SCRIBES OF ANGEL
FanFic
________________________________
Wreckage
by Felicity
Summary: Done with Darla, Angel visits Buffy in
his search for warmth.
Author Notes: This is pretty dark, but it has
its redeeming qualities I promise.
Story Notes: Set about a week after
"Reprise" on Angel and "I Was Made to Love You" on Buffy. A
companion to my story "Wreckage". The song is "Full of
Grace" by Sarah McLachlan.
Warnings: language, violence
Disclaimer: They're not mine. If they were,
none of this would ever have happened.
:
I just had to
get away. All day, I'd been surrounded by so many people. My friends, mostly,
and Giles, and my father, all being supportive and there for me and good and
kind and just what I needed...except what I really needed was to scream, or to
be alone, or to destroy something. I don't know. I suppose I was numb...it was
all kind of hazy, like in a dream. Cliched, isn't it?
And Dawn of
course. Dawn was always there.
Finally it
got to be too much. I couldn't think about it anymore. I couldn't stand there
while Willow squeezed my hand, or my father rubbed my back, or Dawn clung to
me...I couldn't.
"I...I'll
be back soon," I told Giles, and ran from the funeral home, from the
sympathetic looks and red eyes. Ran and ran and found myself home. There was
the couch where I'd found her body. There were the stairs where she'd stood
every day and there was the door to the kitchen, where she cooked us pancakes
on Sunday mornings.
There and
there and there and there. She'd been in all those places, and she never would
be again.
I walked up
the stairs to my room and walked inside. It was dark. I didn't bother to turn
on the light, what was the point? I'd only see her picture, or the lamp she
bought me for my fourteenth birthday. I'd only remember her.
I wanted to
smash something.
My senses
must be getting better, because I knew he was there. I didn't see him, or hear
him or...anything. I just knew he was there. I turned and closed the door, even
though there was no one else in the house. One of my hands traced the familiar
wood-grain as I said, "Angel."
"Buffy,"
he said softly. There was something...odd about his voice.
"Didn't
expect to see you here," I said. How had he known? Did he still lurk? Or
did he hear from Cordelia? Or Giles? Giles might have called them...why hadn't
he come to the funeral? Why to my room? Why hiding, like this?
"What
happened?" he asked, and it all came clear. It was like a punch to the
teeth, or a shock running through my body. He didn't know. He hadn't come to
comfort me, to mouth more meaningless sorries, as if I hadn't heard a thousand
already. I turned to look at him, unable to stop myself. He didn't come to
comfort me.
"My
mother died," I said as calmly as I could manage. Very calmly actually. I
couldn't seem to muster much emotion. It was all...too much. The words didn't
fit in my mouth right.
"I'm
sorry," he said. It sounded like a lie, but then, Angel never has been
very sympathetic sounding. The boy needs an expression, stat. "What
happened?
I gave a
little shrug, uncomfortable in my sedate black clothing, in my own skin.
"She had a brain tumor. They thought she'd gotten rid of it
but...obviously not." I wanted to kill the doctors. When the ambulance
came to get her, I nearly killed them right there. They couldn't save her. She
was already dead and they...they told me she would be all right. She was just
starting over. Her entire life was ahead of her and then...
I jerked my
mind back to the present and gave Angel a sharp, inquiring look. "If you
didn't know, why are you here?" I demanded.
He stayed
right where he was. Bastard. The least he could do was let me see him. "I
wanted to be."
The fucking
asshole. My mother had just died.
I wanted to
scream.
"Great,"
I commented acidly, crossing my arms and walking towards him. "Thanks for
stopping by. If you don't mind I could use a little privacy at the
moment."
"I do
mind," he whispered, making my whole body tense. He finally stepped out of
the shadows, into the moonlight, suddenly very close to me.
Something...something in his face alerted me. This was not Angel. And not...not
Angelus. Something was different.
I didn't
really care at the moment.
"I could
make you leave," I stated, knowing it was absolutely true. I wondered if
he knew it too. Did he have any idea what I was now? The kind of strength that
hummed through my body? Not enough strength-not enough to save my mother, not
enough to keep Glory away-but enough to throw Angel out the window.
Enough, if
I'd wanted to. I didn't really want to. See, when I said I wanted to be alone,
I'd lied. I just didn't want to be with my friends, with all those sympathetic,
kind, supportive people.
"You
could," he agreed, closer still, and then bending his head. If he'd had
breath, I would have felt it. If he radiated heat, it would have warmed my
skin. "But you won't."
"Why
not?" I demanded, wondering if he really knew. If I really knew.
