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Into That Good Night
Author:
Chrystler
Disclaimer: Not mine. They belong to those
Whedon and Greenwalt fellas.
Summary: Cordelia is ready to go gently.
Others aren't ready to let her.
Rating: PG-13, but deals with themes of
mortality and towards the end sex will factor in to the equation. Doesn't
it always?.
Spoilers: Up to `Billy' and based upon
spoilers and speculation for `Birthday'.
Author's Notes: I'm ignoring the whole AJ
arc until I know where its going and can decide whether or not it warrants
inclusion in my personal canon view. :) So Darla hasn't shown up, but
Cordelia knows about her and Angel. *__* Indicates italics.
Distribution: If anyone wants it, please
ask.
Dedication: To Claudia for the
encouragement.
Feedback: The good, the bad and the ugly to
chrystler_wolf@yahoo.co.uk
Into That
Good Night
Chapter 1
Wesley
closed the large tome with a heavy sigh that caught inside his chest. He
didn't need to look at the young women in front of him to know she was
frozen rigid. It didn't take vampiric senses to be able to feel the waves
of tension emanating from her body. His body felt leaden. His heart, tight
and weighty. His throat, dry and hollow. The former Watcher took off his
glasses and rubbed at the already spotless lenses. A futile gesture to
delay the inevitable. To stall the awful moment when he would have to look
into those hazel eyes and see reflected there the terrible knowledge of
their owner's fate.
Cordelia
remained stock still, hardly breathing despite her racing mind and churning
stomach. So it was true. That which she'd always known yet always hoped to
be proved wrong. That which she'd denied - to herself for as long as
physically possible and to the others for even longer - was now that which
could not be pushed away. Could not be ignored or neglected, any less than
it had ever been able to be forgotten.
Her eyes
watched the pale figure of her friend slowly place his glasses back on his
nose, her mind hardly acknowledging his presence.
"Cordelia,"
his voice was uncharacteristically husky. The un-Wesley-ness of the tone
brought her out of her numb reverie. Her eyes locked with his steely blue
ones, filled with such pain, such tenderness, such love. The swell of
emotion registered with a start in the dim recess of her brain that wasn't
still anaesthetized by the book's findings. All this, for her? Her mouth
twitched into a small surprised smile almost unconsciously.
"It's
okay, Wesley. I knew. I guess I already knew," her voice came out in
bursts, but it was much steadier and clearer than she'd thought it would
be. Be strong, Chase, she resolved internally, you have to be. For them.
And it won't be for long.
"It's
not okay, Cordelia. None of this is `okay'," the words were spat out
with a fervid ferocity. Wesley's burst of intensity took her a little by
surprise. This was an Angel-level emotional release; white rage and
stubborn steel.
She
reached out, placing a steadying hand on his arm. He whipped his head away
but let her fingers remain on his forearm gently moulding his flesh beneath
their tips. When she spoke, however, her voice possessed a hard edge.
"Hey!
So, no. It's not `okay', but what can we do, Wes? This isn't a big bad
demon you guys can go kill with your pointy swords and kick-ass axes! And
now we know there isn't a pretty little answer, all tied up with string,
just waiting to be found in one of your big old books!"
Here she
grabbed a large volume from the desk and let it drop, the pages exuding
clouds of dust as it hit the counter with a bang. Wesley flinched slightly.
"Look
at me. *Look* at me, Wes!" Cordelia realized her voice teetered on the
shrill. She took a breath, fighting to keep back the simultaneous urges to
cry and smash things into tiny pieces. When Wesley turned back to face her
the tears were in his eyes.
"I'm
dying, Wes. The visions are going to kill me. This puny little human body
can't handle them and all the Champions, and former Rogue Demon Hunters,
and Renegade Street Vamp Fighters, and Physics Genii in the world can't
change that."
She spoke
with a even finality that caused each word to whip across Wesley's chest
with greater force than desperate emotion would have done. His face drained
an even whiter shade of pale than before, but he managed to mutter in a
tone almost suggestive of defiance, "You don't know that."
Cordelia
held his gaze for a beat and bit her lip.
"Yes.
Yes. I do." She lied.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The
Englishman was still noticeably shaky, but his emphasis had shifted from
his own horror and shock to an overwhelming concern for the young seer
whose life hanged in the balance. He managed to pour the tea without
spilling too much scalding liquid over the table, automatically added sugar
and milk to Cordelia's cup and just a splash of the latter to his own.
Picking up the tray, he wove his way around the reception desk towards the
circular sofa in the center of the lobby on which the brunette girl was
curled, hugging her knees to her chest.
She took
the cup he offered, glancing up her thanks, and was once again taken back
by the worry and tender sadness etched over the former Watcher's handsome
regular features. He sank down next to her.
"How
long have you known?" he asked softly, not catching her eye.
She
considered her answer. "Articulately? Since Pylea. Instinctively? A
lot longer. Maybe as long as I've had them."
She
gestured at her head, indicating the migraine-inducing visions.
"I
didn't want to acknowledge it, I suppose, until the pain became so bad and
I couldn't keep *not* realizing it any longer."
Wesley
studied her face. She looked tired, drawn. The eyes that for so long had
alternately sparkled light and flashed fire, equally to his amusement and
annoyance, were dull and sunken. But that wasn't the worst thing he could see
in her face. The most painful thing to behold was the calm. A blanket of
resignation muffled her beautiful features. Cordelia, who had never backed
down from a fight, wasn't even going to front up for this one.
Wesley
felt as though his skin had been grazed on the inside, the wounds raw and
oozing. He trembled involuntarily, and instantly hated himself for being so
weak when her saw her expression morph into a look of concern. *She* was
dying and she was worried about *him*.
With effort,
he pulled himself together.
"What
happened in Pylea?" he questioned, the researcher in him taking over
as the friend quailed.
Damn you,
Wesley, she thought, is there no detail you'll let drop?
"Nothing
really," Cordelia replied out loud, sipping her tea attentively to
avoid looking into his face, "I guess, you could say I had... what was
that thing that Angel had just before he came back to us?"
"An
epiphany?" offered Wesley.
"Yep.
That's it. One o' those." she tried for a flash of a grin and it
almost came off. Before Wesley could point out that something must have
sparked her moment of realization, she blurted out, "You can't tell
him."
