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Title: Break
Author: M Phoenix
Email: Foxtraveller28@hotmail.com
Feedback: Uh-huh
Archive/Distribution: Just ask, it’s very unlikely I’ll
say no.
Summary: The things which connect, and the things which
divide.
Pairing: Buffy/Angel
Spoilers: Seasons two and three of BtVS.
Author’s notes: Thank you to MsGiles for her thoughtful
beta. Apologies in advance for any errors. No swords were harmed during the
making of this story.
Rating: PG-13
Disclaimer: Joss Whedon created the sandpit; I’m just
playing in it.
Break
by M Phoenix
Light and shadow.
Alone, you’ve often tried to catch her on paper. In fine
grey pencil; in thick smudges of charcoal; once in pen and ink, but it
blotched at the last stroke, and you ripped it up, in frustration, and
haven’t tried again.
Each time you come so close, but never quite… never
quite.
She leaves her school books lying splayed, vulnerable on
your desk sometimes, as if she thinks this is her home, as if she has
forgotten what sleeps coiled under your skin, and believes you really are just
a good…man. And you love her for it. For her rediscovered trust; for the
grace of her trivial, teenage chatter; for being so entirely, terribly,
alive; and for the razor twist of pleasure-pain the day you found your own
name doodled on her Math, and English, and History books. You wonder if it
is her attempt to capture you.
“It’s not that simple,” she says now, in reply to a
question you don’t remember asking. She finishes smoothing the fresh bandage around your
injured hand, and securing it with Band Aid; then tells you, sweetly, and
with utter conviction, “Ted is
evil.” The look on her face is pure Slayer. Briefly, you almost pity Ted.
“Buffy…” you are going to say more than that, of course,
but she burrows her head neatly into the hollow of your shoulder, and you
forget. She helps you forget a lot of things, at least for a while. Her hair
is spun sunlight tickling your chin; only its shining doesn’t burn you,
though it probably should. The scent you breathe in is warm, cut grass,
clean girl, and the musky under note of the, drastically over priced,
perfume she would have dabbed on this morning -- still the essence of
innocence, you could never resist. But there is something else, harsher, older, animal, buried there, since
that night she came back from the dead; and the occasional sting of
peroxide in your nasal cavity reminds you she is not a natural blonde.
“I know you think I’m over-reacting,” Buffy continues
seriously; her grip on your hand tightening until it sends little distress
flares of pain exploding through the slowly healing wound in your palm -- the
place where your boy, Spike, pinned you to Drusilla. She, drooping, fragile
as dead, white lilies in a laudanum haze. He, smirking fixedly while he waited
for you to die.
It will start bleeding again soon if she doesn’t stop
squeezing.
Flesh to flesh, blood to blood, joined, pierced through
by cold steel and magic; you hadn’t been that achingly close to another
creature in nearly a century.
Part of you doesn’t want her to stop. A low down throb
has started -- the demon and the man in you waking up, tangled together,
growling and twitching. You shift uncomfortably on the settee, hoping she
won’t notice how hard you’ve suddenly become.
“Er, Buffy. My hand,” you say, surprised at how steady
your voice sounds.
“Ooops. Sorry.” She lets go hurriedly, you feel her
apologetic grimace, against your neck, instantly followed by the flutter of
a kiss; her lips so soft and hot where your pulse no longer beats.
Remember she believes in you, trusts
you, this is your redemption; so hold her to your heart and keep her safe
-- always. But what if you’re the
one she needs to be protected from?
She sighs, oblivious to your struggle. “It’s unbelievable.
He’s taken over my house, with his ‘I’m such a swell guy,’ sitcom smile,
and his stupid little mini pizzas, and he’s probably there, doing
unspeakable things -- things which should never be spoken of, let alone
witnessed by her only child -- with my mother, right now. It’s icky to the
power of gross, and he must be stopped.”
“Hmm, yeah,” you murmur; attempting to sound both
non-committal, and supportive enough to avoid her ire.
She sits up, regarding you suspiciously, clearly you
need to work on those monosyllables. “Evil,” she mutters, pouting darkly;
and the effect is so comic it’s all you can do to keep from laughing out
loud. “At this rate,” she concludes, “before the week is over, I’ll be
re-enacting ‘Death of a Salesman’ with Ted as the star.”
