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All and Nothing
Many thanks to Glossing for beta reading this fic for me.
It was unthinkable to ask the others if they felt as he did about the
Hyperion. It would imply that he, Wesley, was frightened by empty rooms and
that was ridiculous. He couldn’t help noticing that Angel was the only one
who seemed at home here though, moving confidently down long corridors,
flinging open doors, poking into dark corners. The others hovered in the
reception area, within sight of the exit to the outside world, reassured by
an escape route. Cordelia’s dusting got so far and no further and most of
the hotel continued to slumber under a grey blanket.
Wesley was used to being afraid but that didn’t make the sensation any
easier to endure. He dealt with it the way he always had; by assigning it a
place in the list. Was it scarier than the monster under the bed had been?
Yes. Well, then, how about spiders? Definitely. Fine. Let’s stop shilly
shallying. Was it scarier than the look on his father’s face when he found
him sobbing pitifully because he’d wet the bed, the night before he was due
to leave for boarding school? No. Nothing ever was. He’d dealt with
that, he could deal with this. Problem solved.
So Wesley was exploring the hotel, mapping it out in his head, even making
notes in his angular, precise writing if he came across something that
looked interesting in the detritus of decades. Cordelia had left on a lunch
hour that he suspected would stretch to triple that, as she’d just got
paid. Gunn was with his friends, helping to train some new recruits, and
Angel was presumably asleep. Walk–in clients were scarcer than Cordelia’s
auditions so he didn’t feel guilty at leaving the front desk empty.
He’d gone deeper into the basement area than he ever had before – this
wasn’t his first exploration by any means – when the faint noises he’d been
hearing registered in his mind as worthy of investigation rather than a
reason to flee. Biting his lip hard, he retraced his footsteps, forcing
himself to track the sounds to their source, not listening to the voice
telling him to go and get a weapon or wake Angel. Not listening to the
coward within him.
He came eventually to a closed door and paused. The noises were a mixture
of savage, primal cries and hoarse, ragged moans. He felt a blush steal up
his face as he listened. Passion or pain or both? Was he was
eavesdropping on some liaison? Some squatters or street people who’d found
a way into what they might have assumed was an abandoned building? He made
himself listen. Only one voice and it sounded tormented. Cautiously turning
the handle, he pushed open the door and stood framed in the doorway,
peering into the dim, windowless room, lit inadequately by a single light
bulb.
He wondered why the sight of Angel didn’t surprise him and then realised
that he’d recognised that voice from the beginning. Every moan had struck a
chord within him, echoing the noises he had made as Faith worked on him for
long hours and his only lifeline had been his determination never to scream
for mercy. He knew how it felt to have those sounds crawling inside you,
scrabbling to get out, forced back by nothing more than a promise made to
oneself. He’d kept them inside until he was alone and then cried himself
empty. Angel wasn’t going to have that luxury if he knew he had been
seen...
Wesley stepped back but it was too late to retreat even before the small
scrape of his shoe on the hard floor. Angel’s voice came to him from the
shadows a flat and emotionless whisper. “I know you’re there, Wesley. I
heard you coming.”
Wesley bit back the obvious, trite words – ‘Are you all right?’ or ‘Can I
help?’ - and instead said carefully, “Do you want me to go?”
The silence seemed answer enough and he turned, feeling his shoulders sag
slightly under the weight of another rejection, another mishandled
situation, another friend he’d let down in some mysterious, unintended way.
Angel’s voice reached him like a wavering beam of light. “Wes? No, I didn’t
mean – stay. Please.”
Wesley turned, a smile curving his lips as he was granted a second chance.
It vanished as he hurried over to where Angel lay propped up against a
filthy wall. Angel was hurt, his lips tight with pain, blood staining his
white shirt. Wesley knelt down beside him, his hand hovering as he tried to
decide if he should treat Angel here or get him to somewhere cleaner. There
was a sofa a few yards away but the cushions were torn, the stuffing poking
out of the holes. Angel shifted position slightly and his mouth opened in a
soundless gasp of pain.
“Let me see,” Wesley ordered, reaching out to unbutton the shirt.
Angel’s large hand clamped around his wrist and he winced. The pressure
eased but Angel didn’t let go. “Leave it, Wes. That’s not why I wanted
you.”
“You need that looking at, Angel. I know you’ll heal but still –”
Angel slowly unbuttoned his shirt, pulling it aside. Wesley steeled himself
to see the pale skin torn and bleeding but there was no wound, not even a
faint redness as vampire flesh regenerated. “I don’t understand. Is it not
your blood then?” Wesley looked around the room. There were no other exits
visible but he supposed Angel could have been fighting a demon whose body
decomposed on death to nothingness.
