a.connor  a.doyle  a.lindsey  a.oz  a.spike  a.wesley  a.xander  a.other  three.somes  het.fic  character.study           
Title: Sea Change
Author: Yahtzee
Pairing: Angel/Lindsey
Rating: R
Setting: Just post 'No Place Like Etc.' AtS & 'The Gift' BtVS

 

Lindsey has sold half of his belongings and thrown away most of the rest.
Everything else he owns, in a material sense, is bundled in the oversized
backpack in the passenger seat, next to the guitar. Lindsey doesn't care for
the backpack; it's obviously new, and obviously expensive. It seems
ill-suited to the journey he's about to take. Something careworn and
well-traveled would be better -- a secondhand army duffel, perhaps, or a
leather trunk. Something that proclaims him as a man who has never been tied
down.

That, of course, would be a lie. But Lindsey has never been averse to lying
when it suits him.

He will keep a few things here in the States; taking care of the few
possessions that matter to him is all that brought him back to L.A. His
various diplomas and stock certificates are in a safe-deposit box; certain
bits of information about Wolfram & Hart are in another, far more secure
location, should the present truce ever dissolve. And his truck is too damn
cool to bear selling, not that the thing's blue-book value could be more than
a couple bucks at this point. So he's driven it here for storage, and he
gives the door a friendly pat, much as he might a horse, as he shuts it.

Lindsey walks around to the passenger side, takes out the backpack, and
catches a glimpse of a crinkled sheet of notebook paper as it falls to the
ground. Even as he stoops to pick it up, he recognizes it by the shaky,
too-careful writing. He hasn't read this note over since he received it three
weeks ago, since he crumpled it up and crammed it in the glove compartment.
But as he reads it again, he realizes he already knows it, almost word for
word.

"Lindsey. I am glad to here you are working on your own. I know you said that
law firm was a good one to work for but I was not sure and I knowed you was
not happy. Working for your self is better and you don't have to answer to
nobody. So I am glad that is what you are doing. We all miss you. You would
not know Tom and Kristie, they have got so big now. But you must get your
self situated now. When you have some money together we will be so happy to
see you back home. Take care. Love, Dad."

He hates this note because it is so badly written, proclaiming his father's
junior-high education. He hates it because it reveals that his father had
enough sense to distrust Wolfram & Hart long before Lindsey (educated,
worldly Lindsey) caught on. He hates it because it reminds him of the first
eighteen years of his life, spent in poverty and humiliation and the
single-minded desire to use his good mind and his smooth tongue to get the
hell out.

Most of all, he hates it because it makes him feel guilty. Not much has the
power to do that anymore.

He wants to throw it away, but he can't quite bring himself to do it. Then he
wants to leave it in the truck, to wait the six or nine or twelve months it
will be before he returns to America. But that seems to give the note too
much power over him. Lindsey is tired of anyone or anything having power over
him. In the end, he just tucks it into one of the backpack's pockets.

Then he grabs the guitar, makes the final arrangements for the truck's
storage and catches a cab to Long Beach. His ship will be leaving in about an
hour, and this is the last Lindsey hopes to see of Los Angeles for a very
long time.

**

One of Lindsey's DZK fraternity brothers told him about traveling by
freighter. "It's about the journey, man," he said. "You see the world like it
is."

Of course, that kid had a trust fund waiting at the end of all his journeys.
Lindsey had no such security. He's always been careful with his money -- just
saving up from after-school work had earned him a decent-sized bank account
before he started college -- so he could have afforded to pay for a trip like
this before now. But he's never before been able to afford the time.
Freighter voyages are measured in weeks or months, not hours, and Lindsey's
never had weeks or months to call his own. But for the better part of the
next year, Lindsey plans to go where he wants, when he wants. To the Far
East, first, then into Europe, then maybe down to Africa and South America.
He will take as long as he wants. This is the luxury he's treating himself
to; it means more than a plush stateroom or elegant hotel ever could.

The freighter is the Hanjin Ottawa -- a name that's half-Japanese,
half-Canadian. The owners are German; the flag it flies is Liberian, and here
it is in an American port. Lindsey has already thought of three different
arguments about jurisdiction over the ship before he can stop himself. It's
piled high with containers of -- something. Lindsey doesn't know what, and he
doesn't care.

In the twilight, Lindsey can see that a few other passengers are getting onto
the boat. A crewman checks out their tickets and passports and waves them
vaguely back; there's no fanfare, no streamers or confetti, none of that
Kathie Lee Gifford shit, thank God.

Lindsey makes his way on board, answers the few perfunctory questions he's
asked and checks out the other passengers. Most of them are exactly what he'd
expected -- perpetual college students with dog-eared paperbacks and Peruvian
cloth caps. He would like to sneer at their pretensions, but suddenly the
guitar feels very heavy across his back, and he keeps his silence.

But as he heads toward the stairs that lead belowdecks, he sees a few that
don't meet his expectations. There's an older couple, spry retirees, who give
him cheerful but perfunctory waves as they go downstairs. And then there's a
man, about his age --

The man turns, and the first, stupid thought Lindsey has is -- no, much older.

Angel looks surprised to see Lindsey, as well he might, but the reaction's a
lot milder than Lindsey would have thought. Or hoped. Angel has left his
leather at home for once; he's wearing a black wool coat that looks like
something out of Melville, heavy boots not unlike the ones the sailors have
on. And slung over his back is a shabby old bag that has undoubtedly seen
countries, continents and perhaps centuries that Lindsey never will.

Angel, God damn him, looks like he belongs here. It's a new look for him.

"Angel," Lindsey says, stepping close, smiling ever so slightly. "What
happened? Wolfram & Hart finally turn up the heat so high you had to get out
of the kitchen? Or did your so-called friends finally wise up and throw you
out on your undead ass?"

That's Angel's cue to come back at Lindsey with his own put-down, or maybe
just to hit Lindsey with a sledgehammer. It can go either way, and Lindsey's
hoping for the former, but he'll take his chances. Instead Angel just stares
at him. Whatever surprise he felt upon seeing Lindsey has dimmed, and now he
is -- blank. Emotionless.

It's more crushing than anything Angel could have said, and it fires
Lindsey's anger anew -- the same reasonless anger that Angel has inspired
ever since the first moment Lindsey laid eyes on him, in the boardroom of
Russell Winters Enterprises. "Thanks for the sign on my truck, by the way.
Real classy move there. You thought I paid 50 grand for law school without
learning how to talk my way out of a ticket?"

Angel opens his mouth then, and Lindsey lifts his chin, getting ready to take
the insult that's coming. Instead, Angel just says, "Sorry."

He doesn't sound sorry. He doesn't sound sarcastic. There's no feeling in
those words, none at all, and as Lindsey looks up into Angel's dull eyes, he
is suddenly, forcibly reminded that he is speaking to a dead man. And all 50
grand must have been wasted, because now Lindsey's left with absolutely
nothing to say.

If Angel notices, he doesn't care. He turns away from Lindsey without another
word and vanishes into the dark corridors of the freighter. Lindsey is left
on deck, shivering slightly -- the wind sweeping in off the water is cold,
erasing every trace of the summer day's heat.

So much for getting away from it all.

***

Lindsey had imagined that the cabins on a freighter would be fairly primitive
-- cramped and small, with cast-iron bunks bolted to the walls, maybe
scratchy, heavy blankets like the one his dad had left over from his tour of
duty in Vietnam. Sometimes, when he was being very romantic, Lindsey imagined
that this cabin would be located right next to the engine room, that he would
be unable to sleep for the clanging of metal and the hissing of steam,
perhaps shouts and curses of sailors who spoke languages he didn't know.

Instead, to his dismay, his cabin looks like a small, but not cramped,
version of a standard hotel room. Nothing fancy, but there's a double bed, a
minifridge, a dresser and closet. There's even a CD player and TV with VCR;
the appliances don't look new, but they seem to work. A laser-printed note
informs him that he can check out tapes or CDs from any of the officers. Soft
drinks and snacks are on sale in the galley, which is a few decks below.
There is even a swimming pool, though apparently you have to have to ask the
captain to fill it for you before you swim.

The overall effect is disturbingly civilized. Lindsey imagines he'll be
grateful for the comforts six weeks from now, but at the moment, his great
adventure appears to be a lot less adventurous than he'd planned.

He unpacks only as much as he must -- toothbrush here, shoes there. This is
somewhat absurd of him, and he knows it; this ship will be his home for
months to come, and he could easily go ahead and get settled. But he likes
the feeling of being on the move too much to surrender any of it so quickly.

Lindsey pulls back the curtains that cover his small window, expecting to
catch a glimpse of the night sea. Instead, he just sees dark-blue containers,
stacked higher than he can see. Whatever it is they're transporting, they're
loaded with quite a lot of it.

That'll be convenient for Angel, he thinks. No chance of sunlight coming
through.

Angel. Everything about the past two years that's haunted Lindsey, driven him
half-crazy and back again -- all of it is wrapped up in that one name, that
one man. The work he did for the firm, both in its brilliance and its
bitterness, is best summed up in the fact that Lindsey's billed a thousand
hours toward causing Angel pain. His icy determination to rid himself of
guilt and his desperate, ineffectual struggles to accept it are reflected --
better than he often likes to admit, but too well for him to entirely deny --
in Angel's struggles. And desire -- physical desire in all its shades, the
need for sex either as connection or as cruelty -- has been embodied for
Lindsey in Angel's face and form ever since the first time Lindsey saw him.
Black leather and clenched fists and dark eyes.

In other words, everything Angel personifies is everything Lindsey's trying
to put behind him by boarding a ship bound for the other side of the world.
And Angel has spoiled the plan by climbing aboard himself.

Angel must have done this a hundred times. Freighter travel would be the only
way he could move from country to country, and Lindsey, as well-versed in
Angel's history as any man now living, knows that Angel has circumnavigated
the globe several times. As a general rule, vampires avoid air travel, even
redeye flights that might be expected to be sunlight-free.

"You never know," Darla had explained, pulling Lindsey's bathrobe more
tightly across her chest. This had the effect of tugging the robe slightly
off one shoulder, giving him a glimpse of pale skin. He had looked, just as
she had intended him to look. "A flight can run into delays, or be stuck in a
holding pattern, or something. And airports have a lot of windows -- did you
ever notice that? All that glass? No, we keep to the old ways. The safe ways."

As if anything about Darla had been safe.

Lindsey lies back on his bed, so caught up in the memory of her black eyes
and scarlet smile, in the dreams her words had inspired, in his own
long-denied exhaustion, that he misses the moment when the ship slips from
its mooring, and his journey finally begins.

***

"It doesn't matter to us, you know. To vampires."

Darla smiled at him over the rim of her crystal glass; Lindsey pretended that
the deep-red liquid within was Merlot. He leaned toward her on the sofa, nice
and easy, one arm along the back, the way he used to when he was
sweet-talking Tri-Delts at the DZK house. "What doesn't matter to you?"

Given the vast number of things that don't matter to vampires, Darla could
have gone on all night. But she went straight to her point -- that was one of
Darla's few virtues. "Men. Women. These inhibitions you humans have about who
you will and won't screw."

"You don't care anymore, after you die? Does that go too?" Fascinating idea,
that sexual preference would stay down in your grave, moldering along with
your soul, after your body got up and walked away.

"That's not it." She stretched languidly, like a cat; the liquid in her glass
sloshed all the way to the very rim, but did not spill. "You're still
attracted to the same kinds of people you were when you're alive. But when
you awaken -- you want to try everything. You understand? Especially the
things that were denied to you, the things they told you were bad or evil or
wrong. And once you try them, you realize that it doesn't much matter who
makes you feel good. As long as you feel good."

