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Intermezzo
Author: Maren
Rating: PG
Summary: Intermezzo- a short dramatic, musical, or other entertainment of
light character, introduced between the acts of a drama or opera
Author's Note: Tried to do something a little different than my usual fare
so you can think of this as. . . experimental.
Intermezzo
***
There are many stories to tell about the days and years that followed
the collapse of Sunnydale. A lot, maybe most, are the sad kind, the kind
that make your heart ache, the kind that put a lump in your throat. In
those days there was plenty of fodder for stories of betrayal, of loss, of
anger, of grief.
This is not one of those stories.
This is a story of the in-between, of the moments of light in the darkness,
the structure and routine amid the chaos. It’s a story about compromise,
about friendship, about love.
It’s a series of intermezzos in a never-ending drama.
*
Buffy gets a little tired of explaining to people how she ended up back in
L.A. working with Angel Investigations.
She keeps threatening to have the down and dirty story printed,
telegraph-style, on cards so she can just send them out to everyone she
knows, everyone Angel knows, and everyone who’s ever heard of either of
them just to be done with it.
Dawn got homesick and wanted to go back to L.A. Stop.
Yes, we both understand the irony of her getting homesick for a place that
was never actually her home. Stop.
No shortage of demons in L.A.—too big a job for just one person these days.Stop.
It made sense to pool resources and muscle rather than keep getting in each
other’s way. Stop.
No, Angel is not my boss. It’s still called Angel Investigations because of
brand-name recognition (according to Angel- I don’t really care). Stop
The truth is that things didn’t happen exactly that easily, or that
quickly, but then Buffy doesn’t really think the not-very-sordid details of
her very complicated relationship with Angel are anyone else’s business.
Besides, it’s much less complicated now, so water under the bridge and all
that jazz.
Really.
*
Faith comes to visit and when Buffy leads her to her office so Faith can
dump her stuff before they go patrol, the other slayer starts smirking.
“Never thought I’d see the day when Buffy Summers let somebody else be in
charge.”
“What?” Buffy frowns and follows Faith’s gaze to the big office Angel is
sitting in, then back to the closet-size room that holds Buffy’s things.
Whatever.
She guesses his time at Wolfram & Hart created a monster, of sorts. A
big office, leather-chair-loving monster. She’s dealt with much worse in
her day so she let him have the honcho office even though she’d get more
enjoyment out of the windows and instead took up residence in one of the
smaller rooms.
Desks aren’t really her thing, anyway. She’s more of a doer. A mover. When
they aren’t busy she ends up doing a lot of pacing, and finger-tapping, and
sometimes shadow-boxing. It drives Angel crazy. He never says anything, but
she can tell by the way his brow furrows and the way he starts holding his
pencil too tight like maybe he’s wishing she were dustable with a
tiny flick of his wrist.
Back when they started working together, it was a little awkward trying to
figure out who was in charge. If one used “little” as a synonym for
“massively”, that is. By that time she was used to her status as the
leader, as slayer-numero-uno and if the new girls called her the little
general behind her back. . . Well, they weren’t wrong. Angel wasn’t any
better, especially not after his stint as CEO of Evil Incorporated and
those first few cases they worked together were. . . rough.
But they’d figured it out without either of them having to officially
assume the sidekick position and now things worked pretty seamlessly. It
wasn’t magical or perfect. They didn’t always agree. They weren’t, like,
mind-melded or anything and sometimes they had very different ideas about
the best course of action. The crux of it all was negotiating whose plan
was best in any given situation and going with it.
Turns out it isn’t that hard. They’d just forgotten how much they trusted
each other is all. Once they remembered, the hows and whose of it didn’t
really matter that much anymore.
She rolls her eyes at Faith. “Please. We’re all equal and stuff. Besides,
who brings who coffee every day without even being asked?” Buffy points to
the empty Starbucks cup on her desk and crosses her arms over her chest.
Everybody knows bosses don’t bring coffee to their peons and Angel is
diligent with his deliveries.
Faith waggles her eyebrows and gives her a knowing smile.
Buffy bites her lip to keep from telling her that it’s not like that, not
anymore.
It’s not.
*
They date. Just not each other.
Her current boyfriend’s name is Cole. He’s a firefighter with the most
amazing upper body she’s ever seen and she’s seen some amazing upper
bodies. He also has an amazing DVD collection and sometimes they spend
their rare nights off together mainlining Homicide and The Office
before heading back to his bedroom for other activities.
It’s normal. Kind of boring sometimes, but normal, and isn’t that what she
always wanted?
