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Déjà Vu
Author: Little Heaven
PART
ONE
Chapter
Five: Sharp
Cordelia
stood on the top stair, listening to the conversation below.
"I
hope she didn't stake him or anything," Gunn said.
"Do
you really think she would?" Wesley asked, sounding nervous.
Cordelia
suppressed a grin, which broke free when Gunn replied, "I never saw
her that mad before. She's one scary chick when she gets going."
"Quite
a perplexing outburst. I don't think I'll ever understand that girl. Women
are hard to read at the best of times. And Cordelia..." Wesley began.
"Should
have come with instructions," Gunn finished the sentence.
Okay,
she deserved that. You never heard good things about yourself when you
eavesdropped. Besides, right now an instruction manual for her addled brain
would come in real handy. To turn off unwanted feelings -- pull left
earlobe...
She
cleared her throat, making the rest of her descent as loud as possible. The
voices came to an abrupt halt. Wesley and Gunn looked up at her, guilt
written all over their faces.
"When
people go quiet as you walk in the room, it's rarely a good sign." She
narrowed her eyes at them, wanting to make them squirm.
"Angel
okay? He looked pretty mad," Gunn asked, obviously trying to change
the subject.
"We
kissed and made up," she said lightly. Oh God, did we kiss... No! Bad
thoughts.
"Oh,
good, that's -- good." Wesley took off his glasses and began to polish
them vigorously. "I was a bit worried about him. I know how hard
things are for him right now."
"You
have no idea," Cordelia deadpanned, shaking her head.
Gunn
sat down on Angel's chair, crossing one ankle over the other. "So? Are
we gonna go after Cara?"
"She
could be on a bus out of town by now," Wesley said.
"I
think we should find out as much as we can about that prophecy first. If
Cara comes back, we need to know if we can fix things," she said.
"If Angel has any hope of getting permanently souly, we have to figure
out how he can 'do it' with her without a dinner bell going off in his
head."
"But
I thought you didn't like that idea," Wesley said, looking confused.
She
frowned at him. "That is *so* not the issue right now. This is about
what Angel wants, not what I think."
"Instructions."
Gunn tried to disguise the word as a loud cough. Cordelia slapped him,
hard.
There
was a brief silence as they all racked their brains as to where to begin
looking.
"Hey,
what about the scroll of linoleum?" Cordelia said, remembering where
the prophecy about Angel's Shanshu came from. Surely there was other stuff
in that?
"You
mean the scroll of Aberjian?" Wesley corrected, drawing out the word
for her benefit. "Actually, you might have something there. I do recall
mention of gypsies. I just assumed that referred to his past dealings with
them, and paid little attention to it. I was so busy trying to work out the
Shanshu part, I never went back to that section. I'll look into it
immediately." He jumped up, excited, and scuttled into his office.
Cordelia
noticed Angel coming down the stairs about ten minutes later. She could
barely look at him without her cheeks feeling hot, and ducked her head back
to the book she was trying to read.
The
men hardly acknowledged his presence. They were deep in research mode --
books and musty old bits of paper strewn over every spare inch of desktop,
and parts of the floor. Wesley had the scroll of Aberjian carefully
weighted down at each corner, and was poring over it with a looking glass,
muttering to himself. "Damn, I know it's here somewhere."
"Hey,
man, grab a book," Gunn said, glancing up briefly.
Angel
lifted a heavy volume and sat down beside Cordelia. "What are we
looking for exactly?"
"We're
trying to find a reference to the prophecy, or better still, a full
version," Wesley said, not looking up from the ancient scroll.
"You
still think Cara's is incomplete?" Angel looked hopeful at the
prospect.
"Mmm,
possibly," Wesley murmured, his attention still focussed on the
parchment.
Cordelia
watched Angel set his book on the desk, and begin turning pages. His
concentration was obviously shot -- he kept glancing sideways at her,
shifting in his seat, moving his feet restlessly. She could guess what he
was thinking. She was thinking it too.
Her
emotions were still in a mess. She wanted him -- she didn't want him.
Everything sensible in her brain told her to forget the kiss, ignore his
feelings for her, but now that it was out there, she couldn't stop thinking
about it.
She
pondered her track record in romance. Shouting at Xander one moment,
kissing him passionately the next. Calling Doyle a weasel at breakfast
time, accepting his dinner invitation the same evening. Sleeping with a man
she barely knew... Was she doomed to follow the same pattern forever -
lurching from indifference to infatuation at the drop of a hat? All it had
gotten her so far was a broken heart, rebar through the torso,
mind-shattering visions and a demon pregnancy.
Concentrate,
Cordelia, there are more important things at stake. Regardless of what she
did, or didn't feel for Angel, they needed to get this prophecy sorted out
-- which they couldn't do unless they miraculously found Cara, and somehow
fulfilled it without Angel turning into Cujo in the process.
They
were playing with fire here, and Cara's life, for his benefit. No, not just
his benefit -- for her own, too. The thought of what Angelus would do to
her if he got free scared her more than anything else in the world. She
knew it scared him just as much.
But
that was only the start of it. Once Angelus was finished with her,
countless others would follow. Wesley and Gunn certainly. Their friends in
Sunnydale too. Buffy, Willow, and how many others? Hundreds? Thousands
perhaps. This was so much bigger that she had ever considered. Shame washed
over her as she thought about her selfish outburst. All she'd considered
was how it affected her. That was supposed to be the old Cordy.
She
glanced at Angel, her pensiveness turning to amusement. He was still away
with the fairies, and despite her misgivings, she liked that it was because
of her. It was a new and entirely pleasant feeling. The boys at school had
only gone out with her because she was popular, and the Xander episode had
been sorta twisted and gropey and apparently one-sided.
She'd
never really had someone fall for her before, not the way Angel seemed to
have. Maybe Doyle had started to, but he died before they ever got to work
out their feelings. And until recently, she probably wasn't the sort of
person anyone would have wanted to be with anyway.
Cordelia
jumped as Angel's hand crept onto her thigh, under the desk, hidden from
view. Neither of them was going to get any work done like this -- her
fretting, and him copping a feel. Especially since, she noted, his book was
upside-down. Reaching over, she turned it one-hundred-and-eighty degrees,
so the text was readable. He looked at her sheepishly.
She
needed to concentrate, sort this whole mess out in her head, and she
couldn't do that with him in such close proximity. "I need more
light," she announced, reaching under the desk for her purse.
Wesley
and Gunn grunted in unison. Gathering up her cardigan, left behind by the
fleeing Cara, Cordelia collected her books and rose from her chair, Angel's
hand slipping off her leg. She strode towards the doors to the small
courtyard.
"Cordelia,
those books are very susceptible to UV light." Wesley was sufficiently
distracted now to look up.
"So
am I, and I'm gonna absorb as much of it as possible," she called over
her shoulder.
She
folded the cardigan into a cushion, and placed it on the wall of the dry
fountain. Taking her sunglasses out of her bag, she settled down to read.
Sighing
comfortably, she hitched her skirt up to reveal her legs, relishing the
warmth as the sun tingled on her skin. She saw too little of her old friend
these days. She realized that, more and more, she was choosing between it
and Angel. Cordelia knew which one would win. She'd live her whole life in
the dark to be with him. And there were always sunbeds. Perhaps he'd
install one in the basement for her.
***
Angel
watched her through the doors, sitting out in the daylight, where he couldn't
follow. It felt wrong -- dangerous. He raised his head, listening, sniffing
the air. Something *was* wrong. Something was -- outside. "Uh, guys,
you might want to check out the front," he said uneasily, glancing
towards the main entrance.
"You
think there's somethin' out there?" Gunn said, rising, tensed for
action. Angel nodded. "Back me up, bro." Gunn motioned to Wesley
to follow, and they both made their way to the door, weapons in hand.
