A pot of tea rests on the sideboard, and it is cold. He has not drunk a
drop. She left hours ago, but he is still staring at the chair where
she sat, her scent possibly the only thing tethering him to reality,
though the thread is frayed and so hopelessly delicate.
Vanilla scent, he thinks, as though it is supposed to mean something.
But then again, perhaps it does, because it serves a purpose, stops him
thinking about *that*, stops him thinking about the fact that...that...
A tic in the cheek and it's back to vanilla scent, a thousand emotions
bubbling under the well-sealed lid of his consciousness, and he will
not let them in, will not invite sensation, because then wouldn't the
floodgates open, and then wouldn't he kill, and wouldn't he surrender,
because feeling is cognisanceand he cannot handle that.
It would give him an excuse and goddamnit he's sick of hiding.
Cordelia came down about ten minutes ago. Took one look at his
face and posture and left Old Cordy at the door, thank the Lord,
because in this state he'd probably have snapped Old Cordy's neck. She
fussed for a moment, gentle slurs on Buffy's name, supportive
friendship bullshit that probably worked for herhigh-school friends,
possibly even for Wesley, for mortals, for anyone who hasn't been alive
long enough to know that pain on both sides might balance the scales,
but it also makes them a bitch to carry.
No movement from him, no indication that he lived and now she has started to panic, and is screaming at him,
yelling, Please Angel! I need you Angel! Speak! Move! Fuckinganything!
and nothing gets through. Her tears are clear and he wants to taste
them, but he doesn't know why. Salt tears, no blood, just the fruit of
her pain and they probably symbolise something but he'll be damned if
he knows what it is. Wonders if maybe he should ask her, but she's
elsewhere now, not in the vicinity of the chair, and he's not allowed
to look away from the chair because the chair is Distraction, the chair
is Buffy and that means it isn't...
Jesus, Wesley, he's fucking *rocking*! Back and forward, like a crazy guy!
She must be on the phone, she's obviously given up, because they all
do. He'll wrong them once too often and they'll walk away; they have
the right but he'll grudge them it like the bastard he is, and...ah,
self-flagellation. That's good, he can deal with that. That is a Safe
topic. This he can think about.
Just get here now! I don't know what she said but I'm fucking well going to kill her when I do...
She? Buffy, that's right. Buffy was here. Vanilla scent.
A memory of Buffy at the threshold, asking to be let in, refusing to
enter without an invitation. She probably thought it was polite. He
remembers thinking it was a particularly sick irony, and wanting to
laugh till he choked.
Months since the Riley incident, longer since Faith, though with all the so-called excitement in his life,
it seemed longer. Standing there on the doorstep he didn't know what to
do. He wanted to hit her, he wanted to hold her, he wanted to kiss her
until she couldn't breathe, suck all that oxygen into his own dead
lungs and live on it, but he didn't, simply held open the door and led
her to the table, offered biscuits she didn't touch and tea that never
got drunk.
She was the same as ever; brilliant, blond, Aega of the sun, and her
radiance was all-consuming, but he found himself detached from it,
removed; remembered what it was like to be in her flames, and for the
first time in forever he felt free in the shadows. So they sat and said
nothing. Nothing with their mouths and less with their eyes. Motionless
for long moments, the only movement the rhythmic rise and fall of her
chest, a chasm between them occupied only by abstractions, Time Apart
and Things Unsaid, and he wondered briefly how they ever filled the
silence.
Close to an hour before she broke her own control, words cutting
through the calm like a knife, stumbling over sentences and talking,
talking and talking. Her voice washed over him like the sea, and it had
been so long since he'd heard her simply say anything, tears and
screams and harsh epithets the only things he could recall.
He listened to her wander confusedly through the tangled topics of her
life, listened to her, uninterrupted, for time unchecked. Listened to
her speak about demons and nightmares, evil and salvation, Watchers and
Slayers and children, and something about destroying her initiative,
but the words refused to register in the part of his brain that dealt
with language, instead rolling uselessly around in the area reserved
for dealing with Gunn and Drusilla and all those wretched stupid
lawyers. Funny how he isn't appalled to have lumped Buffy with his
crazy Childe and his one-handed nemesis, how it doesn't even seem]to
bother him.
Funny.
She ran out of steam eventually, somewhere around the tale of the most
recent Slaying extravaganza. Just stopped, mid-sentence, last word
hanging in the air like the sword about to drop and her eyes shifted
down and to the side and he wanted to yell at her...
What Buffy what? What is so terrible? You've broken my heart and
trampled on the pieces, what can you possibly have to say that is worse
than everything you've ever said?
And her face was terrifying to behold, just for a moment, pale
monochrome skin of death-pallor, hollow empty eyes, emotionless, numb.
Then she seemed to gather herself and the pain zoomed in, took over her
face like a jet aircraft landing in her expression. Pain, he could see,
pain for him. For me? Why me? Buffy?
