|
Author's
note: This story takes place just before the first episode of season 3 of
Angel.
A Time to Mourn
by
Jeanne Rose
Angel sat
staring at the steady flame of the candle, trying to breathe in and out in
the cadence he had been taught. His muscles were beginning to cramp
at the awkward position. He resisted the urge to sigh.
Meditation
was supposed to calm the soul, ease his grief. So far it wasn't
working. Images of Buffy – her eyes, her hands, her upturned face –
continued to surface unbidden, drenching him in renewed sorrow. Her
voice, soft in his ear, the smell of her hair, the smile that was only for
him, the fast pulse of her blood when she fought, her strength, her
impertinence, her loneliness. . . .
He blinked
away incipient tears and discovered that he'd stopped breathing
again. It took effort to remember since his body didn't need
it. The old human reflex seemed to kick in when he was
surprised or in pain, but he didn't usually keep it up for such long
stretches of time. And he wasn't quite sure this measured breathing
did the same thing for him that it would for a human.
Surely
soon the gong would sound. Even monks had to eat now and then.
They knew what he was and had provided a plasma substitute that was totally
tasteless but would at least quell the hunger pangs for a while. Then
perhaps after sundown he would sit out in the courtyard and watch the
jewel-bright stars make their slow journey across the sky. It seemed
to bring him more peace than anything else here.
Unexpectedly
he felt it. Sunset, the passing of the world from deadly daylight to
friendly darkness. It must be much later than he'd
thought. The gong should have sounded long ago.
He stirred
uneasily. These monks were as rigid in their daily time table as any
medieval Christian monastery with their horarium. Could something
have happened?
Slowly
Angel stood, stretching the kinks out of his muscles. The unfamiliar
white clothing hung loosely on him. He stood still and listened for
some sign of trouble. No sound reached his ears – no soft shuffling
footsteps, no heartbeats.
He picked
up the candle and padded barefoot through the entire enclave, poking his
head into all of the areas he had been told he was allowed to go . . . and
finally to those he had been forbidden. He found no one at all.
* * *
It took
him most of the night to discover that not only was the monastery empty but
also the nearest town and, as far as he could tell, the rest of the world
as well. He found a phone and called every number he knew, including
the operator. No one answered. No planes flew overhead.
The radio and television stations were all static.
He went
back to the monastery and consumed a bag of plasma substitute. It was
not really adequate nourishment – he was starting to feel
light-headed. Then it occurred to him that if all of the animals had
disappeared as well, it might be the only sustenance he had.
He sat
down on a stone bench under a large spreading tree in the middle of the
courtyard. Beyond the branches the sky was huge, the glorious spread
of stars unimaginably distant. He had often felt alone before – alone
in a crowd, alone because he was neither vampire nor human, alone because
no one cared. Buffy had helped heal some of that aloneness, and in
their own way Cordelia, Wesley and Gunn had helped too. But Buffy was
gone, and now it seemed the others were lost to him as well. He was
truly, utterly alone.
For a
moment the weight of it pressed down on him like a mountain. If there
were no people left there was very little reason to go on living. If
there was no one to help there was no redemption to earn. What
purpose could his life serve?
Abruptly
he shook his head as if to clear it. This was madness. All the
people on earth could not suddenly disappear without a reason.
Something must have happened, and perhaps if he could figure out what it
was he could bring them back.
He looked
around. The monks might have books or scrolls, but he probably
couldn't read them. His own resources were half way around the
world. He could get there on foot, he supposed, given enough
time. Shoes would definitely be helpful. And maps.
Suddenly
he was aware of someone else in the courtyard. Perhaps he wasn't
alone in the world after all? Then he realized that it was someone
like him, someone without a heartbeat. Perhaps only demons remained.
He
recognized the scent and turned abruptly. "Spike! What are
you doing here?"
Spike
looked around. "Don't rightly know. Same as you,
maybe." His gaze took in the windswept courtyard, the tree, the
sky. "What are you doing here?"
Somehow
Angel felt no need for glib answers. "Mourning."
Spike
nodded. "Right. Me too."
Angel stared
at him incredulously. "Why would you want to mourn the
Slayer? You hated her. If you didn't kill her you probably
watched the back of the demon that did."
Spike
looked him in the eye. "No. I loved her, just like
you."
