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Amor Fati
AUTHOR:
starlet2367
EMAIL:
starlet2367@comcast.net
RATED:
PG
CATEGORY:
Post-ep for Amends (BtVS S3)
CONTENT:
B/A (don’t freak!), the first stirrings of C/A friendship
SUMMARY:
Two outsiders, drawn together by fate.
DISCLAIMER:
The characters in the Angelverse were created by Joss Whedon & David
Greenwalt. No infringement is intended, no profit is made.
SPOILERS:
Through BtVS S3.
DISTRIBUTION:
Stranger Things, the ST archive, my site, my LJ; anyone else please ask.
NOTES:
A Secret Santa for samluvsharrison (we've got Secret Story karma, babe!),
who requested A/C, PG, with the song, "I saw mommy kissing Santa
Claus." This ended up being more an Angel character study than an
actual A/C fic. I hope that's okay! Thanks to psychofilly and juliefortune
for the beta, and to Gabs for the kickass feedback. You guys are getting
peppermint-dipped Angels in your stockings for Christmas.
***
"Cruelty is the only thing you ever had a true
talent for.” The words echo as he stares at the crackling fire. He fingers
the stake absently, the wood leaving splinters in his hand. The hearth is
hard beneath him, unforgiving.
As she should have been.
But Buffy was so full of light, of life. She couldn’t do
anything *but* forgive him.
He pitches the stake on the fire, watches the
blue-hearted flames lap it, turn the light blond wood into black. Is that
what will happen to her if he stays?
The fire screen scrapes against the stone as he puts it
back in place, echoing through the hollow room. He yearns for the silence,
not just here, but of a forgiven death. Instead he hears the screams of his
victims, sees their faces pouring through him.
Death is not silent. And it's not his to take. Yesterday
proved that. He'd been brought back for a reason. He stares at the stake,
slowly disappearing in the fire. To hurt Buffy? Would God give him back his
life simply so he could take others'?
He stands, brushes off his hands, and pads across the
cold, stone floor to the garden door. Memories dance like warriors and he
rubs his chest, feels again the metal edge of her sword, slicing him in
half. How the world had flared, rippled. How he'd died.
He pushes the door open and steps into the chilly air.
After the warm snap, the fated snow, the weather has returned to normal.
Storm clouds hang low, making a pressure behind his eyes and he brushes his
hand over his face, looking for relief.
In winter, the garden is lush. Camellias, eucalyptus,
their leaves full and the smells pungent. He wants to bury himself in the
earth. To go back to the woods where he lived for so long and find the
darkness he craves.
Beneath his fingers the petals of the camellia feel like
Buffy’s skin. Dewy, softer than snow, warmed by moonlight. Dreams of her
mouth and cheek, the hollow behind her ear. The places he can lose himself
in, like the dirt. Only her places aren’t dark and silent; they boil him alive,
strip his skin, make him ache and mourn the man he’s become.
“Great. Just what I need.”
He starts at the woman’s voice, tilts his head,
listening, collecting her in the shell of his ear.
There’s a dull thud, and his mind works to solve the
mystery, to put disembodied sound with the thing that made it. It comes
again, and this time, the visual with it. She’s kicking a tire.
“Dammit!”
He steps to the gate and peers out, but he can’t see
through the trees. He can, however, hear the tinny punch of numbers on a
cell phone, the dry, mechanical ring. His ears prickle as he concentrates.
“What do you mean, my account is inactive? My father
paid for a full year of service!”
Angel leans toward the garden edge, trying to place the
vaguely familiar tone of her voice.
“Well, send someone anyway! Isn’t this the giving time
of year? You can’t possibly expect— As if! Oh, bite me.”
Her exasperation is carried to him on the rising wind. A
flash of memory: the Scooby Gang at the Bronze, music throbbing through
every bone in his body, and Cordelia, on her tiny, accessory-like phone
with one of her friends.
“Ah,” he says. “Cordelia.” He shakes his head. Why, in
Sunnydale, do they all insist on saying “Bite me”? He glances toward her
voice. Buffy really hates her. He should probably just go back inside and
leave her alone with her flat.