“My blood. Yes, it’s mine. Every drop.”
Wesley wanted to touch the smooth skin, feel for himself that it was whole,
but he hesitated. If it had been anyone else but Angel, he would have laid
his hand against it, fingers spread, palm flat, done it without thinking,
without caring for anything but using it as a guide to the well being of
his patient. He knew that Angel was unlikely to be running a fever but that
wasn’t what kept his hand away.
“Angel. Please explain to me why you are covered in blood yet show no signs
of a wound.” Pedantic, prissy words while he screamed, ‘Tell me!’ inside
his head.
Angel looked past Wesley, his gaze oddly intent. Wesley turned and saw what
he should have seen from the moment he entered, saw the reason for the
subliminal screeching of nails down the blackboard of his mind. A pentacle.
Drawn in blood, glowing faintly, fading fast. As he watched, the glimmer of
crimson fire winked out and the darkness of the room seemed to lift rather
than diminish as it passed.
“What did you do?” he whispered.
“Called a demon to play with, Wes. Doesn’t everyone do that now and then?”
Wesley rounded on him, feeling the bitterness shape his words. “Only those
who don’t care for anything or any one. Is that you? Is it really?”
“Beats brooding. I’m so good at that; it’s just no challenge any more.”
Wesley was lost but he carried on, one step at a time, clinging to the
belief that the right questions could lead the way out of the maze in which
he found himself. “What did you conjure?”
Angel smiled. “Not a ‘what’, a ‘who’. Me. I conjured me.”
Wesley felt his head ache slightly as he met Angel’s dark eyes, trying not
to let the horror he felt show in his own. “Tell me you didn’t bring a
Tzingari here. Tell me!”
“You want me to lie, Wes? Not very friendly to do that but I will if you
like.”
Wesley wanted to edge away from the madman in front of him and in equal,
confusing measure, wanted to hug the desolate figure until Angel let go of
the strained, brittle calm that was hiding a measure of pain he could only
guess at. He settled for remaining still and allowing himself the lightest
of touches on Angel’s hand. “Don’t ever lie. Angel, you know I –we – all
want to help you. If you shut us out like this we’re in the dark –”
“And if I let you in, Wes? Where do you think you’d be then? It’s not some
happy party in my head you know.”
“Yes, I’m aware of that,” Wesley began.
“You know nothing.” Angel pushed himself up, staggering slightly. Wesley
looked up at him and was astonished when Angel stretched down his hand to
help him up. He took it, letting Angel tug him to his feet, wanting to
prolong the contact and covering that by pulling his hand away abruptly.
“I know that demon is considered dangerous, if that isn’t redundant. I
still don’t know why you risked yourself like that, what your intention
was. Do you want to tell me?”
Angel swayed forward, his face very close to Wesley’s. “No. Want to make
me?”
Wesley sighed. “Stage three.”
“What?”
Wesley adopted the tone of voice his least favourite lecturer had used; a
dry, sarcastic, delivery that grated on the ear. “One. You summon a demon
who takes the shape of whoever you ask it to. In this case, in a sublime
display of narcissism, yourself. Two. You fight this demon – or fuck it,
I’m not entirely sure how to interpret the sounds I heard –”
“Oh, that’s funny, Wes. Do you think the curse still counts if it’s me?
Have to try that next time.”
Wesley lifted an eyebrow. “’Next time’? I can see we do have a lot to
discuss. As I was saying. Step three; the demon is dismissed and as its
final gift to the donor of the blood that I presume you baited the pentacle
with, it leaves behind a temporary feeling of euphoria, not unlike being
drunk. The physical effects all vanish as well, which explains your lack of
injury. Did I miss anything?”
Angel’s smile slipped for a moment and then returned. He shook his head.
“Text book perfect, Wes. Not that I’m surprised by that. Always said you
had ink in your veins, not blood.”
Wesley felt the hurt eat away at every barrier he’d put up, every wall he’d
hidden behind. “You stupid, selfish bastard!”
The punch was aimed directly at the face that he’d dreamed about for so
long it was as familiar as his own. Angel let it land and shuddered
slightly, his eyes clearing as the lingering effects of the summoning
dissipated. “Wes, I’m sorry –”
Wesley wasn’t ready to hear that. His next punch was aimed at the stone
wall and he didn’t hold back. Still clenched, he thrust his hand at Angel.
“Well? Is that blood or ink? Do you want to drink it or write with it?”