Angel took
a step backwards, wondering if this night could get any more surreal.
"You can't love. You don't have a soul."
"I
can and I did. She was a real special girl. One of a
kind."
Spike was
the last person Angel wanted to talk with about Buffy . . . even if he was
the last person on earth. He changed the subject.
"What's
going on here?"
"What
do you mean?"
"All
the people have disappeared. I thought I was alone until you showed
up."
Spike
looked a bit put out. "No people? What's there going to be
to eat?" He looked at Angel accusingly. "You didn't
finally succeed in destroying the world, now did you?"
Angel
glared at him. "I have to figure out what happened, how to put
things right again. Are you going to help or not?"
Spike
shrugged. "Fine. OK, maybe it's you that disappeared, not
everyone else."
Angel
considered this new idea, surprised he hadn't thought of it. "So
you're saying this isn't real. I'm in some other dimension or
something?"
"I'm
not saying nothing, mate. How would I know?"
"Good
question," Angel said sarcastically and turned away. Perhaps
Spike was right and he had somehow accidentally crossed a boundary into
hell. It would surely explain why he was alone in the universe with
the one person least likely to be any help.
Then Angel
smelled a new scent – one that made him dizzy with hope. He turned.
"Buffy?"
She was
standing a few feet away in jeans and a white sweater stained with
blood. She had no heartbeat but her scent was unchanged. She
stared around her in confusion.
"Buffy,
right," Spike said. "I was wondering when she would show
up."
She looked
from one to the other. "Spike? Angel?"
Spike
stepped toward her and smiled with such gentleness that it made Angel's
brain freeze up. "Buffy. You all right?"
She looked
down at the blood on her sweater. "I'm dead . . . right? I
remember . . . falling . . . had to save Dawn . . . save the world . . .
but . . . you guys can't be . . . you're not both dead too, are you?"
she asked with a note of panic.
"Technically
we already were," Spike reminded her soothingly.
"Oh
yeah."
The sight
of Spike's black nailed hand on Buffy's arm abruptly caused Angel's brain
to unfreeze. He stepped forward and took her hand, claiming her.
"It's
ok," he said, trying to make it sound as there was some reason to
believe it.
"So
you're dead in a vampire sort of way but you didn't get staked or
anything?"she asked him.
He shook
his head. "I don't think so."
"And
this doesn't happen to you normally. You don't . . . talk to dead
people?"
Angel
shook his head, and thanked the gods that he did not. Being cursed to
remember their faces was bad enough.
"Where
are we?" she asked.
"This
is a monastery," Angel answered. "I came here, after Willow
brought the news. I was trying to meditate, and then everybody
disappeared."
"Except
me," Spike interjected. "I'm here."
"Then
Spike showed up," Angel added grudgingly. "And now
you."
Buffy
looked back at Spike, refusing to dismiss him as neatly as Angel might have
hoped. "OK, so I'm dead, but I'm still . . . talking and stuff,
and you're both . . . undead, and everybody else is gone. What's
going on?"
"I
don't know," Angel relied, grasping her hand, which was now as
lifeless as his own. "But we're going to find out."
* * *
He started
toward the door of the main building, intent on finding where they had
stowed his street clothes. When he walked through it he found himself
in the lobby of the hotel in LA, already wearing them.
And his
hand was empty. "Buffy?" he called. There was no
answer. He turned and walked back through the front door.
Nothing happened.
Loss
washed over him again.
After a
minute he looked around. The place was deserted.
"Cordelia? Wesley?" he called out without much hope.
The sound echoed against the high ceiling.
"No
one here, mate," Spike said, drifting out from behind the pillar by
the elevator.
"You
again," Angel said with little courtesy. "What are you
doing here?"
"Following
you around, evidently. This the new place? A little roomier
than the last one. A few too many windows, though."
Angel
ignored him. He walked to the fridge, then remembered that he'd drunk
the last bag before leaving. He turned to the bookshelves. At
least now maybe he could figure out what was happening. He pulled out
a stack of books and began to read.
