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Making
Up For Lost Time
AN: Just a few notes to explain the
British expressions and places referred to in this story:
1. “Welly” – slang for Wellington
Boots. These are basically waterproof rubber boots.
2. “Kegs” – English slang for trousers or underwear. It is used in this
chapter to denote underwear.
3. Plymouth and Exeter are two major cities in Devon, a county in the South
West of England.
4. Newquay – is a seaside town in the English county of Cornwall. Due to
its position on the North Cornish coast, it’s popular with surfers,
families, young people and bikini-clad women alike.
Chapter One
The long rolling green fields of the farm seemed to
stretch for miles, scattered among the woods and the trickling stream. From
her favourite spot beside the old oak tree, Buffy Summers felt she was
truly within the grip of rural South West England, far away from the noise
and excitement of London . Even the nearest cities of Exeter and Plymouth
had that old country charm, caught between the attempted trendiness of the
big smoke and the half-soaked ambience of a backwater town. Life in the
English county of Devon was as different from the one she had once led in
Los Angeles as chalk from cheese. The days here had predictable rhythms,
punctuated by the community-spirited fetes, fayres and social dos that were
becoming ever more frequent as the showery days of April shimmered into the
sun of May. Her mother’s friend Rupert Giles had once told her about
British weather, expounding upon the joyous diversity that could be found
within one week, from dazzling sunshine to torrential downpours. To the
young Buffy it had all seemed very exotic, but now, sitting under a bank of
cloud, waiting for the sun to peek through, she felt a pang of longing for
the cloudless skies of home and her old life. The life she had given up for
The One, the definitive love of her life, forsaking all others. At the age
of twenty-three, her Liam “Angel” O’Leary had been all the reassurance she
needed, and she had stepped on the plane at LAX without looking back. That
was three years ago.
Idly Buffy picked at a daisy, using her nail to
delicately place a slit through its stem before threading another daisy
through it. It was something she had watched the children of Angel’s cousin
Wesley, Sarah and Rebecca, do many times, smiling as they hung the
completed bracelets and necklaces around their wrists and necks. Sometimes
the three of them would walk the fields of Wesley’s farm, laughing as the
big Labrador Ben bounced through the long grass, heading joyously for the
stream. Sometimes Wesley and his wife Fred would join them, and together
they would wade welly-clad through the stream and across to the woods where
Wesley had hung an old tyre for the children to play on. Angel had snorted
the first time he had seen her place her feet in the plain green Wellington
boots, teasing her that they wouldn’t go with her Prada bag. She had sucked
her bottom lip, feeling the press of tears in her eyes but had said
nothing. He had no idea how many of her former worksuits and designer
dresses were packed away, wrapped mummy-like in their dress bags, never
again to see the light of the day. With the mud and the potholes littering
the farm and surrounding fields, she was certain she would never see a pair
of heels again, a great loss to a woman of no more than five foot three.
Still, here she could breathe the blustering air of the windswept
countryside and sit alone beside an oak, lost in her own thoughts and
memories. Soon she would stand and meander back through the fields, smiling
warmly as she passed Fred’s kitchen window at the family scene she would
see inside. Then she would walk up the tiny lane to the thatched cottage
that was now her home and switch on the kettle, ready for Angel’s return
home.
The cloud was slowly shifting from the sky, letting the
sunshine begin to warm Buffy’s face as she lay back upon the grass. It was
almost the same feeling of peace she had had as a child, lying beside her
little sister Dawnie, the endless days of summer seeming to last forever.
That was before the divorce and everything that happened after. That was
before Buffy had even known what unhappiness was and Angel had swept into
her life and changed everything.
She felt her eyes drift closed, the fields before her
dissolving into the campus of the UCLA, to the day she had walked across
the quad with her best friend Willow and had almost been knocked over by a
dark-haired rushing man. Indignant, she had righted herself, ready to let
out a torrent of ranting on the inconsiderateness of male freshmen. Then
she had seen the anxious look on the man’s face. His face was gorgeous and
brooding, truly Byronic: the curve of his lips, his deep chocolatey-velvet
eyes, gazing at her, right at her. She had quickly looked away, her face
reddening as she realised she had been staring. He had touched her shoulder
lightly, asking if she was alright in a strong Irish brogue which Buffy had
instantly found attractive. From that day on, they had gone from tentative
coffee meet-ups to somehow stumbling into a comfortable pattern of sharing
a bed, a bathroom and a life. Their relationship had seemed indestructible
until Angel had graduated a year before Buffy and announced he was moving
to London to take over his family’s art dealing business. Angel’s father
had insisted upon this change, believing Angel’s major in Art History to be
at best use in the family business. It had seemed a strange request to
Buffy, considering Angel’s father was in perfectly good health and more
than capable of travelling between Dublin and London as need be. Still,
Angel had not questioned it. A week later he had been on a plane,
disappearing out of Buffy’s life, leaving her only with memories and a
dog-eared London phone number.