"Because
you want this too." Before I could answer he kissed me-sweetly, so
sweetly. The kisses that haunted my dreams after he turned evil. Gentle,
tender, like love made solid, made into touch.
It wasn't
love that I needed then. So I kissed him back-only I kissed him like the
nightmares that had haunted my dreams those same months. Hungry. Passionate.
Rough. God, what the hell did he think he was doing kissing me? And what the
hell was I doing kissing back?
I couldn't
stop. I didn't want to stop. I needed him to do it for me.
I threw him
against the wall and pinned him there, hoping it would sufficiently remind him
of the reasons we'd broken up. Obviously it didn't-or it did, and he just
didn't care. I think it was the second, actually. He looked down at me and
laughed. He laughed.
"I'm not
a little girl anymore," I reminded him savagely, wondering what he thought
I'd been doing the last year and a half that he could just kiss me like that
and walk away. I was an adult now. I wanted something to follow that kiss.
I wanted him.
God help me, I wanted him. The way his lean, muscled body pressed against me as
I held him there...the gleam in his eyes as he looked down at me... I wanted
him more than I had ever wanted anyone in my whole life.
"Good,"
he whispered, the look in his eyes, and bent down to kiss me. It wasn't gentle
this time, or loving, or sweet. It was just what I'd given him, only double,
tripled, quadrupled-rage and rapture, hard, ravenous, painful. I kissed him
right back, the same way, lost in the overwhelming need for oblivion, for him,
for a feeling I'd lost somewhere in the midst of living.
He tore my
skirt nearly in half getting it off me, but then, I popped most of the buttons
from his shirt.
I have
nothing to compare that night too. Not to my first time certainly-there's no
room for comparison. Besides the basic technical elements it wasn't even the
same thing. There was pain that first time, of course, but mostly love,
gentleness, tender care and solicitude. He'd worked so hard to make it
beautiful, to make me happy. I was happy, I was so happy. I'd wanted to touch
every inch of his beautiful skin, and I had. Gentle touches, worshipful
touches...This time, there was little touching. Fingernails digging in here or
there, teeth maybe, a heavy grip. No exploration, no time, no solicitude. No
love.
I wanted to
feel alive, but I only felt more numb at the end. There was nothing. We
collapsed on my bed and I looked over at Angel and knew that at no point during
that...whatever it was...had there been any sort of happiness, besides possibly
physical.
I didn't say
anything, because I had no idea what to say. I hid beneath the sheets. In a way
I felt...dirty. Shamed. But not really, not as much as I should have perhaps.
It was what it was. Bestial, perhaps, slutty, sick that I should do this the
day of my mother's funeral...but it was what it was. No more, no less. We both
needed something, and we'd thought it was each other.
"I'll
let you be alone," Angel said finally, climbing out of bed. I gave an
incredulous laugh, amazed at his self-involvement...or mine, or something. I
sat up uneasily, clutching the sheet over my breasts. He was watching me
intensely, a familiar look in his eyes. For that matter, I probably returned
the look as I watched him dress. He was in perfect shape-lean, powerful, an
animal really, not even human. But I still wanted him. I wanted him to fill me
again, to throw me against a wall and fuck me.
"You
think that's really what I want?" I asked. "To be alone?" Of
course not. Why would I have kept him there if I wanted to be alone? Why would
I want to be alone? To reflect on the fact I was never going to see my mother
again? To wonder what she would say if she could see me at that moment, how
ashamed she would be? He kept watching me and I pulled up my knees
self-consciously.
"More
than you want to be with me right now," he offered and I had the feeling
he was finally being honest. There was something in him, something dark and
hurt that hadn't been there the last time I saw him. "I just gave you all
the comfort I have to give." I winced at that, remembering his idea of
comfort. I ached for days afterwards. He picked up his jacket and shrugged it
on easily, turning towards the window.
Clarity came
to me, sudden and certain. "Angel," I called. I waited until he
turned back and wondered if what I was going to say would hurt him. Part of me
hoped it did. "Are you looking for true happiness so you won't have to
feel at all anymore, or because you want to remember what it feels like?"
He almost
looked surprised. It flickered in his eyes, so I assumed I'd gotten part of it
right anyway. Why else would he come to me? If he needed someone to screw he
could have found plenty of girls in LA. He was looking for a proven quantity:
the girl that made him lose his soul. Only I couldn't anymore.
He turned
back to the window without a word and I watched him, leaning my head on my
knees. And then his voice came, and I wondered if he was trying to hurt me
back, or just saying it because it was true. "Did you let me because you
hoped I'd kill you after, or because you wanted to feel alive again?"