"What?"
"Angel.
You've got to promise me you won't tell him."
"Cordelia,
I..."
"Please,
Wesley, I'll never ask you for another thing. `Cause well, I'll be dead and
all soon enough. But even so, you have to promise me, Wes. He can't know.
Not until it happens."
Wesley
stared at her in confusion. What could possibly be gained from not telling
Angel? On the contrary, maybe they *could* find a way to prevent the
visions taking the seer's life.
"What
can't Angel know until it happens?"
The two
friends on the couch swung round hurriedly in the direction of the voice
issuing the terse enquiry.
"Oh
great!" breathed Cordelia through gritted teeth.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
She
hadn't expected any of this to be easy but she also hadn't expected things
to go so far awry from her plan. Damn him to hell for that vampiric,
noiseless-sneaking-up ability. But then, thought Cordelia, being a vampire,
the damning to hell thing was pretty much a given.
She
slumped back on the couch and closed her eyes. Now there was going to be
the scene. The one she'd wanted so much to avoid, when all her little
secrets came spilling out in one ugly, messy heap. All of them. Even the
ones she'd vowed he'd never know. She'd only wanted to spare him more guilt
and anguish, and herself the loss of all and any dignity she may have
remaining. After the pain worsened and she'd been forced to realize the
unvarnished truth, that Groo had been right and humans weren't supposed to
bear the force of TPTB's inter-cranial messaging service, she had cried and
screamed and punched walls and eventually, over time, become resigned to
her suspected fate. He *never* would. She knew him well enough to know
that. Knew him almost too well. She felt the shift of weight as Wesley
stood up beside her, and let her head slip into her hands, all too aware of
what was bound to follow.
The
vampire repeated his query, urgency joining the suspicion in his tone as he
glanced from Wesley's tense form to Cordelia's huddled one.
"What
can't I know?"
Wesley
inhaled slowly in anticipation of speech. Cordelia squeezed her eyes
tighter shut.
"Angel,
I think you might want to sit down."
"I
really don't think I do, Wes. I think I want to know what the hell's going
on," his eyes flashed, impatience driven by a sudden wave of fear.
Wesley
glanced apprehensively at the speaker's imposing figure, noting the tension
resonating in his every muscle. This was too big to be kept hidden, no
matter what Cordelia might mistakenly feel was for the best. Angel now knew
she wanted to keep secrets from him, which meant there was no way he'd be
content to let the matter drop. He would have to know everything. The
greatest thing Wesley could do for the ill-fated seer now was to bear the
burden of breaking the news to one rather highly-strung, unpredictable
vampire himself.
He leaned
down and spoke softly into Cordelia's ear, "Go."
She
quickly brought up her head from her hands, bewildered, "What?"
"Go.
I'll fill Angel in on the situation. I have a feeling things are likely to
get broken and that's not what you need right now, so go."
She
looked up at him amazed, grateful, touched. Wesley was perhaps the greatest
friend any girl could have.
"Thank
you," she whispered hoarsely, rising from the couch and hurrying to
grab her coat from behind the desk.
She
passed within a foot of Angel, stood in the lobby arms folded across his
chest, seconds away from implosion, but never once glanced in his
direction.
She was strides
away from the door when the voice she could hardly bear to hear spoke
again.
"Hold
it right there!" Angel commanded icily, "You're not going
anywhere until someone tells me what this is about."
She shot
Wesley a pleading look. She couldn't. She just couldn't. She'd rather drop
dead on the spot than have to remain there watching Angel shatter into
little pieces in front of her eyes. Then worse, spectate helplessly as he
leaped into his inevitable knee-jerk denial. Hear him demanding that it simply
wasn't going to happen. That she would live. That they would find a way to
save her. Him finding a way was what she dreaded most of all.
Her
co-conspirator responded to her silent request with chivalrous strength.
Tapping into those hidden reserves of steel that had taken such a battering
of late, Wesley drew himself up and contradicted the vampire with even
firmer orders of his own.
"Cordelia,
leave. Angel, go into the office and pour us both a drink. I think we'll
both be grateful for something to dull the pain when you smash your fist
through my desk."
Cordelia
smiled inwardly. Dry. Businesslike. That was more like the Wesley she knew
and loved. The one who would stand tall for her until the end. She headed
to the door and pushed at it, almost out into the sunlit street when she
risked stealing a glance in Angel's direction. His dark eyes were fixed
upon her, his handsome face creased into a frown of worry and confusion.
Cordelia's heart caught in her throat, suspending her body for a second
before she rediscovered her legs and ran. Ran from the hotel. Ran from him.
Out into the light where he couldn't follow. Soon she'd be going somewhere
else he wouldn't be able to follow.
She
didn't realize she was crying until she felt the damp patch on her shirt
where the drops of saltwater had landed.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wearily,
Wesley reached down to rescue a chair from its resting place on the floor.
Just one of the many casualties the Hyperion fixtures and fittings had
sustained in the onslaught of Hurricane Angel. He dragged it to the desk,
avoiding the priceless ancient tomes slung carelessly over the floor,
noting superficially the 14th-century volume sticking incongruously through
the broken glass of the computer screen. Shards of monitor had joined the
pieces of ceramic mug and crystal vase in creating a mosaic of destruction
against the art-deco tiles of the hotel floor.
Angel was
nothing if not thorough, he mused sadly, as he picked up one of the books
to restart a search he already knew to be futile and sank down on to the
seat.
"Owwww!
Bloody hell!"
His
exclamation melded with the now familiar sound of splintering wood echoing
in the empty lobby. A painful jolt of hard floor meeting soft buttock coursed
through his already aching body. It turned out the chair's injuries had
been more serious than had first appeared. The man who had faced adversity
over and over again in the form of demons, vampires, lawyers, zombie cops
and hell-dimensions, sat among the strewn debris of the Hyperion Hotel and,
for the first time in along time, allowed his head to yield to his heart.
The
tear-choked howls carried on the still air out into the remorselessly
indifferent late afternoon California sun.
Chapter 2
She watched
the glowing fiery ball slip slowly into the ocean, savoring every ethereal
shaft of golden light as they cut through the encroaching dusk, trying to
imprint every different hue worn by the heavens on her mind's eye. Furious
yellow deepening to rich orange, orange slipping into delicate pink, pink
feathering into blood red. A grand performance, more spectacular than a
fireworks display, put on by Nature every evening for everyone, everywhere.