Angel
stood, feeling useless, unable to return to his book. Getting more
agitated, he strode towards the courtyard doors. Cordelia was still there,
skirt hitched indecently high, thumbing through a musty old tome as if it
were the latest Vogue. He smiled despite himself, struck by the bizarre
juxtaposition of two disparate worlds, and amazed as always by the way she
took life's oddities in hand. The benefit of a Sunnydale childhood, he
figured.
A
small movement caught his eye. The demon was crouched on the courtyard
wall, so still it was almost invisible, its skin the color of sandstone.
Long, lethal talons protruded from its fingertips, and it cocked its head,
eyeing Cordelia as she sunbathed, oblivious to its presence. Angel's
sensitive ears picked up the low clicking sound that emanated from its
throat as it stalked its prey. The muscles in its hind legs tensed, ready
to spring.
Angel
saw everything in slow motion. The demon launched itself from the wall,
landing beside Cordelia. She screamed, and to her eternal credit, kept her
wits about her enough to bash it across the face with her book. A feral
growl ripped from Angel's throat, his demon visage erupting as he flung
himself through the doors and out into the blazing LA sunshine.
***
Cordelia
wasn't sure what alarmed her more -- the sight of the huge talons lunging
at her, or that of Angel, in full game face, billowing smoke as he slammed
into the demon full-force. In a tangle of claws, fangs and limbs, the two
combatants tumbled against the wall of the hotel, and mercifully into a
sliver of shade.
The
smell of burning flesh made her gag for a second. The demon extricated
itself from the tackle, and crouched over Angel, who cowered against the
wall, holding his burned hands protectively against his chest. Dammit,
Angel, stay in the shade. It raised one claw high in the air for the blow
that would surely sever Angel's head.
"Hey,
Edward Scissorhands!" Cordelia screamed at it, her hand going into her
bag. There was no way she was going to stand by and watch Angel be
decapitated, whatever the danger to herself. She maneuvered closer. The
demon paused, but did not turn around.
"I
said, HEY!" She belted it across the back of the head with her
handbag, her other hand gripping the small cylinder she had retrieved from
its depths. An agitated clicking sound, rising to something akin to a
two-stroke engine, reverberated from the animal. It sniffed, taking in her
scent.
"Cordelia,
run," Angel's voice cracked.
The
demon swung around, evil eyes locking onto her. She seized the opportunity
and discharged the full can of mace into its face. It began to squeal, the
taloned hands flying up to protect its eyes. She jumped backwards just
enough to avoid being slashed as they whizzed past her face.
There
was a resonant 'thung', followed by a 'whoosh' as an arrow flew past her
left shoulder and embedded between the demon's eyes. The two-stroke sound
accelerated to a noise more like a chain saw, and the monster lurched
around the courtyard, flailing wildly with the deadly blades.
Gunn
and Wesley leapt into battle, Gunn's hubcap weapon and Wesley's Bavarian
fighting axe clashing with talons and several other parts of the demon's
body. Cordelia averted her eyes, but that didn't block out the horrible
hacking noise, or the smell.
Finally,
it crumpled into a bloody, oozing heap on the pavers. Wesley and Gunn stood
over the corpse, breathing hard, and examining the small nicks and cuts
that adorned both their bodies.
Now
Cordelia could see Angel, huddled against the building, burns marring his
face and hands. He shook, whimpering, recoiling from the daylight that
illuminated the concrete just inches from his body.
"Oh,
God, Angel," she stepped over the body of the demon, falling to her
knees beside him.
He
began to slump over, his voice barely audible. "Get me inside."
***
Angel
lay, spread semi-naked on his bed. Over the scent of his own charred skin,
he smelled his friends, gathered nearby. He could feel weeping blisters on
his hands and face, and the sting of the lacerations that covered his body
from his tumble with the demon.
"Thank
the Lord he was wearing a long-sleeved skivvy," he heard; Wesley's
voice, fuzzy, but growing closer. Something cold and wet pressed against
his seared forehead. It was Cordelia, tending to him with a washcloth full
of ice. He could feel her hand trembling as she moved the soothing coolness
to his cheek.
"That
feels nice," he whispered. A couple of gasps indicated his comment had
startled the onlookers.
Forcing
open his swollen eyelids, he squinted up at Cordelia. She looked really
mad. He cringed -- it was never a good thing to raise her ire, and
especially not when you felt like you'd just been attacked by a blow-torch
wielding Cuisinart. He hoped she'd take it easy on him, considering his
weakened state.
"That
was stupid. What the hell were you doing?" she said angrily.
"It
was going to kill you," he sighed. "I had to stop it."
"What
were you planning to do, torch boy? Scare it off with fire? You almost ended
up as the world's largest shish-kebab!" Her eyes flashed fury -- and
pain.
Now he
understood. She wasn't just angry -- she was scared. And she was trying
valiantly to cover it up. "I had to protect you." He began to
cough.
"I
was doing fine by myself, what with the not being on fire and all,"
she said, her face softening, although her voice remained annoyed.
"Yeah,
cos being whacked with a handbag is the number one cause of death among
demons," Gunn said, dripping sarcasm.
"Actually,"
Angel rasped, "that bag's full of stuff. It must weigh a ton."
Her
scowl returned. "You've been into my handbag?"
"Now
you're really in trouble," Gunn laughed.
"You
will be, too, if Angel doesn't get some rest. Shoo!" Cordelia flapped
her hands at Gunn and Wesley. Angel closed his eyes again, knowing he was
in good hands.
***
Angel
stood on the first floor balcony. He'd slept right through sunset, and it
was now sometime around midnight. His scarred and blotchy skin was already
healing.
Wesley
and Gunn were still awake below, in the lobby, looking like they'd cut
themselves shaving -- all over. Dressings and bits of surgical tape created
a patchwork effect on their arms and faces. They were having an animated
discussion with Cordelia, who was surfing the net.
"Cordelia,
you're making that up." Wesley's tone was scolding, as if she was a
naughty child telling him a bare-faced fib.
"I'm
not! Come and look for yourself. Ginsu. Gin-su. That's what it says. I was
attacked by a Ginsu demon."
"Like
the steak knives?" Gunn asked. Angel could tell he didn't believe her
either.
"Yeah,
like the steak knives. How do you think they got their name?" Her
voice was thick with exasperation.
"I
always suspected there was something evil about those infomercials,"
Wesley said, leaning over her shoulder to inspect the monitor.
Angel
came down the stairs, and they only noticed him as he reached the lobby
floor.
"The
Ginsu, while possessing poor eyesight, have excellent hearing and an
advanced sense of smell," Wesley read from the screen.
Angel
leaned on the desk with his elbows, avoiding unnecessary pressure on his
sore hands. "It was after Cara."
"So
why did it attack me?" Cordelia said, indignant. "I don't look
like her. My ass is way smaller."
"No,
but you sat on the cardigan she wore. It made you smell like her,"
Angel said. "Not much, but enough to confuse it."
"Ugh,
gross!" She shifted in her seat, trying to wipe her hands across her
butt.
"You
think there's more of those steak knife things out there?" Gunn poked
a thumb in the direction of the courtyard, where the body of the slain
demon had degenerated into an oily black slick on the concrete.
"Probably.
You should wash and change, Cordy," Angel suggested, aware all she was
doing was spreading the weak smell around. She'd stirred it up enough that
Darla's pretty powdered face flashed though his mind again, and he shook
himself mentally. Fight it. Don't let it get to you. Don't inhale.
"I
think I may have made some small progress with our little problem,"
Wesley said, having absorbed all the information on their latest demon.
Cordelia
feigned disappointment. "But you didn't say Eureka."