But the ring of metal on concrete jars him. The jack,
hitting the pavement. He can almost see it: the pretty brunette, the red
convertible with its hood up. The picture of a helpless girl.
What is she doing in his neighborhood at this time of
night, anyway? Doesn't she live across town? And why didn't she call her
father? Or Xander?
Another thud echoes as she drops what sounds like the
spare on the pavement. He steps through the garden gate, curious to see if
she’s really going to do this. With those nails? He chuckles. Gotta give
her credit.
She’s alone on the road, right in the tight little curve
that dips into the hillside before it straightens again into the rest of
the neighborhood. It’s like a wrinkle in the hill, too stubborn to give
itself up to bulldozers and contractors. The native, waving grass provides
a carpet for the tall, thin, deadly eucalyptus that go up like matchsticks
in the summer fires.
Up the hill are houses bigger and better tended than
his. Those houses glow with wreathes and lights, the things that signal
Christmas in Southern California, since the weather usually doesn't.
His house sits dark, empty looking, tucked back in the
wooded lot, only the occasional stone visible from the street.
Cordelia has her hands on her hips, and she’s tapping
her toe as she stares at the tire. The streetlight spreads a sick, yellow
light from overhead, lighting everything and nothing. From here, he can see
she’s got the jack wedged under the car—in the right place, but it looks
like she doesn’t know, or can't see, where to attach the handle.
She’s dressed in the silk top to long johns, a down vest
and a pair of jeans that, despite his love for Buffy, make him wonder what
her ass would feel like in his hands. As he approaches, he’s careful to let
his shoes scuff and avert his eyes from her curves.
An old pro at life in Sunnydale, Cordy turns, tire iron
in a tight fist, a fierce look on her face. Then she sees who he is and the
fierceness dials down a notch. “Oh, Angel. Hey.” She smiles, winningly, but
she’s still braced, still ready to run. “Not evil again, are you?"
He stares at her, blankly.
She relaxes. “Good. Thank God you’re here.” She makes it
sound like she always runs into friendly vampires in strange neighborhoods.
“Uh.” He has no idea what to say to her. Not that he
ever knows what to say to Buffy’s friends, but Cordelia’s always been in
another league.
"I was about to be forced to change this tire by
myself." She makes an "ew" face.
He puts his hands in his pockets and stares down at the
jack. “Yeah.”
He can feel her staring at him. Feel her trust, her
expectation.
She shouldn’t trust him. He knows exactly what his
hands, his mouth, his dark, hard center is capable of.
Some time ago, he’d given her a ride home. He remembered
how she clung to him as they walked to her car. She’d been playing games
with Buffy’s head and he’d been inclined to let her, to see if Buffy would
get jealous. But the clench of her fingers, the hitch of her breath, told
him she was really frightened, and grateful for his protection.
His mind flashes to the more distant past. To the maid,
drained and pale, on the floor at his feet. He can still feel the press of
his mouth on her skin, the give of her arms under the claws of his hands,
her blood spraying the back of his throat.
Hatred, shame, accusation glowed in her eyes when she
appeared to him yesterday. The queasy, black press of shame swims through
him. She’d been brought back to remind him what he was. As if he could
forget.
He tenses. Glances toward the house, where it's
shadowed. Safe.
“I was going to see Aura. She lives on the other ridge?”
Her voice rises, in that way of modern girls looking to connect.
His eyes are drawn to her hands, to the tire iron,
clutched across her thighs. It would be so easy to strip it away. To knock
her down. She knows what he's capable of. Doesn't she care?
“Anyway, this is a good short cut.” Her brow furrows.
“Or it was, until that stupid house they're building down the road started
leaving nails around for anyone to drive over. Don't they have a law
against that?" The furrows deepen, then clear. "Anyway, if you
could just change my tire, I’d really appreciate it.” She swings the tire
iron toward him.
Pure instinct is the only thing that keeps him from
losing a knuckle. He takes the iron from her and cradles it in one hand.