Time to change the subject.
You nod towards the corner by your bed, where a long,
slim shape is propped, resting -- a shadow, cast against the wall. “I have something
for you.”
“What’s the occasion?” she asks, her face breaking into
a slightly wary smile.
“The occasion is you saving my life,” you say. And killing my children, you think,
but leave unvoiced. You could not -- would not want to -- explain the strange
mixture of relief-guilt-desire-loss, clumped solid in your chest, when you
think of your…family. She would know you for a monster, once and for all.
“It’s a katana,” you tell her; as she eagerly unwraps
the cloth covering her gift.
Her face has taken on a fierce, assessing look,
schoolgirl melting seamlessly into warrior. “A samurai sword,” she
breathes; unsheathing it in one swift, flowing, motion.
“The real deal. Seventeenth century.”
She shakes her head, and quickly turns to face you.
“This is too much. I-I mean I don’t have anything to give you, my allowance
won’t stretch that far…maybe a Swiss army knife, or this really nifty
letter opener I saw at --”
“I don’t…” you interrupt, before she can hit full speed
babble. “…you don’t need to give me anything.” At this second you mean it,
truly, you do. “Anyway, it was a freebee --” you lie “-- Willie the Snitch
owed me big a favour.”
Buffy smiles then, in a way far older than she should be
able, in a way you cannot read, and returns her full attention to the
sword. You know she is not really listening as you parade your knowledge of
smithcraft, and Japanese culture; in all honesty, neither are you, you’ve
heard all your stories before. So after a while you let your voice drop,
and fall away, and just watch her. She skims her fingertips slowly,
carefully along the flat of the blade, where the process of folding and
welding the metal hundreds of times has left a delicate pattern, like clouds
drifting and swirling. Touches it like something sacredlethalbeautiful, the
same way you find yourself touching her sometimes, after a kill.
“Why don’t you try it out, test the balance.”
Her technique is good as she runs through a few basic
warm up moves; the simple, perfect curve of the blade flashing through the
air. One handed right cut. Flash. Left slash with two hands relaxed on the
long grip. Flash. A centre cut designed to cleave down the middle of any
unlucky opponent. Flash. She raises the blade up in front of her face,
pointing at the sky; then sweeps it down and to the side, with her right
hand, finishing with the tip poised just over the earth. Good, yes, but…
“What’s that for?” she asks, and you realize you must be
frowning harder than you’d thought.
“What do you think you’re doing?”
She pushes her hair off her forehead with the back of
her hand, and takes a step towards you; flexing in a manner that makes you
fear for your soft furnishings. “Trying out my excessively shiny new sword,”
she says, bright tone not entirely masking disgruntlement.
“You’re using it like an extension of your arm.”
“Ah-huh.” And you can practically hear the deleted, ‘well,
duh, of course I am, brain-trust.’
Didn’t Giles teach her anything? You sway awkwardly to
your feet, still embarrassingly weak, and shuffle to stand behind her, your
arms around her, your unhurt hand easily covering her small one, wrapped
around the grip. She instinctively nestles her shoulders into your chest,
annoyance already forgotten; and, God, you are a prize idiot, because you want
this to be forever. Forever, please, forever. “This --” you murmur,
bringing the katana into her line of vision. “This is you. It’s not just an
extension of your arm; it’s an extension of your soul. In order to use it
right, you have to become it.”
“But…” She twists around to look at you, smiling
slightly, quip forming on her lips, then she seems to change her mind, and
her brows furrow to silence.
Your voice feels caught in your throat, though you
couldn’t say why. “The people who created the katana -- fought and died
with it -- believed it was the protector of the warrior’s soul. Many of the
oldest ones had names, were thought to have souls of their own.”
A long pause. Her hand; your hand; and the katana thrumming
quietly between you, whispering ‘yes, yes, yes.’
“Okay,” she says too loudly, in a huff of breath, “but
to me a sword is just a weapon; sharp metal, good for the slicing and
dicing of demons. They don’t…” Her eyes are luminous and suddenly
uncertain, searching yours. “They don’t really share souls…have souls.”
It’s not that
simple, you think. Never that
simple. You glance from her face to the mirror-bright blade of the
katana, and the reflection you cannot see, and you wonder for a moment what
expression the stranger there is wearing, as you say, “Some of them do.”