She brushed her cornsilk hair away from her face, pursed her lips, studied
his face. Lindsey tried hard not to let his eagerness show, not to let her
guess where his imagination was wandering. She knew, though. Darla always
knew.

"Take -- Dru, for instance." Neither of them were thinking of Dru. "Her mouth
feels like anyone else's mouth. As long as she knows what to do, and she
does. After all, if you're being touched -- just right -- does it matter
whose hands are doing the touching?"

Lindsey had only one hand then. The smirk on her mouth revealed that she
remembered that quite well. He looked down at the place where flesh became
plastic, and felt rage and lust slam into each other, alter each other,
explode outward in a reaction he couldn't control --

"Bitch," he growled. "You BITCH --"

And even as he swung his one hand toward her face with all the strength in
his body, her face changed into Angel's --

Lindsey awakens with a start. He runs both hands -- the one he was born with,
the one stolen for him -- through his hair. A quick check of his watch
reveals he's slept all the way through the night and into the morning. He was
more tired than he'd realized.

The dream-memory is still making him shake as he sits up. Instinctively, he
pulls the bedcovers around him, as if the chill came from outside his body.

Darla had been at his apartment, supposedly recuperating from what Angel had
done to her. (How healthy had she been then, in reality? Lindsey had thought
her an invalid, utterly dependent upon him, until the moment he saw her in
the very center of Wolfram & Hart, just seconds away from avenging her
resurrection upon a Senior Partner.) She did tell him that about vampires,
about Dru; she was pretending to tantalize him about the thought of her and
Drusilla together, making love, a mental picture that admittedly had its
charms.

In truth she was tempting him with thoughts of Angel, with the information
that Angel had taken men to bed, had enjoyed it, would enjoy it even now if
the man in question knew what he was doing. And Lindsey did.

Sorority girls aren't the only ones steered upstairs, drunken and laughing
and incapable, at DZK parties.

But when Darla made her little joke about hands -- when she opened her eyes
wider, drinking in his embarrassment and remembered pain even as she took
another sip from the crystal -- he hadn't lashed out. He hadn't called her
names. That was dream, not reality. In reality, he had just poured himself
another drink.

Lindsey would like a drink right now, matter of fact; it's early in the day,
but that wouldn't stop him if he had access to some liquor.

Instead, he dives into an almost adolescent irrelevance, a form of escapism
that turns out to work almost as well as alcohol ever did. He buys up a
supply of soda and snacks from downstairs (tiny cans, sizes they don't sell
in the States, and candy bars he doesn't recognize, like the "Aero") and
stocks his minifridge. It's raining outside, so whatever he might have
thought to do on deck is out. He pulls out the first book he'd brought for
this trip (Bruce Catton's Army of the Potomac trilogy, book one, "Mr.
Lincoln's Army") and alternates between reading, fooling around on the guitar
and trying the new candy. (The Aero is actually fairly tasty, with bubbles in
the chocolate.) It fills the day, occupies his mind, almost drowns out the
remembered sound of Darla's laugh, the remembered fantasy of Angel trying
everything he'd been told was bad or evil or wrong.

Lindsey missed breakfast, but he does get to the mess for lunch; there's no
menu, just whatever the cook has seen fit to make, which you can take or
leave. Today it's rather gluey macaroni and cheese. The older couple Lindsey
saw before sit at his table and chat him up; he'd prefer to be alone, but
he's courteous. He might want to borrow books from them at some point. And
this too, helps distract him. Every moment he's not making small talk with
them ("Oklahoma. You?" "We're from Maine, Bangor, do you know it?") is a
moment that his mind has to run free. To ask questions.

What is Angel doing? What the hell is he going to eat for the several weeks
they're at sea? Why wasn't he angry to see Lindsey again? Why is he leaving
Los Angeles? What happened to Cordelia and Wesley and that other guy, the new
one, what was the name in the file -- Charles something?

Lindsey wants to know, and he hates that he wants to know. The obsession with
Angel is just one of the many things he's trying to escape; if Angel's going
to stay holed up in his cabin the whole time, he might as well not be on
board, and Lindsey's no worse off. He just needs other things to occupy his
mind and his time, and soon, he'll move past this.

This is what he keeps telling himself, between bites of something that
purports to be a sloppy joe and polite laughter at the older couple's jokes.

But by the time lunch is over, Lindsey knows he's going to have to push
himself past it. Maybe physical exhaustion is the way to go -- it worked well
enough last night.

He goes to the captain and asks for the pool to be filled; he is informed
that someone's already asked, so the pool is ready. Lindsey quickly goes to
his cabin, finds his swimming trunks in the depths of his backpack and heads
down to the pool. It's not on deck, the way it would be on a cruise ship;
it's below decks, in the very belly of the beast. Lindsey's ready to make
nice with whoever is there, probably some hacky-sack-playing sixth-year
senior who'll want to talk about "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance."
He's ready to do 20 or 50 or 100 laps, whatever it takes to wear him out and
drive Angel right out of his head.

So when he goes into the pool area, Lindsey's ready for anything -- except
the sight of Angel, all but naked, wet and gleaming by the side of the water.

Angel turns slowly -- as though he were already underwater -- and takes in
the sight of Lindsey. Again, his cue for the put-down, the bitter joke. Again
he lets it go. "Hi." The man has never been long on words.

"Hi," Lindsey says. Two can play that game. But no matter how he matches the
nonchalance verbally, his body won't obey. Lindsey can feel his heart beating
faster, knows Angel can feel it too. And almost against his will, his eyes
travel down the length of Angel's body -- he's even more muscular than
Lindsey had thought. He seems sleeker, more streamlined, in all that black,
but it turns out Angel's powerfully built, almost to the point of looking
brutish rather than beautiful. But not quite.

And the swim trunks -- trunks doesn't even seem the right word. They're a
weird shade of blue, one you don't see much anymore, and they lace in front,
and they cover Angel's package and his ass and not a hell of a lot else.
Lindsey realizes they're probably 35 years old -- something from the late
60s, maybe. Something Rock Hudson might have worn in a movie.

Angel sees where Lindsey's looking, takes up the safer topic of conversation.
"I don't swim a lot."

"Guess not," Lindsey said. "So how come you're doing it now? Shouldn't you be
asleep?"

"I don't always sleep during the day," Angel says. "You should remember that."

And there it is -- a bit of the edge, a touch of the anger. Because their
daytime meetings were few, unpleasant and memorable -- whichever one it is
Angel's hoping Lindsey remembers, it's not good. Feeling refreshed already,
Lindsey stalls by jumping into the pool --

-- and comes up, sputtering in shock. He wipes his eyes, feels stupid for
reacting, but still feels the need to explain his surprise. "This is salt
water."

"It's sea water." Lindsey couldn't see out of his stinging eyes at the
moment, but he can hear the muted amusement in Angel's voice. "You thought
they carried around a few hundred gallons of chlorinated stuff so you could
have fun?"

Sea water. Thick with salt and fucking cold. Lindsey can feel himself
starting to shake. "You could've warned me."

"I didn't think I had to." Just as Lindsey's finally able to open his eyes,
he hears the splash of Angel jumping in with him. He surfaces a couple feet
from Lindsey, his hair slicked back, dark and shining. He's still got a gold
chain around his neck, some kind of pendant or ring hanging from it; the
necklace ought to make him look like a gigolo, but somehow doesn't. The cold
isn't bothering Angel -- of course not, Lindsey thinks. His body temperature
just changes to match. As Lindsey stares, he realizes whatever shadow of
fighting spirit had flickered with Angel before is already gone. Angel just
says, quietly, "Do you want me to go?"

"No," Lindsey says, which is true. He then adds, "I don't care," which is a
lie.

Angel doesn't reply, just sinks back into the water and starts doing laps.
Lindsey moves to the other edge of the pool, presumably to give Angel room,
but really to give himself a little time to watch. Angel's not very polished;
what he said about swimming rarely is undoubtedly true. Lindsey (swim team,
2,3,4) can see imperfections in the strokes, mistakes in the turns,
inefficient moves that cost him time.

But that doesn't matter. Lindsey couldn't give a damn about the stuff his
swim coach said 13 years ago when he watches Angel's body move through the
water. Long arms, big hands, pulling him forward, working the muscles in that
powerful back. The tattoo on his shoulder (what is it? Something
celtic-looking) moves as the planes of his body flex and pull. Angel doesn't
turn his head to breathe, which makes sense, even if it looks strange.

Angel's pushing himself, swimming hard, the way Lindsey used to do when he
was showing off. And so he figures the thing to do is push himself even
harder.

If Angel wants to beat Lindsey at something, he'll have to choose something
else. If, on the other hand, he wants a look at what Lindsey's body can do --

Lindsey shakes off his own lack of practice, braces his feet against the edge
of the pool and pushes off. His body remembers more than his conscious mind;
he finds his old patterns and rhythms quickly, more quickly than he would
have thought possible. His competitor's instincts revive as well and give him
a sense of where Angel is in the pool, how fast he's moving. Not nearly as
fast as Lindsey, as it turns out; Lindsey grins in the water, salt slipping
into his mouth as his lips part. You wanna keep it up, Angel? he thinks.
We'll keep it up.

And they do.

And they do.

Ten minutes. Twenty. Forty. Lindsey's moving slower now. His whole body is
shrieking in protest -- hot cramps snaking their way through his calves, down
his back. He hates himself for wanting to stop, hates himself more for
thinking he could win a war of attrition with a vampire.

Finally he gives up -- just stops kicking. His muscles are suffused with both
pain and blessed relief as Lindsey slows his strokes, spreads his arms out in
the water. He floats there, still, waiting for Angel to surface. Will he mock
Lindsey? Just look at him in that calm, superior way that never fails to make
Lindsey berserk with rage? Or will he -- just --

-- keep swimming.

Lindsey realizes that Angel wasn't racing him. He wasn't trying to prove
anything to Lindsey. Wasn't trying to show off for him. He doesn't even
notice that Lindsey's stopped. Just keeps going, clumsy strokes and iron will
pushing him through the pool, edge to edge, over and over.

After about five more minutes, Lindsey uses his quivering arms to pull
himself out of the water; he wraps his towel around himself and stumbles to
the door.

Angel doesn't even seem to remember he's there.

At least the swim fulfills its original purpose. Lindsey goes back to his
cabin and collapses, exhausted, into a sleep too deep for dreams.

***

The freighter is not small, and the general atmosphere isn't social, but
there are only so many people on board, and by day six they've all begun
naming and categorizing each other.

Against his will, Lindsey has learned the names of Louis and Marjorie (the
older couple from Maine), Tony (last big trip before med school at LSU) and
Bryan (aspiring poet, forever scratching in a notepad.) He has come up with
names for the ones he hasn't met: Orange Parka, Three Helpings (every lunch,
every dinner, no matter how much the food sucks) and Hyena Laugh. A
half-caught snippet of conversation has revealed that some of the others call
him Guitar Guy. Okay, he can live with that.

And they have all mentioned the Swimmer.

The Swimmer is down there all day, every day. They don't understand how he
can do it, how anybody can have that kind of strength and single-minded
obsessiveness. The crew members grumble about it sometimes; apparently the
pool is one of their few means of exercise, and now the Swimmer is in it all
the time, and they are reluctant to swim when he is there, for subconscious
reasons that speak well of their survival skills. The Swimmer asks for the
pool at the earliest possible time, and he doesn't leave until the last hour
the captain will leave it filled.

They've all seen him, at certain points, headed to or from the pool. Lindsey
thinks he is the only one who ever watches him. He doesn't actually go in,
just peers through the glass in the door. Angel moves unceasingly through the
pool, just beneath the surface, the water rippling around him like a sleeve.