Her senior year had possibly been the most miserable of
her life, the majority of her days being spent pining until her weekly
transatlantic phone call with Angel. Yet amazingly, as the year grew to a
close and graduation loomed, a strange transformation began to take place
in Buffy. When Willow pleaded with her to go to a campus party, Buffy began
to less reluctantly accept, even making an effort with her hair, makeup and
clothes. There were even dates: strange and furtive events which always
ended with a chaste kiss and the puppy dog-eyed devotion of the man in
question. It was not that Buffy was toying with them, rather that it had
never occurred to her that they wanted anything more from her than company.
Then had come the offer of a lifetime, the chance to do something with her
Communication major that she had never imagined possible, and she had taken
it. The fact that it would keep her away from Angel was the only downside
to working at the most exclusive PR company in the Los Angeles area. Then,
just a year later, she had given it all away for a gamble on love.
She was startled out of her daydream by a gentle tap on
her shoulder. Looking up, she gazed into the familiar brown eyes she had
melted into countless times, and tried to smile. “Hey,” she said, pulling
herself up from the ground.
The lopsided grin was there as Angel watched his
girlfriend wake up groggily from her reveries, her thin body cocooned in a
thick sweater and old comfortable jeans. “I knew I’d find you here,” he
told her.
His hand was held out, and as was expected she took it,
allowing him to help her to her feet. For a minute, he held her there,
tenderly brushing back the golden wisps of hair that had fallen from her
messy pony, fingers lingering on her cheek. If it was the look in her eyes,
she could not tell, but something shivered through Angel and his hands drew
away from her and into the confines of his pockets. He began to walk, Buffy
following, easily falling into their established rhythm. For a little
while, they did not talk, Buffy kicking the grass as she went with the toe
of her trainers, Angel gazing off towards the farmhouse where his cousin
Wesley and his family resided. In the distance, the birds chattered
sweetly, their calls familiar and welcoming. Buffy wondered how long it
would take her tonight to make their tea and whether Angel would offer to
assume control half way through, a subtle reminder of his superior culinary
skills. After that, she would switch on their small television and watch
one of the Australian soap operas that the British seemed to be obsessed
by, dimming the sound before Angel could come back in, with two trays in
his hand. Dinner would be served and like students, they would eat a TV
dinner.
The sound of a Land Rover pulling into the gate caused
both Buffy and Angel to look up, for a second their eyes meeting. Then as
quickly Buffy looked away, waving politely to Wesley as he got out of the
muddy Land Rover, and nodded cordially to them both. It was almost strange
to see Wesley dressed for work, the smart slacks and stiff white shirt of a
college lecturer a far cry from the scruffy jeans and anorak he normally
favoured.
“So, you two lovebirds were taking a walk?” Wesley
observed, his eyes twinkling with the enjoyment of the tease.
Buffy felt Angel’s eyes upon her, his hand now cupping
hers flimsily, the connection as likely to droop as the heads of the
daisies on Buffy’s chain. She felt her own face move into the machinations
of a smile, her muscles moving the lips in a well-oiled curve. As she
glanced at Angel, she saw the same reflected in his face, the guarded and
typical response to one of Wesley’s little jokes.
“That’s right, Wes,” Angel returned, bringing Buffy’s hand
to his lips in a flutter of romance. “You can’t let the romance go dead
just because the woman’s seeing you in your kegs.”
Briefly, the irony of his comment amused her, an
expression Wesley took for contentedness. Wesley smiled at her kindly, then
softly said to Angel, “Well, you just take care of her. Our Buffy here is a
good woman.”
The nod from Angel was imperceptible before Wesley had
waved goodbye and had immersed himself in the heart of his happy family. As
she walked towards the gate with Angel, Buffy could hear Wesley laughing
heartily with Fred and the girls as Ben jumped round them in joy, his
little yips of excitement mingling with the growing mirth. Angel opened the
gate, and they passed through, Angel shutting it behind them with a firm click.