****
Shadow and light.
You are walking barefoot, enjoying the sensation of sand
squishing between your toes; the fresh scent of clean, salt air, the sound
of waves surging onto the beach. But there are things skittering through
your peripheral vision that you don’t want to see, things which…Wait, you
are walking barefoot, and the light is so bright you have to squint to see
the blue, blue ocean. Must be the Pacific you guess, it seems important to
know, and you’re pleased to have figured it out. But there are things you
have to remember, and you don’t
want…Please, not yet. You stop walking, and tilt your head back, eyes shut
tight, soaking in the sun, letting it burn the fear away; and when you feel
him appear behind you and slide his arms around your waist, you’re sure
everything will be okay except…He feels warm, warmer than he ever did when
he was…
“Angel?” You say it like a prayer, like a plea. “Angel,
stay.”
“That’s the whole point,” he whispers, his lips almost
brushing your ear. “I’ll never leave you; not even if you kill me.”
Suddenly there is a sword in your hand.
“I have something for you,” you say, kissing him. “Close
your eyes.”
This morning you saved the world. You remember this as
you wake with your cheek crushed into the canvas of your duffle bag, and
your eyes sore and gritty from crying in your sleep.
You walked through the silent streets, through the
suburbs of manicured lawns and accountants with wives on Prozac, and
Doberman pinchers, and 2.4 children. In the watery pre-dawn light you
passed the long, straight driveways of the houses scattered at the edge of
town. You lingered for a moment at the Donovans’ broken mail box, where the
kids playing ‘car baseball’ along the road had gotten in a lucky strike,
and wondered what they would say if they knew all this might be gone before
nightfall. And, with the sun just kissing the horizon, you killed your
lover, so that it could go on.
You sit up stiffly, still clutching your bag, and grind
the heels of your hands into your eyelids until all you can see is whirling
blackness. You will not cry again -- probably ever.
Three am in L.A. bus station, and you are beginning to
wonder why you bothered; maybe the whole, ‘sucked into Hell’ thing wouldn’t
have that much of a contrast. All human life is here, and you sincerely
wish it had chosen to be some place else. You may as well have ‘teenage
runaway, ripe for exploitation,’ tattooed on your forehead. So far you’ve
encountered one very persistent pimp, set on taking you under his wing; a
guy with a gold front tooth and no hair who called you ‘honey-doll,’ and
offered you ten bucks to blow him; and a jittery girl in an old army
jacket, who tried to sell you a white substance you’re pretty sure was baby
powder wrapped in tinfoil.
Each time, your hand slipped into your pocket, searching
for the reassurance of the stake which should have been there; wanting
something familiar to hold on to. But you brought no weapons with you, none
except your own body. You have made your last kill. That life is over.
And you know, when you fell off the bus from Sunnydale,
you should have walked through the swish of those automatic doors and kept
walking, found a hostel, or simply let the city swallow you up; but you
stayed. Stayed because you exhausted all the strength you had left making
it this far, and now you are too hollow with grief to care anymore.
“Aye-y-ya,” an old, bird-like woman says, sinking onto
the bench next to you, with a grateful sigh. “My feet give trouble,” she
tells you, smiling, by way of an explanation. She cocks her head on one
side and stares at you with undisguised curiosity, her eyes like wet
asphalt. After a moment she asks, in her thick, rolling accent, “So, kid,
you okay?”
“Fine,” you say hoarsely, digging your fingers into the
fabric of your duffle bag, and edging away. Maybe you could find a cave to
crawl into, far, far away from people; go one million B.C. and start wearing
animal pelts and bone pins; perhaps paint a few bison on the wall, for
company, you’ve heard art can be very therapeutic. The woman is still
staring. “I am okay. Okay?”
“Okay,” she shrugs, and begins to hum to herself;
breaking off periodically to talk in gentle Spanish to someone who isn’t
there. This woman is the epitome of crazy-homeless-chic. Scarlet taffeta dress,
crumpled under what looks like a genuine mink coat -- which she’s wearing
in flagrant disregard of protest movements and ninety degree temperatures
-- black, steel toe-capped boots, and a feather tucked into her sparse,
grey hair, at a rakish angle.