He
ignored the remark, adjusting his glasses on his nose. "There is a
section of the scroll of Aberjian that mentions the curse. It says the soul
will be revoked by true happiness, until after Angel encounters 'the chosen
daughter'."
"Cara?"
Gunn said.
"One
can only assume."
"So
is the prophecy mentioned?" Angel leaned forward, his interest piqued.
"Not
really. There is one other passage -- it's not a language I'm fluent in. I
only recognise two or three words."
"Which
are?"
"Uh,
there's 'curse', 'Gypsy' and, er -- I believe the last one translates as
'penetration'. Wesley's face went a vivid shade of pink.
"Jeez,
obscure much?" Cordelia rolled her eyes. "Now we know where the
guys who write instructions for assemble-it-yourself furniture descended
from."
"Yeah,
bro, why couldn't they just write it in plain English?" Gunn said.
"Well,
I don't think English was invented when this was written," Wesley
tried to explain, before turning back to Angel. "I have to know, has
anything like this ever happened to you before? The hallucinations?"
"Uh,
yeah, once." Angel didn't like the line of questioning. It forced him
to remember things that were better left buried.
His
face had obviously given away more than he intended, because Wesley came
towards him and said, "If we're to help you, Angel, you must tell us
everything."
"I
had hallucinations when I was in Sunnydale. Waking dreams. But that was The
First, trying to get me to kill Buffy," he said, trying to get away
with as brief a description as possible. "This is different."
"And
how did you deal with that?" Wesley asked.
Angel
paused for a long time before answering. "I didn't."
"Angel."
Wesley's voice held a tone of warning.
"I
walked up on the ridge and waited for the sun."
"But
you're still here, so something must've stopped you from burning up,"
Cordelia said.
"It
snowed." Angel looked down at his burned hands. "If it
hadn't..."
"That
was all about you?" she gasped.
"I
-- I guess so. I never really stopped to wonder..."
"Typical!"
she snorted, banging her hand down on the keyboard. "Damn PTB! You,
they give two inches of snow. Me, they give mind-melting, head-cracking,
drool-o-vision. Speaking of which..."
Angel
made it to her side and wound his arms around her, even before she rocked
forward, crying out in agony.
"Cordy,"
he said, hating that he always felt so useless when this happened. She
cannoned back against his chest, her fingers clawing at his forearms. Damn
PTB was right. Why couldn't they transfer the visions to him?
Wesley
grabbed up a pad and pen. "Cordelia, what can you see?"
"Ginsu,"
she coughed, struggling to force the word out. "Cara -- she's
bleeding."
"It's
okay." Angel held her firmly, ignoring his smarting palms.
"The
Chinese Theater," she gasped, opening her eyes. Angel thought it was
all over, but another lance of pain threw her forward, and he just managed
to stop her hitting her head on the computer.
"Angel,
no!" she cried, twisting in his grasp, pushing against his chest. Her
face contorted in panic and revulsion.
"Cordy,
it's okay. You're safe. I've got you," he said, trying to calm her
frantic flailing, and wincing as her fingers raked and pummelled the
partially healed cuts beneath his shirt. She opened her eyes and grew
still, staring at him in horror. He could smell something new on her. Fear,
raw and ugly. Fear of him.
"What
did you see?" Wesley asked again, as Angel released Cordelia enough so
she could sit straight.
"It's
Cara -- those slice 'n' dice things are after her," she said, sucking
in deep breaths. "She was on the grounds of some big old house, behind
Mann's Chinese Theater."
"Yeah,
that's a hostel. Maybe she's stayin' there," Gunn said, moving for his
axe.
"That's
not all. I saw you." She turned to Angel. "You -- you bit
someone." Her voice was filled with disgust.
"Cara?"
he asked, unnerved. Please, just for once, let Cordy’s vision be wrong.
Just when I have her back...
She
nodded, her whole body straining to move away from him. "I think
so."
"When,
Cordelia?" Wesley looked grave.
"We
have to leave now." She reached for her jacket, struggling to her
feet.
"Hey,
you should stay here -- rest," Angel said, fishing for his car keys in
the pocket of his duster.
Cordelia
avoided the hand he put out to restrain her. "I have to come. If you
wig, I might be the only one who can bring you back."
She
was right. It was her scent, her touch, that had grounded him at Caritas.
He was going to need her with him when they found Cara. She had to stop him
from killing, not just for Cara's sake, but for his own. She had to keep
him away from the darkness.
He
pocketed her painkillers, and grabbed her water bottle.
Chapter
Six: Showdown
"We're
here." Angel's voice cut into Cordelia's nap. She lifted her head from
Wesley's shoulder, looking around to gain her bearings. They were pulling
up outside the hostel she'd seen in her vision. Several windows were still
lit, casting squares of light over the garden. A few people scurried past,
heading out to nightclubs, or home after dinner and a movie. Angel pulled
the Plymouth over to the curb and parked. They all sat in silence for a
moment.
Angel
lifted his head, alert, testing the air. "She's coming." She
wondered what he could smell. Fear? Sweat? Ugh, gross, he could keep the
super-nostrils if that was the case.
Now
her footsteps were audible, and Cara appeared out of the darkness, coming
along the sidewalk towards the hostel. She appeared not to notice the black
car across the road.
As
Cara turned up the path towards the hostel door, Cordelia saw a movement in
the shadows, between the trees. The Ginsu were waiting. Their sandy colored
bodies were dappled in the mix of moonlight and shadow, almost camouflaging
them, but the intermittent glint from their long blades gave them away.
"Angel,"
she whispered, but he'd already seen them, or smelled them. Without
warning, he vaulted over the driver's door and sprinted across the road, a
short battle sword clenched tightly in his fist. She gripped her knife and
followed Wesley and Gunn as they all ran towards the garden, weapons ready.
The few passers-by noticed, and scattered.
Cara's
scream rent the air. She'd made it most of the way to the hostel door
before five talon-waving figures encircled her. They were tightening their
circle, cutting off any means of escape for the terrified girl. The blades
protruding from their fingers swished through the air, getting closer to
Cara's face, her hands, her legs, slicing her skin. The closer they got,
the more they cut, and the louder she screamed.
Angel
had disappeared. Cordelia tensed with momentary panic. No, she hadn't seen
him get injured. He must be hanging back somewhere -- it made sense that
he'd keep clear of Cara. Drawing a long breath, she tried to remain calm.
She was no use to anyone as a gibbering wreck. Just stay out of the way and
try not to get killed.
Gunn
moved around to the left, his custom-made axe swinging in a wide arc as he
lopped the head clean off the nearest Ginsu. It fell to the ground,
bouncing twice and then rolling away like a macabre soccer ball. The rest
of the demon stayed upright for a moment, before toppling backwards and
slamming full-length onto the grass, black goo gushing from its severed
neck.
The
other four Ginsu stopped terrorising Cara, wheeling around to look at Gunn.
He stood there, bringing the handle of his axe down into one hand, his head
tipped on one side, his whole stance a challenge, as he eyed the closest
one. "C'mon, Patti la Belle, 'fraid of breakin' a fingernail?" he
taunted, his voice icy.
Whether
the Ginsu spoke English or not, Gunn's body language certainly provoked
them. The remaining four demons began to converge on him, clicking in
agitation.
Cara
was momentarily unguarded. "Cordelia, get the girl to safety!"
Wesley shouted, raising his crossbow.
Cara
obviously needed no encouragement to run. She stumbled backwards a few
steps, before turning and lurching across the grass to where Cordelia
waited. Blood streamed from a gash on her forehead, dripping through her
left eyebrow and running down her cheek. Her hands and legs were scored and
bleeding, and red drops spattered on the grass as she ran.