"He must leave sometimes," Marjorie says, looking suspiciously at dinner,
which the cook claims is lasagna. "I mean, he has to eat, if nothing else. We
just don't see him."

"Sounds right," Lindsey says. People can justify anything. He knows this
well, has relied on it for most of his professional career.

"Guess that's as good a way to spend the trip as any," Louis says, as Three
Helpings goes back for pseudo-lasagna helping #2. "Getting yourself in shape.
We could stand to do a few laps around the deck ourselves, you know."

"It just seems as though he'd be very bored," Marjorie says.

"You never know," Louis says. "Swimming, running, anything with repetitive
motion -- it helps you think. Maybe he's thinking something through."

Marjorie folds her wrinkled hands together, considering that. She has a ring
on every finger -- no truly precious stones, just turquoise and jade. "Or
he's trying not to think about something."

For the first time, Lindsey's glad he met Louis and Marjorie.

***

Lindsey's been tipping one of the lower officers generously since day one,
because you never know when you might need a loyal assistant; this kind of
planning pays off tonight. It only takes a few words and $20 to get him a
bottle of cheap Scotch from a sailor's private stash, as well as the
directions to Angel's cabin. He dresses for the occasion: his most
comfortable jeans, a white cotton T-shirt, no underwear. With the bottle in
one hand and two paper cups from the galley in another, Lindsey goes down one
flight of steps, heads halfway down the corridor, takes a deep breath and
knocks.

After a very long pause, Angel's voice says, "Can I help you?"

"You've helped me enough, thanks," Lindsey says. "But I'd bet anything you
could use a drink."

Another long pause -- then Angel opens his door. He's shirtless, wearing only
loose black pants -- the sort of thing you'd have on if you were doing
martial arts or t'ai chi. That gold necklace is around his neck, the ring
still on the chain, resting just above his breastbone. Lindsey tries very
hard to keep breathing slowly, to keep the same lazy smile on his face.

"I'm not good company right now," Angel finally says.

"Like you ever were," Lindsey replies. "We're on this boat for a while,
Angel. And I don't know about you, but I'm already bored as hell. We might as
well use whatever entertainment options we've got." He holds up the Scotch,
as though this were what he was referring to.

Angel isn't seriously tempted, either by the Scotch or anything else, Lindsey
can tell. He's not looking at Lindsey, exactly -- more like looking through
him. But it would take more energy to resist Lindsey at this point than to
comply, and after a moment he steps back, allowing Lindsey to come inside.

Lindsey has to work even harder to contain his triumph. Getting in the door
was the hardest part, he tells himself. From now on, all I have to do is keep
pouring.

He does just that, opening up the Scotch, filling the paper cups about
three-fourths full. The calm seas they've been having are cooperating with
him tonight; the only ripple in the cups is from the low, omnipresent
vibration of the ship's engine. Lindsey hands one to Angel, who stares down
at it as though he'd never seen Scotch before.

And then he moves, whip-snap fast, bolting a swallow of it. Lindsey does have
to grin now, but he hides it behind the rim of his own cup. Twenty dollars
was way the hell too much, he thinks; his throat burns from the cheap liquor,
and his voice is raspy when he says, "So, Angel. Why the Orient? Some ancient
evil about to rise? I heard a rumor about this giant lizard that stomps all
over Tokyo --"

If Angel's seen a Godzilla movie, he doesn't see fit to respond to the
reference. "I switch ships at Kyoto. I'm on my way to Sri Lanka."

When no more words are forthcoming, Lindsey prompts, "Because -- what? You
like to vacation in places torn apart by violent internal warfare? Wait, I
remember now. You do."

"I know a monastery there," Angel says. He sits heavily on the edge of his
bed. "I'm going to stay there for a while."

The obvious jokes about monks, celibacy and Angel come to mind, but Lindsey
lets it go. Angel's not in a sparring mood, and he's not going to be anytime
soon. This leaves Lindsey feeling strangely at odds -- if he's not baiting
Angel, trying to provoke him, he doesn't really have a whole lot to say to
the guy. He'll have to wing it. "They're gonna miss you at the office."

"I guess." Angel takes another deep swallow. Do vampires get drunk as easily
as humans? Darla never seemed to lose control, no matter how much wine they
drank together. Then again, she always had as much blood as she wanted. If
vampires are like humans, and an empty stomach makes you vulnerable --

"What are you eating?" Lindsey says. He'd like to sit on the bed next to
Angel, but that's rushing things. He grabs the room's one chair, turns it
around so he can straddle the back, cross his arms over the edge. "I've been
counting. We've still got all the passengers and crew we started out with, so
it's not the obvious."

"I brought a few pints with me." Angel points toward his own minifridge,
which probably does not have any soda or Aero bars inside.

"A few pints? Not much for a big, strappin' guy such as yourself."

"It'll hold me," Angel says. "I've lived on less for longer."

"Bet you weren't pushing yourself all day when you did. What happens if you
run out?"

Angel shrugs. "Even modern ships have rats."

Lindsey grimaces at the thought, forces down another swallow of the bad
Scotch. Angel's already gotten nearly to the bottom of his own cup, and it
looks less suspicious if he refills them both. Which he does. "What's with
the swimming, Angel?"

"It fills the hours."

Okay, then. Lindsey is, in some corners of his mind, curious about exactly
what has put Angel in this state -- but he's pushed that aside as savagely as
every other complexity he's on this ship to run away from. He's on this ship
to fulfill one fantasy; tonight, hopefully, he's going to fulfill another. He
will ask himself what it all cost later. And not until then, Lindsey reminds
himself, looking at Angel's broad shoulders in the dim light. He deserves to
get back as much of what the firm took from him as he can. He deserves to
collect on some of those long-denied dreams. He can't stop himself from
thinking what Angel deserves -- but among the many punishments Angel has
coming, this could be by far the most pleasurable. His lips curve in a smile
along the rim of the paper cup.

Lindsey swallows, then says, "Didn't think vampires would be able to swim.
Dead bodies don't float. No buoyancy. That's in the firm handbook, you know."

"No. I don't float," Angel says. "If I quit moving, I'd sink."

Lindsey's clearly going to be the one doing the work in this conversation.
"Aren't you gonna ask what I'm doing? Where I'm headed?"

Angel takes another swallow of Scotch -- he's clearly considering, and going
for, the advantages of blackout. Lindsey intends to stop him a little bit
before that. In any case, he obviously doesn't care what Lindsey's doing or
where he's heading. But, out of what appears to be a purely automatic
politeness, he asks, "Why are you here?"

'I'm going to see the world," Lindsey says, exaggerating the words, holding
out his hands. "Do I sound like George Bailey in It's a Wonderful Life?
Because that's what I was going for."

"A little," Angel says. So, he has seen some movies after all.

"I'm just taking a few months to do whatever the hell I want. See what I want
to see, move on when I want to move on. Nothing to tie me down."

For some reason, this of all things gets a reaction out of Angel -- he
half-laughs, a bitter sound. Lindsey waits for an explanation, doesn't get
one.

He casts about desperately for something else to talk about while Angel's
getting himself good and plastered. Wasn't there something in the files about
Angel traveling in the Far East before? "So, you've been all around these
parts. What should I see, Angel?" When that doesn't draw an immediate
response, Lindsey tries being more direct, "What about -- Angkor Wat?
Everything they say?"

Angel tells him about Angkor Wat, then about Mt. Fuji, then about the Taj
Mahal. Lindsey asks; Angel answers by rote. It is, Lindsey thinks, not unlike
a CDROM -- he clicks, the explanation pops up. The transaction is as empty,
as devoid of meaning. Lindsey's making Angel talk, and Angel's too beat up --
and, increasingly, too drunk -- to resist. Which is a good sign.

Angel's into his fourth cup of Scotch when his voice begins to slur, just the
littlest bit. He leans forward, rests one arm (strong, well-muscled) on his
knee. The ring at the end of the gold necklace dangles. Lindsey gets a
glimpse of the tattoo again, just a bit he can see over Angel's shoulder.

Pour again or make his move?

When he sees Angel rub his forehead with the back of one hand -- a tired,
disoriented move -- he knows the guy's pretty well drunk. More and he'll pass
out. Now or never.

Lindsey takes a deep breath, finishes off his own cup as he tosses his head
back. A wave of dizziness hits him; he hasn't kept up with Angel, but the
Scotch is getting to him, too. All the better. Lindsey doesn't lack nerve,
but he'd be hard-pressed to do this stone-cold sober.

"I'm glad you're here," he says. It's the first sincere thing he's said all
night, and, if he has it his way, the last. Angel doesn't look up, just stays
slightly slumped over, a disheartened Rodin. "I mean it. You and me -- I
always thought if we got past all the mortal-enemies stuff, we'd probably get
on."

"Probably," Angel says. Still no real response. Heart pounding, Lindsey
swings his leg around, gets up, comes to sit by Angel on the bed. When Angel
only half-turns to look at him, Lindsey knows this plan is working. Working
better than he'd really thought it would, down deep.

"Always wanted to get to know you better," Lindsey says. A bad line, one that
wouldn't work at the sleaziest pick-up bar in L.A. But Angel seems to be past
caring. Lindsey puts one hand on Angel's arm -- warm skin against cool. "I
can think of some better ways for you to fill the hours."

And Lindsey kisses Angel, hard, on the mouth.

At first he can't even feel it. All he can take in is the psychological shock
of it -- holy shit, I actually did it, I just kissed Angel. Two solid years
of fantasy just paid off, and he can't even enjoy it for the surprise.

If Angel's going to punch his lights out, it'll be now. Doesn't happen.
Angel's staring at Lindsey in Scotch-dulled shock, but he's not doing
anything else, not even pulling away. Lindsey leans forward and kisses him
again. And this time he feels it, feels his whole body begin responding to
Angel.

Cool lips against his own, a cool mouth that doesn't resist his tongue
slipping inside. Lindsey takes Angel's face in his hands and starts kissing
him deep, tasting that cheap Scotch again. He shifts his weight without ever
breaking the kiss, straddles Angel's legs with his own, presses his rock-hard
erection against Angel's belly. Wouldn't take the guy but about two moves to
get him out -- but he doesn't.

Angel's letting Lindsey do this, but he's not participating. Which could work
up to a point, but Lindsey thinks he can do better.

Lindsey pushes Angel back onto the bed, an act that seems to restore Angel's
sense of reality for a moment. "Lindsey --"

"Come on," Lindsey coaxes, running his hands along Angel's chest, marveling
at the cool, hard, marble perfection of it. "I've seen you swimming. I
watched you down Scotch like it was B-negative. You want to escape, don't
you, Angel? Don't you?"

Angel closes his eyes. After a moment, he nods, very slightly. The least
consent he could possibly give, but it's given, and Lindsey feels all the
energy that's been coiled up within him tonight go kinetic, light him up from
inside.

Lindsey kisses Angel's lips again, then his throat, dipping his tongue into
the hollow between the collarbones. He can taste sea salt on Angel's skin.
His own flesh is tingling, as though electricity were flowing over him,
through him, as he waits for Angel's answering touch, which doesn't come. As
he works his way down, he brushes his thumbs against Angel's nipples, waiting
to feel them harden in response. Nothing. This is less discouraging to
Lindsey than it is challenging.

Fine, Angel, Lindsey thinks, while he presses his hands against Angel's
ribcage, nips gently at the skin of Angel's belly. You think you're too damn
good to want me? We'll see about that.

He tugs at Angel's black pants, gets them down.to his knees. Lindsey has to
take in a sharp breath as he sees Angel's cock for the first time -- still
quiescent, but long and thick even at rest, uncut, with foreskin that tapers
close to his flesh, a perfect sheath. With a groan of pure hunger, Lindsey
leans down and takes Angel's cock in his mouth.