Buffy wondered what the Wyndham-Pryce family would eat for dinner as they
gathered around their table, and how soon it would be before the girls
begged to take Ben out for one last walk before they did their homework.
One day Buffy had thought it would be her place to be a wife and a mother
and live in a perfect home, one so different from the house she had
grappled to keep after her mother had passed away, with its leaking taps
and drafty windows. It had only been Willow and Xander, her longstanding friends,
who had kept the wolf from her door and helped her out so many times with
mates’ rates repairs. Xander, who had hated Angel from first sight and
resented him for taking Buffy away from LA. Xander, who she had been in
more scrapes with in High School than she could count, along with Willow ,
Oz and Cordelia.
As Angel opened the front door to their cottage,
beckoning her in from the increasing chill as evening grew closer, she
remembered the Halloween she had been forced to participate in the high
school shepherding scheme for the neighbourhood children’s trick or
treating. There would never be such a scheme here; the village frowned upon
such American customs.
Angel placed a mug of steaming hot chocolate in front
of Buffy, mouth twitching in annoyance as she hardly moved or acknowledged
him, her eyes fixed upon the sunny climes of Australia flickering dimly on
the television set. He returned to the kitchen, laying out the items he
would need for tonight’s meal. Tonight they would eat something simple and
then he would watch the news.
~~
Halloween, 1997, Los Angeles .
The corset was digging into her ribs, making breathing
a challenging accomplishment. In the shop, the 18th
Century-style hooped dress and chestnut curled wig had seemed like the
perfect Halloween costume, but now as she struggled to keep up with Xander
as he strode down the street, she wanted nothing more than to rip it from
her body. “Xander!” she screeched finally, tripping over the long hem of
her skirts in her haste to keep up with him.
He turned slowly, a sort of quizzical grin on his face.
She pouted pointedly, flinging her hands out at the injustice of her
imprisoning outfit. “What’s the matter, Buff?” he drawled, unable to
withhold the quip any longer. “Corset a bit tight?” The levity lifted as
soon as he saw the ire glowing in Buffy’s eyes, a sure preamble to the full
Summers wrath, and he made the appropriate apologetic smile.
Tired of running and from the dull ache that was
becoming ever-constant, Buffy sat down on the edge of the sidewalk, not
caring as the folds of her skirts crushed against the dusty grime. She
sighed deeply, her face cupped in her hand as she wondered why exactly
these types of things always happened to her. If only she had not been
loitering in the halls, laughing with Xander and Willow , Principal Snyder
would never have pounced upon them and enforced this torture upon them.
Lord only knew why Snyder would think Buffy Summers, the girl who couldn’t
even keep her cyberpet alive, would be the perfect candidate for playing
shepherdess to five sugar-intoxicated children. As it transpired, it was
not her shepherding abilities that were the problem, but rather Xander’s.
Somehow while he had been admiring Cordelia’s form in her skintight cat
unitard, five children had vanished. In a panic, he had fled, searching for
the children high and low until he had eventually happened upon Buffy and
her little gaggle.
Now Buffy’s group was safely ensconced with Willow ,
disguised fittingly as a ghost, and Buffy was watching Xander pace up and
down, his toy gun placed soldier-style across his broad shoulders.
“You know what I’m thinking, Xander?” she finally
commented, fixing him with a smouldering glare. “We should turn you into a
soldier, for real. Then at least you’d find the kids.”
“Well I don’t see you finding them either,” he
retorted, kicking a pebble across the sidewalk in his frustration. He
flopped down beside Buffy, thoroughly annoyed with himself for being so
hormonally-charged that his mortal enemy Cordelia Chase could inspire such
lust in him. Being seventeen, responsible and male were not a probable
combination. The only plus side was that it had only been five minutes
since he had last seen the kids, and the neighbourhood was teeming with
high school students. So how hard could it be to track down two
mini-demons, two vamps and a fairy princess?
“Look, Buffster, what we need is to get into the mind
of a kid,” Xander began, curling his lip at the smirk beginning to spread
across Buffy’s face. “So, what would I do if I was a kid?”
“A lot like you’d do now,” she returned lightly,
struggling to adjust her corset again. “Eat lots of candy.”
Jumping up, Xander grabbed hold of Buffy’s hands and
pulled her to her feet, barely able to contain his excitement. “Hot and
smart,” he exclaimed, whirling them around in a circle as his idea formed.
It was obvious. The kids had scampered off with another group, overpowered
by the draw of more sugary goodness. “Buffster, I think you might just have
saved my ass.”
