|
Copper Sunrise
Author:
Kairos
Summary: There's humans, and then there's Buffy.
Rating: General
Livejournal
**
Angelus stepped in front of the glass doors. I’m not
Angelus. I can’t be Angelus. The doors opened, sliding into slots in
the walls as if they were a pair of servants obeying his mental cues. I’m
not ready for this.
Nobody was looking at him funny, though. He supposed the
shower and the haircut and the new clothes had done their job: he not only
looked like a human, but like a human with a home and a job and a life. None
of which is true. Well, maybe the job, but I seem to recall that jobs pay
money.
He heard an irritated clucking, and a stout middle-aged
woman brushed past him. He was still standing just inside the glass doors,
he realized, and he hastily stepped aside and began to walk as if he had a
purpose. Another moment to steady himself would have been a help. After
facing any number of sewers, subway tunnels, demon lairs, and the shadiest
parts of neighborhoods so shady that decent folks didn’t only avoid them
but couldn’t get there if they tried, he found he was woefully unprepared
to face an average suburban grocery store.
There was no turning back now, though. Whistler had
arranged to make him “less disgusting”, but stated clearly that after that,
the cleaned-up vampire could run his own errands. He had to learn to get by
in human society, anyway. When he finally met the girl, he wasn’t going to
let her see him as a bumbling misfit, but he needed some practice first.
He fingered the two twenty-dollar bills in his pocket,
which Whistler had provided along with a few exasperated remarks about
being forced to bankroll this whole operation. It seemed like a lot of
money to Angelus - I can’t call myself Angelus - but he wasn’t
really sure what money was worth these days. In any case, he resolved, he’d
pay it back once he was able. There had to be a way to tap into his
hereditary funds again.
Everything around him was food for humans; the doors had
opened into the produce section. He picked up a tomato and pretended to be
inspecting it, like other shoppers were doing with various kinds of fruit
and vegetables. He could smell it, sort of, and he knew that if he bit into
it, his teeth would break through the skin and fresh juices would spill
into his mouth. It wouldn’t feed him, though, and he doubted the textures
would yield much satisfaction without the taste. With vague regrets he put
the tomato back on the pile, then wondered if that was allowed. Maybe it
was frowned upon to hold a tomato without buying it. Maybe he should keep
it just so he wouldn’t look suspicious.
Of course, that would require putting it in his basket,
and he didn’t have one. He cursed himself for a fool and set the tomato
down to head back to the door. If the girl saw him now, she’d probably just
laugh at the weird pale guy who didn’t know how to buy groceries.
When he made it out of the produce section, he found
that the aisles were labeled with signs that told which items they stocked.
He meant to skip the first one, which said “International Foods”, but found
himself curious and ended up spending the next ten minutes reading labels
in Spanish and Chinese. Most of the ingredients seemed distantly familiar,
but the closest he’d ever gotten to consuming foreign food was consuming
the people who lived on it. He sighed and put a jar of chili sauce back on
its shelf. Just who did he think he was going to impress by knowing about ethnic
cooking, anyway?
He made himself skip the canned goods aisle, and the
cereal one, and the baking needs. The alcoholic beverage aisle made him
pause for a moment, though. This, at least, he could enjoy like a human
would: nobody drank booze for nutrition, or for the taste. Of course, that
was also what made it dangerous for a human, or pointless for him. He kept
walking. The plan was to become someone, not to toast the girl and get
drunk together.
Finally he made it to the household items, his basket
still empty. There were too many choices, though, so he had to stand there
reading labels again until he found a few substances that could keep his
little apartment clean. He also took some light bulbs, reasoning that he
should get used to living without complete darkness. Now he just needed to
keep his own body clean and well-groomed.
There were even more choices in the shampoo aisle.
Overwhelmed, the vampire ran a hand through his recently shortened hair and
tried to remember what he had done with it last time he was leading a
moderately civilized life. No, that wouldn’t do. Fashions had changed since
then; having an out-of-date hairstyle would draw attention, and worse, make
him look stupid. He frowned and considered a bottle of gel. If only he
could just ask the girl what kind of hair she liked.
“Oh, don’t use that one,” said a female voice right
beside him, but it was the wrong girl. This one was just a fellow shopper,
one who had been a little too close for comfort even before she spoke to
him. “My ex used to gel his hair all the time, he tried them all. That
one’s best.” She pointed.
“Thanks,” he said curtly, and dropped her suggestion
into his basket, hoping that would terminate her interest in him.
It didn’t. Before he was able to turn away from her, she
called him back with, “Oh, sorry? Would you be an angel and get that dye
from the top shelf for me? The copper sunrise, not the wildfire.”
He sized her up. She wasn’t petite, and in her
excessively high heels, she shouldn’t have any trouble reaching the item in
question. What she wanted from him was more than a few seconds of
assistance, and knowing that ignited a seed of rage within him. Such
foolishness deserved only his contempt, but he wasn’t here to teach anyone
a lesson, and he had to learn to check his impulses, sooner rather than
later. He reached up and handed her the box of copper sunrise hair dye.
“Thanks, angel! You’re so tall. I wish they had one of
you in every aisle. Ha ha ha!” She sidled up to him as he searched for the
bar soap as quickly as possible. “Just doing some hygiene shopping, huh?
Yeah, I don’t have much of a plan for the weekend either. Well, that’s the
best time to try out a new hair color, right?”