The shifting
colors reflected off the planes of the young girl's face, burnishing her
cheekbones with bronze, lighting tiny flames within the depths of her hazel
eyes and weaving threads of amber and copper in her dark hair.
Cordelia
wondered why she'd never bothered to look before. Something so
extraordinary, so full of grace and light and hope. Yet it had never seemed
important, never been something she'd given a moment's notice. Instead, for
much of her life, she'd concentrated upon the ephemeral; shoes, clothes,
high-school popularity, the brief tainted rush of delivering the perfect
put-down. The woman who had once been Queen C of Sunnydale High furrowed
her brow, wishing she'd been able to possess this kind of perspective all
those years ago, considering all the sunsets she'd missed, and full of
wonder that something so simple could be so complicated.
The sun
rose and set every day. Expected, taken for granted, unappreciated. Yet
contained within that single occurrence lay the entire existence of the Earth.
Overworld and underworld alike were ruled by the sunlight. Death happened
everyday too, especially in their line of work, and whilst private worlds
could be rocked by it, the flow of life continued unstemmed with the next
sunrise.
Cordelia
shrugged to herself. Death. No biggie. Not cosmically.
Yeah,
right.
Tell that
to the crawling fear which kept grabbing at her gut making her want to
wretch, snatching at her vocal chords making her want to scream, snagging
at her muscles making her want to sink to the floor and huddle there until
it ceased. She was past throwing up, past screaming, past hoping against
hope that the cause of the fear would evaporate if she willed hard enough.
Her fight was gone but the fear remained nevertheless.
No
biggie.
Tell that
to Wesley who had spent the best part of the day desperately ransacking
every text he could get his hands on. Every book, every scroll, that might
possibly tell of a human seer who had survived their burdensome gift. In
the end his fevered research had only uncovered confirmation of that which
she had seen in her mind-splitting vision. The last human seer's final
vision had been literally mind-splitting. As had the human seer's before
that. There had been no others. She was the third in recorded history.
Cordelia wasn't about to lend much weight to the old adage, `third time
lucky'.
No
biggie.
Tell that
to Angel, who had been around death, caused death, hell, *been* dead for a
quarter of a millenium. Angel knew better than anyone that death was pretty
much as big as deals got. It had been three hours since she'd run from the
hotel, run from his questioning eyes. He'd have the answers by now, and
Cordelia would put the little money she had on betting his response, unlike
Wesley's, hadn't been an offer to make a pot of strong tea.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
She had
her back to him, lent over the railings gazing out at the gently swelling
Pacific Ocean, the final burnished rays of the day gently brushed their long
fingers over the lines of her body, lending her the glowing appearance of
an otherworldly being. He drank in the scene, shifting uneasily from foot
to foot, trying to delay the moment when he would have to step forward and
shatter her serenity. One more thing for him to take from her. One more
part of her for him to destroy. He was on the verge of moving towards her
and placing a cold hand on her shoulder when she spoke, the sound
surprising him back into stillness.
"I
know you're there, you know. I can feel the huge cloud of angst unsettling
the atmosphere. Like before a thunderstorm."
Normally,
such a Cordelia-ism would have made him smile, now it just felt like a
knife being twisted in his chest, and yes, he had first hand knowledge of
that sensation. He moved next to her, instinctively taking up a pose to
mirror hers. Elbows on rail, hands clasped together, eyes on the horizon.
His mind hurt from the crowds of thoughts and half-thoughts, feelings and
fears. There was so much to say, so much to express, so much to work
through... how the hell did you start conversations like this?
"Hey."
Great opening there, Angel.
"Hey."
Silence
settled between them. He cleared his throat to break it.
"Um,
Wes told me..." the rest of the sentence got stuck in his throat. He
knew the words. That you're going to die. Soon. All because of me and my
stupid mission. The news coming from Wesley's mouth had been unbelievable,
refutable, plain wrong. From his own it seemed desperately, horribly real.
She saved
him, cutting in, "Yeah. I didn't want you to have to go through
this."
A tiny
pause.
"Is
it still standing?"
"What?"
Three
years still wasn't enough time to learn to follow the meanders that passed
for Cordy-logic. God, he wanted more time.
"The
hotel. Is it still standing after the battering I presume you gave
it?"
She
indicated towards the gashes and bruises on his knuckles, turning her face
to meet his for the first time since she'd spoken. That face. Her face.
Rendering all the wind out of him.
He gasped
hoarsely, "Just about.... Cordy, I..."
A swiftly
raised hand shushed him. "Don't! Please don't! I already know
everything you're going to say." She started to reel off her mental
list, "How sorry you are, how it's all your fault, how it doesn't have
to be this way, how you're not going to let me die, that you'll find a way
to get rid of the visions, or discover some hokey spell to make me
stronger."
Cordelia
paused for breath before fixing the vampire straight in the eye. "I
know it all, Angel. I've had this conversation with you in my head a
hundred times over. I was hoping I'd get to avoid the actual version, so
just... don't... say... any of it."
It was
more than he could stand. The hazel eyes defying him to challenge their
fate. Desperate rage welled up inside his soul once more.
"What
do you expect me to do, Cor? Shrug my shoulders and say `Oh well, there
goes another seer. Has anyone seen this weekend's listings guide?'!"
Shouting
at her wasn't the most productive approach, he knew. It was, however, the
only course of action he seemed to have at his disposal right then. She
shrank a little from his scathing tone, but there was too much pent-up
anger, grief and frustration for him to be able to moderate his outburst
now.
"You
didn't want me to find out? You thought, what?! That I wouldn't care?! That
I didn't deserve to know?! I know I hurt you, Cor, but I thought we were
over that. Things have never been like this before."
He gestured
from himself to her, "You and me, Cordelia, I thought... I thought we
were closer than ever. And you didn't think I needed to know that the
visions you get *for me* are going to kill you?!"
She burst
in, her voice rising, matching the emotion in his, "Yeah, because what
you really need is yet one more thing to feel guilty about, one more reason
to lock yourself away from the world and brood, one more victim to add to
the list! Buffy, Drusilla, Darla - there's a role call of `Females Angel
Flagellates Himself Over' I *really* want to join! What's happening to me
*is not your fault*, okay? When I'm gone sit in a darkened room and enjoy
wallowing in the self-pity and self-blame all you want, but don't you
*dare* start while there's still breath left in this body!"