Standing beside him, Buffy smiled as he held out his
hand, and she gracefully curtseyed before him. “Thank you, kind sir,” she
giggled.
“Buffy, Lady of Buffdom, Duchess of Buffonia, I
completely renounce spandex,” he told her admiringly, gazing at the curves
revealed by Buffy’s sumptuous dress as they began to meander down the
street. The sound of children’s excited chattering could be heard, and
Xander stopped, a hopeful look on his face. “I think we found the runts!”
The sheet-covered form of Willow came hesitantly into
view, good-naturedly propelling a small nation of children forward. As
Xander caught sight of the glitter of a plastic tiara, he ran to Willow ,
signalling for his group to come forward. “How did you find them?” he
demanded of Willow , frantically doing a headcount of the children. “Not
that I’m not grateful and all.”
Through the eyeslits of her ghost costume, Willow
smiled coyly at Xander, feeling her face warm at his attention upon her.
“They stayed to get more candy,” she explained, self-consciously pulling at
her sheet. “Cordy saw the extra kids, saw me and well…”
As Xander gave the children a military-style lecture
his commando outfit never looked more comical, his relieved smile belying
the stern posture and bellowing tones. Unnoticed, Buffy came to Willow ,
pulling her aside. “Will, you’re never going to get him by hiding,” Buffy
told her rebukingly, lifting the offending sheet. “I thought we talked
about this.”
“Well, we did,” Will returned, scurrying for a way to
solidify her defence. “You said Halloween is ‘come as you aren’t night’ and
I said…”
“And you said nothing,” Buffy finished, yanking the
sheet from Willow with a determined tug. As Willow seemed to fairly squirm,
arms moving to cover her suddenly bare midriff, revealed by the short
leather skirt and rib-skimming shirt, Buffy looked admiringly at her work.
“Wow, you really are a dish.”
Defensively grabbing the sheet from Buffy, Willow
covered her bare flesh before Xander could see. Sighing deeply, Buffy
watched as Xander walked off with his group, oblivious to Willow’s efforts.
He really was dense sometimes. Willow had been his best friend since
forever, a staple part of his life and sometimes that meant that he was the
least cognisant of the subtle changes in her mood and penchants, whims and
fancies, especially as they related to him. It was not Willow ’s style to
highlight her feelings with flashing neon lights, nor Xander’s to view
Willow as anything other than a friend. It was a heartbreaking dance to
watch, and Buffy was glad of her own safety net with Riley.
Just as Willow was about to slip the sheet over her
head, she heard the gentle growling of an engine, and looked up to see a
van slowly driving down the street towards them. The sheet drifted from her
hands, and she gazed up at the driver, a smile of recognition upon her
face.
“Hey isn’t that Oz?” asked Buffy suddenly, a grin
beginning to curl its way across her lips as she noticed the intensity in
the exchange. “Oh my God, Will! He’s totally checking you out.”
Willow shook her head emphatically, her pale face
becoming flushed. “No, no, there’s no checking out of any kind. Just
computer nerd solidarity,” she babbled, hardly able to contain the
unfamiliar frisson she felt as Oz’s mouth twitched into an enigmatic grin.
“He’s checking you out,” Buffy finally reiterated,
steering Willow away from the lamp post she was about to walk into. “This
is so cool.”
A little smirk of pleasure escaped the cool denial of
Willow ’s defence, and the thought that Oz, senior Oz, Oz of The
Dingoes, Oz, Oz, Oz, looking at me, Oz, became transparent on her face.
Beginning the walk back to High School, the children an untidy gaggle
snaking in front of them, Buffy linked arms with Willow . She felt so safe
and warm and loved; nothing could go wrong. Tonight she and her two best
friends, Willow and Xander would gather around Buffy’s TV, eating popcorn
and giggle over Cordy’s cat costume. Then Buffy would climb into bed,
smiling, knowing in the morning she would hear the comforting beep of
Riley’s horn as he came to pick her up.
Then the van had stopped and Oz had gazed at Willow so
tenderly, and that was it. Buffy saw the change immediately and knew that
Willow ’s heart was hooked. In the months that followed, she saw Willow
begin to date Oz, Cordelia and Xander become an ill-matched but somewhat
solid couple, whilst she and Riley trundled on in their own unwielding way.
That was before things began to crumble, and Buffy saw the cracks in
everything around her. There were no certainties after that.