It's been a while, but all the old tricks come back to him now. Lindsey
tightens his hand around Angel, gently pulls so that the foreskin rolls back,
revealing the sensitive head to Lindsey's swirling tongue. Angel tenses, and
Lindsey begins sucking.

As he pulls Angel deeper into his mouth, he feels Angel's cock begin to go
thick and stiff. In triumph, Lindsey sucks even harder, dipping his mouth up
and down, already simulating thrusting. His tongue flicks across the ridge,
strokes the faint indentation at the very tip, tastes cool salt there.
Angel's hands clamp down on his shoulders with all his considerable strength
-- oh, you're with me now, aren't you, Angel? -- holding Lindsey in place.
But Lindsey's got him hungry, and he intends to make Angel work for the rest.

One last caress with the tongue, and Lindsey lets Angel's cock slip out of
his mouth with a soft pop. Angel makes a sound that's not quite a hiss, pure
frustration. Lindsey's smiling when Angel sits up, pulls Lindsey to him and
starts kissing him savagely.

Oh, God.

This is what he's wanted, this is what he's dreamed of for two years, this
moment, when Angel wants him and nothing else, when Angel's kissing him as
though he'd die if they pulled apart. He tugs one of Angel's hands away from
his shoulder and puts it on his own hard, throbbing cock; he's so desperate
for Angel's touch now that even this pressure, through thick denim, is enough
to send a jolt of near-orgasmic pleasure through him.

Angel whispers, against Lindsey's mouth, "You're alive." He takes his hand
away from Lindsey's erection, slides it up to his chest, right above
Lindsey's pounding heart. "You're alive."

That's what Angel wants, what Angel's after. He doesn't want Lindsey; he
wants to touch something alive.

But if it isn't Lindsey Angel wants, it's Lindsey Angel's about to fuck. And
shouldn't that be good enough for the fantasy?

But it's not. Dammit, it's not. He doesn't care if Angel fucks him out of
love or out of hate, out of desire or contempt or boredom. But Lindsey wants
Angel to fuck HIM -- not a warm body who happened to show up with Scotch.

Shit, Angel would probably be doing the same thing with Marjorie.

Lindsey pushes Angel back, stares into his face. He wants to wake Angel up
just a little more -- just enough to get him to understand what's going on.
But whatever it was that was hounding Angel before Lindsey came in suddenly
hits him again; he can see the pain darken Angel's eyes to black, feel his
shoulders slumping inward.

For a terrible moment, he looks a lot like he did when Dru turned Darla.
Lindsey wishes he hadn't thought of that.

"I'm sorry," Lindsey lies. "I'm sorry. It's okay."

Angel lies back down onto the bed. He doesn't look up at Lindsey, doesn't
even seem to care if he's still there.

Lindsey pulls Angel's pants back up for him. Then he lowers himself onto the
bunk next to Angel. Angel's turned away from him, but Lindsey curls along his
back and slides one arm around Angel's waist. He is close enough that Angel
should be able to feel Lindsey's heartbeat against his spine.

So it's not a matter of one night. This is a longer game, one with higher
goals, more complex strategy. Lindsey tries to ignore his painfully erect
cock, to tell himself this is what he wanted anyway. Any damn fool at the DZK
house could lay somebody drunk off their ass. What he's after is more than
sex -- he wants more intangible victories too. That was one of the things
Wolfram & Hart promised you, when they recruited you; he could still hear
Holland's voice, genial and calm, saying, "You get more than monetary gains
from working for our firm. The other benefits -- the intangibles -- they
matter even more."

Lindsey's been after more than pure gain ever since he was an tenth-grade boy
who tried to pretend that his jeans were ripped only because it was trendy,
since he sat through lunches pretending not to notice how everybody from town
laughed at the country kid who brought his lunch in the same greasy paper
sack, over and over.

That's what Lindsey's reminding himself of as he lies next to Angel. Angel
isn't crying, but there's a tension in his body that's not unlike the kind
that accompanies tears. Angel's on the brink, and Lindsey's lying there
pretending to hold him back.

But Lindsey is having other memories too, unwilling ones. He remembers a
Tri-Delt early one morning after a party, creeping around his room, crying
quietly, looking for the bra he'd taken off her semiconscious body. He
remembers the office of one of his law school professors, the pile of the
Oriental rug against his knees as he ensured himself the highest grade in the
class. He remembers watching one of the guards lift Darla's dead body up in
his arms, then pushing Angel, still duct-taped, down to the floor with a
shove of his heel.

And at none of those times did Lindsey feel as cheap or as dirty as he does
right now, lying next to Angel, pretending to be kind.

***

Some of Lindsey's law professors were younger -- more casual dressers, women
as well as men, black as well as white. They tried to be funny and friendly,
and it showed up in their hypotheticals: the contentious parties would have
names from Star Trek or Cheers, or the criminal cases would be the fallout
from popular action movies. ("For which criminal acts does the Terminator
have specific as opposed to general intent? Discuss.")

Lindsey was never greatly entertained by these efforts, well-meaning though
they might have been. He greatly preferred the older professors -- white,
male, clad in three-piece suits even on swelteringly hot days. They
represented a certain formality he valued in his professors, if almost
nowhere else.

These professors did not try to make their hypotheticals amusing. They made
them difficult, to separate the weak from the strong, and Lindsey,
ever-strong, appreciated this.

They also did not attempt to show imagination. Parties were named A, B, C and
so forth. And the property they clashed over -- the estate they possessed and
inherited and trespassed upon and contracted for -- was invariably called by
the same name. Blackacre.

Perversely, that name stirred Lindsey's imagination far more than the
whimsical hypotheticals ever had or could. Blackacre. It sounded old, Gothic,
expensive -- the sort of place that would be surrounded by a cast-iron gate
thick with scrollwork, and brambles that twisted into thorns. Like something
out of the romantic books his older sisters used to read and leave,
dog-eared, on the back porch. Lindsey (done with his exam early, holding onto
his bluebook lest the others discover his ability) imagined the path that
would lead to Blackacre -- old stones, broken decades back, so that dust and
grass showed between the cracks, winding through ancient, shadowy trees to
the fortresslike Blackacre. Blackacre -- a name meant to be dry, dull, and
impersonal -- was more vivid to Lindsey than any of the funny, familiar
hypotheticals ever were. It captured a desire in him he had hardly known was
there -- a desire to explore darkness and mystery, a desire to break down
barriers.

He did not fully recognize this desire in himself until far later in life,
after it had already led him into the belly of Wolfram & Hart. And only now
does he realize what he had always wanted to find within Blackacre, who he
had always wanted to discover locked up in its attics. At the heart of
Blackacre -- wrapped within history and danger and trespass -- that's where
Angel was waiting.

Or so it seems to him now, as he lies on Angel's bunk, watching Angel sleep.

Lindsey has heard many bad poets and songwriters wax rhapsodic about watching
a lover sleep; Angel is not really his lover yet, but that's not why this
scene has relatively few pleasures for Lindsey.

For one, Angel does not breathe slowly in sleep, flutter his eyelids, mumble
nonsensical words or do any of the other simple things that lovers find
endearing. Angel just lies there like the dead body he is. Also, Angel is
lying across Lindsey's arm, the one original he has left, and the solid
muscles that were so inviting to look upon and so arousing to touch are now
just part of the bulk that has crushed out all feeling from elbow to fingers.

But Lindsey doesn't push Angel away, or try to move. It's still too amazing,
too new, that he could be lying here in bed with Angel at all. And besides,
if he hopes to get Angel to accept him willingly as his lover, Lindsey will
have to be kinder than his usual inclination for a few days, or weeks.
Months?

Yes, Lindsey thinks with a faint smile, even months. He is at sea, and he is
pursuing his dreams, and after all, he has nothing better to do.

He looks at Angel again, and his eyes narrow as he looks again at the gold
chain around Angel's neck, the ring. that is lying on his collarbone. The
shape is familiar -- two hands on either side of a crowned heart. A claddagh
ring. Lindsey knows it's Irish, thinks there's some symbolism that goes with
it; there's something romantic, something that gets reprinted on greeting
cards -- but something more, too. Something religious.

Lindsey reaches out with his free hand to touch the ring; perhaps sensing the
motion, Angel stirs, then opens his eyes. He registers some surprise when he
sees he's not alone, but Lindsey can tell Angel remembers what happened. He's
just surprised Lindsey stayed.

"Do vampires get hangovers?" Lindsey asks quietly.

"It's possible," Angel says, without letting on to his own condition. He
pushes himself up on his elbows, freeing Lindsey's arm; Lindsey pulls it
back, trying not to let his profound relief show.

Slowly clenching and releasing his numbed hand, Lindsey says, "You slept for
about ten hours. If that was all sleep -- guess you could've been passed out
for part of it. With you, there's not a whole lot of telling."

"It was sleep," Angel says. "Lindsey -- last night --"

Lindsey braces himself; what's Angel gonna say? The worst possibility, in
which an outraged Angel attacks him for taking advantage, is already ruled
out. Would've done it first thing, if he was going to do it at all. But the
game Lindsey's going to play depends almost entirely on what Angel does next:
how angry he is, how distant, how lonely.

Because, as much as Lindsey's trying not to think about just how Angel ended
up this way, he still hasn't been able to miss the fact that Angel's lonely.

Angel doesn't say anything. His last words just hang there, in the
uncomfortable silence of his bunk. He's not going to tell Lindsey to get out,
or apologize, or do anything else. Already, the heaviness and distance is
back in Angel's eyes; left to his own devices, he'll just get up and tell the
captain to fill the pool again. He doesn't care about what happened here
between him and Lindsey, just wants to get back to blotting it out of his
mind. Whatever "it" is.

"You're not swimming today," Lindsey says. Angel half-turns to look at him;
Lindsey props up so that they're face to face. "You're creeping out everyone
else on the boat, you know that? You want to fill the hours, you're gonna
have to do it some other way."

"I don't think that's your decision to make," Angel says.

"I think maybe it is," Lindsey says. He leans forward -- they're within
kissing distance -- and Angel leans back. Good, Lindsey thinks. Finally
getting some reaction here. "Listen, I don't know how you ended up like this,
and I shouldn't care. But I do. You want to know why?" Without waiting for an
answer, Lindsey plows on: "It's because I know at least some part of it is my
fault. I give you a lot of shit because of what you did to me -- and don't
expect me to stop anytime soon, by the way -- but it goes both ways. And I
know it. I know what I did to you."

Angel shakes his head. "This isn't your fault," he says quietly. "This has --
nothing -- to do with you."

So. Not Darla, then. Not the firm at all. Lindsey mentally files this away
for future reference. "Maybe," Lindsey says. "The fact is, I owe you. And I'm
about tired of owing anyone for anything. I'm tired of just living with what
I've done. I want -- I want to make up for some of it, Angel. You understand
that, right?"

Angel looks at him, his expression unreadable, and then he nods.

Lindsey tries to hold back his sigh of relief. Playing the redemption card
this early in was a calculated risk, but apparently it's going to pay off.

***

They don't swim.

It's the only activity available on the ship they don't try, those first few
days; that's the first of many habits Lindsey's hoping to break Angel of.
Instead, Lindsey checks out tapes and CDs from the officers; Angel is in no
mood for comedies, but he'll watch the heavy dramas and the action flicks --
that is, except one night, when Michelle Yeoh's kicking ass and taking names
hits Angel wrong, and he turns off the TV without even asking Lindsey.
They're better off with the CDs. There's a large classical selection, which
Angel likes, and they can lie there together for hours, not talking, just
letting the music flow through the room.