I think I
made a little noise, I don't really remember. My turn to be surprised. He could
still read me, or maybe it was just that my feelings on the matter were so
close to his.
If he killed
me, I would be with my mother again. I wouldn't have to defeat Glory. I
wouldn't have to worry about the demons. I wouldn't have to look at everything
around me and know that she would never be part of it again.
By the time I
realized I should say something he was gone, out the window. He could have
taken the door; no one else was home. They were all at...
The numbness
descended again, as I knew it would. Angel didn't really make me feel alive,
but he did make me feel something...even it was only lust, only shame or anger
or need. It was something.
I took a
shower and let the water wash away the smell of him. My skirt was irreparable,
so I put on a black dress instead and hoped no one would notice. An hour later
I was back at the funeral parlor and no one was the wiser, not for a minute.
They were still comforting and sympathetic, and I was still in a daze, sinking
in a sea of people that loved me, when all I wanted was someone that didn't.
//Spend all
your time waiting
for that
second chance
for a break
that would make it okay
there's
always one reason
to feel not
good enough
and it's hard
at the end of the day
I need some
distraction
oh beautiful
release
memory seeps
from my veins
let me be
empty
and weightless
and maybe
I'll find
some peace tonight//
My days were
spent trying not to appear distracted; my nights, tossing and turning,
helpless, hopeless. I dreamt of Angel; of my mother; of Glory butchering Dawn;
of Angel again.
I thought too
much. I was always thinking. That's all I knew how to do: think, punish myself.
I couldn't talk, couldn't interact with people in any way but the superficial
ones. I made Dawn breakfast and dinner every day. I looked into selling the
house but couldn't go through with it. I called the Council and convinced them
to start sending me a monthly paycheck. I helped at the Magic Box, I
researched, I trained.
None of the
training made me able to save my mother. And none of it did any good against
the threat of Glory.
There was one
dream I could deal with though.
"Did you
call Angel?" I asked Giles one day. He looked up, startled. "About my
mother...? Did you talk to him?"
"I
called, and I spoke with Wesley," Giles said slowly. "I'm sorry I
didn't tell you, I just..."
"What is
it?" I asked.
"Angel's
gone...well, rogue, you might say. He's still on our side, but he fired
Cordelia and Wesley and one other employee. He never speaks to them. He's
closed himself off from everyone and become rather obsessed with this law firm...He's
set out to destroy them." Giles paused and took off his glasses. "I'm
sorry Buffy. I'm sure he'll be all right." I shrugged. What did I care
about Angel's personal problems?
If he never
spoke to anyone, no one would know if he was gone one night a week.
"Wesley
sends his condolences," Giles said softly. I nodded, and went back to
punching the bag.
I sent him
the note the next day. I don't really know why I did it. I suppose I thought
that if I had him the dreams might stop. Or maybe I didn't care about the
dreams stopping, I just wanted him. I'd been reduced to carnal lusts. At least
it was a feeling, something breaking through my deadened haze.
I wasn't sure
he'd come. I kept telling myself he probably wouldn't, but I suppose I assumed
he really would. He did. He opened the door and stood there looking at me. I'd
put on a bathrobe, so he wouldn't rip any of my other clothes. I wasn't sure
what it was going to be like if he came; if it would be the same, or if that
was only one night, if he was different now. I had no idea.
I told him
why I was wearing a robe. He shrugged, said, "fair enough," and
walked over to push me back onto the bed. We spent hours there, searching for
something, satisfying our mutual passion and then collapsing for a few moments
until we couldn't hold apart any longer. It was the same as before-harsh,
satisfying. When I couldn't move any more we lay in bed for a few minutes. I
played with the covers, idly, restless and exhausted.
"Where's
Dawn?" he asked finally, startling me. He didn't know anything about it
and yet...and yet those were his first real words to me all night long.
"She's
with Xander," I replied automatically, and then just said it, "Movie
night. Every Thursday." I suppose it was an offer. He took it as one
anyway.
"Next
week?" he asked, sliding out of the bed, beginning to get dressed.
"Same
Bat time, same Bat place," I replied, lips curling in a self-mocking smile
as I remembered the old show. Batman and Robin fought the bad guys and always
won with the POW WHAM SMASH. No one good ever died, and it was always easy to
tell who the bad ones were. But in that world, what would we be, Angel and I?
Good or bad? After all, we never seemed to win. Did that mean we weren't really
on the right side?
He didn't say
goodbye. I was so caught up in my contemplation of our pure uselessness that I
hardly even noticed. I heard the door close and closed my eyes, wondering why I
was there. I could have a boyfriend if I wanted one, I knew I could. Men had
always been attracted to me-I could have Ben, or someone else, anyone else.