She
pressed her hand against her quickly rising and falling chest in time with
her last few words for emphasis. He watched her with uncomprehending eyes.
When he
replied the fury in his voice had dropped to a pained halter, "How can
I not?"
She only
threw him a frustrated pleading glance. Her anger had dissipated along with
his, but her full lips still trembled with emotion and her large eyes
glistened with moisture. How could he let something so beautiful slip away
without a fight?
"It
*is* my fault. You saying it isn't doesn't make it so, we both know that.
No me. No mission. No visions. No pain. No death. I caused this, Cordelia,
why didn't you want to give me the chance to make it better? I'll find a
new way to the Powers. The Oracles folded time once, there must be some
other entity with that kind of power who can stop the visions. Their deal
is with me. You, and Doyle, should never have been brought into it."
He
half-expected her to dissolve into tears, thanking him. The resignation suddenly
replaced by hope. Instead she grimaced as if biting back anger and tore her
gaze away from him back out onto the now dark ocean.
"Always
you."
The words
would have been matter-of-fact but she couldn't prevent the note of
bitterness from creeping in.
"I
see why you and Buffy thought you had the soulmate thing. You're just the
same. It's always about you. As if everyone else are just minor players
caught up in the grand drama that is The Saga of You."
"No,
Cor! I may have acted like that sometimes, but truly, I get that it's not
about me anymore..."
"No
you don't. You don't get it at all. You never have, or else you wouldn't be
all `oh woe is me, poor Doyle, poor Cordy, poor Wes. Look how badly their
lives turned out because of me'. It's bull Angel! Do you know why things
have happened to us the way they have? It's not because we're just some
hapless fools who happened to accidentally get caught up in Slipstream
Angel! It's because we *chose*. We *chose* to be here. And although I bet
none of us could pinpoint the moment, the second, in which that decision
got made, there just came a time when we realized we'd already made it.
That it wasn't necessity keeping us here anymore, there was simply no where
else we wanted to be. *I* chose this, Angel. You didn't force it upon me, I
chose. And it's not *your* mission. It never was. It's *ours*. You, me,
Wes, Gunn, Fred - this is what we've chosen. *Chosen*. Knowing the
consequences, knowing not all of us would see it through, not even sure if
there was a `through' to see.
*That* is
the deal, Angel. It's about time you realised it."
He hardly
waited for her to finish before shooting back, "You didn't choose
anything, Cordy. You got stuck with the visions, and got stuck with me. You
can't tell me this is what you wanted from life. I've been there for the
auditions, the casting calls, the hundred plus attempts you've made to get
yourself a something different. Better. The life you should have had. Why
are you pretending anything different now? To make it easier for me?
Because let me tell you, there is *nothing*, *nothing* you can say that
will do that."
He
suddenly felt the lapels of his leather jacket tugged harshly, pulling him
towards her, then released just as quickly as her fists balled up to pound
on his chest.
"God,
you're so dense! You're a big, stupid, dense lug of a vampire!"
"Cordy!"
He
grabbed her wrists gently, preventing a further physical onslaught, and
peered into her conflicted face confused, uncomfortably aware that his
bemused expression was probably only reinforcing her assessment.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It was
then that the tears started to fall. Hot and fast, they edged over her
cheekbones before careering down the hollows of her cheeks and plummeting
into the soft wool of his sweater. Angel, at a loss for anything else, did
what he'd been wanting to do from the start, wrapping her in his arms and
holding her, pressing her, tight against him. Cordelia allowed him, her
frustrated anger dissipating into wracking sobs. Her mask of distant
strength crumbling into clutching, grasping need. Need to be close, need to
touch and to be touched. Need to lose herself in the familiar sense of
perversity that washed over her every time she realized it took a dead
thing to make her feel truly alive.
Angel
guided them both towards the nearest bench a few yards down the ocean
front, Cordelia clinging round his neck. Each warm gasp of her breath
gently falling on his cold skin wounding him in ways her pummeling fists
never could.
Entangled,
they sank down on to the bench, Angel's chest absorbing Cordelia's sobs.
His cool lips brushed against her hair as he waited for her distress to
abate wondering why, out of all the factors arrayed around the young girl
in this arms, it was his apparent stupidity that had compelled her to
flooding tears.
After a
minute, which Angel had tried his best to will to an eternity, her wracked
gasps slowed. Cordelia began to regain her composure and attempt to control
her breathing. Wiping at her damp eyes with her hands, she shifted out from
the embrace. The cool night air rushed to fill the space she had occupied
and Angel shivered involuntarily at the temperature change next to his skin.
The
moment hung between them, broken only by her quiet sniffs. Angel wanted to
reach out, touch her, bring her close again, but her altered demeanor
cautioned him against it. When she finally brought her eyes to meet his,
her strength held steady once more. She had become proud, brave, dignified,
untouchable Cordelia again.
As she
faced him under now darkened skies of her native California, he wondered
dimly how it was that she had always been here. At times like this she
didn't seem the modern, glossy, all-American girl he knew she was. Angel
had been lucky enough in recent years to view her in the sun. He knew how
in the sun she sparkled; light and dazzling, all suntan and toothpaste
smiles. Under the sun she was the Cordelia Chase the world saw, used, caved
into, wanted and discarded at will.
In the
moonlight however, the cool rays through which his usual existence was
filtered, she was something else entirely. The silver light painted her
skin pale, accentuated her darkened eyes and not her flashing smile. At
night she no longer sparkled but shone with a quiet luminescence; ancient
and otherwordly.
Both
Cordelias drew the vampire. One pulled him towards the heady warmth of her humanity,
her laughter, her pulsating life force and instilled within him a desire to
allow himself to be burned up in its heat. The other bewitched him with the
tantalizing promise of hidden wisdoms, of a power beyond and outside them
both, whispered of nobility and love, of courage and endurance, and gave
him a glimpse of the eternity within and without himself; leaving him
yearning to be immersed in the gleaming silver pools of metallic moonlight.
All this encased in the fragile frame of the young girl, who moments
previously had been sobbing brokenly in his arms.