And they do lie together -- when Lindsey left the cabin that first time to
grab a quick lunch, he went back to his own room, left behind only a handful
of things to claim it as his territory, and basically moved his backpack and
himself into Angel's room. Angel was still too numb to protest, although
Lindsey did see Angel raise an eyebrow when Lindsey tossed his underwear into
a drawer. He hasn't remarked on the fact that Lindsey's moved in, either to
protest or to approve. But they lay on the bed together watching movies that
entire first day, and when the last one clicked at the end and started
rewinding, Lindsey didn't bother asking if it was all right for him to fall
asleep in the bed next to Angel.

Angel hasn't fought it. Though there's been no repetition of the first
night's events -- Lindsey can still feel Angel's cool kiss every time he lets
himself think about it, which is as seldom as possible, which is still fairly
often -- apparently they earned Lindsey at least some of the rights of a
lover. He is allowed to sleep in Angel's bed, by Angel's side.

Lindsey is not used to this kind of slow-burn buildup to sex. He's kept both
sexuality and romance strictly compartmentalized his entire adult life,
separating them from the rest of his existence, not to mention from each
other as far as possible. Most of his discipline and work has gone into the
firm; therefore, Lindsey's sexual history consists mostly of brief affairs,
begun and ended quickly, if never impulsively. He sees someone he wants, he
weighs the risks and probabilities -- and then he then either goes for it
immediately or sets it aside as unworkable.
He broke this rule for Darla and paid the price; at this glacial pace, he's
seriously bending the rule for Angel.. And if he thought the waiting was
killing him for Darla, that was because he didn't have a goddamn clue what it
would be like to lie next to Angel at night, to see him coming out of the
shower in the morning, wet hair, moist skin, towel only loosely wrapped and
low on the hips --

Lindsey still has enough discpline to cut these thoughts off early. Fairly
early, anyway. So he's playing a different kind of game these days; he seems
to be playing it well. All in all, he's in good position to make his move as
soon as the time is right.

Whenever that might be.

But breaking through Angel's misery is going to take a long time, and Lindsey
learns the hard way not to push it. The third night, he talks Angel into
going on a walk on deck; the ocean is still surreally calm, almost without a
wave, and the sky is brilliant with stars, the way it never can be in Los
Angeles, with its smog and city lights. It reminds Lindsey a little of
Oklahoma, though he tries not to think about that.

They walk along the deck, Angel in his enviable wool coat, Lindsey in his
anorak, not talking, just taking in the stars and the silence. Lindsey sees
Orange Parka checking them out, realizes that by lunchtime tomorrow the
entire ship will believe that The Swimmer and Guitar Guy are an item. Fine by
Lindsey; he doubts a bunch of guys who spend almost their entire lives alone
together at sea are going to be real shocked, and as for rumor among the
passengers -- well, appearances have a way of becoming less deceiving as time
goes on.

Angel keeps looking at the horizon, where black water meets black sky, and
not at Lindsey.

"Don't you have a mission to get back to?" Lindsey said.

Angel shrugs. "I'll go back."

"When exactly? Because I don't think you're checking yourself into a
monastery just for the weekend."

"When I can face it."

That strikes Lindsey as a little odd. "When you can face what?" he says,
thinking about walking into Wolfram & Hart every day. "When you can face the
fact that the gods in their heavens chose you to be their very special errand
boy? That the road you're on leads straight to the Pearly Gates? Yeah, that's
gotta be a cross to bear."

No sooner is it out of his mouth than Lindsey wants to cringe. He's supposed
to be supportive, or barring that, silent; also, it just occurred to him that
the idea of bearing a cross probably carries some very literal and ugly
resonance for vampires.

He glances over at Angel, and Angel's mouth is twisted in a grimace.
Lindsey's waiting for Angel to lash out -- but Angel's not mad at him.

"When I can face that they chose me," Angel says. His hand moves up to his
neck; Lindsey watches his fist clench around the claddagh ring on the chain.
The movement seems instinctive, like a primitive clutching a talisman or a
totem of something very dear. "When I can face that they let me have all the
agony that comes with a soul but deny me the happiness that's supposed to
make up for it. When I can face that they make me promises, that they make
bargains with me, and they only keep their word if they feel like it. That
they torture my best friend, make her see things so we can stop them, but
they pick and choose what to make her see. What they'll let me prevent."

Angel's hand tightens even more around the ring, so hard the metal's got to
be cutting into his flesh. He doesn't seem to notice it, just stares out at
the water as his face contorts in rage. "When I can face the fact that they
asked me to sacrifice the thing I wanted most in this world -- the thing she
wanted most in this world -- that they asked me to do it to save her, and I
did it, I did it to save her, and then they didn't save her -- they just let
her --"

They? She? Lindsey can't quite put this together, but he's pretty damn sure
it would be a bad time to interrupt.

"When I can deal with the fact that they don't care, and I can give it all up
and it can all mean nothing anyway, and when I can finally just let it go --"
Angel rips at the chain, breaking it, and throws the ring with all his might
into the ocean. One glint of light against the waves, and it's gone forever.

Lindsey looks at Angel, surprised; Angel is staring after the ring with
something that goes beyond horror, beyond regret. If Angel could dive into
the ocean right now, spend the next fifty years diving back into the water
over and over to find that ring and have any chance of doing so, Lindsey is
sure he'd do it. Because he has the sense that Angel threw away something
more than just a bit of jewelry, and that Angel knows it too.

But the ocean's too vast for that, and even Angel's life is too short. After
a moment, Angel turns to go back inside. Lindsey follows him, and as they lie
next to each other that night, Lindsey realizes that Angel is even further
away, in his mind, than he was before.

So, after this, he doesn't push.

***

Lindsey begins pulling Angel into some of the rhythms of daily life aboard
the ship -- getting him to go to meals, telling him about the various
passengers. Some of this is practical -- Lindsey has to eat, and he still
isn't certain that he won't come back to the cabin sometime to find his stuff
in the hallway and the door locked. Some of it is pure desperation, since
after all they must talk about something during all these hours. And some of
it is a gamble on Lindsey's part, a guess that Angel will feel obligated to
be polite to strangers, more than he does to Lindsey.

This much of the gamble pays off; Louis and Marjorie talk Angel's ear off at
virtually every meal. They're almost too friendly, in what Lindsey suspects
is an attempt to make the gay couple feel accepted. Angel fits in as best he
can, even eats a little of the cook's atrocious macaroni and cheese, which
has to be even more tasteless to him than it is to Lindsey. Angel doesn't
open up about himself -- Lindsey has never before realized just how good a
defense strategy Angel's social cluelessness actually is -- but he asks Louis
and Marjorie a lot of questions, and they're happy to answer. And Lindsey
feels ridiculously triumphant to be in the officers' mess of a ship somewhere
in the South Pacific, looking at photos of grandchildren with a vampire.
Angel's curiosity is reawakening; the rest will come soon.

But Lindsey had not fully calculated what the return of Angel's curiosity
would mean, and he scarcely considers the issue at all until the beginning of
their second week in the same cabin, the day of the storm.

The waves begin swelling in the middle of the afternoon, rocking Angel's
cabin, sending the few things they didn't have stowed away tumbling around
the cabin. Despite Angel's insistence that this is nothing, particularly
compared to a certain hurricane in the West Indies in the 1820s, Lindsey is
unconvinced and goes abovedecks to ask the officers if they are in danger. He
thinks it will help him to see the waves, gauge their size and menace; when
Lindsey finally gets abovedecks and glimpses a wall of water twenty feet
higher than the ship, he wishes he hadn't seen it.

To Lindsey's amazement and annoyance, the sailors agree with Angel. This is
nothing. Lindsey is left to take his fear and his motion sickness back down
below.

Angel gives him a look when he stumbles through the door, bracing himself for
a moment against the wall. "What did they say?"

"Shut up," Lindsey says, which tells Angel pretty much the whole story. Angel
smiles a little, which would either encourage Lindsey or piss him off if he
could concentrate on anything besides not throwing up.

Lindsey gets to the bed and clings to it desperately throughout the evening
as the ship pitches and rolls. At times he imagines that he is already
overboard, clinging to a life raft in the middle of the treacherous ocean.
Seasickness apparently holds no sway over vampires; Angel is able to read,
watch a video, even walk about the cabin with no visible discomfort and only
the slightest signs that he has to struggle for balance.

They don't make conversation until very late, when a sudden drop sends
Lindsey's backpack crashing out of the closet. A crinkled sheet of notebook
paper falls out.

Angel sees it before Lindsey does; Lindsey notices Angel's reaction first,
and only then turns back to see the letter lying on the floor, Angel's broad
hand picking it up. Lindsey feels all the muscles in his body clench as Angel
offhandedly tosses the backpack in the closet again and unfolds the paper.
Angel does not ask for permission to read it. He just does.

Lindsey's father never let his lack of writing skills stop him from sending
letters while Lindsey was in school. One a month, maybe two, depending on how
good Lindsey had been at dodging his phone calls. So Lindsey's had lovers
find notes from his father before. A couple of girls and most of the guys had
laughed at the bad spelling and grammar, until Lindsey smoothly changed the
subject, hiding his clenched fists. One guy -- Jason, from Kansas, so long
ago -- had looked up at him earnestly and told Lindsey that this letter made
Jason respect him all the more, now that he had seen where Lindsey came from
and how far he'd traveled, and knew just how brave Lindsey really was.

Lindsey could still remember feeling the bone in Jason's jaw snap beneath his
fist, the bewildered expression on Jason's face as he stumbled out of the
dorm room, clutching his Polo shirt in one hand.

Angel, however, reads the note over slowly, then says, "Your father loves you
very much."

Funny, how he hasn't thought of that -- as simply as that -- for so long. And
how much he doesn't like thinking about it. "Guess so," Lindsey says. "No
accountin' for tastes."

"Will you do what he wants?" Angel says. "Will you go see him?"

Lindsey looks up at Angel, who is standing steady in the center of the room,
despite the fact that it feels as though they're being tossed about wildly.
Angel's calm goes deeper than his body, too. Now that he's got Lindsey tense,
Angel's more relaxed. Some things don't change. "Eventually," Lindsey says.
"I'm in no rush. I don't jump on his command anymore."

He figures this comment will either shut Angel up or earn him a lecture; to
his surprise, Angel laughs. "What's the joke?" Lindsey asks.

"You are," Angel says without a trace of sarcasm. "You think you're free of
your father. Nobody's ever free from his father, Lindsey."

"Not even you," Lindsey says. He knows the bald facts about Angel's parents
-- the descriptions of their bodies as recorded by the parish priest,
transcribed from church records in a Wolfram & Hart report old enough to have
been typed on yellowing paper he pulled from a file. But those are words,
only words, and Lindsey's suddenly very curious about what it would really
mean -- to kill your father, to live two and a half centuries past that
murder, to still have it affect you. He doesn't think, for a moment, that
Angel could be talking about anything but the murder.

But then Angel says, "I told myself I'd never have to hear his voice again.
And I don't think one day has gone by that I haven't heard it."

"What was he like? Your father?"

"My father -- " Angel is quiet, considering this. He's clearly struggling for
the words; Lindsey realizes that nobody's asked Angel this before. He
realizes also that he didn't ask for any tactical purpose -- just because he
wanted to know. Bad planning. Can't let that happen again -- "My father
believed in order. Rules. Cause and effect. Justice and punishment." Then
Angel's face softens slightly, and he continues, "He was a good horseman.
Loved to ride. He had a tremendous singing voice, even though he never sang
anywhere but in church. He wanted to think of himself as a rich man, even
though he wasn't one. His favorite meal was roast beef, and he laughed at all
my mother's superstitions, and he wouldn't bother learning the names of the
barn cats. Just called them all 'cat,' regardless. My first memory of him is
of him riding up on his horse -- I don't know where he'd been -- but my
mother lifted me up to the window, and I saw him riding up, and I waved, and
he smiled and waved back at me. And I felt very grown-up and proud, that my
father waved to me from the street."