She would never have expected it but after the initial awkward period, when
he introduced her to Nina and they navigated the ins and outs of being
coworkers without the heavy duty epic romance shtick, they’d settled into a
fairly comfortable place. They’d never gone on a double-date or
anything—they weren’t that comfortable. But if she wanted to skip
patrol or take a night off to go on a date she didn’t have to lie and if
Nina popped in to see Angel, she could be completely civil. Friendly even.
Now that she’s gotten used to it, Buffy doesn’t mind seeing him with Nina
at all and she’s pretty sure he’d say the same.
*
Who is she kidding?
Not Cole. Not the guys who came before him, either. She’s not sure about
Nina.
*
They make the back storage room into a training room and start spending
their down time sparring and working out. Buffy thinks Angel was just tired
of her pacing and wanted to put her energy to less annoying use, but she
doesn’t say anything because no matter the reason, it’s better.
Sometimes he brings Nina back to train with weapons. Buffy stays clear of
the training room then because Nina may be a werewolf but in human form
she’s not all that coordinated and Buffy’s afraid she’ll “accidentally” run
her through with a sword. Other times Connor or Spike use it too and if
she’s in the mood she’ll throw herself on the mats with them.
Most of the time it’s just her and Angel, and those are the times she likes
best.
Because they’re the most evenly matched, that’s all.
It’s late afternoon, after her last class for the day, and Buffy’s working
off some of her frustration after getting the first draft of her senior
thesis paper back. It was covered in red and she thinks that if her
professor knew how much red gunky stuff she has to deal with on an everyday
basis to keep the world safe, he’d be a little more judicious with
the negative comments. As she works the hanging bag she doesn’t go so far
as to imagine her professor’s face on it, but the words run through her
head and occasionally out her mouth.
She’s working so hard that she doesn’t immediately notice Angel’s entrance.
“Bad day?” He’s leaning against the door, arms crossed casually over his
chest.
Buffy shrugs, then punches the bag again, sending it swinging wildly.
“There’s no impending apocalyptic doom so I guess I’ve had worse.”
He nods and moves onto the mats. “I’m not sure how much more that bag can
take. Want a partner?”
She stops and grabs the bag to still its movements, arches an eyebrow and
lets a real smile cross her face. “You really think you can handle me
today?”
Angel’s lips quirk, but he doesn’t say anything, just reaches down and
pulls his shirt over his head and tosses it to the side. Back in the
beginning, when they first started occupying one another’s spaces again,
the sight of Angel half-bare would have put her in a physical tizzy. Get
him sweaty and flexing on the mats and not respond? Forget about it. But
now it’s nothing, just a sparring partner with a very nice torso and a
great set of arms.
Well, maybe not nothing, but it’s nothing she can’t handle. Nothing
she can’t ignore.
They spar for almost twenty minutes, full out, and when Buffy finally gets
Angel off his feet and moves into a kill position, she’s sweating and
breathing hard. She rolls off, and springs to her feet before
reaching down to help him up. A grin stretches her face from ear to ear and
he’s giving her that disgruntled indigestion look he gets.
He can be such a sore loser.
“You up for some weapons work?” he asks and she wants to laugh at how
transparent he is. He thinks he’s better on swords than she is. She
lets him, because anything she might say to dispel that myth might bring up
things from their past that are better left there.
Buffy shakes her head. “Nope, gotta go.”
He raises an eyebrow and shoots her a challenging smirk. “Why, you afraid I
can beat you?”
“Ha! In your dreams, vamp boy. I need to go call the Watcher’s Council. I
have important information that needs to be recorded for posterity.”
Angel frowns and she can see him trying to figure out what information
she’s gathered from their recent cases that needs to go to the Council. He
grabs his shirt off the floor and wipes it over his face, still looking
puzzled, and Buffy has to stifle a laugh as she continues.
“I need to let them know that 255 years seems to be when vamps hit their
physical prime and that it’s all downhill from there.”
“Hey, I’m older than. . .” Understanding dawns
They’re both laughing as he chases her out of the training room.
It’s amazing how much better she feels.
*
Sometimes, the good times are scarce They live through it anyway,
because they are survivors.
It’s not all fun and games. Sunnydale still collapsed. Some parts of L.A.
still look like a war zone. They’ve both lost. They both grieve.
But this story isn’t about that. Still, it explains why sometimes the break
comes late, why sometimes it seems like it will never come at all.
The thing is, it always does.
*
The office is quiet, too quiet, and considering she came here because she
needs to study for her history final, her irritation at the silence is
admittedly strange.