***
Wesley
watched just long enough to make sure she was out of the way, then let fly
his first arrow. It pierced the arm of one Ginsu, which wheeled angrily in
his direction. The chainsaw growling was quite disconcerting. Wesley
fumbled for another bolt, his hand coming to rest on one made of wood. No,
that was for later -- just in case.
"Wes,
look out!" Gunn yelled, and Wesley ducked, moments before a giant
blade swished through the air where his neck had been. He dropped and
rolled, putting some distance between himself and a really close shave.
From
his new position, he could see Angel, crouched in the shrubbery, waiting
for Cara to reach the other side of the garden, as far away as possible.
"Angel,
any time now would be good," Gunn shouted from where he was fending
off three very fractious Ginsu.
Wesley
rolled again, avoiding another talon. He hoped Angel was in a fit state to
respond. Now was no time for their trump card to be smelling the roses. He
glanced over, noticing Angel rise to his feet, advancing hesitantly. He
didn't look good, actually, panting hard, his eyes glowing amber, tugging
at his hair with trembling hands. Was he losing control? For a second
Wesley's heart sank, but Angel shook himself, tightened his grip on his
sword, and launched into the fray.
***
Cordelia
made it to the sidewalk. She had her arm around Cara, and could feel the
girl sagging, slowing down. Her feet dragged and tripped along the uneven
ground. Cara was about to faint. That would kinda ruin the 'getting to
safety' part of the plan.
"Come
on, we have to hide," she said, dragging Cara into the nearest clump
of bushes. They crouched, breathless, watching the fight raging on the
lawn.
Two of
the Ginsu were down now, and it also looked like Wesley had been injured.
Angel was battling hard, leaping in the air to avoid his feet being cut out
from under him, and then spinning and kicking his assailant in the face.
Cordelia averted her eyes, somehow finding it much harder to watch him
fight now -- now that she knew how he felt.
"How
did you know?" Cara said, her voice wobbling. "How did you find
me? Oh -- God." She looked down at her hands, staring at the blood
dripping from her fingers. Big flaps of skin hung open, glistening in the
moonlight like ghoulish petals. It was too much, and she fainted.
"Oh,
for the love of..." Cordelia muttered, letting Cara slump to the
ground. It was impossible to keep the girl sitting up when she was
completely limp and all slippery with blood. No big -- she'd wait for the
guys to finish their slash-a-palooza, and then call an ambulance. By the
look of things, everyone bar her and Angel would need stitches.
She
fished in her jacket for her cellphone, breathing a sigh of relief as her
hand closed around the small plastic and metal case. Just holding the piece
of modern technology made her feel better. But -- it sounded like it was
clicking. She pulled it from her pocket and held it up in front of her
face. It wasn't even turned on.
Her
spine prickled as she saw the reflection in the small screen of the Ginsu
hunched behind her. "Of course," she said out loud. "Should
have known -- they always come in a set of six."
Sharp
pain screamed through her side, just above her hip, followed by the warm
trickle of her own blood. Ignoring it, she spun as best she could from her
squatting position, falling onto her butt, facing the demon.
One
wild kick knocked it back a mere step, and the blood-curdling clicking
noise rattled more loudly in its throat. She threw her knife at it, and
missed completely. Great, there went her only weapon.
The
Ginsu just stood there. Why didn't it attack? It moved its head slowly from
Cara to Cordelia, sniffing. It was trying to work out which one of them was
the target. She was covered in Cara's blood. Oh God, it would probably give
up in a moment and just kill them both.
***
Panting
hard, a habit that never left him, Angel stood over the body of the slain
Ginsu. The air was thick with human blood. Cara's was all over the grass at
his feet, and he fought off the urge to bury his hand in it, wipe it across
his face, over his tongue...
After
a moment's intense concentration, he dragged himself away, and looked over
to Gunn, who was hacking away at the last of the five demons. "Need
help?"
"Nah,
go see if English is all right," Gunn said, between blows.
Cordelia's
scream ripped through the still air. Angel hesitated. Wherever Cordy was,
so was Cara. He couldn't go there, it wasn't safe. Another scream. He
looked from the dazed Wesley to the battling Gunn.
"Angel!"
She screamed.
There
was no choice. Cordelia needed him. He began to run.
Her
cries led him around the side of the building, where she was trying to find
a door, anywhere she could get to safety. She was moving slowly, too
slowly, dragging a semi-conscious Cara with her. The sixth Ginsu was
tracking them like a wolf, pacing, waiting for them to fall. It stood
between Angel and his Seer, unaware anyone was approaching.
Angel
could smell Cara again, stronger now that he had rounded the corner. He
hesitated for a moment, unsure if he could trust himself to go on, and then
something else pricked in the back of his nose. Cordy's blood. It coated
one of the Ginsu's talons. It would die for hurting her.
His
game face emerged, and he flew at it, striking out with his sword. The two
of them tumbled into a heap and went backwards through a bush.
Angel
hit out, rage infusing him with extra strength. "Don't you ever. Go.
Near. Her. Again!" He slashed furiously, chopping off lumps of flesh
with each livid word. They rolled back, slamming against the wall of the
hostel, coating the paintwork with black goo. The Ginsu roared, flashing
its fingernails in all directions, trying to survive the onslaught.
When
it grew silent, Angel stood up, casting the sword to the ground, and
spinning around to see if Cordelia was okay.
"Angel!"
She ran towards him, holding out her arms. He caught her in a fierce
embrace, clutching her against his chest. She was all right, thank God. Her
hands clasped the back of his neck, as if she were holding herself up.
"You
okay?" he asked, his demon face buried in her hair. She nodded against
his cheek, and he pulled away, dipping his head to kiss her.
Her
reaction was immediate, recoiling, avoiding the fangs. "Angel, I
can't," she gasped, stumbling backwards, looking down, evading his
gaze. She began to tremble. "Oh, God, what have I done? Angel, I'm so
sorry."
"What?"
He didn't understand.
She
held her hands up in front of her, looking at them as if they had betrayed
her. They were covered in blood. Cara's blood.
He inhaled.
He couldn't help it. Cara's scent covered him. It was creeping all over him
like ivy, the tendrils of scent curling into his nostrils, growing up into
his brain.
He
reached up with a trembling finger and drew it through the moist red patch
on his neck. He held it in front of his face, staring at the blood for an
endless second, before putting it into his mouth and sucking. It tasted
better than anything he could remember. His gut twisted. So hungry...
"Angel,
stop it, you're scaring me," Cordelia said, balling her hands into her
jacket pockets.
He
looked around. The lush drapes, the rich, thick, woollen rugs, the roaring
fire. He knew this place. He ran his tongue around the inside of his mouth,
cold saliva rushing in anticipation.
"She's
not just for you, I get to watch." Darla's breath cooled his ear.
He
growled low in his throat and advanced, scenting the air.
"Angel,
it's me, Cordy."
What
was it saying? Something wasn't right. Didn't smell right. The smell was
stronger -- behind it.
***
Cordelia
felt her stomach drop. He didn't even know her anymore. She was covered in
gypsy blood and she couldn't help him.
With a
snarl, Angel sprang forward. She screamed, expecting him to grasp her
shoulders and bite deep. But he shoved her aside, stopping to kneel over
Cara, who was on her backside on the grass.
Cordelia
watched in horror as he pushed up Cara's skirt, exposing her thigh. He
dipped his head, and buried his fangs right into the spot she knew bore the
birthmark. The slurping noise was awful, but not as horrible as the noise
coming out of Cara's throat -- a scream of pure terror.
Cordelia
felt the bile rising. As much as she knew Angel had no control over this, a
tide of revulsion still engulfed her. Part of her registered this as *her*
Angel killing Cara.