Angel is quiet for a long while after this speech, which is as much as
Lindsey's ever heard Angel say at one time. Lindsey lets him stay quiet, then
goes back to the first words. Those are often the most critical. "He believed
in order. In rules. And you weren't big on that, were you?"

"My father thought that obedience was the same as love," Angel says. "I
thought disobedience was the same as freedom. I was young." He pauses, then
adds, "And now I see -- he was too."

Angel hands the letter to Lindsey, and to Lindsey's surprise, his hand is
shaking as he takes it from Angel's. If Angel notices, he doesn't let on. But
later that night, when the storm has calmed somewhat and Angel has joined
Lindsey in the bed, Lindsey lets his hand rest against Angel's back. Angel
doesn't pull away.

***

The waiting is worse, after that.

Lindsey's a patient man, relatively speaking. Being a lawyer demands that of
you, even in a firm with methods as unconventional as Wolfram & Hart's. But
this, dammit -- this is starting to drive him crazy.

He's losing sleep now; there's no way to fully relax with Angel lying next to
him, shirt off, sometimes just in his underwear, not touching Lindsey's body
-- but not avoiding him either. If Lindsey puts an arm across one of Angel's
shoulders, or lets his leg brush against Angel's -- Angel lets him. It's not
exactly the wild erotic response Lindsey might wish for, but it's a step
forward, a sign that his game is working.

But his ability to play the game is draining away. Lindsey is losing his
perspective, losing his cool.

He lies awake at night watching Angel, feeling his cock go hard just at the
sight of Angel's naked chest. He wants to touch himself so badly on those
nights, when he's so hot for Angel it hurts. And he can't help but wonder
what Angel would do if he awoke to find Lindsey in the act, pumping into his
own fist; in these nighttime musings, Lindsey's mind is so febrile, so
overheated, that he can imagine Angel not being dismayed or amused, but
instead being turned on, replacing Lindsey's hand with his mouth --

Thus far, Lindsey hasn't tried this fantasy out. He's only jacking off in the
shower, though he's doing this often enough that Angel must have caught on by
now -- unless he actually is as obtuse as he sometimes acts, a possibility
Lindsey hasn't ruled out.

This much of it -- the sexual tension, the pain of waiting -- that's to be
expected. It might be more intense than anything Lindsey's experienced
before, but so has everything else so far in his relationship with Angel. No,
as much as it's killing him, he can handle what's happening with his body.

What's happening on the inside, though, is a hell of a lot scarier.

When he sees that Angel's hurting -- and this is still clear, still hanging
on Angel like a shroud -- Lindsey feels an answering pang in his own chest,
actual physical pain. Sometimes, when they're lying together in bed,
Lindsey's thoughts don't turn instantly to sex; when he wants to reach out
and touch Angel, he's thinking only of stroking his hair, or even just
holding him. Just holding him close, putting his arms around him, making some
of that pain fall away from him --

Lindsey's known this feeling precious few times in his life. His memories of
it are only fleeting, because every time he's recognized it, he's run like
hell. And when he recognizes it there in the dark, he can feel it closing in
on him -- like elevator walls around a claustrophobic, making his pulse race
and his sweat go cold. As much as he wants Angel, as close as he can tell he
is getting to a place where he might achieve his goal, when Lindsey
recognizes this feeling, he wants to run like hell again.

But he's on a ship in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Where's he going to
run to?

Worst of all, he has begun to talk. And not just to fill the hours, not just
to draw Angel out. Lindsey is beginning to talk because he wants Angel to
hear. To understand. Something in him has begun to wish that Angel would
understand, and this can only be because something in him has begun to think
that if Angel understood, everything would be different.

Lindsey is close to Angel's body, but he is as far as ever from Angel's soul,
and his fresh knowledge of the distance hurts worse than his yearning body on
those long nights.

And yet he stays in Angel's cabin, in Angel's bed. And he continues to talk.

**
 

"So this guy's standing there in the gym, and he's gotta see how run-down the
school is, you know? Those bleachers were more graffiti than wood, at that
point. Birds nesting at the top of the gym -- they'd swoop down, during ball
games, sometimes."

"Must've been exciting." Angel has that almost-smile on his face, an
expression that's fairly new to Lindsey. It's already just about his
favorite. He is lying on his side, listening to Lindsey with what appears to
be real interest.

"Yeah, if missing a free throw due to a bird shitting on you is exciting."
Lindsey's got all their pillows under his head, is lying on his back, the
better to hand both hands free to gesture. He likes to talk with his hands,
now that he can again. It's rainy tonight -- though thankfully not stormy --
and the pattering of the drops on their window is comforting. "But this guy
-- he's so slick. His suit costs as much as my dad would make in about three
months. And he's not acting like he's some big deal. The guys from the bank,
they thought they were some kinda kings. Lording it over you while they're
standing there in short-sleeved dress shirts and polyester pants. Not this
guy. He had money, but he seemed like he was on the level." Lindsey laughs.
"And he was there to tell us how you could overcome poverty or problems or
anything else by going to law school. And maybe, someday, if we were lucky,
we could find ourselves a law firm as fine as his."

"Wolfram & Hart," Angel says. It's not a question. "And you wanted that suit
for yourself."

Once, that comment would have been a taunt from Angel. Now he's just trying
to understand, and Lindsey wants him to be clear. "Not the suit. Not just the
suit, anyway. It was the way he felt wearing it, you know? Like he was past
ever having to worry about that kind of thing, ever again. He was so much
better than us he didn't even have to think about being better. At least,
that was how it looked to me then."

"He gave you a card," Angel postulates. "Asked you to call them if you needed
work."

"Like they leave that much up to chance," Lindsey scoffs. "They go get 'em
early at the firm. No, that guy asked the principal about any 'deserving
students.' Kids who had brains but no money. So by the end of the day, me and
about three other kids get to talk with him in the principal's office."

"What happened to the other kids?"

"Don't know," Lindsey says. "Nothing with the firm, anyway. They didn't fit
the profile. But I did. That lawyer wrote me recommendation letters for
college scholarships and law school. Got me to rush his fraternity. Checked
up on me the whole way."

"Where is he now?"

"Dead," Lindsey says. He doesn't bother explaining -- by firm standards, it's
not an especially horrifying story -- and Angel doesn't ask further. "Anyway,
I knew from the beginning there was more to it. I mean, I didn't know about
vampires or demons or anything -- but I knew there was something they wanted.
You just don't get that kind of helping hand in the world, not without there
being a price."

"Not often," Angel says quietly.

"But I didn't care. I never in my life felt as good as I did walking home
that day. The road out to my house was tarred, and it was hot enough for it
to melt, and so I had to walk in the dirt and smell that hot tar, and I
remember thinking, the day's gonna come when I never have to do this again. I
didn't think anything else mattered."

They are silent together for a while, listening to the rain against the
glass. The natural next question for Angel to ask is whether anything else
matters to Lindsey now. Lindsey would like to be able to tell him yes -- he's
pretty sure the answer is yes -- but there's still that doubt. Still the
memory of how good it felt, to look down on Los Angeles from his office, to
sit back in his leather chair, to know that he had power.

But even as they lie there, Lindsey realizes that Angel already understands
this much -- given his own history, he could not help but understand it.
Lindsey is warmed by that, touched in a way that revives the needy-scary
feeling that's been welling up inside him these past few days.

He recognizes the emotion, feels the fear, and in his panic and dismay makes
a mistake no lawyer should ever make, breaks the most basic of all courtroom
rules. He asks a question for no purpose -- a question to which he does not
know the answer.

"Why are you here?" Lindsey says. "Why are you going to Sri Lanka?"

There it is, bald and demanding, the question they've been avoiding ever
since their first moments together on the ship. Angel sits up abruptly, and
Lindsey winces. Angel's about to get out of bed, maybe leave the room, and
when he comes back he's going to want Lindsey out of there --

Except that Angel's still just sitting there, thinking. Lindsey realizes,
with a start, that Angel's thinking about how to answer. He pushes himself up
on his elbows -- not getting too close to Angel, but in a position to meet
his eyes, when he's ready.

Angel's not looking at Lindsey; he's looking inward, thinking less now about
how he will say whatever it is he wants to say than about the truth of it.
Grief is shadowing his face again -- not muted, as it was when he boarded the
ship, but raw and naked now.

Slowly, Angel says, his voice a whisper, "She's dead."

Lindsey stares at him. After a moment's hesitation, he says, "Cordelia?
Cordelia's dead?"

"What? No. God, no." Angel's horror at the idea, his relief that it is not
true, jerks him back to the here and now. "Cordelia's fine."

"Darla." He ought to have expected this. It ought to hurt more than it does.

"No -- not as far as I know -- no." Angel sighs. "Buffy. Buffy's dead."

Buffy. Lindsey never met her. He read about her in the files -- Summers,
Buffy Anne. The Slayer. Born 1981, Died 1997, revived. Now the creepy Files
and Records woman in the firm basement is adding, Died 2001. Angel's lover.
Angel's love. The one and only time Lindsey ever gave the girl any thought
was during a spirited debate as to whether kidnapping her as a form of
coercing Angel would be feasible. After some review of what she'd done to
most of her enemies, they'd decided, probably not.

But she was the one who had given Angel perfect happiness, the one Angel had
loved -- deeply enough that, two years after they'd parted company, he could
still be torn apart by her death. "I'm sorry," Lindsey says, and it is
actually true.

"She died saving the world," Angel says. "I knew -- I mean, I always knew,
even before I met her -- that was how it was going to end. That if I wasn't
staked in some fight, I'd have to lose her someday. But she was so strong,
Lindsey. So damn good at it. It was stupid to think she could just keep on
winning forever, but if you'd ever seen her -- you would've believed it too."

"You still loved her," Lindsey says.

Angel nods, but his expression is distant again. "I used to imagine dying for
her. Before our big battles, I always pictured it -- the sword coming at her,
or the spell, or the fire. Whatever it was, it was always something I could
step in front of. Something that could happen to me instead of her -- but in
the end, it was something that only she could have done. Something in her
blood. And I should've known that all along."

"That's what's eating you. That you couldn't die for her."

"No," Angel says. He pauses, then whispers, "It's that I didn't want to."

Those words tear something out of Angel; he grimaces and covers his face with
one of his hands. "Oh, God," he says.

"Hey," Lindsey says. "Hey, it's okay." He takes Angel's other hand in his --
no calculation, no desire, just pure instinct.

The touch seems to calm Angel slightly; his hand is shaking as he takes it
down from his face, but he can speak again. "I mean, I would have died for
her. I would have, if I could have," he says. "But there was a time when -- I
couldn't imagine living without her, Lindsey. I didn't have to be with her --
I just had to know that she was somewhere in the world. Living the life she
deserved. I always knew I'd lose Buffy, and I always thought that when she
died, I'd die too. Because there was nothing to live for, without her."

"It's okay." Lindsey's stroking Angel's hair now, touching another person for
no reason but comfort, something he hasn't done since he was a teenager and
Tom and Kristie were tiny enough to want to be cuddled after they'd skinned
their knees.

"And when I heard that Buffy was dead -- it hurt so much, Lindsey, it hurt so
damn much, but I didn't want to die. I didn't want to walk away from my
mission. I didn't want to leave my friends. I wasn't sorry that I hadn't died
with her."

Lindsey understands now, at last. "You lost what you thought was your whole
world. And then you found out you still had something left to lose."

"And that's the hell of it."

"So you left anyway?"