Waiting
for her to speak, with breath as bated as it was unnecessary, she bewitched
him now.
"Maybe...
maybe it did choose us too. No, no `maybe'. It did. I know it did.
Sometimes I know things without knowing how I know. And I know Buffy's not
the only Chosen One. The Powers chose you too, and I guess they chose me.
But the decision was mutual. I still chose them too. And I choose them
again every day. Don't you see?"
She
looked up at him in supplication.
"The
auditions, the reason why every so often I make another pathetic attempt at
an acting career - it's not about trying to find an escape route. It's just
the opposite. I wanted there to be something else I could do, something
else I could be good at so that I was still choosing. So that I'd know, so
that you'd know, I *could* be somewhere else and yet wasn't. Because. I.
Chose."
Her last
words separated with her emphasis. An emphasis, Angel realised with a
inward smile, which was for the big, stupid, dense lug of a vampire's
benefit. The smile worked its way slowly to his lips before resting a
little short of his eyes. The gesture was enough to enable Cordelia to tell
he had finally got a clue and she rewarded him with a smile of her own and
a rueful chuckle.
"That's
what that last disastrous commercial shoot was about," she paused, the
smile falling as the reminiscence deepened, "The visions were getting
worse and we'd only just made up. I needed to prove my choice again. It
didn't quite work out."
She
managed a half-grin, attempting to counter the dismay that had repossessed
Angel's face at the mention of the visions. His eyes fell from hers as the
habitual weight of guilt resettled upon his shoulders. Cordelia reached
out, her fingers catching his chin, tilting his face back level with hers.
"But
then there was Pylea, and I *did* choose again. Chose this. So none of this
is your fault, Angel. It's nobody's fault. It's just the road the choices
*I* made have led to. Do you understand? It's important to me that you
understand. If you don't understand I'm really in trouble, because I'm not
sure there's another soul in the world who will."
He looked
into her beautiful moon-darkened eyes, silently pleading, wordlessly asking
him to grant her this little sliver of peace and Angel found himself
sliding into the mercury moonlight with a tiny nod.
She held
him there with her gaze for the longest time, before breathing only a
gentle, "Good."
The spell
broke and Angel felt himself quickly resurfacing. Scattered senses
regathering their bearings. Bench, ocean, night, LA, twenty-first century.
Her hand dropped from his chin and she gathered her coat around her against
the cool night.
Standing,
she shot one final look at the liquid moon reflected in the ocean, then
turned sharply and offered her hand, "Let's get back. I want to check
on Wesley."
Chapter 3
Scrunch. Snap.
Crunch.
The lack of light in
the Hyperion lobby meant Cordelia's first damage assessment was being done
by ear. She didn't want to imagine what pieces of essential equipment were
being crushed into further oblivion by her boots as she felt her way
hesitantly towards the light switches on the wall behind the counter. Her
outstretched fingers finally fumbled across their goal and glaring
electrical illumination sprang cheerfully into action, revealing the true
extent of the devastation.
"Jeez
Angel!"
He stood in the
doorway, just returned from parking the car, a strained expression on his
face. Half- shocked realization at the full force of his violent outburst,
half- desire to repeat it. Being back in the place he'd first heard the
news, he felt he was reliving the moment again. Anger swelled up once more
but now, under the scrutiny of her gaze, the crippling pain soon overcame
the ire. He stared back at her helplessly.
"Anger
management issues much? I hope to God you're insured. You are insured,
right?" she spoke matter-of-factly, Sunny Cordelia re-emerging under
the brash artificial lighting.
Her offhand query got
no response as Angel dumbly shrugged off his coat, his heavy steps further
grounding the debris as he moved to hang it. There were much more crucial
issues than his lack of insurance still to be addressed. Cordelia had
ducked into the office, she reappeared in the frame of the second door only
a few inches from his elbow as he hung his coat. He started briefly, taken
aback by her capacity for swiftness of movement at a time when all his own
limbs felt like lead.
"He's not here.
He must have gone home."
"His bike's
still outside."
"Maybe he got
the bus."
"He could be
upstairs. It's pretty late."
"I'll go check.
Could you make up some coffee? I feel a little drained. If you can find an
intact cup, that is."
She was already on
the staircase before she'd finished her sentence. Angel watched her go with
eyes that felt older than usual. He had seen her make similar movements a
hundred times over. He couldn't count the number of times he had watched
her disappear up the staircase hurriedly to wash imaginary slime out of her
hair after a hard night's evil fighting, or to change into whatever clothes
she deemed better suited for that day's task in hand - whether it be
meeting a client or dismembering a demonic corpse. Never before had the
sight of her figure disappearing through the archway filled him with the
dread panic it did now. She wasn't allowed to be out of his sight, dammit!
If she was out of his sight he might not be able to stop her from dying. If
that happened then she'd be out of his sight for ever. That couldn't be
borne thinking about. It wasn't going to happen because he wasn't going to
let it.
He couldn't. It
wouldn't. Would it?
This merest notion of
the possibility caused his unbeating heart to seize inside his chest as if
being tightly wound by barbed wire. For a second Angel thought he might
pass out, until her oh-so-penetrating whisper from the top of the stairs
severed the constricting metal strands.
"He's asleep in
one of the guest rooms."
Her tone softened as
she moved down the stairs and began to speak normally again, "He looks
exhausted. Sprawled on the bed fully clothed."
Angel managed a nod,
collected himself and began to go through the motions necessary to provide
Cordelia with her requested caffeine fix. Luckily the coffee machine was
one of the few survivors of his earlier attack. She joined by his side.
"Not the
greatest day all round, huh?" she surmised sadly, her sheen of
brassiness evaporating as suddenly as it appeared.
Angel found his voice
catching deep in his throat as he struggled to articulate a simple,
"No."
He managed to locate
a pair of ugly but unshattered mugs at the back of a cupboard, poured the
coffee, and handed one to her. She surveyed the lobby for a sturdy chair
and drew a blank. Instead, Cordelia settled herself on the lower steps of
the staircase and gestured for Angel to do the same. She took his cup so as
to prevent spilling as he lowered himself down. He smiled his thanks
wordlessly, wondering when it was he had started to take such tiny acts of
intimacy for granted.
On an
uncharacteristic impulse, he found himself taking her free hand in his. She
cast him a short, surprised glance but increased her own pressure on the
clasp, in gratitude, in understanding edged with latent need.