But
through the disgust, another feeling struggled free. A fierce spark, that
grew and burned in her chest. He needed her now, just as she had needed him
a moment ago. It was her turn to be the strong one. She'd promised him
she'd stop him from doing this, and she damn well would, whatever the cost.
The spark in her chest burst into flame.
With a
scream she threw herself at Angel, landing on his back. Kicking and punching,
she pummelled his arms, his back, his head. For a moment, he broke away
from Cara, and Cordelia's heart soared. One strong arm reached behind,
grabbing her around the bicep. His fingers crushed into her flesh, and then
she was tumbling to the ground, falling on her back, all the air jolting
from her lungs. She couldn't get up, couldn't breathe. Couldn't block out
the noise of fangs sinking into flesh and Cara's thin wails.
"Angel,
put her down!" Wesley's voice was thin but menacing, and he used the
same expression that one would when scolding a naughty dog. Cordelia rolled
onto her knees, dragging air back into her chest. Thank God for Wesley. He
would make things better -- he had to.
Angel
lifted his head again, distracted. He turned his face to the sky, and
Cara's blood trickled from the corner of his mouth.
"Cordelia,
do something. You said if he freaked you could bring him back." Gunn
reached for Wesley's crossbow, his voice betraying his distress.
"I
can't, I'm covered in her blood," Cordelia coughed, holding her
shaking hands towards them as evidence. "I got it on Angel and it
changed him. He didn't even touch her. And I can't..." She stopped,
pressing her sleeve to her mouth, unable to get another word out. It was
her fault.
There
was a crunching sound as Angel's teeth sank once more into Cara's thigh.
She'd stopped struggling now.
"Move
aside, Cordelia," Wesley said, his voice cold and determined, though
his body wavered.
She
looked at them, open-mouthed. "Oh, no, no."
"I
gotta do it, Cordy, get out of the way." Gunn raised the crossbow,
pointing the wooden bolt at Angel.
He was
right. It was what Angel would want. He'd rather be dust than a killer. She
hauled herself to her feet, backing away.
Time
slowed down. She saw Gunn's finger, squeezing the trigger, Angel hunched
over Cara's failing body, Wesley swaying and putting his hands on his knees
for support. And in that split second before Gunn fired, her heart broke,
and she knew. She finally knew how she really felt. Too late, once again.
In a
blur, the world snapped back into real-time. And then everything happened
at once.
A
pulse of blue light burst from Cara's body.
"Gunn,
wait!" Cordelia screamed, but the crossbow fired even as she opened
her mouth. The bolt embedded in Angel's back, as the explosion rocketed him
into the air.
Cordelia
barely had time to register that he was flying towards her, on the crest of
a blue shockwave. He landed, knocking her into Gunn and Wesley, and the
four of them went down. There was some shouting, a lot of tumbling, and
then painful quiet.
Cordelia
tried to move. It wasn't easy with Angel, a dead-weight, sprawled across
her back. At least that meant he hadn't dissolved into dust. Something
sharp jabbed her ribs -- possibly the crossbow, possibly part of Wesley. He
was way too bony for a pile-up like this.
Finally,
she managed to free one hand and wipe the dirt and grass from her face. It
was the only movement in the eerie stillness. Just laying there and waiting
for something to happen felt like a good plan.
Wesley's
voice, coming from somewhere by her left knee, broke the silence. "Ah,
right. Of course. I think I've worked it out."
Chapter
Seven: The Test
Angel's
eyes snapped opened. He could see clouds scudding over the night sky. His
limbs buzzed and twitched. He felt warm, like he'd fed recently, and the
tang of blood in his mouth told him it was true. Human blood. Cara's blood
-- he could taste her essence in it. He sat bolt upright. Oh God, what had
he done?
"Hey."
Cordelia leaned her elbows against the top of the rear passenger door.
"I'm glad you're awake. No way am I strong enough to carry you
inside."
He
looked around. They were parked outside her apartment building. "What
happened?" He tasted the inside of his mouth again with growing
terror, shifting in the seat, agitated.
"You
don't remember?" she said, raising her eyebrows. He shook his head,
puzzled and disoriented. Why wasn't Cordy angry, or frightened? Surely she
had seen him...
Reaching
up with trembling fingers, he touched the corner of his mouth. They came
away smeared with congealed blood. "Cara," he gasped. "I
killed her?"
"Don't
get all amateur dramatic society on me. Cara's fine. Wes and Gunn are with
her at the hospital." Cordelia rolled her eyes, but her voice was soft
and reassuring.
"But
I fed from her."
"Don't
worry, you didn't get past the appetizer," she said.
The
car felt like it spun for a moment, and he didn't care what or who had
stopped him. Just that he hadn't killed anyone. And that Cordy was still
talking to him, which was a miracle after what she'd seen him do. Cara,
however...
"I
-- I should go, apologise to her." He started struggling to get the
door open, frantic. His hands shook and he fumbled the lock.
"I
don't think she wants to see you right now. Or anytime, well -- ever,"
she said, holding out her hand. "Come on, you look like hell."
They
made their way inside in silence. "Dennis, hot bath please?" she
called, tossing the car keys onto the mantelpiece. The sound of running
water drifted from the bathroom.
"Why
are we here?" Angel stood in the middle of the room, shuffling his
feet, wishing he could get over the adrenaline-like rush that came from
drinking human blood. It disgusted him that it felt so good. If only he
could stop the trembling...
"I
don't know," Cordelia said, shrugging. "After Wes and Gunn threw
you in the back seat, I just started driving, and here we are. I didn't
want to go back to the hotel."
He sat
down on the sofa, and rubbed his face restlessly. "What
happened?"
"It's
my fault." She sat beside him, close enough so her arm was pressed
against his. "I wiped Cara's blood all over you." She held out
her hands, still tainted with the offending substance, although it looked like
she'd tried to wash them.
"She
never touched me?" he said, looking up into her face.
"Well,
some of her did," she sighed, flexing her stained fingers. "I'm
sorry."
She
blamed herself. How was it that every time he tried to protect her, he
seemed to end up hurting her? He reached out and touched the side of her
face gently. "It wasn't your fault. You're the only thing that's kept
me sane these last couple of days."
"You
weren't going mad, Angel. It was part of the prophecy," she said.
He
shook his head, not understanding. "How?"
"The
prophecy didn't mean you had to sleep with her -- it meant you had to feed
from her. Wesley finally worked it out. Kinda after the fact,
unfortunately."
He
frowned. "So -- the hallucinations?"
"Would
you have bitten her willingly?" she asked.
Of
course not. He would never have fed from Cara, not without a
one-hundred-percent guarantee that it was the right thing to do. Even then
he couldn't have been sure he'd stop drinking in time. And he wouldn't have
risked killing her. "You're sure that was it? That it worked?"
"Well,
there was a big explosion. And in the ambulance after, Wesley looked at
Cara's birthmark, and it was gone. Not even a hole where you..." She
made a biting motion. "I'd say that all adds up to a great big
'duh'," she said, her face softening into a smile. "You're not
crazy, Angel, you never were. Everything you were feeling was put there by
someone -- or something."
"Not
everything," he murmured, cupping her cheek. He leaned in for a kiss,
and she shrank away, her face screwing up. Of course, she wouldn't want him
now, not after what he'd done. He hung his head. So close, and yet...
"No,
Angel, I'm sorry." Cordelia took his hand. "I would, but right
now there's a really sick twist on 'you've got something in your teeth'
that's grossing me out. You wash up, then perhaps after, there could be --
kissage."
She
got up and went to the linen closet, getting towels and washcloths, while
he watched her from the sofa.
That's
when the relief hit, surging through him, combining with the blood-rush and
forcing him to his feet. He'd been to the very brink, the precipice of
total darkness, and this time his friends were there to pull him back.