"Just for a while. Not long. Not very long, anyway." Angel emphasizes this by
shaking his head, and the protesting reveals to Lindsey that Angel had
considered going away for good -- leaving human friends he now knows he has
to lose, others he will have to hurt for as he's hurting now. But Lindsey
believes what Angel's said. "What are you doing, then?"

"Giving myself time to feel the pain. And getting far enough away from my
friends so that they don't have to deal with me losing it again."

Lindsey remembers opening his apartment door to see Darla, burned skin
hanging off her in strips, tears in her eyes. He still thinks the tears in
her eyes were real. All this silence, this journey across the world -- it's
all Angel's way of not letting that happen once more.

Slowly, Lindsey says, "Do you want to talk about Buffy?"

He's almost completely certain that Angel will say no. And Angel does stare
at him at first, as though -- after two weeks of sleeping in the same bed and
one night of abortive foreplay -- Lindsey's finally crossed the line.

But Angel relaxes, lies back in the bed. He holds out one hand, and Lindsey
surrenders one of the pillows. Angel balls it behind his head and starts to
talk. Lindsey lies next to him for hours, listening to stories about the
Master, about the Mayor, about the Sisterhood of Jhe. He hears about a slow
dance at the prom, and a Christmas when it snowed, and the real meaning of
the ring that Angel threw overboard.

As Angel talks, Lindsey holds him, strokes his hair, lets his body express
what will never be said in words. They are both letting go, holding nothing
back, for the first and possibly the only time together.

Lindsey falls asleep with his head on Angel's shoulder, listening to a tale
about a battle at an ice rink, and a girl who took off her glove to touch a
vampire's face. The last thing he does before drifting off is touch his own
fingertips to Angel's cheek.

**

He wakes up with Angel's arms around him, Angel's body curled against him.
And Lindsey's eyes open very wide as he realizes that Angel is hard, his
erection pressing against Lindsey's thigh.

"Angel?" he whispers.

"Yeah," Angel says. Lindsey moves back just far enough to see Angel's face.
He is watching Lindsey very carefully -- there's a little of the old distance
there, something almost predatory, which is exciting as hell. But Angel
doesn't make his move; what he's guarded about doesn't seem to have much to
do with the fact that their bodies are laced together beneath the sheets.

Lindsey rolls over on his side so that they're face to face; this means
breaking some of the contact between their bodies, but he has a feeling
that's only a temporary loss. His heart is thumping crazily, and he knows his
breathing has sped up. Angel's got to have registered all this, but his dark
eyes are unreadable. The rain is still pattering against their window,
staccato and inconstant.

Angel says, "When did you stop playing me?"

So Angel knew all along. Lindsey breathes out, surprised that what he's
feeling is relief. "I don't know," he confesses. "Wasn't any one day, any one
thing. I was messing with your head, and then I wasn't." Angel nods,
accepting this. Some of the scary distance in his eyes is gone as he relaxes.
Lindsey asks, "How come you didn't throw me out on my ass?"

"It was good to be near someone. If I'd been alone this whole time -- I don't
know."

"Rethinking the monastery?" Lindsey cocks one eyebrow as he says this, rests
his hand against Angel's chest.

"No," Angel says, though he covers Lindsey's hand with his own, one simple
motion that gives Lindsey a hard-on and a head rush. "Just the journey. It
wouldn't have been good, if you hadn't been here."

"I can make it better than this," Lindsey suggests.

Angel disentangles his hand from Lindsey's, brings it up to Lindsey's cheek,
a mirror of the touch Lindsey gave him before falling asleep. The touch is
gentle, desiring, everything Lindsey's ever wanted from Angel and would never
have dared to ask for. And it all seems like a miracle, like a daydream's
triumph over reality, until Angel whispers, "Is this what you want?"

It's not what he says. It's how he says it. Angel is looking at Lindsey with
physical need, with gratitude, even with liking -- but whatever this is
that's been born within Lindsey the past few days, this deeper feeling that's
got him scared and exhilarated all at once -- that's not there. Angel wants
Lindsey, and he knows Lindsey wants him, and he is willing to indulge their
mutual need. That's all it is, for him; he thinks that's all it is for
Lindsey, too.

Lindsey hugs Angel, only to give himself a moment to hide his face. Angel
returns the embrace, running one of his hands through Lindsey's hair; there's
real tenderness in his touch, and that makes it all the worse. So close,
Lindsey thinks. So close and so far.

Of course it was stupid to expect more from Angel -- especially here and now.
Angel may be getting over Buffy's death a hell of a lot faster than he'd
thought possible, but the grief's still too new. And for everything he and
Angel have talked about, there are a thousand things they haven't; there's
still too much blame, too many unacknowledged sins between them. Lindsey let
himself forget that, for a while.

As Angel's hands slide down Lindsey's back -- pulling them closer together,
asking permission -- Lindsey knows he's got two options. One, he can just go
ahead with this. Take what Angel's offering, understand that it's the closest
he's ever likely to get. Two, he can tell the truth. He can admit what he's
feeling to Angel, admit it to himself, and play this game out for real, for
the only stakes that will ever matter.

"Lindsey?" Angel's voice is soft against his ear.

"Yes," Lindsey says. "Yes. I want this. I want you."

Lindsey's always been a pragmatist.

Angel's hands, big and square, are on either side of Lindsey's face, bringing
their mouths close. The kiss is inevitable, has been for a while now, but
they take it slow, so slow, savoring that last moment of anticipation.
Lindsey opens his mouth slightly as their lips finally touch, warm against
cool.

They kiss again, then again, getting deeper and wetter with each kiss.
Lindsey feels Angel's tongue push slowly into his mouth, opens his lips wider
to take him in. He can still remember their first kisses on that night that
seems so long ago now -- at the time, he thought them arousing. Now they seem
cold and pale, and the strongest memory Lindsey has of them is of the taste
of that terrible scotch. Those kisses can't compare at all to this -- to
Angel kissing him with real hunger, real desire, because in this moment he
wants Lindsey as badly as Lindsey wants him.

Lindsey begins moving against Angel languidly, letting Angel feel just how
hard Lindsey is for him. Angel responds by pulling Lindsey even closer,
making sure that their cocks rub against each other every time Lindsey moves.
Just this sensation -- cloaked as it is by the cotton of their shorts -- is
enough to make Lindsey want to take things a lot faster.

He pushes Angel away and gets on his knees just long enough to pull his
t-shirt off; it's still over his head when he feels Angel's lips on his
breastbone, just above his heart. Lindsey gasps, throws the shirt away,
lowers his hands to Angel's shoulders. He lets his left hand -- the original
-- trace the outline of Angel's tattoo as Angel kisses his way down his
chest, brushing his tongue against a nipple, into his navel, down toward the
waistband of his boxers.

As Angel hooks his fingers onto the legs of the boxer shorts, preparing to
pull them away, Lindsey braces himself against Angel's body. He rubs his
fingers against the tattoo, fixating on it as a way of keeping himself from
coming right here and now, like a teenage boy, so excited at being seen, at
just the idea of sex, that his body's already losing control. "This tattoo,"
he rasps, as Angel peels his underwear down, as he feels his cock spring
free. "What is this?"

"A gryphon," Angel says against the curve of Lindsey's pelvic bone.

"So -- what's that mean? Why did you -- why'd you get this?"

"Does it matter?" Angel is tracing his fingertips up Lindsey's inner thighs.

"Nope. But it -- it beats thinking about baseball scores." Angel laughs
quietly; he doesn't answer Lindsey's question.

Lindsey expects Angel to start going down on him any second now, which is why
it's a surprise to be pushed back down on the bed. Then again, he thinks it's
good that Angel's got the will to slow this down. If it were up to Lindsey
alone, this would be over way the hell too quickly.

Angel starts kissing Lindsey's body -- everywhere, all over, lavishing as
much time and attention on unusual places (beneath his arms, his knees) as he
does on the erogenous zones (the earlobes, the nipples). It's the simplest
foreplay of all, all the more arousing and maddening for being so gentle and
slow. As Angel works his way south, Lindsey thrusts up with his hips, begging
without words for Angel's lips on his cock. Angel chuckles -- a low, rumbling
sound, not unlike the deep humming of the ship's engine -- but he doesn't do
what Lindsey wants. Instead, he cups one of his big hands around Lindsey's
balls, fondling them with a firm, practiced touch, and Lindsey screws his
eyes shut so Angel won't see them roll back.

Lindsey moves one hand to the back of Angel's neck, trying to guide him
again; Angel's still having none of it. Instead, he keeps creating slow
trails of sensation all along Lindsey's body with his fingertips and tongue
-- flips Lindsey over on his stomach to give the same treatment to his back
and his ass. Lindsey splays his legs out beneath Angel, feels Angel's thighs
between his, knows that he will have to wait for this too. But it's okay. Let
Angel set the pace. Let Angel do what he wants. He's gonna trust Angel
tonight, the way he hasn't trusted anyone or anything in years.

Angel turns Lindsey over again and they kiss, slow, devouring kisses now.
Angel's body is still cool, of course, and when Lindsey touches him, there's
no pulse to race in response. But Angel's breathing has become faster -- it
may only be a force of habit, but it mirrors his growing need for Lindsey the
same way it would in a living man. Lindsey savors the sound of Angel gasping
as Lindsey reaches in his boxers, takes Angel's cock in his hand, ever so
gently rolls the foreskin back, rubs his thumb across the tip. Angel copies
the move, clasping Lindsey in his hand again; for a few minutes they lie
together just like this, mouths against each other, cocks in each other's
hands, thrusting and caressing in the same deliberate tempo, perfect mirror
images of one another.

Lindsey's so lost in the moment that he's almost startled when Angel pulls
away. But it's just for a moment -- just long enough for him to tug off his
own boxers and push Lindsey back down onto the bed.

And Lindsey gasps as Angel takes his cock into his mouth.

His mouth is cold -- Lindsey had anticipated that -- but he hadn't realized
how damn good it would feel. The contrast of his own flushed, heated skin and
Angel's pool-water-cool mouth is amazing; it sets every nerve ending on fire,
makes Lindsey push himself in even farther, trying to find the depths of that
coolness.

Angel can take him deep, too. He begins sucking, slowly, gently, taking his
time. As Lindsey writhes beneath him, Angel wraps his tongue around Lindsey's
cock, then moves his head ever so slightly, letting the motion do the work
for him.

Lindsey's head is thrown back, and he starts thrusting -- thrusting deep, the
way he would if he were fucking Angel, not just his mouth. Most people can't
take this, but Angel seems to like it. He groans, a deep, satisfied sound,
and the vibration ripples through Lindsey's cock.

"Oh, Jesus," Lindsey says through clenched teeth. "I'm gonna --"

Angel hears him, starts sucking harder, creates a whirlpool of sensation and
pleasure right there, right at the head, and Lindsey feels his muscles tense
and his mind blank and now, oh God, oh damn, right now --

Lindsey shouts out as he comes, feels his own wet heat in Angel's mouth. He
keeps thrusting as he rides it out, feels wave after wave of it. Angel keeps
sucking, swallowing Lindsey down, drinking from his body.

Finally, Lindsey goes limp; he feels himself sinking back further into the
mattress, and in his post-orgasmic haze it feels to him as though he might
disappear into it, just be folded up in fabric and foam and never come out.
Angel lightly kisses Lindsey's softening cock one last time, then pulls
himself up next to Lindsey on the bed. Lindsey realizes he must have a stupid
smile on his face, because Angel is laughing quietly as he kisses his
forehead. "Good?"

"Like you don't know that," Lindsey drawls. "False modesty is so unbecoming."

"Mmm." Angel kisses his throat, right where he'd bite. Lindsey slides one
lazy arm around Angel's back; the chill of Angel's body is even more
noticeable now that Lindsey's fever-hot, covered in a sheen of sweat. But the
contrast works.