Angel’s in his office, caving to his obsessive-compulsive nature and
finishing up a file on a case they closed the night before. Buffy never
does the paperwork and after a few unsuccessful attempts at guilting her
into it, Angel let it go and took it all over. She doesn’t get the point.
It isn’t like there’s some demon fighting bureaucracy that mandates they
keep carefully documented and labeled case files.
Okay, well there is version 2.0 of the Watcher’s Council but Buffy
personally thinks it’s kind of dumb to leave a paper trail to the inner
workings of the supernatural world for any old burglar to find. Plus, it
seems kind of anticlimactic—this kind of information belongs in big dusty
antique tomes with gilded covers, not standard size manila folders that are
carefully arranged in green hanging files by Angel.
She taps her highlighter (orange) against the spiral of her notebook for a
little auditory stimulation and tries to remember why she should care about
the Protestant Ascendancy. She’s still tapping, still wondering when Angel
wanders in with a stack of folders in his hand. Buffy watches as he thinks
for a moment, then pulls a drawer open. She has to bite back a smirk when
he curses softly under his breath and closes the drawer only to open
another.
Watching him be completely mystified by the filing system he put in
place is endlessly amusing but she tries not to make fun of him too much. The
fact that he organizes things using a sentimental style rather than a, you
know, logical one is actually too sweet to ridicule.
He tried to explain Cordy’s system to her once but Buffy had tuned him out
because even if she could trust that he actually knew what the
system was, it really didn’t matter. She still isn’t sure he
understands her no-file policy extends to reading them as well.
She turns her attention back to her book as he finishes filing and sighs.
“What are you studying?” He’s standing next to her and she didn’t even
notice he moved. Some slayer senses she has.
“History of 18th-Century Europe.” She stifles a yawn. It had seemed
interesting in the course book and it filled one of her last gen ed
requirements.
He ignores her boredom and gives her a half smile. “My specialty,” he says
as he sits on the corner of her desk and angles her notes so he can read
them.
She thinks, I knew that.
She says, “Oh yeah, that’s right. Well, as long as you’re here, what can
you tell me about Irish politics?”
*
They’re out working a case. . . well, working an informant if you wanted to
be all technical. Angel is vamped out and his voice sounds wicked and
dangerous even without the extra-added terror of it coming out of his mouth
around very sharp fangs. The little demon twerp they’re interrogating keeps
looking at her with this pleading look in his eyes, like she’s going to
help him. Like she’s the good cop to his bad cop.
Sucker.
The idea sticks though and when they get the information they need and
leave, Buffy’s still thinking about it.
They are sort of like buddy cops of the demon world. Yeah. Like
Cagney and Lacey or something. She’s not sure which one’s which because
she’s never actually seen Hill Street Blues before, but they were
buddy cops, right? Hmmm, maybe Pembleton and Bayliss then. Angel would definitely
be the Pembleton there.
Working so closely together over the past year or so means that she knows
how cranky Angel can get; say, when things aren’t going well on a case, or
when he can’t get his hair to lay the right way, or especially when Connor
shows up with a new hickey from Spike. (That one makes her grumpy too, but
for different reasons. She hopes.). He’s actually pretty moody and
considering she’s spent a considerable amount of time over the past couple
years living and/or working with hormonal teenaged girls. . .
Well.
For the rest of the night she calls Angel “Frank”. Laughs when he stops
looking at her like she’s lost her mind and adopts that cranky,
Pembleton-like glower instead.
Buffy figures she has to take her fun where she can get it. Demon buddy
cops, remember? Not a glamorous life.
*
Lorne needs some help in Las Vegas (apparently, it’s not the first time)
and since it’s Vegas, Spike and Connor insist on coming along.
It’s really more muscle than strictly necessary, so the first thing she
does after they check into their rooms is call the box office.
When they reconvene so they can meet with Lorne and take care of business,
Buffy hands Angel a ticket and tells him the rest of them can square things
away without him—he has a show to see.
Just the one ticket, though, because two would have seemed too much like a
date. Plus, Barry Manilow is lame.
*
Dawn wants to spend Christmas with Giles and Buffy can’t imagine spending
the holiday without her sister, so they go to London.
Things are still tense between she and Giles and by Boxing Day Buffy is
about to crawl out of her skin. So she hugs Dawn goodbye, buys a ticket,
and spends a few days by herself in Ireland. It’s cold and sort of muddy,
not at all what she’d painted in her mind, but the people are friendly and
she can feel the history in the cobblestones that line the side street that
holds her hotel.