He imagines his rooms, the dark comfort, the
companionable whir of swallows in the garden. But he kneels on damp
concrete. Rubs a hand across his forehead when a fat drop of rain breaks on
his skin.
Cordy leaves him and when she returns she’s got an
umbrella. “Least I could do is keep you dry,” she says, in her
cheerleader’s voice.
He prefers quiet women, demure. Women who wait for men
to—
He drops a lug nut into the hubcap. The clatter breaks
up the image of Buffy, lying virginal beneath him, her thighs open and her
breath held. Waiting.
“…and so we had to cut our trip short. My mother and her
stupid disease. I mean, you’d think it could at least be something cool,
right? I only got to ski for a couple of days. But the plus? I did meet
this really cute….”
Angel sighs, concentrating on sliding the wheel off the
axle. The spare, a small tire, goes on easily, and soon he’s tightening the
nuts and applying the iron.
He stands, brushing the umbrella aside and drops the
flat tire, the jack and the iron in the trunk. “All done. You should have
your dad see about getting that patched for you.”
An odd look crosses Cordelia’s face. “Sure.”
Something has him stepping toward her. “You okay?” He
hunches against the wind and spattering rain.
Cordelia's smile is brittle, aloof. “Of course. I’m sure
my dad will take care of it tomorrow.” She reaches into the car, grabs her
purse. “What do I owe you?”
Angel stares at her. “What? Nothing.”
She shakes her head and tosses the purse in the car.
"Well, thanks, then. I'll buy you a...something...next time I see you
at the Bronze." She smiles again, the same "don't touch me"
flash as before.
He feels a tug in his heart, an answering call. “Like attracts
like” pops into his head and he wants to laugh at the idea of being like
this shallow, vain girl. But he finds himself drawn to her again, the way
he was drawn to her voice earlier. Before he can think, the words are out.
“You look chilly. Can I make you some, uh, tea?”
People aren’t really his strong suit. He can see in her
face how awkward the offer was, and he’s already turning for the house,
sure she’s mocking him. But then she says, “Yes.”
He stops, surprised. “Really?”
“I like tea.” Her gaze, like closed shutters before, has
opened just enough to show a soft sparkle.
He can’t tell if she’s flirting with him out of habit,
or if she’s really cold and lonely. But he takes her keys from her and
motions for her to get into the passenger seat.
The car starts, the radio flares. “I saw mommy kissing
Santa Claus, underneath the mistletoe—“
Cordelia reaches out and flicks it off. “Like I need the
reminder that I'm back in Sunnyhell and it’s still Christmas.”
“Actually, it’s Boxing Day.” He throws her a look,
curious how she'll respond.
She doesn't disappoint him. “Like boxers?” Her hands
fist and pump in a silly caricature of a fighter.
He smiles as they limp on the little tire down to his
driveway, and pulls in behind the Plymouth.
“No, like St. Stephen’s Day. When churches opened their
alms boxes?”
Cordelia climbs out of the car and follows him into the
house. “What’s an alms box?”
He shakes his head. American teenagers live for
everything but education. The old door screeches on its hinges as he pushes
it across the stone floor.
“Creepy. Geez, Angel. You’d think you were a vampire, or
something.” She snorts, charmed by her own joke.
The sound echoes through the empty room. He thinks,
again, about how he could have stayed here in the silence. Seriously
considers pretending he’s out of tea.
But it’s too late. She’s warming her hands in front of
the fire. “This is nice. All you need is a bear rug, and it’d be like
something out of GQ. I’ll bet you could get lots of girls up here.” She
shrugs. “If you didn’t have such a hard-on for Buffy.”
He leaves that alone and heads to the kitchen to start
the teapot. The lights in the kitchen don’t work and he doesn’t bother
lighting the candle. Everything is silver and blue when he turns on the
gas; he has enough light to see by.
Ten minutes later, he’s regretting his decision even
more. What would Buffy think if she found out? But he still finds himself
carrying a full teapot and two mugs back down the hall.