One small hand, perfectly manicured despite nightly bouts with the
unspeakable, tiny nails, delicate fingers wrapped desperately tight
around a heavy wooden box. And then he had known. Known what had
happened, known what she had come here to tell him, what she had
breached their interminable separation for, and the tiny spark of light
that still inhabited his world was chased away by all the shades of
black, disappearing in a heartbeat that he didn't have.
A mistake, she said. A night alone in the wrong part of town. One
night, and what's that when you're immortal? But it was enough. A few
hours of beer and that loose tongue, that cocky attitude and goddamned
pretty face and it was enough.
How many of them? she didn't know, but at least three. There
was...sufficient damage, impersonal fucking term, to suggest three.
Guys, she said, humans, mortals, damned weak paltry *people* for fuck's
sake, and they didn't have that much against him, didn't have much but
a couple of well-aimed insults and a tasteless wave of his hand, but
that had been excuse enough to do...that.
She said it with eyes closed, some kind of respect for the one she had
mocked so often, and he was relieved for it, relieved for this latent
deference, even if it was too little too late, and relieved to be
rescued from the oblivion of her eyes. She didn't deserve to hurt that
much, not for this. She didn't know what she was saying, her only
comprehension of the experience from a sideline view of magazine horror
stories and human tears. When she spoke of it, eyes still closed, words
almost lost in halting stilted phrases, she couldn't see his soul-deep
anger, couldn't hear thedemon rattling, yelling, *screaming* at
thistransgression.
Mine! Mine mine *mine* MINE!
Torn, she'd said, torn skin and blood...everywhere...scarlet testament
to the suffering, mingled with...with...and she couldn't say the word,
innocent little girl-child, couldn't even say the word. Nineteen years
old, for Christ's sake, numerous sexual encounters and she was still
too used to sugar-sex to say the word. And he felt like
screaming that at her as well: semen, semen, their fucking *come*, is
that it?! Polluting the blood, that precious, beautiful blood of the
Childe, defiled by the products of their sick human desire, and he
wanted to kill them for touching that body, wanted to tear and slice
and destroy, wanted to use every trick thatAngelus had ever
learned just to teach them Thou Shalt Not Covet. No, thou shalt not
covet, and thou shalt not steal, and thou shalt not trespass where only
He is permitted to go. Body of the Childe, body of the Sire, his
property since the Turning, and his for Evermore, and he had loved it
and fucked it, touched it and taught it, and worshipped the demon and
the man
within its corporeal walls.
The demon was crying.
She told him of the beating, of the torture, of the exorcism of their
restless human fucking boredom and their Nothing To Do On A Friday
Night. She told him of the rape, in that singular child-style of hers,
and he could see the truth she was trying to hide, the PG-13 filter she
was throwing, and he called her on it,voice so strangely calm, the
demon's voice. Acquiescence with a nod and she told him the truth in
all its sordid entirity. Hell was the only word that could form in his
brain and by God even that wasn't enough. He had been to Hell, and this
was worse.
Strong, so strong his boy was, and so intractable, so beautiful in his
sedition, so pure in his iniquity, reduced to this, this fucking *sham*
of a life, violated by the commandos and their ridiculous perception of
justice. And the final desecration, his undoing at the hands of the
mortals, the toys, the dead weight that their family once preyed upon
with such wanton insatiability, the amoeba of the Earth they ploughed
through like so many inconsequential
playthings, fear and the kill and the blood and the blood and the blood.
Childe's blood.
She told him everything that his Childe had told her, lying in her arms
in the cemetery that had seen his pain, the cemetery she had found him
in, crimson blood bleached roseate and broken body painted silver in
the moonlight, and she had wept over him, had cried and pleaded and
kissed his eyes, seeing the futility of her own hope but constant to
the last, until all that coated her hands was his ash and his life and
her own salt-water tears.
And when she could speak no more, when her throat was dry and the sobs
that would not come were choking off her air, she pushed the box
towards him, but he made no move to take it. He would not open it in
her presence. She sensed this, his need to be alone, or perhaps she
simply knew that her welcome was outstayed, that the tale was told and
her part was done, and she kissed his cheek, held his cold hand in her
own warm one and pressed her body to his solid,
motionless back, moulding herself around the chair to contact flesh on
flesh. He wanted to pull away, to remove himself from her heat, her
life, her simple existence, but he did not because he could not move, a
sudden immutable stillness that would not break for less than the
return of the one who was lost.
He didn't notice her leave, but she must have done so for she is no
longer here, vanilla scent all that lingers on the air, sweetness and
sugar replaced and infringed by the spice of Cordelia, her manner still
anxious, still desperate, still in the dark. He wants her to leave,
wants to feel the space of the room closing in on him and crushing his
body, wants her to go and allow him his solitude, and eventually she
does, muttering something about Wesley and his consummate unreliability.
The box rests, innocent on the table, and he is mesmerised by it.