She does a little sight-seeing, more than a little shopping (duh), and on
her second afternoon in Galway she ducks into a pub to avoid the rain. The
barkeep takes one look at her and tells her she looks like she needs
something a bit stout. He won’t take no for an answer and he puts down a
beer that is so dark and thick it looks like a mug of hot fudge. She picks
it up, and it would not be an understatement to say that eldest currently
living slayer is scared. But when she takes a little sip she finds it isn’t
that bad. The next sip is a little bigger.
And because it’s impossible to be here and not think of him, Buffy
considers all of the times Angel has looked at her preferred girly drinks
and grimaced with distaste. A smile passes over her lips as she remembers
his promise that if she ever had “a real drink”, he’d try the fruitiest,
sweetest, pinkest concoction she could come up with.
A wave of. . . something. . . passes through her and Buffy digs her phone
out and dials Angel’s number. Her smile grows until it’s so wide it’s
making her cheeks ache a little and as the phone rings she lets out an
anticipatory laugh at the look on his face when she tells him she’s pretty
sure whatever it is she just drank made hair sprout on her chest.
Seriously, she can feel the tingle.
But he doesn’t answer and when his voice mail picks up, Buffy hangs up the
phone rather than leave a message. She guesses he’s probably busy with
Connor and Nina and she shouldn’t bother them.
She heads back to London the night before she and Dawn are scheduled to fly
back home. Giles’ flat is dark when she gets there and there’s a note on
the door, letting her know that he and Dawn went to grab dinner so she
heads back to the guest room to drop her bags and maybe find something to
eat herself.
When she flips on the light, the first thing she sees is a brown parcel
package on her bed, covered in air mail stickers. Buffy has a brief
paranoid moment where she considers things like mail bombs and anthrax but
that goes away pretty quickly when 1)she recognizes Angel’s handwriting on
the package and 2)the fact that she really likes presents overrides any
other concern.
Inside the box there is a card and a thin, wrapped package. She tosses the
card to the side for the moment because hello, it’s not like she has
an audience and has to pretend to be more interested in the card than the
present. Still, she’s careful with the wrapping and when she uncovers the
book it holds she can’t stop the tears.
Buffy remembers telling Angel about how she used to love hearing her mom
read to her as a child, how she’d saved all of her books to someday read to
her own kids. Her favorite was The Velveteen Rabbit and she used to make
her mother read it to her every Christmas. One of the things that she
regrets losing the most when Sunnydale collapsed was that book and its
connection to some of her best memories of her mother.
When she’s ready, she pulls the small linen card out of its envelope and
opens it.
I hope this arrives on time, and that it brings you more joy than
sadness. Merry Christmas, Buffy. ~Angel
She holds the old copy of The Velveteen Rabbit carefully to her chest and
thinks about the antique dagger with Liam’s family crest inlaid on the
handle that’s sitting carefully wrapped in her luggage.
She hopes it brings him more joy than sadness.
*
The day they kiss for the first time in almost three years isn’t notable
for any reason. Okay, well for any other reason. They aren’t in any
more danger than usual, no one’s sick and dying in the hospital. . .
nothing particularly cliché at all. They’re just laughing about something
stupid Spike did, totally behind his back, and when their eyes meet
everything just clicks.
It’s all sparky and lusty, yeah, but it’s not out of control. Buffy knows
what she’s doing and when she looks at Angel she can tell he’s being deliberate
too.
She thinks, I don’t want to ruin our friendship.
She says, “You’re my best friend.”
Angel nods, swallows, brushes her hair out of her face and traces her cheek
with his thumb (oooh, sparks). “We don’t have to do this.”
Buffy looks at him like he’s crazy and grabs his face between her hands.
“That wasn’t an argument against anything. Just a statement. And we are so totally
doing this.”
And their second kiss in almost three years is maybe just a little out of
control.
Maybe it was inevitable, although Buffy’s past thinking of her relationship
with Angel in terms of destiny. She thinks that the reason they ended back
together is exactly because they worked so hard to be just fine apart.
Buffy knows no one really believes they can make it work. They all think
they’re doomed, star-crossed . . . all of the other things that she herself
used to buy into. But frankly, she doesn’t care what anyone else thinks.
Because she’s in love with her best friend and things aren’t perfect but
they’re good.
Sometimes they’re even great.
*
The story doesn’t end there and the fact that it continues at all for
Buffy and Angel is happy enough on its own, but there are no fairytale
happy endings. There are no sunsets to be ridden into, and if there were
Angel wouldn’t be able to do so anyway.
However, there are no sad endings, either, and for a vampire with a soul
and a woman destined to fight his kind until she dies, there’s something
quite incredible in a normal ending, somewhere between happy and sad.
They live, they fight, and they make the most of each intermezzo.
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