Later that
night he went out for a walk. The streets of LA were empty, though
somehow the lights continued to blaze. There were no cars, no horns, no
music. Yesterday's newspapers remained in the stands. There was
no one at Wesley's apartment, or Cordelia's – even her ghost was not in
evidence. Gunn's end of town was deserted. Caritas was
empty. The karaoke machine was still working, and he turned it on and
sang a few bars, hoping it would somehow induce Lorne to appear, but
nothing happened. The offices of Wolfram and Hart were locked down,
but they appeared vacant as well.
He walked
by a hospital and considered breaking in to get some blood but found he
wasn't hungry.
He went
back to the hotel before sunrise. Spike was sitting on the
step. Angel was surprised to find his annoyance muted by the prospect
of someone to talk to. He sat down on the opposite end of the step.
"Not
much of a world without them, is it?" Spike said glumly.
"No,"
Angel agreed.
"Find
anything in those books of yours?"
Angel
shook his head. "All the apocalypses seem to involve destruction
of the whole world, not just the people. And the demon dimensions all
seem to be inhabited."
Spike
nodded without comment.
Without
changing tone Angel asked, "Where's Buffy?"
"Not
here, it looks like."
"At
the monastery, why were you expecting her?" Angel asked.
"What?"
"You
said, ‘I was wondering when she would show up.' Why?"
Spike
shrugged. "It just seemed like what ought to happen next."
Angel
looked at him suspiciously. "And what seems like it ought to
happen now?"
"I
don't know. Why don't you walk through that door again and find
out."
Angel
slowly got to his feet. He looked at the door – he'd gone through it
before and nothing had happened. But there was nothing for him
here. If he was going to understand what was happening he had to move
on. He opened the door and walked through.
He found himself
standing in the doorway of Buffy's home, covered with sunlight that
streamed in through the door and windows. He ducked instinctively
into the shadows, cringing at the expected burning of his flesh. But
he felt no pain.
Hesitantly,
shielding his eyes, he stuck his hand into a block of light. It felt
warm on his skin. And the brightness didn't hurt his eyes,
either. He stepped back into the light and stood, trying
to wrap his mind around the gentle warmth of the kindly rays. Then,
warned by her scent, he turned.
"I
knew you'd come," Buffy said, and he gathered her into his arms and
they stood together in the sunlight for a long time.
* * *
"I suppose there's not much reason to go on patrol," Buffy
said a little later as they sat on the couch.
"I
guess not," he responded. "No demons to kill."
"No
world to protect either. Which is a really nice thing, because I was
getting tired of doing it."
"You
did more than your share," he assured her.
She
nodded, looked toward the kitchen. "There's food in the fridge,
but I'm really not hungry." She looked up at Angel
worriedly. "Are you?"
He shook
his head. "I was at first, but not any more."
"Good,
because we're fresh out of blood, and I don't think I'm good for eating
anymore." She smiled, making it a joke.
"I
suppose we could find out," he teased. But when he reached
inside himself to where his vampire instincts lay he found unexpectedly
that he couldn't have called them forth if he'd wanted to.
"What's
wrong?" she asked.
"Nothing,"
he said. "It's just . . . everything's different here."
"Yeah."
She traced a line of sunlight across his cheek with a fingertip, then
nestled more snugly under his arm. "Everything's safe."
Naturally
Spike chose this moment to wander in from the kitchen. "Oh yeah,
it's safe all right. Safe and boring as hell." He eyed
them grumpily. "But you two love birds probably won't
mind." He looked Angel in the eye. "I guess you're
happy now."
"Go
away, Spike," Angel told him. Spike shrugged and left them to
each other.
They
settled into a companionable silence. With no demands, no danger to
be faced, no battles to be fought, time seemed to flow seamlessly as the
shadows shifted infinitesimally across them. Angel would have thought
that Buffy would want to talk, to tell him about everything that had
happened, but she seemed content to enjoy the silence.
He
wondered what death had been like for her, or if she had been waiting
long. He wondered if this was a dream, or an illusion, or some kind
of spell that could burst like a bubble at a moment's notice. It
didn't feel like one. Buffy was solid and real against his chest, as
real as when he'd held her the night after her mother died. This time
he could not feel her heart beating against him, but he didn't mind.
And here, no desire rose up to torment him. If she felt safe in his
arms, it was enough.
As the
hours passed, the stillness of the room found its way into his heart, and
his mind grew still. He smiled at the realization that perhaps this
was what the monks had been trying to teach him. Funny that no
breathing seemed to be required.