Unaware of his own movement, anaesthetised limbs and deadened nerves,
he reaches to the casket, pulling it towards him, gently removingthe
lid with trembling fingers, revealed and skimmed in a minute, blood
tears threatening in cold, cold eyes.
Elbow gloves in cream, cloth-wrapped black-bead rosary, leatherbound
spellbook, carmine hair ribbon of finest silk, papers, pictures,
mementoes and memories, the forgotten yesterdays of their eternity.
Old, razor-sharp railroad spike, flecked with blood or rust or both, a
chestnut curl, Shakespeare's sonnets and Moore's poetry, the perfectly
preserved label from a bottle of Irish whiskey 1804, sketches of
himself, paintings of them all, and a single name written in blood.
And under it all, under the collection of two centuries' worth of Sire
and love and lover, an envelope that smelled of fire and whose ink was
still fresh. And the name on it was the same, though written in black
this time, elegant capital and careless script, decorated with a
griffin and underscored with a twisted metal spike.
Opening it and letting out breath he didn't have, careful, reverent,
not a single piece torn, paper crackling under his fingers and it is
finally freed, black spider-scrawl writing in the centre of the page,
and it is so familiar...
Angelus.
I don't really know what to say, so I won't say much.
I don't have the patience to sit here and write a
novel anyway, so maybe it's for the best.
It's been a while Angelus, just over a century. Bloody
hell. A century. That's a long bloody time for
mortals, and I think for us as well, no matter what
they say about time being of no consequence when you
have infinite amounts of it. Let me tell you something
about time, Angelus: it's all perception. Time flies
and all the rest of that crap. A hundred years is a
long time when you're alone, and just a single human
heartbeat when you have everything you could ever
want. A hundred years is forever when the only thing
you think about every day is the way your Sire looked
at you once, and the way he took you to his bed, the
way he shaped the world and made it bleed, and then
offered it all to you. For a century, I missed that. I
miss it still, but I'd never say it to your face,
because you'd probably hit me. You'd hit me because
you think I want you back, or Him if you prefer; I
know how you like to separate the soul from the demon.
But you know, it doesn't really make any difference,
Angelus, because you *are* him, and before you get
your boxers in a twist just let me say that's a *good*
thing. At least to me. Angel, Angelus, you're more
alike than you know. That big freak who turned up a
few years back wasn't you *or* Him, but now you're...I
don't know, and I've never been very good with words,
but maybe it's something to do with age. Maybe I'm
finally growing up.
You're my Sire, Angel. You always were, only I
couldn't see it. I spent too many years hating you for
leaving us, too many years thinking that your soul
made you regret everything we'd ever had, everything
we'd ever been, but I missed the truth. You Are My
Sire, and for that I will always be yours. Eternity
and Blood, Angelus; they're both bitches, but they're
our bitches and we must make of them what we can.
Aeternum vale, Angel.
Will.
Reading it twice, reading it aloud, reading it word. by. word. and
losing more sanity with every repetition. He had known, he had *known*
what was going to happen. Not the specifics, of course not, buthe had
known he was going to die. Aeternum vale. Farewell forever. He had
known.
And a warm something is weaving through his blood, and his Childe calls
him, and his demon sings. Gathers the contents of the box from the
table and arranges them back in their coffin, a kiss on its lid for the
memory, a kiss for the love, and a kiss for the years of pain and blood
and forever. Leaves the letter and his own blood-name for them to find.
An explanation of a kind.
It seems that at last he can move, at last his limbs feel real, though
still more than a little cumbersome, and he moves to the stairs, begins
to climb. Each step seems to take a year, and they seem to be steeper
than they ever were before, or maybe his feet are just heavier. It
could be possible that grief has lent him the weight as a physical
manifestation of his pain.
What a sweet emotion.
The roof access doesn't want to be opened; perhaps it knows his intent,
and is stalling for time, long enough for Cordelia to get worried, or
Wesley to arrive. No matter if they did, and he thinks this with a
sigh. They wouldn't be able to stop him now, he is beyond their grasp
and most certainly beyond their pleas.
Up on the roof he moves to the wall, same slow tempo, measured steps,
meticulously counting out the paces because he cannot seem to see
anything that isn't directly ahead anymore, his vision narrowed to a
foot-square box of perception. Wall, sky, horizon; there's probably a
drop there, but he's not going to fall down it, and it doesn't fit in
the box. Irrelevant.
The clouds are dissipating, drifting cotton-wool softness over the
washed-red glow of the sky. With a start he realises; the light that
spreads above the sea is the same colour as blood. Blood red hue with
water-of-tears. Pale pink death. For one of his kind, it's eminently
fitting.
As the clouds move east the rain he hadn't even noticed was present
disappears with them, and thestorm though raging in his heart is abated
at least in his setting, leaving a cover of diamond-bright raindrops on
the dark concrete that in moments willblaze aflame like thousands of
daybreak stars.