Cordelia had been right. Letting them in had saved him. Without them, he
would have run from this, Cara would probably be dead, and he'd be alone
again.
Last
time he'd totally blown it, driven them away. This time, he still had his
crew, his soul, and most amazing of all, Cordy still seemed to be considering
whatever they had between them.
Pacing,
he rubbed a hand over the back of his aching neck, feeling the powdery
dried blood coming away beneath his fingers. He could smell it, sharp with
iron, and dizziness made him lean on the edge of the sofa, leaving
red-brown fingerprints on the upholstery.
Images
crammed into his mind, jumbled, yet vivid. The fighting, Cara's thigh,
quivering beneath his watering mouth, the blue light that filled his being,
the sound of the crossbow firing, and finally, one endless moment where he
heard Cordelia's anguished voice. 'Gunn, wait!' It rang over and over in
his head.
He was
on the floor, on his knees, gasping. "Cordy!"
"What?"
She came running from the bathroom.
"Get
this stuff off me," he said, his voice desperate and breaking.
"Please."
"Okay,
it's okay." She reached down and took his arms, pulling him up.
"Come on." The look on her face spoke so clearly of the hurt she
felt, seeing him like that. He stumbled and lurched, grateful when she
wound both arms around his waist and guided him to the bathroom.
He
tried in vain to undo his shirt, shaking fingers refusing to obey, and then
he felt her tugging at his duster, pulling it down over his arms, and he
just gave up, letting her undress him as he leaned against the vanity.
She
continued, business-like, unlacing boots, peeling off socks, unbuttoning
his pants and easing them down. He stepped out of them and stood before
her, naked now apart from his boxers.
Cordelia
had seen him like this a thousand times before, yet he felt nervous, his
throat dry. She was standing back, waiting to see if he would go that last
step by himself. He took the moment to turn away and rinse his mouth out in
the sink, erasing the taste of Cara from his tongue.
Leaning
on the counter top, he felt her hands on his waist, small and warm, just
the lightest of touches, and then her thumbs slipping into the waistband of
his boxers.
"You
ready?" she asked, her voice husky. He nodded, and she slipped them
down, letting him kick them away. He turned back to face her, trembling,
afraid if he spoke it would break the spell, and she'd laugh, or make a
joke, or worse, shove his clothes back at him and leave.
As
soon as his eyes met hers, he knew his fears were groundless. Her face was
flushed, a picture of desire. She smiled, not the big flashbulb-going-off
that she normally used, just the faintest upward turn at the corners of her
lips.
Taking
his arm firmly, she guided him to the tub. He sank through the perfumed
foam with a short sigh. The dried blood -- his own and Cara's, dissolved
and curled away in little eddies as he moved his arms, reaching for the
sponge. His fingers were still shaking. He fumbled and dropped it.
"Here,
let me." Cordelia leaned in and retrieved the sponge, squeezing body
wash onto it. She drew it over his chest, under his silver pendant. With
firm movements she soaped his shoulders, then ran the sponge up behind his
neck, making sure she removed all traces of blood. It felt so good. He
closed his eyes, sighing.
Leaning
forward, he let her work the soap over his back. "Ouch," he
winced, feeling the sharp sting as she scrubbed over what felt like a deep
puncture wound. "What was that?"
"Sorry,
sorry." She grimaced. "Uh, Gunn shot you. Don't be mad."
"No,
he did the right thing," he said, taking a deep, unnecessary breath.
They'd tried to kill him, just like he'd asked them to in the car, while
Cordy slept. He'd always wondered -- if it came down to the crunch -- if he
could truly rely on them to respect his wishes. Now he knew.
Her
eyes were moist. "It was really hard, Angel," she whispered.
"I had to step back and let him fire."
He
nodded. "I'm so proud of you, Cordy." The words felt inadequate.
Reaching up, he slid his hand behind her neck, pulling her face to his. He
kissed her softly, delighting when she responded in kind, sighing into his
mouth, and leaning into him, her hands pressing against his chest. She
slipped her arms around him, fingers playing against his back as he tipped
his head to the other side and kissed her again, deeper, harder.
He
could hear her heartbeat accelerate, feel the heat coming from her flushed
face. He sensed her want -- arousal so keen it almost jumped out and bit
him. He wasn't going to make it. He couldn't just sit there while she
kissed him like that, when all he really wanted to do was drag her, fully
clothed, into the water, press her against the floor of the tub, and ...
"Ow,"
she winced, breaking away, her hand suddenly going to her side.
"You're
hurt," he said. The memory of her blood on the demon's talons emerged
from the mental fog.
She
shook her head. "It's nothing."
"Let
me see."
"I'm
okay, Angel, really," she protested, as he reached up and grasped her shoulders.
"Turn
around," he insisted, twisting her carefully away from him. His hands
made wet prints on her top as she gave up, facing the wall while he lifted
her clothing. The scent of her blood wafted out as he tried to peel away
the fabric. He removed his hand from her shirt, not wanting to hurt her.
"You should have shown this to someone."
"I
didn't feel it, truly. I guess I had other things on my mind," she
said, shrugging. She looked down at herself and laughed. Grass stains,
blood, ripped clothes. "Look at me, I'm a mess."
"Hadn't
noticed," he fibbed. She was still the most beautiful woman in the
world, regardless. He couldn't stop a huge smile spreading across his face.
"Well,
I feel gross." She stood, and for one awful second he thought she was
going to leave. But, to his amazement, she began kicking off her shoes
instead. She looked down at him, eyes shining. In them, he could see fear,
affection, confusion, desire and pain, jumbled together in a look that
simultaneously broke and mended his heart.
Never
breaking their gaze, she began to remove her clothes, tugging the shirt
away from the wound on her side, grimacing, but not stopping. He smelled
her fresh blood, and it only served to arouse him more.
Within
a minute, she was standing naked beside the tub. Her skin puckered into
goosebumps, although the room was warm and steamy. He could not tear his
eyes away -- she was so beautiful, and she was -- his. All his. A naked
goddess, allowing him to see her in her full glory for the first time.
And
then Cordelia stepped into the bath, one long, beautiful leg at a time. She
turned her back on Angel, sinking into the water between his legs, and lay
back against his chest. He looked down her body, taking in her tanned
breasts, and the flat expanse of her stomach angling into the water.
"Oh,
Cordy," he whispered, slipping his arms around her, bringing his hands
up to cup both breasts, feeling their weight, the nipples pressing like
hard little buttons on his palms. He brought his face down to her neck,
kissing and nipping at the sensitive spot just below her ear.
She
sighed and wriggled in his arms, pressing further back against him. He
longed for one more inch of skin against skin, but it was too soon. He let
go, smiling at the little noise of protest that escaped from her throat.
Retrieving
the sponge, he dabbed at the slash on her side. For a moment, Buffy floated
into his mind, damp and shivering, the cut on her back rough beneath his
fingers. If only he'd known then how fragile his soul was. The fear of
losing it again was still so strong. What if...?
"Angel?"
Cordelia's voice brought him back.
"It's
all right, just a shallow scratch. You'll be fine," he said quietly.
Angel returned
his attention to the sponge, brushing it over the back of her neck, down
between her shoulder blades, sneaking around under her arms. He flicked the
rough foam on the underside of her breasts, making her gasp and arch
upwards. His other hand flattened over her stomach, pressing lightly,
sliding lower, and disappearing beneath the bubbles.
Her
eyes flew open wide as his fingers slid between her legs. He began to
stroke and tease, threatening to enter her, but drawing back at the last
moment. She threw her head back against his shoulder with a low moan, and
his lips closed over hers, his tongue flicking gently, and then taking
possession.
With a
splash she turned over, causing a small wave of water to slosh over the
side of the bath. "I want you, I want you," she whispered, her
lips against his.