Cordy is sitting on the couch with his copy of The
Stranger open in her lap. He stops to watch, amazed to see she’s absorbed
in the story, right where he’d left off. “I didn’t know you knew French.”
She jumps, looks defensive. “One of our housekeepers was
from Canada,” she says, laying the book aside. “She refused to speak
anything else.”
“Oh.” He wonders why she’s embarrassed to be caught
knowing something. “Do you read Camus?”
“That guy?” She thumbs toward the book. “We had to read
him in English class last year. Existentialists bore me. I mean, really.
How do you know you’re alive? You look down at your brand new pair of
Farragamos. What better proof do you need?”
Angel laughs.
She looks away, almost shy, and tucks a strand of hair behind
her ear.
“What?” he asks, pouring tea into a mug and passing it
to her.
“Nothing. Thanks.” She raises the mug and takes a sip.
He watches her, intrigued by the play of emotions on her
quicksilver face. In the firelight she’s lush, like the garden. All rich
colors and feminine curves. But she’s also shy, lonely, surprised, it
seems, by the fact that someone finds her genuinely amusing.
He’s not sure what to think about that, so he pours tea
into his own mug and takes a sip. It’s wet and quenches part of his thirst,
which is about all he can say for it. But it’s a social thing, so he drinks
it. After all, someone sent snow. Drinking tea with Cordelia is the least
he can do in return.
“So, I heard you guys got some snow,” she says, dropping
the mug to the coffee table.
He blinks, startled that she picked up on his thoughts.
Or maybe she didn't. Maybe it's just a good conversation starter.
She leans back on his couch like she owns it, all
youthful arrogance, and waits for him to answer.
Her shirt rides up and he catches a glimpse of a dark
mark on her abdomen. His eyes narrow, honing in on what looks like a scar.
Comprehension dawns. That's why she didn't call Xander.
He can smell it, now, the faint odor of newly-pink
flesh, different from the skin around it. The wound, he remembers Buffy
saying, was deep. She’d nearly died. And yet she was here, walking around,
reading Camus and talking about shoes.
He blinks, so focused on the scar, that he’s startled
when she smoothes her shirt over it.
“Sorry,” he says, looking away.
“You know what sucks?”
Surprised, he looks up. “What?”
“That I got it ‘cause of Xander.”
Angel blows air through his nose, wryly amused. “We seem
to be united in our mutual dislike of Mr. Harris.”
Cordelia waves a hand through the air. “Oh, please. Like
you could hate him more than me? I highly doubt it.” Her mobile face pulls
into a grimace. “You think you know someone and then they go all psycho on
you.” Her gaze catches his and she flashes a faux-pas smile. “Oops?"
He shrugs. “No, it’s okay.”
"Hey, at least you didn't know it could happen to
you. I knew I was dating a loser from the beginning and I didn't stop.
What's that say about me?"
When the silence falls, it's companionable. The rain
hits the windows and drums on the roof. Cordelia picks up her tea and takes
another sip. “Weird.”
“What?” he asks.
“This. Talking to you. Having tea with Buffy’s…what are
you, anyway?” She looks him up and down. “Boyfriend? Ex? Lov-uh?”
He snorts. “Lov-uh?”
She nods sagely, but her eyes are watchful. “The proper
terminology is very important.”
“Yeah.” He considers his half-full mug of tea.
“Somewhere in between, I guess."
At her worried grimace, he continues. "Between
boyfriend, and ex?” He thinks about that strange snow, about walking hand
in hand with her. He can’t stay away from her; if she’s near he has to
touch her.
It’s dangerous, this need.
Cordy is saying something, so he tunes back in.
“…isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.”
“I’m sorry?”
“Passion,” she repeats, “isn’t all it’s cracked up to
be.” She stares at the fire, and for a moment there’s nothing but the
crackle of the flames and the dance of rain on the roof. “I wanted Xander.”
She glances at him, as if looking for something.
“I won’t tell,” he says, hoping that he’s answered the
question in her eyes correctly. When she nods, he’s relieved.
