, to the pain gripping him. She would soothe back his hair, caress his shivering form. As she
eased his pain, she would offer her blood and the ache in his belly was so
acute, he would take it without question.
But it wasn't
Cordelia.
It was the
Hellbeast.
With every
taste, he would lose more of himself, lose more of her. She dissipated, with
each passing moment, she moved farther away.
He struggled to hang on, to recall the brush of her. But there came a time when he could
not. When he remember nothing but the
pain, the torture about him. His mind
filled up with the screams, his screams. It tore away his memories, the last
images to which he clung. There was
only the coming of night.
He saw
nothing as the rain began to fall. It
started that way, the night in Hell. He
forced himself to remain still, forced himself into a smaller ball. Yet a distant fragrance called to him,
pulled at him. He opened his eyes to
the blackness that seemed to absorb his skin.
The smell intoxicated and a dizziness overwhelmed him as the power of it
consumed him. He reached out, caught
the drops and brought them to his lips.
Warm,
viscous.
He lifted the
drops to his mouth, tasted it. Sensual,
thick. Blood, her blood. The need clenched his muscles, tightened in
his throat. He cupped his hands and
collected it.
Blood.
He
drank. And drank again.
It filled
him, quenched the ache that plagued him. It streamed over his hands, over his
wrists. In his excitement, he bit down
upon his own wrist.
But the blood
continued to flow, her blood washed over his mouth, his tongue. He drank.
Not caring that
it wasn't her. Not caring it was the
Hellbeast reborn in Hell itself. He
smelled her, he tasted her.
He heard a
name. An echo of a past life. A name.
"Angel,"
the voice murmured in his head.
He only bit
down harder, not waiting to be revived from this dream.
"Angel." The tone became more desperate, more urgent.
"Angel!"
His teeth
ripped flesh.
"Angel,
stop! God, stop Angel, stop!" A hand clawed his hair, pulled his head up
from the wrist he fed upon. She was
still there, more real than any dream he'd had. The air around him seemed to change, lighten and breathe. His
surroundings twisted and structure formed out of the abyss. Columns grew, color spread over ground,
reds, yellows, greens. A memory, he
told himself.
He snarled at
the ghost image of her, smiled at the open wound on her wrist. "Angel, stop." He bent to feed again, yet she yanked his
head from her wrist. "Angel, Angelus, whoever you are I said
stop!" She jerked back her free
hand, balled it.
Her fist
collided with his jaw and he staggered, paused, then fell to the carpeted
floor. He only heard her whisper as he lost consciousness, "You're back,
oh God, you're back."