Angel
swallowed hard as her breasts pressed against his chest. He brought his
knees up, cocooning her, keeping her still, while he slid his hands over
her perfect, perfect bottom. He squeezed the cheeks gently, cupping them,
pulling her pelvis against his hardness.
She
reached up and wound her arms around his neck, nipping at his lower lip.
With a growl he complied, tasting her warm silky tongue, the kiss
deepening, becoming frantic.
She
was moaning softly, her hands gripping at his neck, his shoulders, and her
stomach rubbed against him. He wanted to claim her right there in the bath,
make her his in every way.
"Cordelia,"
he growled, turning his head away.
"What?"
She looked up at him, breathing hard, her eyes smoky.
"We
need to -- talk." He moved one hand to her back, running a finger
along the dip of her spine.
"Now?"
Her voice was heavy with disbelief.
"Are
we doing what I think we're doing?" he murmured, nuzzling her cheek
with his nose and lips.
"Well,
duh! I thought you knew all about the birds and the bees." She rolled
her eyes at him, but she was smiling.
"If
the prophecy didn't work..."
"It
did," she cut him off, planting little, warm kisses along his jaw
line.
"Do
you have a stake?" he asked quietly, struggling to keep his train of
thought.
She
stopped abruptly, kneeling back, looking at him with wide, sad eyes.
"Yes," she said. "But..."
"If
I turn, there'll be a minute or two where I'm weak, in pain, disoriented. You
have to do it then." He leaned forward, cupping her face in his hands
as her eyes filled with tears.
"No,
Angel." She bit her lip. "I've already had to face losing you
once tonight, and now you're asking me to do it again? I can't."
He
pushed her hair back from her damp face. "You were very brave, and you
know it was the right thing to do. I need you to be brave for me
again."
"I
wasn't brave, I was so scared," she said, the words rushing out.
"I was going to lose you, just when I..." She put her hand over
her mouth, suppressing a sob.
For a
second she was silent, and then she took a deep breath. "The prophecy
worked. I saw it. I saw her leg, the mark was gone. But if you think it
didn't work..."
"No,
I think it worked," he said, and he felt in his unbeating heart that
it was true. "I'm sure it worked. I just want to cover all the bases.
Which means you have to promise me -- just in case. I don't want to hurt
you, ever again."
"I
promise," she whispered.
Those
two small words set him free. Free to finally feel the happiness she
brought to him, free to love her with every fiber of his being, free to
totally let go and share everything with her.
***
Cordelia
marvelled at the look on Angel's face -- something lifted from it as she
spoke. With a groan he drew his legs up beneath him, sliding his arms
around her waist, lowering her back against the foot of the bath, reversing
their previous position. She sighed as he pressed down against her. She
could feel his anticipation growing, every muscle tensing.
He
brushed his lips against hers, just once, before wandering away across her
face, stopping at her cheekbone, backtracking, then moving purposefully
towards her ear. He tripped down the pathway between jaw and neck, lingered
in the valley of her throat, and then rushed joyfully towards her breasts.
Everywhere he'd been left tracks of fire on her skin, like he'd planted a
trail of tiny candles that burned just for her.
She
curled her hands in his hair, holding his head to her as he lapped and
sucked, fuelling the desire she felt for him. His teeth nipped playfully,
teasingly; his tongue circling, dragging over sensitive skin, drawing gasps
from deep within her.
And
then he was on the move again, turning his attention to her stomach. His
chin dipped into the water as he kissed her belly button, and then his
whole face submerged into the bubbles.
His
hands slid down to her thighs, gently parting her legs, pushing them against
the sides of the bath. He nuzzled his mouth at her entrance, and his tongue
found the hard little pebble there, his rough tastebuds caressing her into
a frenzy.
Cordelia
threw her head back, crying his name over and over. He was relentless,
driving her closer to the edge. Oh, God, thank-you for a lover who never
had to breathe. She was vibrating, her thighs and stomach quivering, and
she let go of his head to grip the sides of the bathtub. Just to hang on to
something solid as the rest of her world flew away in a whirlwind of
sensation and heat.
He was
watching her. She gulped in another lungful of air and looked down at his
face, chin resting on her stomach, rivulets of water running down out of
his hair. Hello, soapy goodness. And that devastating smile spread from ear
to ear. Twice in one night -- that had to be a record on the Angel
smile-o-meter.
Slowly,
he uncurled himself from the kneeling position, splashing the cooling
water, and she shivered, just a little.
"Cold?"
he asked. She nodded reluctantly, never wanting to leave the sanctuary of
the tub again. But that would lead to pruneyness, which wasn't attractive.
Best to get out now.
He was
already up, in more ways than one, she noted with a smile. Strong arms
grasped hers, pulling her to her feet. Gone were the tremors and trembles
of earlier, he was steady, solid, hard -- so hard...
"Cordy,"
he laughed, as she threw herself into his arms, craving to finish what had
been started. "I can't dry you like this."
"Don't
care," she murmured.
"Well,
I do." He unwound her from his chest, stepping onto the sopping
carpet.
He
picked up the towel she had fetched, raising an eyebrow as he saw the
second one beneath it. Cordelia could feel herself blushing. He knotted his
around his waist, raising the other like a matador's cape, sweeping it
around her and pulling her close.
Gently
his large hands began to rub, making slow, wide circles on her back. She
felt like a cat, arching against his touch, purring with pleasure. He
reached down, cupping a hand behind her knee, bringing it up to his hip,
running the towel over the back of her thigh.
She
surrendered completely, leaning her head against his chest, hands clasped
behind his neck, pliant in his arms as he caressed the water from her skin.
***
Heat
was radiating off her in waves. She was the sun, shining just for him,
filling him with light, with warmth. He remembered a time when he would
have done – did do the unthinkable -- just to feel anything besides the
cold. And now it was gone.
"Angel?"
Her voice was thick as honey, dripping over him, coating him.
"Mmm?"
He'd stopped moving. How long had he stood there, oblivious in her embrace?
"Enough
with the drying already," she whispered, discarding her towel. It
flowed down her body in ripples, pooling around her feet. "Come to
bed."
He
lifted her in his arms -- a feather -- carried her to the bedroom, and laid
her on the bed, standing back to admire her.
"Too
beautiful." He shook his head. She had no right to be that perfect.
"Less
puppy eyes, more touching." She held out her hand, her hazel eyes
dancing in the dim light from the hallway. He curled his fingers with hers,
and let her pull him down.
"I
love you, Cordelia," he whispered, cradling the side of her face with
his hand.
"Angel,"
she sighed, reaching down, tugging the towel away from around his slim
hips.
***
She
gazed at him, stretched beside her, propped on one elbow, his long body a
study of shadow and light. His skin pale, criss-crossed with cuts, and
dappled with bruises and dew-drops of bathwater that the towel hadn't
captured. Muscles, taut and hard. Beautiful, beautiful Angel.
"Cordy?"
he whispered, his eyes asking permission to pass the point of no return.
"Follow
me," she breathed, taking his hand in hers, drawing his fingers over
her breast, thrilled at his touch. Shivering, she raised his palm to her
face, licked it, tasting soap and skin, drawing his forefinger and thumb
into her mouth, sucking hard. His other arm trembled beneath him, and his
eyes flashed with desire.
She
took his wet fingers; dragged them down her neck, moistening the hollow of
her throat. She ached for him even more, watching her proud warrior
submitting, meekly allowing her to guide him where she most needed him to
be. He must have known, better than any man, how to touch a woman, yet he
let her take the lead.
She
pressed his hand to her mouth again, running the pads of his fingers around
her lips, her tongue darting out to meet them. Arching upwards, brushing
the cool roughness of his hand across her breasts, she painted her own
salvia around one nipple. Then the other. They puckered beneath his
fingertips.