"I won't let you
go." he whispered huskily.
The only reply was a
small sad smile.
"There's a way
to stop it. There has to be. And I'll find it, Cordy, I promise you, I'll
find it."
Her sudden flinch
caused a trickle of hot liquid to spill over the edge of her mug and on to
her jeans.
"No." she
said almost too quickly. She ran on, hoping to cover her moment of panic,
"I mean, there isn't anything you can do. Humans aren't meant to be
seers. End of story. It was in my vision and all Wesley's books say the
same thing."
"So what? We've
prevented the things you see in visions from happening before and not every
answer is found in books, you know that, Cor. It's not even as if Wes'
collection is all that extensive. There's lots of places to try yet. Wes
might even have found something whilst we were at the beach, I told him to
keep looking." Angel made to move back over to the desk in search of
some miraculously helpful notes written in the former Watcher's close hand
but Cordelia's tight grip on his hand wouldn't allow him.
"He already
looked once. Wes is thorough. He wouldn't have missed anything."
Angel turned back to
her in incomprehension.
"What is this,
Cor? I'm trying to save you, and you won't even consider the possibilities.
I don't understand. You don't give up like this. What is it? What's going
on with you?"
His voice cracked as
a new horror struck him, "Do you... do you *want* to die?"
"Of course I
don't want to die!" she returned, her voice rising. "I want to
live and stay here with my friends, watching them fight and laugh and grow
old or grow human - depending on who they are - and be able to fight and
laugh and grow with them. I want all that. I want it so much it makes me
ache inside but sometimes you just can't get what you want, and there are
always... costs..." She trailed off, attempting to stem the flow of
emotion before it was too late.
Angel didn't know
whether to hug her or shake her, "But you won't even let me try?! It's
almost as if you don't want to be saved!"
She sprang up,
sending her coffee mug flying across the room, its landing smash
reverberating in the acoustics of the lobby.
"You can't save
me, Angel!" she burst out vehemently, "You can give me the power
to bear the visions or you can take them away, but you CAN'T SAVE ME! You
can only DAMN ME!"
Raw, shocked silence
descended upon them. Cordelia felt herself swaying, dizziness and nausea
caused by brutal realization flooding her body. She had uttered that which
she had sworn never to reveal and now the floodgates were down and she had
no strength left to fight the tide.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He caught her before
she fell. Just as he always did. As he'd vowed he always would in that
moment back in his friends' ramshackle office when he had steadied her
vision throes for the first time after his return. His head was swimming
with countless fragmentary thoughts, but ensuring her well-being didn't
need an ability to think clearly. It was an instinct now. As natural to him
as breath was to her. Angel drew her close, the nearness of her soothing
his own confusion. She had said he could solve the problem of the visions
but yet he couldn't save her? Angel was used to being spun on his ass by
Cordelia's utterances but this was an entirely new level of uncomprehending
disbelief.
A few seconds passed
before she came to and Angel felt hands on his chest pushing him away. They
stood a few feet apart, facing each other like adversaries not best
friends. His brow furrowed in confusion; her eyes misted once again with
tears; both shaking a little.
Angel spoke first,
"Cor, I don't..."
He didn't need to
finish the sentence, the lack of his understanding was palpable. She
shifted a little from foot to foot, face lowered, before tilting up her
chin, locking his eyes with hers, and enunciating in a low slow tone,
"You can't save someone who's already saved."
Okay, Angel would
readily admit he might not be Einstein but since when had Cordelia been the
Delphic Oracle?
He shook his head in
frustration and ran a hand through his hair. "I swear, I haven't the
least idea what you're talking about. How is letting someone die saving
them? You said I could give you the power to bear the visions. Make you
stronger somehow? And you don't want me to? Please Cordy, I'm begging you,
because I'll do anything, *anything* if it means I won't lose you."
She gave a short
bitter laugh. "Anything?"
"You know I
would."
"You really
haven't even thought of it, have you? The more obvious solution to our
little dilemma," her words now came out hard, mocking. "Humans
not strong enough to bear the visions, demons are. Hmm, who around here has
the ability to make me a little less than human? I'm dying anyway, what
does the method matter?"
Angel's eyes grew
large as he finally understood what she was suggesting. She continued
mercilessly with her charade.
"I'll tell you
what, I'll go wake Wes, then he can get on the phone to Willow for a copy
of that handy curse whilst you bite me. There'll a be a good few hours
before I rise to get all the ingredients together, and if not, I'm sure you
can pull off a little gypsy hocus pocus before I drain the life out of
*too* many people."
His voice came out
bruised and grated, "Never."
"Really?"
she flashed darkly, dropping the act, "And you make the whole eternal
ensouled damnation bit look such fun too!"
"It's not an
option." he managed, still hoarse but with complete finality.
"Damn skippy,
it's not an option!" Cordelia screamed at the top of her voice. The
hotel walls roared it back at her.
When the echoes died
away, she made an effort to speak again, more calmly now, "Angel, do
you get it now? I die now - the way the Powers want me to - I die for
something good, something worthwhile. I die knowing people love me, knowing
who I am, knowing I was the best person I could be. You did that. You and
Wes and Doyle. Gunn and Fred have played their parts too. You know what I
was back in high school. I was a bitch. A shallow, self-centered, mean,
petty bitch. I hurt people, I caused them pain. Not because they deserved
it but just because I could. I was so caught up in my own
self-preservation, `Don't let anyone in, keep them at arms length otherwise
they might make you feel something, and God forbid you should feel
something, because feelings lead to vulnerability, and vulnerability to
hurt, and a Chase doesn't let anyone get the better of them. So be a bitch,
keep them out, keep them down.' "
She sank back down on
the steps again and continued her monologue, "I should have been vamp
fodder back in Sunnydale, most probably would have been if it wasn't for...
the B-word."
She threw a guilty
half-smile in Angel's direction, "And then I came to L.A. and was this
close to being just another family-less, deluded, fame-seeking, mortuary
slab decoration here too. You haven't forgotten how we got here? That
Russell Winters creep? You saved me, then Doyle gave me a sense of purpose,
and when Wolfram and Hart tried to take it all away I realised just what
that meant, and you saved me again. And you keep saving me, Angel, every
day. Every day I spend with you I'm a little more saved."