Someone that would be sweet, and teasing and feed me chocolates. Someone that
would hold me afterwards. Someone I wouldn't have to sneak away to see, lie to
my friends, to my sister, say I needed a little time to myself when all I
really needed was someone to fuck me into oblivion.
Why was I
there, in that dirty little hotel room, the smell of Angel still lingering on
me? The truth is, I had no idea. No justification. Just the need, and no reason
not to fulfill it.
Things got
worse. Glory got bored and killed a room full of people for fun. A few of them
she left alive-babbling idiots. I went after her, because I had to. It was
stupid, but there was nothing else to do. I couldn't just sit around. She
laughed, and beat me into a pulp. I couldn't move my arm for two days it was so
bruised, and it was painful to the touch for a week. I needed stitches on my
forehead. I'd never needed stitches before.
Dawn cried
when she came to see me in my hospital room. Dawn cried a lot those days.
"This is my fault," she whispered. "If it wasn't for me Glory
would never have come here."
"It
doesn't matter," I told her, even though it did. I wasn't going to justify
her own self-hatred, feed it. I knew how much that could eat you up inside. I'd
lived with it for years: if I hadn't come, Xander would never have been turned
into a hyena. If I hadn't come, Angel would never have lost his soul. If I
hadn't come, Ms. Calendar would still be alive.
If I hadn't
come, maybe the Master would have risen. And if Dawn hadn't come...well, my
mother would still have died, only I'd be alone.
She cried and
put her head down on my lap and I stroked her hair, closed my eyes and
pretended it all away. It didn't go away.
I thought
about not going that Thursday, but it had been a month by then and Angel would
wonder if I didn't come. He might come to my house, and I wouldn't be able to
send him away. I wouldn't want to. Better at the hotel than at my house.
Besides, I wanted to forget. Wanted to pretend things were normal. I wore a
long-sleeved dress with a high neck to cover my bruises and little underwear so
he wouldn't feel the need to undress me. Not that I gave him a chance to. I
grabbed him the second he came in the room-with my good arm-and kissed him
hungrily, more determined than ever to wipe away my life. He pushed me against
the wall as I'd known he would-I was beginning to know him well by that time,
or at least his appetites-and pushed up my skirt, rough, ready. He grabbed my
arms to pin me and pain shot through my body like a scream. I must have cried
out, I don't even remember. I was trying to stay conscious.
He let go of
me like I had the plague, stepped away his eyes blazing. "What is
it?"
Why did he
care? He wasn't supposed to care. I was there to forget, to screw, not to have
him get all protective. That wasn't what I needed now. "Nothing," I
spat back at him and reached for his belt, trying to distract him, to return to
the purpose of the evening. He jerked away and reached for the back of my
dress, nearly tearing off the zipper in his haste. He jerked aside the
shoulder, revealing the proverbial black-and-blue of my shoulder and upper arm.
I knew it looked terrible. From the look in his eyes, it was worse than I'd
thought.
"Who did
this to you?" he demanded, sounding angry. At me for being this weak? At
them? What did he think he was going to do, rush out like my knight in shining
armor? News flash Angel: you're not exactly knight material, and those black
pants aren't shining armor. "What's going on?"
"Why do
you care?" I snapped, jerking my dress back to order, not wanting him to
stare at it anymore. Irrational, but there it was. Maybe I didn't want him to
think I was weak. Maybe the fact that I gave as good as I got on those Thursday
nights was all my twisted way of making him realize that I'd grown up, that I
was strong, stronger than he was.
Whatever it
was, I wasn't going to stay around and deal with this bulshit. I wasn't going
to stand there and watch him get righteous and condescending. I wasn't.
"It's
none of your business Angel," I said coldly, or hotly maybe, angrily.
"You're not part of my life. Don't try and pretend like you are."
There it was.
That was my reason. He was worrying about me, just like everyone else. I
couldn't let him worry about me. If he started caring then...then I'd have to
stop coming. Too many people cared already. The whole point of this arrangement
was that Angel didn't. I didn't have to worry about hurting him, about him
being disappointed in me-there was nothing to hurt, nothing to be disappointed
in. We had no relationship. Just...just what it was...
I started
towards the door, angry beyond all reason. What had I expected? He was still
Angel. Still had a soul. It was inevitable that at some point he would feel
something...
Or maybe not.
Before I
reached the door he jerked me back and in a moment he was devouring my mouth
again, as if it had never happened, as if I'd never walked away. We returned to
our previous position-and this time when I cried out he didn't care. I don't
know if he even heard me.