She kept it up without seeming to need any response or
reaction from him until he escaped into a checkout line, hoping that he
wasn’t forgetting anything. The cashier gave him change and a receipt to
puzzle over later and put all of his purchases into a brown paper bag, and
he congratulated himself on successfully completing his first act of
reintegration into human life.
As the sliding doors released him into the night, he
found to his dismay that his admirer in high heels had somehow made it out
of the store before him. She even appeared to be waiting for him, unless
she was just leaning against the column of shopping carts because she liked
it there. “Hey,” she said when she saw him, dashing his hopes. “I was just
gonna say, you looked kind of peeved in there, so I just wanted to say,
sorry if I said something, you know. I was just trying to be friendly. You
look really sad.”
What am I supposed to do here? He nodded in her
direction. “That’s alright.”
He tried to step into the parking lot, but suddenly her
hand was on his arm. “Hey, you don’t have to be so -”
The line was crossed. He whirled on her so quickly that
she gasped and stumbled backward into the carts. “I am not an angel,” he
growled into her face. “I’m not interested in you, and you better thank
your God for that. I used to pick up women like you all the time. Not as
lovers. As victims. Go home and dye your hair and think twice next time you
meet a strange man at night.”
He didn’t turn around as he stalked away from the store,
but he thought he heard her stifling a sob. So much for my successful
trip. But really, what could he have done? The woman was playing with
fire. He didn’t like flirtation at the best of times, and this time he
needed more than a polite rebuttal to shake her off. Besides, he had at
least concealed the worst of his real self. She had been far too close to
him, and beneath her perfume, she smelled of ambrosia. Shutting her up for
good was doubly difficult to resist.
If she had been the girl, though...
The demands of his soul were so hard to navigate.
Wouldn’t the girl smell even better? Was he not prepared for that? He’d
better be, if he ever wanted to speak to her or fight beside her. It
would be okay if she wanted to flirt with me, though. It would be
different. And that wasn’t a solution at all; it was a problem of its
own.
He confessed everything to Whistler the next time he saw
him. After the requisite lamenting about his lot in life, the demon
listened closely and then shook his head with something resembling
sympathy. “Y’know what they say, never go grocery shopping when you’re hungry.”
“But then I realized,” the vampire plowed on, “if it had
been the girl, I wouldn’t have even cared.”
“Buffy.” Whistler put down the open bottle he had been
sniffing and waited. When he got no response, he continued, “You’re still
callin’ her ‘the girl’, and honestly it’s startin’ to creep me out. Jesus,
buddy, I told you what her name was weeks ago. A’right, so it’s not quite
the regal title you’d expect of her nubile Slayerness -”
“There’s nothing wrong with her name,” he cut in,
feeling absurdly indignant. “It just doesn’t feel right to use it. I don’t know
her yet.”
“You know her enough to decide she’d be worth a little
bit a’ decency if you caught her ogling your pretty face, I’d say that’s
something. Get over your immortal unholier-than-thou disdain for the living
and you might just realize there’s no ‘the girl’. There’s billions of ‘em.
That’s why they got names. You’re in the game now, that’s good for
everyone, but you gotta wake up and notice it’s not all about you anymore.”
“It was never about me. It was about -”
“Her?” Whistler snorted. “Don’t make me laugh. You know
what a Slayer does? She risks her life and usually kisses it goodbye, all
for the sake of some average-at-best humans who don’t even know she’s
there. Are you gonna help her save them or are you gonna work the angle of
they’re not worth it? ‘Cause there’s some things you can’t fake, pal, and
for her it’s gonna matter.”
The vampire cast him a baleful look. He still hadn’t
quite figured Whistler out. He was clearly right about some things, like
bringing the vampire and the Slayer together, but just as clearly wrong
about others, like what kind of hat to wear. Was his advice now part of his
divine guidance, or was it a personal preference, like the hat? “Even if
they are worth it,” he said, “the girl - Buffy - she won’t thank me for
accidentally killing them if they get too close and I can’t control
myself.”
“Not one bit,” agreed Whistler. “So don’t do it.” He
pointed his half-empty bottle at the vampire. “You got the power to snuff
out the life of any human that crosses your path of damnation - except for
Buffy - without a second thought. You snagged a soul, you finally figured
out that power doesn’t make you better than them, so now you don’t do it
anymore. Well, feed on this: that doesn’t make you better than them either.
It just makes you one of ‘em. One of billions, just like your cute little
ancestral enemy.”
The vampire, who was not Angelus, considered this. “But
I don’t have a name.”
“You want one?”
“You said I
could become someone.”
Whistler smacked himself in the forehead. “Gods monsters
and strip dancers, the vamp actually listened to something I said. Never
thought that would happen. A’right, you wanna be someone? How about bein’
that guy in the hair gel aisle?”
Not at all an appealing prospect. “What’s so
great about that guy?”
“He helped a woman get something off a shelf.”
The vampire took a moment to make sure Whistler was
being serious, and concluded that he was. If this was a matter of his
personal preferences, it wasn’t such a bad one. Not as bad as the hat,
anyway. “So you’re saying I should call myself Angel? That’s not exactly
new.”
“Make it new.” The demon finally poured a pair of shots
out of the bottle, pushed one across the table, and lifted the other one
high. “To the girl,” he said. “Buffy the Slayer.”
“To her people,” said Angel, wondering all over again
what he had gotten himself into. “The whole world.”
| Fiction Search | Home
Page | Back |
|