A bit
after sundown Buffy yawned sleepily and said she was ready for bed.
He followed her upstairs to her bedroom, where as soon as she walked
through the door she was dressed in pink flannel pajamas. She brushed
her teeth out of what he supposed to be sheer habit and climbed under the
covers. He watched her sleeping for a while, then went out for a
walk.
* * *
In the
dark Sunnydale looked pretty much as he remembered it. He was tempted
to think nothing had changed . . . except that all of the houses were
empty.
He wasn't
sure exactly when Spike joined him. They walked in silence until
Spike finally said, "Can't shake the feeling that I ought to be
horribly jealous."
"You're
not?" Angel asked.
Spike
shrugged. "She's safe, she's happy, I'm happy. A hell
of lot happier if she was getting all snuggly with me, mind you, but
I suppose that wasn't in the cards. We might have had a moment,
though, if Glory and her apocalypse hadn't happened along."
Angel
didn't care for the sound of that. "A moment? What are you
talking about? Buffy could never have loved you."
"You
left her. You've been in LA. How would you know?"
All the
reasons he had left, all the excruciating justifications for that necessary
abandonment crowded Angel's mind, but he didn't feel much like arguing the
point. Fortunately he didn't have to because Spike was still talking.
"Look,
I tried to fight it, but I love her. Nearly got myself tortured to
death just to save her from grief, so she knew I meant it. And she
treated me decent."
"So
what are you doing here," Angel asked pointedly.
Spike
snorted. "Yeah, what am I doing in the middle of your little
paradise? That's a good one."
They had
only walked a few more paces before Spike suddenly stopped. He let
out a startled chuckle, then looked at Angel and laughed again in earnest,
nearly bent double. Angel glared at him. "What?"
"I
just figured it out."
"What?"
Angel repeated.
"Why
I keep turning up wherever you are. Why the only time I'm here is
when I'm talking to you."
"Gee,
I don't know – maybe every paradise has to have a snake?"
"Hey
now, no sense insulting your spirit guide."
"You?
A guide. You're right, that is funny."
"Hey,
the joke's on both of us. Never say the Powers That Be don't have a
sense of humor."
"More
like a sense of irony." Then suddenly it hit him. "Wait a
minute. Are the Powers That Be doing this? What for? Is
this a test?"
"I
don't think so," Spike answered. "I think it's just the
universe giving you a choice."
"So
is this real?"
"Didn't
say I was the fount of knowledge," Spike replied.
"Great.
I have an annoying spirit guide who doesn't even know what's
happening."
"I
steered you here to Sunnydale, right?"
Angel
conceded this with a nod. Spike grew suddenly serious.
"You
won't go anywhere else until you're ready to."
Angel
stared back toward Buffy's house. "What if I decide not to
go?"
* * *
When
morning came Angel found Buffy sitting at the kitchen table.
"It's
spotless," she said. "I don't think it was ever really this
clean."
"Likely
to stay that way, too," Angel observed, "unless you're in the
mood for blueberry pancakes."
She shook
her head. "Let's go for a walk."
He took
her hand and they went outside, leaving the front door open.
The sun shone midway up a dazzling blue sky. The green of the trees
and grass was so brilliant it nearly overwhelmed his senses. He had
forgotten how alive things looked when the sun touched them. Buffy
smiled, watching him. He picked a daisy from someone's front yard and
stuck it behind her ear – she rewarded him with a silly grin.
They took
their time, making a pilgrimage to all of the places they had been
togther. The Bronze, the factory, the high school, the streets and
alleys where they had kissed and argued fought any number of foes, always
in the dark. Seeing them in sunlight made it seem as if this were a
different world, as if such suffering had happened long ago, to someone
else.
They ended
up in the cemetery, walking among the graves and crypts. The sun was
setting, bathing the undersides of the clouds in orange and pink.
They stopped next to her grave.
She looked
up at him. "Stay with me."
He let the
words sink into his heart. But then he shook his head. "I
don't belong here."
Her face
clouded, and the brilliance of the sunset dimmed. Then suddenly he
knew something else. "You don't belong here either."
"Where
do I belong?"
"I
don't know. Maybe with your mother. You shouldn't be alone
here."
Her brow
twitched, and he knew she had received the same gift of
knowing. "I won't be," she said. She stepped
away from him, still keeping hold of his fingers.