I reveled in
it, just as much as I hated it. I urged him on while I cried at the pain, at
the shame of what I was doing. What I was.
When it was
over he picked me up and I moaned, afraid it wasn't over, wanting it not to be
over. But he only carried me to the bed and laid me down. I think he pulled the
covers over me. I'd retreated into numbness again. It was easier that way. I
hardly noticed what he was doing...I think I assumed he'd left, until I
realized that I'd been staring straight at him for ten minutes, unseeing. He'd
laid down on the bed beside me, not touching me, just...laying there.
I was afraid.
Afraid he had begun to feel something. Afraid he had begun to worry.
I was afraid
he hadn't.
"You can
go," I said softly. "I'm fine." That was a lie, but the
justifiable kind. In a way I was-physically I wasn't any worse off than I had
been. Mentally I was so screwed up anyway it hadn't done me much harm.
Why was I
there? To find oblivion in the arms of a fallen Angel. And hadn't I?
"I
know," he said, and he didn't leave.
I closed my
eyes and tried not to think about what had just happened, or what was
happening. I tried not to remember the look in his eyes when he hurt me, and I
tried not to imagine if it was one of horror or triumph. I tried not to think
why I hadn't kept walking out that door. I tried not to think.
After a while
it worked, and I feel asleep. I didn't even dream that night.
//in the arms
of an angel
fly away from
here
from this
dark cold hotel room
and the
endlessness that you fear
you are
pulled from the wreckage
of your
silent reverie
you're in the
arms of the angel
may you find
some comfort there//
He didn't say
anything about it the next week. I thanked...well, not God. Whatever there was
left to thank in my screwed up mind. He started staying around afterwards,
which was strange, but not altogether bad. I usually stayed the whole night,
even before he started doing the same. I didn't like going back to my bed, to
my empty house. I could go to Xander's, I knew, or Giles' and crash on a couch,
but somehow I couldn't do that either. Not after...
I wondered if
they ever guessed, if they had any idea. I didn't think so, but then there were
lots of things I didn't notice those days.
We rarely
talked. I slept, but my nightmares usually came, so I would wake up and stare
at him. He never slept. Sometime he would lay down, but usually he paced the
floor, or stared out the window. He could stand like that for hours,
unmoving...Once in a while if I was really bored I would say something, and he
would reply shortly, and then I would try to sleep again.
I wonder if I
cried out while I slept, if I begged or whimpered or did any of the things I
did in my dreams. I doubted he would say anything if I did, or wake me up.
One night I
dreamt that Glory was killing Dawn in front of my eyes, using her up while she
faded away, withered, screaming. Something held me down-I couldn't fight,
couldn't get to them. Couldn't save her.
When I woke
up, Angel was gone though it wasn't yet dawn. On the table beside the bed was a
wad of bills. Money. He had left money, like I was some whore.
Wasn't I?
I sat in that
creaky, dirty bed, and cried.
All week I
thought about not going back. I told myself I wouldn't, that it was over, that
no one could do that to me, could even suggest that to me. I told myself that I
didn't need him, that I could deal with my life as it was. I told myself it was
only lust, which was true, and I told myself I could deal with lust, which
wasn't entirely. I told myself a thousand things, but Thursday night still
found me sitting in that hotel room.
He didn't say
anything. I wondered if he'd gotten the money I sent back to him, and the note
I sent with him. I guessed he had. I wondered what he thought of it, and didn't
ask.
I didn't say
anything either. We didn't say anything at all, the entire time. We were quiet,
angry, screaming silently at each other the whole time, like we had to prove
who could hold out the longest.
He didn't
stay that night.
Sometimes I
wondered what his life was like, what he did in LA. I assumed he still wasn't
speaking to Cordelia or Wesley. I wondered how they were doing, how the demon
fighting was going. Generally I didn't have enough energy to wonder about
anything besides how we were going to get through another day.
Riley sent me
a telegram from...wherever the hell he was. It was short. "Coming home in
September STOP Call parents if you want to see me STOP"
Did I want to
see him? Part of me did. Riley was sweet, and kind and good to me. He would be
comforting. He would hold me all night while I cried. Only I didn't want to cry
while he held me. I didn't want comfort. I wanted to smash something.
I tried to
imagine what Riley would do if I did with him what I did with Angel. Freak,
probably. Or maybe he'd like it. Who knows what he did with all those vampires
while they were biting him...