She glanced up
earnestly to gage his reaction to her speech. What she saw shook her to the
core. Angel's eyes were pooled with tears. *Angel* was crying. She'd not
even known he could. Cordelia launched herself into his arms, taking his
face between her hands, gently wiping away the salt water whilst her lips
pressed little kisses along his jaw and cheeks and uttered whispered
reassurances and pleas for him to stop.
"Please, Angel,
stop. I can't bear it. Please."
He only hung on to
her with greater vigor and buried his face in her neck trying to inhale
her, all of her, so she'd never be able to leave him. This beautiful girl
who had just broken his heart in the sweetest way imaginable.
Chapter 4
"Here,"
Cordelia handed him a box of tissues with a mischievous grin, "In case
you feel like doing your `peeling onions' impression again."
He thanked her dryly.
They had moved out into the garden. The ostensible reason had been their
joint desire to get away from the chaos of the destroyed lobby. Angel had
other motives he hadn't voiced. First and foremost, he wanted the chance to
view Cordelia in the moonlight again. Secondly, he wanted to save her
further upset by letting the shadows hide any tears of his yet to fall.
She settled down next
to him cupping a new (chipped) mug of coffee in both hands. She had changed
into a warm sweater she'd found behind the counter, and the way she'd
pulled the sleeves down over her wrists made her look younger and more
vulnerable than ever.
"Funny."
He wasn't sure he had
heard her correctly. That certainly wasn't a word he'd use to describe much
right then.
"What?
Funny?"
"Yeah. Funny.
I've known you forever and I never knew you could cry. Proper tears and
everything. It's funny."
"You haven't
known me forever, Cor."
They spoke in hushed
tones. A natural adherence to the laws of the night.
"Sometimes it
feels like it. Or maybe I just like pretending I have. Sometimes it feels
like I've known you five minutes. I suppose it feels like that to you all
the time, what with having a couple of centuries under your belt and
all."
He smiled at her, his
dark eyes warm and soft. The safest place she'd ever known, thought
Cordelia.
"No, it doesn't.
Some years pass like minutes, some like centuries. These last few years?
Best three hundred of my life," he managed a genuine grin and was
rewarded with one in return.
"Yeah, apart
from all the demon fighting, evil lawyer scheming, exploding apartments,
resurrected exes, hell dimensions and pretty much nearly being killed on a
regular basis, it's been a damn fine run," she returned.
He studied her
closely, "You make it sound like it's already over."
A trademark
half-smile, a raised brow, an averted gaze. Words so quiet they were hardly
audible, "For me it almost is."
He shut his eyes
tight as a roughed wave of grief washed over his soul, grazing it raw,
"Don't say that. Don't ever say that."
"It's the truth.
It might not be the next vision, or even the one after that, or maybe I'll
get really lucky and have three or four only mildly debilitating visions
before the one that kills me, but it's going to be soon. I can feel
it."
"Maybe some
people aren't ready to accept that truth."
"Maybe they'd
better."
"Maybe it would
kill them, too."
"Now you're
being melodramatic."
"First, not
melodramatic. Second, do you really imagine I could keep doing this without
you?"
"That's what you
thought about the B-... about Buffy, but you went on. You were okay. I'm
guessing it's more likely I'll *stay* dead but you'll cope. You're strong,
Angel, and it's not as if all those hopeless are going to stop needing help
because I'm not around. You'll go on, and one day the pain won't be as bad
and the next it'll be even less, until the day comes when you're happy
again without realizing it. Only not too happy. Because that isn't a good
look on you. I mean, sure the wardrobe improves, but the insides?
Ugly." she finished, punctuating the last word with a wrinkle of her
nose.
How could she do
this? Make him want to laugh and cry all at once. God, he was going to miss
her. No, no missing. Not yet. Not whilst she was warm and alive and huddled
into his shoulder. It was then he remembered.
"Cordy?"
the slightest bit of suspicion had crept into his tone. She tensed a little
in anticipation.
He continued,
"You said I could give you the power to stand the visions..."
"I thought we'd
already covered what a great idea *that* would be," she interrupted.
He carried on,
ignoring her, more certain by the second he'd missed something important,
"*Or* I could take them away." She noticeably shrank and moved
away, still clutching at her coffee mug. "The first one isn't an
option, you're right. So maybe you could explain option two to me? Because
I'm thinking it sounds like a winner."
Ohgodohgodohgod. As
if things weren't complicated enough already. Cordelia bit her lip
nervously, "I've told you before, Angel. I can't lose the
visions."
"You can't lose
the visions but you can lose your life? Cordy, that's madness!"
"It's a little
quirky perhaps, but it's not madness."
"Quirky?"
Angel spluttered, not believing his ears.
"Without the
visions I don't have a life. Not the one I want. I'd rather be dead."
"Of course you'd
have a life, the same life, just without the pain and the headaches and the
falling into the furniture! Or are you going to tell me you enjoy that
now?!" Angel's total confusion was tipping over into frustrated anger.
"No, I
wouldn't!" she sat rigid now, eyes fixed on the darkness ahead, not on
him, "If I didn't have the visions I wouldn't be here - with you and
Wes - fighting the good fight."
"And I told you
before, the visions aren't why you're important. Do you think I'd need you
any less? Do you think I'd stop caring without the link, or that Wes
would?"
"Yes and no,
respectively. And that's why I wouldn't be able to stay."
He could only look at
her in exasperation.
"I'm not
explaining this well," she turned back to face the vampire, crossing
her legs over the top of the bench, "You do the most amazing things
for me. Things that I never dreamed I could ever expect anyone to do. How
many other girls can say they've had men jump into hell dimensions to save
them, not once but twice? And I'm so grateful, Angel, and I love you so
much for it. But it's such a huge risk. Look what happened with Billy.
Innocent people got hurt, Wes and Fred got hurt. Having the visions, being
the link, means that when you do things like that I can justify it, because
the visions help us help others. Without them, you'd just be doing it for
me, and who has the right to say Cordelia Chase is more important than
anybody else? Not me. Not you."
Angel's irritation
had expired. Instead he could only look at her in awed reverence. When did
she become so selfless, so noble? Had it always been there, it just took
the most awful of challenges for it to be revealed? He didn't have any
answers and it struck him that he really should. If only he'd realized
everything she was so much earlier. If only it wasn't so close to the end
that he'd finally realized she was everything that mattered.