As he pulls Angel close again, he feels Angel's cock, so hard it feels like
steel pressed into his stomach. Lindsey kisses Angel, slow and wet, then
murmurs into his mouth, "When are you gonna fuck me?"

"Soon," Angel promises, his voice rougher than it was just a moment ago.

"Now," Lindsey insists, taking Angel into his hand and gripping him with
force. Angel gasps as Lindsey whispers, "Do it now."

Angel pushes Lindsey onto his stomach, rolls on top of him; his hands are
strong against Lindsey's back, pressing him down. Angel slides one knee
between Lindsey's thighs, and Lindsey's glad to help, spreading his legs out
as far as he can. He'd rather be on his hands and knees -- he could take
Angel harder then -- but he'll do this however Angel wants to do it, he'll do
whatever Angel wants, just so long as Angel takes him and does it soon.

Hoarsely, Angel says, "What can we -- where --"

"Top drawer," Lindsey gasps. Thank God for planning ahead; Angel finds the
vaseline, right where Lindsey planted it, in about two seconds, and it's only
another second before Lindsey feels Angel's fingers sliding into him, cool
and slick.

Angel works him with skill and speed. Lindsey tries to relax into the
movement, to relish the sensation of Angel's fingers moving inside him,
stroking that one place inside that's making him erect again, stiff against
the sheets. He feels himself opening up, getting ready for Angel.

Angel's being careful with him, but Lindsey's tired of careful, and he pushes
back against Angel's hand, taking those fingers in deeper. "Now," he repeats.
"Do it, just do it."

"Do what?" Angel's moving to take him even as he asks; Lindsey can feel the
head of Angel's cock brushing against his ass. "Let me hear you say it."

"Goddammit, Angel, fuck me --"

And then Angel pushes inside him. Lindsey cries out as Angel's cock splits
him apart; he's big, he's so damn big, and he's already so deep inside
Lindsey, and he feels like he's being torn apart. But the pleasure's so much
better than the pain -- the feeling of Angel, thick and long and hard, moving
into him.

Angel's hands are clenched around Lindsey's arms, and his fingers are digging
into the skin as he begins to thrust. He's taking his time with Lindsey,
taking it slow, building a rhythm that matches Lindsey's own breathing.
Lindsey tries to get used to the sensation; it's been a long time since he
let a man take him like this. He'd forgotten how good it feels, having
someone inside you. The way the movement starts to make you go hot and dizzy,
the way that place far inside you starts to blaze, the way you find yourself
cursing into the pillow, saying words that don't make a damn bit of sense,
except that they're dirty, and they're secret, and so they must have
something to do with the fact that you're getting fucked.

But this is better than any memory, because this is Angel inside him. Lindsey
pushes back against Angel, gets him in even deeper, makes him pick up the
pace. Angel responds, starts going faster, thrusting harder. Lindsey groans
-- he's so open for Angel now, and he's getting pounded down against the
mattress, and his cock is hard again, rubbing against the sheets, and
goddammit he's going to come again if Angel will just keep going keep going
keep going --

The world goes black and Lindsey's heart skips and his body goes tight as he
comes again, yelling it out, not giving a damn if it echoes over the whole
ship. Angel thrusts into him again, again, once more, and then his body
tenses, locks up, one long band of muscle and sinew as Angel's orgasm takes
him..

Then Angel collapses atop Lindsey's back. He is heavy, so solid Lindsey
thinks he can't breathe, but he can't imagine asking Angel to move. Their
bodies are still locked together, and Angel's face is against the back of his
neck, and he's twining his fingers with Lindsey's as they lie there together.
The only sounds are the rain and Lindsey's ragged breaths.

Lindsey doesn't know whether to laugh or to cry. He's just lived his fantasy,
just made love to Angel. But now that he's gotten what he wanted, he wants so
much more. He's destined to spend his whole life as that poor kid in cutoffs,
pressing his nose to the window, never able to go inside and buy.

But as Angel lifts Lindsey's right hand to his lips -- as he kisses the faint
white line where the new hand was attached, where the old one was severed,
the only apology he's ever gonna get -- Lindsey thinks that he might not have
everything he wants, but what he has is still pretty damn good.

**

The next day, the ship makes its first stop -- Kyoto, Japan. Lindsey is eager
both to do some of the exploring he's dreamed about and to avoid acting
clingy, so he bids a sleepy Angel farewell very early in the morning before
going out to spend a day ashore.

Surprisingly, though, he doesn't get as much of a thrill from the experience
as he would've thought. Sure, everyone's Asian, but there's plenty of areas
of L.A. where that's true. Signs are in Japanese, but there's little need for
him to employ the Japanese-English phrasebook he'd brought along. Everyone
speaks English, at least enough to help Lindsey out. He has a feeling he
could stay here for weeks without breaking the dictionary's binding.

What's more, he realizes now that he didn't want a change of surroundings. He
wanted to have something else to think about, some way of escaping the worn
grooves in his mind that his thoughts have fallen into this past year. But it
doesn't work. Lindsey can walk past a Shinto temple and still feel the weight
of Darla's dead body across his lap as they drove away from her shabby little
hotel room. He can eat sashimi and still hear Holland's voice, superior and
knowing, echoing inside. He can watch the ships in the bay, great freighters
and little boats with square sails, and still smell the hot tar on the road
to his father's house.

So he is tired and discouraged when he comes back to the cabin at nightfall,
and it therefore hits him all the harder to see that Angel is packing up his
bag. "What are you doing?" he says.

"This is my stop, Lindsey," Angel says. "This is where I leave the ship. We
talked about this that first night."

They did, didn't they? He'd let himself forget -- stupid. Worse than stupid.
Like letting a statute of limitations pass. "Slipped my mind," he says, as
casual as he can manage, which isn't much. "Guess I oughta get my stuff back
to my own place."

"Probably be a good idea." Angel smiles at him, a crooked, awkward smile that
doesn't help Lindsey much as he stuffs his belongings back into the still-new
backpack. They work together in silence, but the tension's thick in the air.
Lindsey gets done first -- he's not packing with care, just cramming it all
in there -- and as he rises, Angel says, "Lindsey --"

"I'm not into the long goodbyes thing," Lindsey says. In truth, he'd like to
end it better than this; he pauses, considers. "I'm going down to my own
cabin, okay? Come down there when you're done."

This buys Lindsey a few moments to himself, a few moments to gather himself
together. He knew it wasn't going to last. He's gladder than ever that he
didn't tell the truth last night, that he took what he could get; turns out
it was his last chance.

But he's mad at Angel all the same. Angel doesn't love him, wouldn't ever
love him, and he used Lindsey for his own comfort, and he didn't ask if
Lindsey wanted more.

Then again, Lindsey knew all this going in. He set out to use Angel a hell of
a lot more surely than Angel's used him. He could have avoided all this if
he'd just told the truth last night; he's not sure what else Angel would've
done, but he's pretty sure he wouldn't have continued their lovemaking.
Lindsey wanted to avoid the consequences of that honesty, so now he has to
accept the consequences of the lie. That's something he's getting better at:
accepting consequences.

Lindsey has time to calm down, time to unpack, even time to spend a few
quality minutes looking in the Japanese-English phrasebook before there's a
knock on the door. "Come in," he says. His voice is steady, and he's proud of
that.

Angel enters hesitantly, but when Lindsey smiles at him, he relaxes. "We
should've talked about this before," Angel says.

"It's okay," Lindsey says. "We had other stuff to talk about."

"I'm glad you were here," Angel says.

"So am I. That you were here, I mean."

"If you ever need anything -- if Wolfram & Hart give you trouble --"

"They won't." Lindsey gets up from the desk. "I wasn't kidding about not
doing the long goodbyes thing."

He walks up to Angel and embraces him for what he knows will be the last
time. Angel's arms are strong and solid around him as they hug one another,
and Lindsey tries to imagine what it might have been like, if only they
hadn't been the people they are. But he can't envision any other paths that
would have led the two of them together, and so this is what he has to be
grateful for.

Lindsey pats Angel on the back, a swift, brotherly pat, signaling the end of
the hug. He wonders if Angel will stoop to kiss him goodbye; he doesn't.
Angel just smiles, shoulders his bag, and goes out the door.

Fluttering on his shoulder is a yellow post-it note which reads, in the best
Japanese script Lindsey could muster, "I disrespect the authority of the
police." Not bad for ten minutes with a Japanese-English phrasebook, all
things considered. And it helps Lindsey smile a little as Angel shuts the
door behind him, walking out of his life forever.

**

Lindsey puts off unpacking that evening; he still doesn't want to feel
settled in this cabin, though now it is for very different reasons. If only
he'd dragged Angel down here just once -- if he could remember talking to
Angel in this room, or making love to Angel in this bed -- well, it would
feel more like home than just about any other place Lindsey's known in far
too long.

He is alone at dinner, and when Louis and Marjorie ask where Angel is,
Lindsey has to tell the truth; after all, they're eventually gonna catch on
to the fact that one of the ship's 12 passengers is missing. Marjorie's face
crinkles up in sympathy. "Oh, I hate to see him go," she says. "It did seem
like the two of you had hit it off."

"He's got his road," Lindsey says. "I've got mine." He says it to cut the
topic short, which it does, but as he thinks about it, it's as good a way of
explaining matters as any.

Louis and Marjorie make harmless chit-chat as they all finish up, and
Marjorie makes Lindsey promise to join them tomorrow for a walking tour.
Lindsey agrees, mostly to stop them worrying about him. If he's bright and
chipper tomorrow, they'll calm down, write off the Affair of Guitar Guy and
The Swimmer as a shipboard fling and let it go.

But, down deep, he knows he agreed partly because of the reason she offered:
He needs distraction from what's happened, a way of blocking out what's
happened. Even wandering around tourist traps with retirees and helping them
figure out their new digital cameras is better than the likely alternative --
lying curled up on his bunk, wishing like hell that Angel was still there.
Or, worse yet, imagining him running in from abovedecks, wrapped in a blanket
to shield himself from the sun, come back to find Lindsey and tell him --

Lindsey shakes his head, pushes it out of his mind. As he gets back to his
cabin, he goes straight to his backpack and starts settling in for real. It's
something to do.

Shoes go in the cabinet, lest they go flying around and kicking Lindsey in
the head during a storm. His books go in the bedstand drawer. He starts to
put his underwear in the drawer that corresponds to the one he used in
Angel's cabin, then thinks better of it and chooses another. His guitar
stayed here all along -- he might've gone soft with Angel there, but he was
never so goddamned sappy that he considered singing for the guy. However,
Lindsey thinks he might be playing a few country tunes this evening.

Wasn't he trying to get away from painful memories? And now he's created all
new ones --

He came on this trip to get away from it all. And instead he's brought it all
rushing back. Your past doesn't catch up with you, Lindsey thinks. It is you.
And you keep on creating more past every second you're alive.

Slowly, deliberately, he reaches into the backpack's front pocket and pulls
out the crinkled sheet of paper. Lindsey sits down on his bed and rereads his
father's letter; for the first time, he doesn't feel guilt or shame. He hears
the words in his mind, in his own voice: Your father loves you very much.

No matter what Lindsey becomes in the future, he will remain the man who
walked away from his family, who joined Wolfram & Hart with his eyes wide
open, who killed a woman he wanted to hurt a man who didn't want him.
Lindsey's known this all along -- but now, at last, he can face it. Because
he will also always be the man who comforted his little brothers and sisters
when they were hurt, who left Wolfram & Hart of his own free will. The man
who made love to Angel last night.

It will be hot in Oklahoma. The tar will be melting, making the path to his
house sticky and thick. Lindsey isn't looking forward to walking that road,
but he knows he's ready to face everything he'll find at the end.



THE END


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