~~
Buffy’s arms spread across the white cotton sheets,
feeling the weight of the comforter pressing down upon her. She squinted
her eyes against the hazy morning sunlight, wondering idly why the curtains
were open. She turned over indulgently, automatically reaching for the warm
body she expected to be beside her. She was almost disappointed by the cold
empty space she found.
“Angel?” she called tentatively, pulling the sheet
around her to ward off the slight chill of the room.
Hearing no answer, she rose from the bed, the shirt of
Angel’s she slept in swallowing her small frame in soft, downy folds. The
smell of coffee, bitter and warm, hit her nose, sending a tiny thrill of
memory through her. She remembered when he used to make her coffee every
morning before their first class, padding into their shared room
bare-chested, clutching two mugs of steaming coffee. It was the best sight
she had ever woken to, desire and rejuvenation all in one. In those days,
the coffee had often grown cold, the brush of hand on hand leading to much
more sensuous places. It was a ritual which had faded to memory as the late
summer nights of London had turned autumnal and Buffy had no longer had a
reason to wake in the morning.
She lounged into their kitchen, expecting to see Angel
pottering around. A bright and cheery annoyingly familiar laugh tinkled
through the room, the Californian twang a faint reminder of the girls she
had hated so much at high school. The flow of her growing mise-en-scene
stalled, and she turned away, feeling awkward, a stranger in her own home.
It was her again. Nina was Angel’s colleague of sorts, an associate
art dealer in the business. An art aficionado like Angel, they would sit
for what seemed like hours, discussing art history and contemporary trends,
barely noticing that Buffy was there; it was as if Buffy faded away like
temporary dye from a blank canvas. She often wondered how it was that her
fellow Californian, golden haired and curvaceous, glamorous and
self-assured, had ever failed in her quest to snare Angel. It was a quest
so obvious to Buffy, but apparently not so to Angel. He was oblivious to
his own attractiveness and charisma, which conversely made him all the more
alluring. Women such as Nina savoured the challenge.
“Buffy, I thought I heard you,” Angel said from behind
her. She turned and faced him slowly, self-consciously pulling down the hem
of her shirt. She saw him look over her, following the line of her fingers
as they lingered upon her thigh, seeing something in his eyes, flickering
candle-like, waiting to ignite. Then Nina was there.
“Hey, Buffy,” Nina greeted curtly, flicking back her
own styled hair as if to draw attention to Buffy’s unbrushed bedhead.
Buffy smiled tightly, not bothering to return the
acknowledgement. She looked at Angel critically, a slight rebuke in her
voice. “I didn’t know we were expecting company,” she commented.
Angel smiled faintly at Nina, hinting for her to move
back into the small dining room. Finally, Nina reluctantly walked away, not
shutting the door behind her. “Buffy,” he began, coming towards her and
placing a placating hand on her arm.
She shrugged her arm back, releasing his grasp, moving
as if to return to her room. “I smelt the coffee,” she told him, leaving
the implication to hang in the air, stagnant and heavy as the memory of
Nina’s flirty tones echoed in Buffy’s mind. A sad, furtive look clouded
Angel’s eyes - memory, desire, then guilt. He took a faltering step towards
her, seeming to wince as she stepped back. He hesitated and gazed down at
her, awkward longing in his eyes.
“I didn’t know she was coming,” he told her finally,
casting a glance back at the open door through which Nina had just gone, no
doubt listening to every word that was now being said.
“I’m going to get dressed,” Buffy said, turning her
back on him and closing the door in a soft click behind her.
Angel stood for a long time, staring at the oblong
panels of the oak door, tracing the grain of the wood as it trickled like
raindrops down a window. Like the beating of his heart the first time he
had kissed Buffy in his black Plymouth and the windows had steamed up. Like
the day they had walked along the beach at Santa Monica and he had seen the
sunlight glinting in her hair, and was blinded, rays of warmth beaming down
as they kissed. Days in LA, thousands of miles away, another life ago. Then
Nina called. He turned and went back, already tasting the black coffee like
bile in his throat.
~~
At first she had not meant to phone. Somehow it had
just happened. The next thing Buffy had heard was the bright cheery voice
of Willow and then she had been crying, soft sobs that never stopped, and
Willow had listened and now Buffy was at the point of no return, with no
place to go now that Willow knew everything. The doubts, the fears, and
most of all, the reality of Buffy’s everyday life, where she had no job and
no purpose. How could she go on with this life now? How could she pretend?
Willow would ask the questions she most feared, the ones she even avoided
asking herself.