He knew
when he looked away, she would be gone. "I love you," he
said softly.
"I
know." She smiled the sad, soft, wistful smile that he
remembered so well.
"Wait
for me," he whispered.
She
nodded. He stood memorizing the contours of her face and the pressure
of her fingers a moment longer, then gathered everything he had and let her
fingers slip from his as he turned.
The air
was empty behind him. Spike stood waiting. "You
ready?"
Angel
nodded, unable to speak. Spike stepped forward and he followed.
* * *
They were back in the monastery, surrounded by monks. There
were perhaps thirty of them chanting softly, a low sound that seemed to
invade his bones. Their scent told him they weren't human.
"What's
happening?" he asked Spike.
"It's
a simple spell, really," Spike told him. "All you have to
do to break it is decide to come back."
The
chanting had ceased abruptly when he spoke. The monks were beginning
to rise. One of them had a broad-bladed axe. Without warning he
sliced with lightning speed, catching Angel across the chest.
The pain
was powerful restorative. Angel felt strength and anger surging
through him, the vampire once again just beneath his skin, crying hungrily
for blood. And abruptly the subliminal sense of a million heartbeats
around him returned. The memory of holding Buffy in the sun began to
slip from him like a dream.
He kicked
the demon monk in the chest, sending him flying across the room, and turned
on Spike. "Was it real?" he demanded.
Spike
shrugged. "Your call."
With a
roar the rest of the demon monks fell on them.
"I'm
not going to remember any of it, am I?" Angel asked, blocking one blow
after another.
"Probably
not," Spike responded, ducking. But somehow the demons did not
seem to be attacking him. And then Angel wondered who he had been
talking to. He was alone, surrounded by demon monks, and there was
nothing to do but fight.
Suddenly
he wanted nothing more than to go home, to watch Cordelia's delight when he
handed her the necklace, or Wes' face when he unsheathed the knife.
He had chosen time over eternity, chosen the battle, chosen the journey
through darkness to find the light. Death was a part of that journey.
Buffy had gone without him, but someday perhaps he would become human, and
join her. It was time to get started.
The End
Author's comments:
The choice between a safe, static
paradise and the mortal world of experience, joy, pain, love, and death is
as old as the Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. It is a common
mythological element from Odysseus to Lancelot and Galahad, and continues
to show up in modern entertainment stories as diverse as the original Star
Trek's "This Side of Paradise," Toy Story II, City of Angels, and
Star Trek: Generations. It's been in the back of my mind for a while
to write a story that gives Angel this choice, with the odd twist that he
is not choosing humanity, but merely the chance to become human. When
I needed to find some way to justify how Angel got over Buffy's death so
easily in "Heartthrob," the pieces just came together. I'd
have preferred that he remember it, but since I like to write in the spaces
within the canon, he had to forget so that it would fit into the continuing
story. Joss kindly left a hole, and I filled it.
I know some readers will be
disappointed that Buffy and Angel didn't take the opportunity to make love
in their little bubble of paradise. Hey, I enjoyed "I Will
Always Remember You" as much as the next Buffy/Angel romantic, but it
just didn't feel right here. First of all, sex is not safe thing in
Buffy's world. In the wake of everything that happened with Glory, it
seemed to me that she would go back to a child's paradise, where someone
held her and then she went to bed in pink flannel pajamas. Physical
desire is mostly a form of torture for Angel, since it has no safe
outlet. And really, sex belongs to the world of reality, where pain
and pleasure and consequences are all mixed together. In a world with
no hunger, no pain, no danger, and no responsibilities, I think sex would
mean something quite different than it does here. It would have to
have been as innocent and serene as hot chocolate and falling snow, and I
didn't think I could pull that off.
So, was it real, or was it all in
Angel's head? Like Spike said, your call. It had to be sort of
real, or why would Spike come with his love for Buffy and memories of
things Angel knew nothing about? And how would Buffy know that she didn't
belong there either? And yet, they are also filtered through his
eyes. My interpretation is that the monks cast the spell sending
Angel into an uninhabited world, but the Powers sent Buffy to give him a
choice, and Spike to show him the way home if he chose to return.
They do have a sense of humor, after all.
| Fiction Search | Home
Page | Back |
|