"Cordy, you do
know - when I did those things - I wasn't thinking about the damn link, I
was only thinking about you," he half-growled, low and intense.
Her gaze melted. This
was what it was to be loved. Loved with all the strength and ferocity of a
demon filtered through the unswerving constancy and gentle sweetness of a
good man. Who wouldn't exchange short life for this? It was more than most
people found in three score years and ten. In Wes and Angel she had two
people (count `em, *two*) who cared more for her than for themselves; and
that, decided Cordelia, was... substance.
She took his hand
gently in hers.
"I know,"
she breathed, struggling to keep back her emotions, "But that's what
makes it impossible to be stay here if the visions are gone. I'm an easy
enough target for your enemies as it is. While I have the visions I *have*
to stay to get the messages to you, without them I'd just be even more of a
liability. Cordelia Chase, Kidnap Central! All the evil dudes would be
telling each other in bars, `You want to get the Do-Gooder Blood-Sucker
going? Get your mitts on that loudmouth brunette chick. Guy'll go crazy
trying to get her back even though she's got no superpowers or is any aid
to his cause. Keep him distracted for hours whilst we massacre a few
innocents.' "
"That is the
worst impersonation of an `evil dude' I've ever heard."
She pulled her hand
from their clasp to swipe his shoulder, but returned it immediately.
"You do get my
point though?"
"No."
"Yes, you do.
You're just a stubborn dork who doesn't want to admit I'm right."
"No. It's not
enough reason."
"So you think me
not being able to live with myself knowing I was your Achilles heel isn't
enough reason?"
He had to admit he
hadn't thought of it quite that way.
"Wes, Gunn and
Fred don't have superpowers either, and they don't see it as a problem.
They just want to do what they can."
"Pfft! Wes is
the `Fount of All Bookish Knowledge'! The Warrior for the Light would be
fighting pretty much blindfold without him. And are you really telling me
that without a second thought you would jump into a hell-dimension portal
and rescue a psychotic criminal for Fred or Gunn?"
"Yes!... no... I
don't know."
"I do. And you
shouldn't feel guilty about that Angel. It's good that you have that
distance, it enables you to see the bigger picture. I don't think you have
that with me. And that... it means so much to me but... it's also a little
scary."
Angel began to see
where she was coming from. The closeness in which they took such strength
also made them both vulnerable to exploitation. And if they were put at a
disadvantage, then so were the people they were supposed to help.
"So you leave.
It would hurt like hell but at least you'd still be alive."
"Haven't you
been listening?" It was Cordelia's turn to be exasperated.
"I like having a
purpose, having a place. I like belonging. I never belonged anywhere else.
Not in my family, not in Sunnydale, not at those phony Hollywood schmoozing
parties - though they can be kind of fun. Everything I love and need is
here in this hotel, and I'm afraid that without it..." she trailed
off, suddenly intent on the contents of her mug.
"Afraid that
without it, what?"
"Afraid that
without it... I might turn back."
She paused.
"I might turn
back into what I was. If I left, I'd lose everything, I'd lose myself. I
wouldn't belong again and I'd rather die then go back to that, Angel, I
swear. I couldn't stay without the visions and I couldn't live if I went
away. Catch 22. See? Take away the visions and I'm still damned."
"No. Nothing
like Catch 22. Or damnation. You stay and we work on your guilt issues and
my portal jumping tendencies. Simple."
She burst out
laughing, the warm rich sound exploding the cool stillness of the air. It
was infectious and Angel found himself smiling without really knowing why.
"Oh, that's
good! *You* advising *me* about guilt issues! Wait `til I tell Wes and Gunn
about that one!" she giggled.
Her shaking mirth
subsided a little, amused expression slipping into one of tender affection.
She ran a finger down the line of his jaw, the lightness of her touch
making him shiver. The pools of silver moonlight stretched, gleaming, all
around her again. Enticing him with their whispers of an aged and ageless
eternity. Angel stared into her dark glistening eyes, noting the tiny
shimmer of the spherical moon caught within them. Part of his mind tried to
capture every detail of the way she looked at that moment. The purity of
love emanating from her delicately drawn features, the expressive eyes, the
full lips, the perfect imperfection of the smattering of freckles across
the bridge of her nose, dappling her skin like the craters of the moon.
Another part of his mind flashed up other images of her from his mental
library. The same aspect kept appearing in different instances. Cordelia
sat on the stage of a disused theater, one arrow pointed at a former
friend's throat, one at
her heart; Cordelia
on the airport runway not long ago, ready to take a life if she had to
because she felt responsible for the actions of others. In the images
Cordelia stood strong, beautiful - crossbow in hand. It hit him like a
thunderbolt. Diana. That's what he saw in this young girl. Hunter, Moon,
the woman who could never be owned. Goddess.
"Retard,"
her lips muttered.
Maybe not.
Maybe she was just
Cordelia. Best friend, fashion victim, Ph.D. in Angel Baiting.
Maybe she was both.
And he loved her.
"What would I
have to do? To take the visions away?"
Instantly, she closed
down. The warmth and intimacy in her demeanor went out like a light. The moonlight
withdrew its gleaming silver fingers.
"You don't need
to know. Because I'd never allow it."
"Cor..."
"Drop it, Angel.
I mean it. I don't even know for sure that you could."
"If you tell me
maybe I could help you with that."
"You really couldn't."
"You don't know
that."
"I said `leave
it', okay!"
"Dammit,
Cordelia! Stop doing that! You can't tell me there's even the slightest
hint of a possibility I won't lose you and then snatch it away again with
no explanation. I need to know. If you explain and it's something too
terrible then at least I'll be able to go on in the knowledge there was
nothing else I could have done. If you don't tell me I'm always going to
wonder and *I* couldn't live with that. So please, whatever it is, just *tell*
me. What. Do I Have. To do?"
Okay, the man has a
point. He deserves to know everything now you've come this far. So you
never wanted to be here. Too late, girl. You've no other options left. Time
to bare your soul. Oh crap, how to begin to explain? Best just blurt it
out, Chase. You're good at that.
"Comshuk
me."
"Excuse
me?"
"Comshuk me,
Angel!"
PART 2
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