Straightening his fingers, he brushed them against Angel’s lips, a
challenging gleam in his eyes. Angel brought his hands up to capture
Wesley’s, resting his lips against the wounded flesh for a moment, refusing
to taste the blood, and then firmly pushed it away without releasing it.
“You shouldn’t – Wes, why did you do that?”
“I’ll tell you if you tell me why you brought that thing here.” Wesley’s
voice was inflexible, unyielding.
Angel sighed, still not letting go of a hand which was beginning to throb
painfully. Wesley could feel his fingers swelling and the sting of blood
seeping out in a sticky ooze. Angel’s hands were cool against his damaged
skin and he concentrated on that, ignoring the discomfort. Angel walked
over to the sofa, taking Wes with him, and they sat on the musty cushions,
side by side. Wes tentatively pulled at his hand but Angel’s grip tightened
and he let it relax, realising that the contact was helping Angel in some
way.
“Cordelia’s always on at me to stop brooding, as if it’s a habit I could
break, like biting my nails. She knows that I’m still affected by what I
did in the past but she’s no idea of what that was, not even after
Sunnydale. You know, though, don’t you?”
His eyes demanded the truth and Wesley nodded reluctantly. “I’ve read all
the Watcher’s Diaries that deal with you. I know. But that’s not –”
“Yes, it is, Wes! You’re going to say it was Angelus, that I shouldn’t
blame myself, right? Well, I do. That’s why I made the demon take my form.
I wanted to hurt myself, wanted to punish him – me – for what I did. It’s
so satisfying to see me in pain, see me begging for mercy as my victims
did. That can’t be wrong.”
Wesley stared, open mouthed. “Angel, that’s – that’s the last thing you
should be doing! Don’t you see? You’re still hurting someone who doesn’t
deserve it. And begging? You’d never do that! The person begging is the
Tzingari demon, not you. Angel, you have to promise me this will end here.
The risks are too great and it’s hurting you in so many ways.”
Angel shook his head stubbornly. “I have to do something. I can’t bear it
sometimes. You’d think it would get better but it doesn’t.”
Wesley said softly, “It’s coming back here, isn’t it? Facing what you did
to the residents? It stopped being something done half a century ago when
you met the woman again and it’s so fresh in your mind that the guilt is
burning you up.”
Angel looked at Wes, with a mixture of relief and gratitude. “You can see
that? Then you should understand why –”
“No!” Wes interrupted. “Beating up a demon with your face stuck on it,
risking an injury that could kill you before the summoning fades – that
does nothing to help those people. Nothing ever can. They’re dead, Angel.
You just have to accept that. Besides, from what you told us, you weren’t
even to blame. The paranoia demon was working on them and the rest followed
on from that.” He paused, searching for the words to bring Angel back.
“You wanted to know why I reverted to adolescence and hit that wall then
tried to get you to taste my blood?”
Angel looked down at Wesley’s hand, stroking his thumb over the fretted
skin. It hurt but Wesley wouldn’t have told him so for anything in the
world. “Yes.”
“Because - God, this is difficult to say – because knowing that even a drop
of my blood was inside you would have been so...” Wesley realised that his
gaze was fixed on a button of Angel’s shirt. He sighed out an impatient
breath, vexed at his own timidity, and looked Angel full in the eyes. “Just
thinking about it, your lips, your tongue, on me got me hard. I can’t
imagine how I would have felt if you’d actually done it. I’m at the point
where I can’t look at you without wanting you. Not love, no. I’m not sure
I’m any more capable of that than you are. I just want you. It’s both
incredibly simple and amazingly complicated. It’s giving my life colour,
meaning, and ruining it at the same time. It’s -”
“Wes. Shut up.”
Wesley paused, steeling himself for scorn, pity or fumbling embarrassment.
Angel’s face was sombre, his eyes speculative. As Wesley waited, the words
he’d wanted to say stuck in his throat, choking him until he could barely
breathe, Angel slid off the sofa, knelt beside Wesley and lowered his head.
Wesley felt the rasp of his tongue across his knuckles, felt it in a dozen
places on his body as an arousal so intense it robbed him of thought held
him in place. Wordless, he watched the dark head move slowly from side to
side, longing to touch it, not daring to risk ending this sudden intimacy.
Angel finished cleaning the blood away and raised his head. Wesley saw that
he was still in human face and wondered vaguely if that took an effort of
will to maintain.