Would I be
able to sleep with him any other way? I wasn't even sure if I was capable of
lovemaking anymore. I'd learned a thousand things with Angel, about the ways
bodies fit together, about pleasure and pain and...everything. Would I be able
to be the Buffy Summers that was gentle and hesitant...the Buffy Summers that
Riley had loved?
Would he be
able to tell?
I asked Angel
one night. Not really asked...I was thinking about it while I half-lay in bed,
brushing my hair. He was near the window, like always, barely dressed.
"Tell
what?" he demanded, his voice harsh. I gave him a rather surprised look.
Was he jealous? For all he knew I'd been dating Riley this whole time. He'd never
asked if I had a boyfriend, or given any indication that he cared one way or
another. I averted my gaze and re-focused on my hair.
"The
difference," I said. "He was...my third. You, this jerk, and then
Riley. I was still pretty...Well, I wonder if he could tell now, if I slept
with him again. If he'd know what I've been doing since he left."
"He
left?" Angel asked. I nodded. It didn't even hurt much anymore. Losing my
mother-god, I still couldn't believe it-had sort of eclipsed every other
experience of being left behind. Besides, I probably would have broken up with
him by now. I couldn't deal with what he would have tried to give me. Probably
what I really needed. But I couldn't deal with it.
"I
didn't care enough," I told Angel, a hint of bitterness creeping into my
voice. I laughed and looked over at him again. This time he was looking at me.
"And with you I cared too much. Funny, isn't it?"
"Hilarious,"
he murmured, coolness creeping into his voice, like ice. I could almost feel
the chill. He was angry. He walked over and I paused, the hairbrush stilled,
looking up at him. I knew what was coming, knew the look in his eyes. He took
the hairbrush from my fingers, almost gently and set it aside. "We'll save
this for later." I shivered a little, but didn't say anything, didn't look
away. My gaze met him steadily, determined not to give. I'd take anything he
had to give, and he'd do the same. That was our deal, even if we'd never said
as much. One of his hands trailed up my thigh as he bent closer and said,
"He'd know."
I curled the
leg up around the back of his, catching it around his thigh, pulling him
towards me. "How would he know?" I asked, only half my mind on the
conversation as I trailed my nails across his neck, his back...
He bent his head
and kissed my neck. I didn't really expect an answer anymore, or even words. I
trembled at his touch; moaned when his tongue found the hollow of my throat, my
ear, his teeth following.
And then the
words came, cold and merciless and so different from the feeling his hands were
still evoking. "Because you'd kill him."
I stiffened,
wanting to scream, wanting to throw him across the wall, through the window,
anything to get him away, to make him stop, to not think of what that meant, or
the truth in the words.
Because I'd
kill him. A normal, human, sweet, tender boyfriend, and if I tried to screw him
I would kill him. I had no capacity for love anymore, for tenderness, for
gentleness. I would kill him.
I flipped
Angel over in a second, straddled him, cold inside, hard and hating him for
being right. I would kill him. "I could kill you," I said, fully
intending to go through with it.
He grinned up
at me, not at all repentant, and distracted me in a way only he could. I still
wanted to kill him. More even. But I didn't.
"Not
tonight," he told me, and he was right. He was too right. Not that night,
not any of the nights.
//so tired of
the straight line
and
everywhere you turn
there's
vultures and thieves at your back and the storm keeps on twisting
you keep on
building the lie
that you make
up for all that you lack
it don't make
no difference
escaping one
last time
it's easier
to believe in this sweet madness oh this glorious sadness that brings me to my
knees//
We found out
what the Key was, why Glory wanted her. I say 'we', but I really mean Giles
found out. I'd lost the ability to research long before, lost any patience
whatsoever with reading old, dull books. I spent my time training, as if it
would make any difference.
We found out
what the Key was, and what Glory could do with it. With her. When we told Dawn
she went pale, and gave a little nod, and said, "So then we just have to
stop her, right?"
We couldn't
stop her. That's where we turned our attention next. We practically stopped
living for days at a time, pausing only to eat when we remembered, sleeping at
the table when our eyes refused to stay open. Some way, any way, to disable a
god. There weren't any. We could have foregone the days of reading, there was
no point. Glory couldn't be defeated. Not by anything human.
I didn't
bother to pray. I knew that wouldn't work either.
Willow found
the spell, but she tried to hide it. We asked what it was, but she wouldn't
say. Finally Dawn snuck into Willow's room and stole the book. When I found her
on the couch the next morning, she was still staring at the words, having not
moved for five hours. Just staring.
"What is
it?" I asked softly, sitting down beside her. She couldn't even say it, she
just handed me the book. The spell was for the dissipation of energy. "To
destroy the Key," it said. I closed the book and considered burning it,
but I didn't.