You watch the tide of passengers pour off the delayed
bus from Phoenix, franticly trying to find enough free hands to grab their
luggage, and travel pillows, and kids, and coming up short. They are hours late, and in such a
hurry to be somewhere…to be home. If you walk out of this house don’t
even think about coming back. Mom’s words go ricocheting around your
skull for the hundredth time today, and the pain practically doubles you
over.
There is a rustling noise beside you; the old woman is
rummaging in her wheeled shopping bag. After a brief, unsuccessful
inventory of the top layers, she clicks her tongue behind her teeth, and
thrusts her hand, and most of her scrawny arm, right down to the bottom, in
a way which reminds you, disturbingly, of vets and farm animals. “Ha!” She
emerges, triumphant, clutching a crinkled packet of M&M’s; settles back
on the bench, but doesn’t open them.
“Remember?” she says wistfully, staring straight ahead, at
a poster advertising ‘bargain breaks in Acapulco.’ You don’t respond; there
is no reason to think the question is directed at you, she’s probably still
talking to her invisible friend. “Remember?” she says again, nudging your
elbow.
“Remember what?” you mutter, reluctantly. Some remnant
in the back of your mind telling you it would be rude and unkind to ignore
her. That your mom would be disappointed, and…
“I…I,” she gesticulates vaguely, her hand flapping at
the wrist so much you expect it to snap off. “I.” She stops; looking
confused; then bursts into high pitched laughter which convulses her whole
body. “I don’t remember,” she wheezes, wiping tears from her eyes.
“Oh.” You begin chewing your thumbnail; it tastes like
salt and nail polish.
The old woman opens her packet of M&M’s, pops one
into her mouth, and sucks it thoughtfully. She leans towards you. “They
used to paint me, I was a…muse, yes, you know? A muse; they knew my name,
yes. Now I’m nobody.” She extends her hand as if you are being formally
introduced. “I’m nobody…and you are?”
You have no idea how to answer. She doesn’t seem phased
by your silence, just leans closer and whispers, as if confiding her
deepest, darkest secret, “The blue ones are my favourites.” Stale,
chocolaty breath on your face; delighted, little-girl smile. “The blue ones
are the best. Shhh.” She presses the packet of M&M’s into your hand,
and heaves herself onto her feet. You try to give them back, but she waves
them away. “You keep them. Yes, good.”
As she shuffles off, dragging her bag behind her, she is
rambling to thin air again.
****
The next night you sleep in a hostel, with spongy,
bursting sofas, and food to match. After a few days you find a job
waitressing, and, with your first pay check, you rent an apartment. Okay, a
room, but it’s clean and it’s yours.
Angel is a constant desperate emptiness inside you, the negative
space where you used to keep love. In your dreams he always comes to you in
sunlight; which seems like the punch-line to some really bad, subconscious
joke. But you don’t laugh, and you don’t cry. These days you wake, with
hot, dry eyes, and lie in your narrow bed, listening to cats caterwauling,
like souls in torment, on the fire escape; and the noise of distant sirens.
Some nights you can almost feel the low hum of the
katana sleeping underneath your bed, the way you used to before the world
didn’t end. Then you get up and walk.
No one walks in L.A., but when you aren’t working, or snuggling up to
your insomnia, you are trudging through the city, mapping the streets with
your feet.
One time you stray far from your usual beat, and spot a
man who could be your father, across the street, near a mall which you
remember as ‘shoe heaven.’ You duck your head and look the other way until
you are safely round the corner, panting and shaking. It takes three blocks
for your heart rate to drop back to normal. Later you wonder if you did the
right thing; but what would you have said to him? You aren’t really his
child anymore.
No. You’ve set that Buffy in a block of concrete and
sent her to sleep with the fishes; and you’ve become the girl who wears her
face every day, but isn’t her.
****
“Anne.” Arlene’s nasal voice twangs taut behind you. For
a moment you don’t recognize the name, don’t turn. The voice becomes
irritated. “Anne, quit dreaming on the job. Order for table three.”
This time you remember; nod; straighten your apron. “Sorry.
I’m on it.”
As you manhandle two plates piled high with pancakes
across the crowded diner, you wonder how long it will take for your mom to
decide there are probably dust bunnies the size of chinchillas growing
under your bed. And what she will think when she finally unwraps the
blanket you left bundled there, shrouding a sword, sacredlethalbeautiful,
broken carefully in half.
The End.
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