It would have been enough. Wesley’s imagination had stopped short at
picturing Angel returning his feelings; he wasn’t even sure what he would
have done if he had. He was about to find out. Angel stood and brought
Wesley’s hand to lie against his erection, the evidence of his desire. His
fingers curled possessively around the hard curve, feeling it fit against
his palm, feeling it stir as he squeezed it experimentally.
He glanced up. “You don’t have to –”
Angel smiled and unzipped his trousers, letting them slide to the floor,
kicking them away, watching Wesley’s face the whole time. His hand wrapped
around his cock and began to work it, sliding it casually through the loose
ring of his fingers. “Do you know many tens of thousands of times I’ve done
this, Wes? Still feels good though. And do you know how many months it’s
been since the only person I’ve been thinking of as I came was you? No, I
don’t have to do anything with you, to you. It’ll fuck up our friendship;
it’ll wreck our working relationship. You know what? I don’t care.”
Wesley leaned forward just enough and captured the rounded head between his
lips and then pushed Angel’s hand away, replacing it with his own as he
slipped from the sofa to his knees. It didn’t seem right to do this
sitting; he wanted to kneel, wanted the symbolism of the position for his
own reasons and for Angel’s sake. He took in as much of the hard flesh as
he could, just because he could, because he’d wanted it and it was there,
in him, stretching his lips and filling his mouth. Then he pulled back and
began to lick at it, concentrating on the areas that gave him pleasure,
rewarded by a sigh that warmed him. Angel could have moaned, could have
whimpered and Wesley would have been pleased, but those soft, whispered
sighs of unneeded air, unnecessary breaths taken in and exhaled by someone
caught up in the sensations he was evoking...those sighs were the most
erotic sound he’d ever heard.
Wesley grew bolder as his lips locked tightly around Angel’s cock and he
began to suck harder, let his free hand cup the soft heaviness of Angel’s
balls, damp now and growing tighter, let his fingers slide around to caress
Angel’s backside, muscled and smooth, let them delve between Angel’s legs,
feeling him move his feet apart to allow it, probing and pushing until his
finger slid in just enough and he felt himself coming, his trapped,
tortured cock spilling out tribute in warm, wet spurts, even as his mouth
swallowed Angel’s own libation.
He swallowed gratefully and then pulled away, wrapping his arms around
Angel’s thighs, resting his head against the flat stomach for a moment,
just a moment. Angel pulled him to his feet, held him close and kissed him,
a long, leisurely kiss, lazily demanding, and full of affection. It ended
and Wesley smiled at him with genuine happiness.
“Come to my room, Wes,” Angel said. “Please?”
***
Wesley woke from a drowsy sleep, curled up against Angel’s broad back. The
shadows were gathering but it was still daylight and Angel’s sleep was so
deep that he did not stir when Wesley kissed the triangle of his shoulder
blade, admiring the subtle curves anatomy added to rigid geometrical
shapes. The intricate design tattooed on the flesh fascinated him,
night-dark ink on moon-pale skin. He’d never had the chance to look at it
closely before but even as he leaned forward his brain began to receive an
influx of messages from his own body. Sore. Stretched. Sticky. He
reluctantly decided that a shower might be in order and rolled away, trying
to slide out of bed without waking Angel.
He was back in the room he used on the nights that it was too late to
bother going home, when he began to shake. An inevitable certainty clawed
at his mind, shredding the fragile happiness into confetti, leaving his
lies bare and exposed.
He loved Angel. He’d hoped the love was returned. Angel hadn’t mentioned
the curse, hadn’t seen it as a barrier. There was only one conclusion and
Wesley reached it without difficulty. He sat on the edge of the bed,
unmoving, the castle in the air he’d constructed from a dozen glances, a
score of sentences, reduced to rubble, and discovered that he’d always
known this was inevitable. Was Angel to be lost to darkness so that he,
Wesley, could know himself loved for one shining moment of brightness?
Hardly. Selfish, stupid, sentimental...he chanted the epithets under his
breath, losing himself in the rhythm of the words until he heard them echo
loudly in the room as his voice rose, and stopped, shocked by his loss of
control.
A measure of calm returned and he moved stiffly towards the bathroom to
prepare himself. There really wasn’t any choice to be made after all. No
sense in wasting time in here.
He showered, his face lifted to the stream of hot water, his face relaxed
as the tears spilled out of his eyes. Even he couldn’t tell when they
stopped. He cleaned himself meticulously and when he was ready he crawled
back into bed beside Angel.
When he woke, he might want more of what Wesley could give him. Safe sex.
It wasn’t enough, but was it better than nothing? No. Was it better than
loneliness? No. Was Wesley going to ever tell him that? No.
Problem solved.
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