I should
have.
"You
can't do this," I told her sternly. "I won't let you. We'll find a
way, I promise. We'll find a way."
That night
Glory cast some sort of new spell-Dawn started to glow. We knew it was only a
matter of time.
I tried to
stop her. We all took turns watching her, talking to her, staying with her, so
she'd never have a moment alone, never have a chance to try. I don't know how
it happened. Somehow she got away-Tara said she must have cast a confusion
spell on us. All we found was the spell book, and a letter. I couldn't even
read it.
That was on
Thursday afternoon.
I didn't even
think of going. I could hardly stand up, walk, much less...I couldn't take
being pummeled. Not that night. I sent everyone home and lay on my bed, sobbing
quietly, because part of me still thought there was someone else in the house I
had to protect. I couldn't let her hear, even if she wasn't there anymore.
No one was
there. I was alone, finally, all alone.
And then I
wasn't. I felt him even before his feet hit the floor heavily, as if warning me
he was there.
"Not
tonight," I whispered, amazed that I was still able to form words.
"I-I can't tonight."
He didn't
leave. Why didn't he leave?
"What
happened?" he asked, like he cared. And I found myself telling him, as if
he really did.
"Dawn,"
I said. Weight shifted on the bed. He'd sat down on the edge. I turned over to
look at him. "She's gone."
"She ran
away?" he asked blankly. I laughed, but it came out as more of a sob,
which is probably what it was, really.
"I wish.
People run away...they come back. She's not coming back."
She wasn't
coming back. Like my mother wasn't coming back. No one ever came back, and I
was all alone, alone in the wreckage of what was left of my life.
"Why?"
Angel asked. I gave him an incredulous look, searching his face for a sign that
he wasn't mocking me with this, pretending he cared. I don't think he
was...pretending I mean. There was something in his eyes. I was too tired to
care what, too tired to refuse to answer. It was almost nice to tell someone. I
hadn't ever told anyone, and I never would be able to tell anyone else.
"She
wasn't real. She was a...a thing. Energy. There's this law of the
universe...energy is always conserved. Well she's the thing that broke that
law. She was energy. She created it. She was called the Key...they put her in
human form to keep her safe, and sent her to me. Only I couldn't, I couldn't
keep her safe."
They sent her
to me, and I failed. They made me love her, and it still wasn't enough.
Somehow
Angel's arms slipped around me. Not in a heated way, not in...any way really. I
leaned against his chest as he asked, "Key to what?"
I explained
about the other dimensions, about Glory...I don't even remember my exact words.
They just kept spilling out of me.
"She did
that to you," he said. It took me a minute to realize what he meant, to
remember the bruise. It took me a minute to realize he still thought about it.
"She's
strong," I said, as if that justified the fact that I'd given up against
her. "Well...she was. She fed off the extra energy Dawn emitted, just by
existing. By now she'll be like anyone. Anyway...I couldn't stop her. No one
could. And there were other things...there would always be someone after her. I
couldn't protect her forever."
At least
Glory was done for now. That afforded a little pleasure, but only a little,
swamped by the tidal wave of despair. It was nice that I could justify it to
myself. Nice that I had excuses, like someone would always have been after
Dawn. Nice that I could pretend what had happened was all right, was as it
should be.
"Did she
do it or was it a mutual decision?" Angel asked. My stomach turned and for
a minute I couldn't believe I'd ever let him touch me. This was what I'd
become. This was the level I'd been reduced to. Not the sex...that didn't
matter. It was just physical. But that he could even imagine I would willingly
let Dawn do that...that I would encourage it...
That was who
I was now. That's all I had left.
"You
think I told my little sister to kill herself?" I asked, my voice rising
slightly hysterically. It wasn't really him I was angry at-it was me, for
letting myself get to a place where that was even imaginable. I took it out on
him though. "Maybe that's all you know anymore Angel. Maybe you have
closed yourself off from everything and everyone so much that you can't fathom
what it's like to love someone so much it hurts, or to feel every pain they
feel doubled, because they should never have felt it in the first place. Maybe
that's just too much for you-I know what you did. How you closed yourself off
from Cordelia and Wesley. And maybe you thought because I fucked you once a
week that I'd done the same Angel, but you were wrong. Because I would never have
given up on Dawn. Never. She was my sister."
She was my
sister. And then she was gone. And I had condoned it-I had let it happen. I
hadn't stopped it. Hadn't saved her. Hadn't kept her safe. I was all the things
Angel thought me to be.