“I gave him more than I’ve ever given anyone.” Her voice
is dark, spare; she’s followed the path desire laid for her and in the end
found nothing but bitterness.
He knows this story, but from the other side. As
betrayer, as destroyer of love. His heart wilts. “I’m sorry,” he whispers.
She breathes deep then lets it out, like she's cleansing
herself. “Why? Not your fault.”
Their gazes catch, hold. Something about the directness
of her comment, her gaze, acts as a sort of absolution for him. He can
never leave his past behind.
But what if he could put it down? Start over?
She sets the mug down on the table with her usual, loud
clatter, and stands. “Thanks for changing my tire. And for the tea. I’ve
gotta go or Aura’ll be pissed.”
He stands with her. “It’s raining.”
“Yeah. I’ll run.”
It wasn't what he meant. He'd meant, "Don't
go." But, of course, he couldn't say that. Not to Cordelia Chase. Not
while he's still trying to figure out what he means to Buffy.
At the door, she turns and says something to him in
French. It's fluid, impeccable. The door closes behind her, and after a
moment, the car starts and drives away.
Angel turns back to the fire and stares as he puzzles it
out. Camus, he finally realizes with a laugh. "We always deceive
ourselves twice about the people we love - first to their advantage, then
to their disadvantage."
Shaking his head, he takes both mugs to the kitchen and
puts them in the sink.
Then he returns to the living room, picks up his book,
and starts reading where she left off.
***
He’s still reading when he notices her. It’s like a
storm headache, a faint pressure behind his eyes.
He rises and goes to meet her at the door.
“It’s raining!” she says, caught between frustration and
a child-like giggle.
“You’re soaked.” He draws her into the room, and the
feel of her damp, heated skin makes him flare, ache.
She unwraps her jacket and stands before him in a thin
excuse for a sweater and clinging jeans. Her boots are high-heeled and
muddy. In them, she barely reaches his collar-bone. “It’s okay. I’ll dry.”
By the fire, she glows, pale as blond wood and just as
deadly.
He settles on the hearth, feeling the heat at his back,
feeling her heat warming him as she stands between his open knees. “Good
day?”
She reaches up to ruffle her hair and her sweater rides
up, exposing the velvet skin of her waist. It draws him forward helplessly,
and he presses his mouth to her warm, soft flesh.
Her breath catches, and he looks up. She’s tense,
watchful. Her eyes are glazed with need. “Angel.”
He pulls back, looks down at his hands on her hips and
remembers the way the fire consumed the wood.
But then her hand is on his shoulder and she’s drawing
him to the couch. She brushes his face. “You okay?”
He stares down at her, searching for answers in her
gold-green gaze. “Do you think we deceive each other?”
Buffy’s brow wrinkles. “Probably.” The look of confusion
turns to concern. “Does it matter?”
Her hands slip around his neck and she pulls him down.
The rain-fresh wave of her scent sucks him under.
His mind spins, his body yearns. But somewhere, deep
down, he thinks, Yes, it matters.
Later, when she’s gone and his body is still humming
with unfulfilled need, he remembers. And he wonders how long it will be
before she stops deceiving herself.
He stares out the open door to the garden beyond. The
clouds are lightening, the sunrise silvering the shiny, green-black hedge,
and for a moment it looks like the sparkle of snow.
Why was he brought back? There’s no silent, forgiven
death in his future. No great atonement. He can never make up for what his
hands, his mouth, his hard, dark center have done.
He flashes back to Cordelia’s gaze, lonely and bitter.
She and Buffy are too young to have experienced that kind of
disappointment. Stripped of their innocence, left wounded by the men who
were supposed to protect them.
A camellia falls to the ground, bruised by the rain. We
have deceived ourselves into believing we can love each other halfway, he
thinks, as he watches it twitch in the storm’s last, spattering drops.
He knows he can’t love her any less, and that to pretend
otherwise is a lie. And one that will eventually tear them apart.
There’s no silent, forgiven death in his future. But
maybe there’s the peace of knowing he’s protecting the woman he loves.
And maybe that’s enough.
END
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