His
strength failed him, bringing his face down into the pillow of her breasts.
He took a small nip of the flesh, sending sparks flying. "God, Cordy,
you have no idea," he rasped.
"Shhh,"
she smiled, pulling his hand down, over her stomach. Fire erupted beneath
it, her thighs dampening. He shifted, drawing himself up over her, kneeling
beside her. His free hand curled into her hair, caressing, cupping her head
and tilting her face up as he bent to kiss her.
His
lips slid away, down her neck, back to her breasts, taking a nipple into
his mouth. She felt herself lifting, pressing against his teeth, needing
more. She pushed his hand lower, between her legs, fingers entwined with
his, plunging them into her. His head snapped up, eyes locking with hers.
"Think
I need lessons, do you?" he said, panting, a half-smile playing across
his face.
"I
want..." she gasped, pushing his fingers -- her own -- deeper.
"I
know what you want, Cordy." He thrust, once, sending her hips flying
off the bed.
"I
want -- more," she moaned.
"You'll
get it," he said, his voice coarse. He placed his other hand over her
stomach, caressing, pressing gently downwards on her womb, as if he were
trying to absorb the heat through his palm. Holding her still, he began to
move, his fingers plundering her, his thumb stroking her clit.
Her
own hand slipped away, curling in the sheet. Small tremors shook her
thighs, her belly. Sparks of heat crackled in her toes, arcing upwards,
seeking release.
He
must be coated in her by now, dripping off his fingers and wetting the
sheets.
God,
she was gonna come again, and he was right there, watching her, his eyes so
full of love... And then his face went fuzzy and the room turned
upside-down. She could hear her own voice, chanting his name, distant,
gasping.
When
he came back into focus, he was smiling. "Told you I knew what you
wanted."
"You
forgot something," she murmured, retrieving him from between her
thighs. Twining her fingers with his, still slick with her juices, she
reached for his cock. She pulled along his length, squeezing, making him
touch himself. He gasped, his eyes rolling back, stomach quivering.
"God,
Cordelia," he groaned. The want on his face fuelled her own even more.
"I
want that, too," she whispered, stilling their hands.
"Then
take it, baby," he said raggedly, sliding his arms around her, rolling
her on top. She knelt astride him, the anticipation delicious as she
hovered over him.
"Angel,
I love you." She bent forward, kissing his scarred chest. His fingers
laced in her hair, holding her head to him, as she gently lowered herself
down, over him, enveloping him.
He
filled her completely, and she gasped as she settled all the way.
"Okay?"
he asked, stroking her hair.
"Better
than," she said, sitting up, leaning her hands on his chest, feeling
his hard nipples under her palms. Slowly, she began to move, getting used
to his size, his feel. His hands slid onto her hips, guiding her, urging
her on. The air in the room began to hum. "Do you feel that?" she
whispered.
He sat
up, clasping her to his chest, forcing her to stillness. "I
feel..." he brushed the tips of his fingers across her face. She could
smell herself on him, and it was intoxicating. She crushed her mouth to
his, eating him, lips, teeth, tongue. No more playing.
He
must have sensed the shift -- one moment she was in a tender embrace, the
next, on her back, Angel above her, hovering between her thighs, barely
inside her.
"Angel,"
she whimpered.
"Shhh,
baby, I'm yours," he said, and his body came down on her, driving into
her. The tenderness was gone, replaced by fever. She clutched at his back,
accepting it, wanting it more than the air that was rushing in and out of
her lungs. His hips cannoned against hers, faster, higher, harder. She felt
his cool tears raining on her face. Heard the incoherent sounds of pleasure
rumbling in his chest. Felt the tempest begin where his body melted into
hers.
Her
whole world exploded in a shower of brilliant white light, and even as she
drifted back down from heaven, she felt him flood into her, gasping her
name. She forced her eyes open to watch him come, and his expression made
her cry. His face, normally heavy with guilt, with sorrow and regret,
looked so different in that one moment of release. Pure happiness,
unadulterated bliss.
***
This
was the worst part, Cordelia thought -- the waiting. She pulled her robe
tighter around her, and drew her legs up onto the chair. The stake clutched
in one hand felt solid against her palm -- but not comforting.
The
craziness of what they'd just done took her breath away. Weak, weak, weak,
she chastised herself. So much for being his rock -- his safe haven.
Dammit, he was vulnerable and shaken, and she should have known better.
Even
the tiniest little sliver of doubt about the prophecy's validity should
have been one tiny sliver too much. They should have just made the best of
what they had. No-bone Angel was better than no Angel at all.
Sure,
he believed that the prophecy had worked. She knew there was no way in the
world he'd ever have risked any of this otherwise. But earlier he'd also
believed that he was powdered-wig-boy and that Cara was a Happy Meal. It
didn't exactly make for a sparkling track record in good judgment.
She
sighed, trying to get off the mental ferris-wheel. Hugging her knees, she
waited.
The
moonlight had gone now, and the gentle patter of raindrops against her
window was almost comforting. Far away, a weak flicker of lightning lit the
sky, just visible through the curtains. A gentle, low rumble shuddered
around the heavens. Her spine prickled. This had better not be the Powers
getting all metaphorical on her.
"Cordelia!"
Angel sat bolt upright, gasping. She jumped, almost falling off the chair.
"Angel?"
She gripped the stake tighter. He put a hand up, clutching at his chest,
his eyes scanning the room. Sweat beaded on his forehead.
Oh
God, she couldn't do this, not again. Not now. "Angel?" she
repeated, her voice shaking.
"Cordy."
He swallowed hard, getting his bearings, his wild breaths subsiding.
"I dreamed -- how long have I been asleep?" he asked, glancing at
the window.
Okay,
not a particularly evil question. Her heart dropped back out of her throat
and resumed its proper place in her chest. "About an hour. You dreamed
what?"
"It
-- it doesn't matter." He looked heavenwards, his eyes misty.
"I'm still..."
"Angel."
She breathed the word out in a long sigh. He was still Angel. No more
Angelus.
***
"Oh,
God," Angel whispered. The sense of relief was palpable. It was more
than that. It was totally overwhelming. He ran a hand through his hair.
"Oh, God."
"It
worked." Cordelia's eyes were wide as saucers. "Angel, it
worked!" she shrieked, leaping onto the bed. "Don't you get
it?"
He
just sat there staring at his hands. What on earth had made him take such a
risk? What had made him so sure that his soul wouldn't be ripped from him
again? *I think maybe we're not alone in this*.
Kate's
voice in his head was the last thing he expected right then. But the sudden
memory brought clarity. Something had let him into her apartment uninvited
that night. Something had tricked him into feeding from Cara. Something had
told him it was safe to consummate his love for Cordelia. He didn't know
what. He didn't want to know.
"Angel,
don't you get it?" Cordelia repeated, her pretty features pulled into
a frown.
"Yeah,
I get it," he said quietly, and at last, he really felt he did.
Another
rumble of thunder made the air vibrate outside. The rain was thick now,
enveloping the apartment in a snug cocoon.
"Do
you want to celebrate?" Her voice dropped to a low purr, and as she
advanced on all fours, her robe slipped open.
He
smiled, letting go of all the fear, reaching behind her head and pulling
her face down to him. "I think I do."
"I
love you, Angel," she said, her mouth against his. He kissed her, lips
parting, allowing their tongues to dance together.
His
hands entered the tent of her robe, slipping the light, silky garment aside
as he cupped her breasts. "Cordy," he moaned into her mouth. Her
lithe body descended on his, rubbing against his instant erection through
the thin sheet.
"Mmm,
déjà vu," she murmured, reaching down to push the offending barrier
away, curling her hand around him.
"Get
used to it," he whispered.
End.
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