I was crying,
and shaking all over and I didn't even know if it was for Dawn or for me. I
loved her so much and she was gone, but all I could think was 'I'm alone, I'm
all alone and this is all that is left of me...'
Angel put his
arms around me again, gently, and I didn't have the will to resist. I didn't
even have the strength not to be comforted, I think I was, even a little. Not
that there was really such a thing as comfort then, in that place, that night.
But I was comforted a little.
"Why?"
I cried, all my anger gone, replaced by despair. "Why did it have to be
like this? Why did I have to lose them both? How could I lose them both?"
I didn't
expect him to answer. What could he possibly say that would make anything
different? Make it better at all? There was nothing to say. No answers anyone
could give me, not anyone in this dimension anyway.
This
dimension...
"I know
she wasn't a person," I whispered, unable to help myself, "but do you
think... do you think maybe there's a heaven somewhere for all the things that
never should have been on this earth? Another dimension where she was just a
girl?"
I wanted the
answer to be yes. I needed it to be yes.
"Yes,"
he said. Maybe it was a lie. Probably it was a lie. But it was still yes.
I relaxed,
tension gone from my body. The tears kept coming but they were
quieter...pouring now, no shaking sobs. Just tears and emptiness. I was empty,
I was alone. I was empty.
I didn't want
to be so empty.
"Make me
forget Angel," I begged, pulling away enough to see his face. My tears had
stopped, though the streaks were probably still visible. My hunger was
returning, the need to be filled. I was empty, and I wanted to forget. Make me
forget, Angel, I begged silently. Make me full again, just for a moment.
//in the arms
of an angel
fly away from
here
from this
dark cold hotel room
and the
endlessness that you fear
you are
pulled from the wreckage
of your
silent reverie
you're in the
arms of the angel
may you find
some comfort there
you're in the
arms of the angel
may you find
some comfort here//
Angel kept
gazing down at me with the oddest look in his eyes. No, that isn't true: it
wasn't odd, just unfamiliar. I'd seen it before though, but not for long...long
and longer. I couldn't even let myself imagine when the last time I'd seen it
had been.
"Not
tonight," he said finally, gently. Rage flared through me. How could he?
How dare he deny me tonight, when I needed him? I had lost everything, how dare
he?
"Why?"
I demanded angrily.
"Remember
the first time?" he asked. I frowned, confused. What was he talking about?
"Which
one?" I asked. The very first time? When he...when I...god, it was so long
ago. A different life almost.
"After
your mother's funeral," he replied, and I retreated back into my safe
cocoon of what I knew, what I remembered, the life I had now, not the old,
forgotten one, where I'd loved and been loved. That first one. I remembered.
That was when the emptiness started.
I wanted to
be full again.
"The
answer was both," he said, startling me.
"What do
you mean?"
"You asked
me what I was looking for, and the answer was both...But it didn't matter then,
because neither came true. But they would now."
My breath
caught as I remembered, and understood, I finally understood. I asked him why
he was searching for true happiness: because he didn't want to feel anymore, or
because he wanted to remember what it was like. The answer had been both, only
neither had come true. There'd been no true happiness that night, no happiness
at all, because he hadn't loved me.
He wasn't going
to sleep with me.
I didn't feel
empty anymore, just full, too full, of understanding, of...awe almost. Like
something incredible had just happened within Angel, something neither of us
quite understood. I felt like if I said a word I would overflow, or maybe that
was just the tears welling up in my eyes.
"Me
too," I whispered. He'd asked me if I let him because I wanted him to kill
me after or just because I wanted to feel. "The answer was both. It's
still both."
This time it
would come true. I'd get my wish, if he touched me now. But that was too much
to ask, even I knew it.
"Not
tonight," he said softly, gazing at me with that look in his eyes. I
recognized it finally, remembered it. Love. Grace.
"No,"
I agreed, because there wasn't anything else to do. "Not tonight."
Part of me wept at it, at the acknowledgement, the defeat. It wasn't just that
night, I knew, it was forever again. I'd lost him again, just as I found him.
Maybe I didn't lose him entirely. He didn't let go of me and I couldn't let go
of him. He lay me down on the bed and curled himself around me, holding me for
the first time in...how long? All those nights we'd spent in the same bed, in
the same room, and he'd never held me. I wouldn't have let him if he'd tried.
I let him
that night. I don't really know why, except that maybe I was tired. Too tired
to be alone that night. Too tired to be alone all the nights. Maybe I was empty
and he made me feel full, of light or hope or whatever it was he saw in me that
I could never manage to see in myself.
Maybe it was
because there wasn't any comfort in that night, but I found it in his arms
anyway, and in the dawn, when it came as I always knew it would.