“But you still love him, right?” Willow persisted, her
voice gentle.
Buffy paused, the words caught in her throat as she
tried to answer. “I-I think so,” she replied, prodding the mass of tightly
coiled emotion nestled within. There was love there. There had to be. You
did not get on a plane to fly to a country thousands of miles away and give
up everything for someone who was not your whole life. “I mean, yes, of
course.”
She heard the sigh in Willow ’s voice, almost seeing
the deep crinkles that were lining Willow ’s forehead as she considered her
next words. “Buffy, come home,” Willow suggested. “Give yourself some time
out. Tara and I would love to see you, so would Xander, Anya and… Dawn.”
Willow ’s awkward hesitation upon Dawn’s name said it
all. However much Buffy hoped that time would heal the rift between she and
Dawn, it never seemed to happen. All Buffy could do was continue to wire
her money, send birthday and Christmas cards, and hear her news through
Willow and the guys. They were Dawn’s family now. Buffy had made them
promise to look after Dawn before she had left.
“I don’t know, Will,” Buffy answered hurriedly.
“There’s Angel and-”
“And what, Buffy?” Willow questioned her, her voice
seeming to press into Buffy’s conscience, forcing out long held secrets and
grey shadows. The pause held a lifetime of shared understanding and Buffy
knew what was coming next. “You gave up a dream job, your friends, family…”
It was almost as if Willow felt the tearing, the ragged edges of Buffy’s
sharp intake of breath. “I’m sorry,” she said quietly.
“It’s okay,” Buffy answered, almost reflexively. It was
something you became used to, apologising for the deceased status of your
own mother, making others feel better about it. She had been practicing
since she was 20, had the art almost perfected. Except for the quiet dip as
she finished the “okay”, the “ay” tailing off to some stilled pause,
somehow mournful.
After it had happened, she had called Angel. When he
had come to the house, he had grasped her hand and squeezed tight, leaving
her to stare at the window, wondering about the silent tinkle of wind
chimes and the children that continued to play outside. Her mother had been
taken away shortly afterwards. The death certificate stated that her mother
died of an aneurysm; the doctor said there was probably nothing that could
have been done to help. Buffy had been unable to resuscitate her, unable to
make her mom warm. She thought now that her younger sister Dawn had never
forgiven her.
“Buffy, I forgot to tell you. Oz is coming to England
.” Willow ’s voice cut through Buffy’s thoughts suddenly, a shaft of dusty
light in an unused room.
“Oz?” Buffy repeated, the old name rolling unfamiliarly
off her tongue.
“Yeah,” Will continued, seeming a little distracted.
She imagined Willow was doodling, drawing little flowers and houses and
swirly lines. “Tara and I saw him at a Dingoes gig and he said he was
heading your way before going to a gig in Newquay. I think he’s planning to
drop in and see you.”
Despite the apparent casualness, Buffy surmised the
meeting with Oz had been anything but easy. Tara and Willow were long term
partners, together since college. Before that it had been Willow and Oz,
something forever and stable. As Buffy was beginning to realise, forever is
a long time. He had left in Willow ’s sophomore year, after having some
sort of life crisis, telling Willow he needed to find his own way and get
his head together. He thought that she deserved better than him. The
resentment and hurt Willow had felt had never truly gone away, even though
she loved Tara with all her heart.
“Oh,” Buffy said, pulling at her sleeve. The frame of
the photo of Angel cuddling her against him glinted in the morning light.
“That would be good.”
~~
There was a knock at the door one morning as Buffy bit
into her toast, watching as Angel scanned the paper and took occasional
sips of his coffee. He had glanced across at her, about to stand but she
had hastily left the kitchen and answered the door. She gasped as she saw
who it was.
“Oz!”
“Hey,” said Oz, his countenance characteristically
noncommittal, yet the slight uplift of his eyebrows was enough to make her
smile warmly. In the six years since she had seen him, nothing much had
changed. He still had the same spiky hair that changed colour almost at
will and the same near to constantly deep-thinking expression.
“It’s good to see you,” she returned, opening the door
to invite him in. “Will told me you were thinking of coming.”
“It’s been a long time,” he observed thoughtfully,
looking around the cottage with an approving mouth twitch. “Nice place.”
“Thanks,” she said, feeling a slight flush of pride at
the compliment. She had put a lot of effort into decorating the cottage,
made it her special project, her one consolation for the lack of job,
financial independence and decent public transport.
Angel appeared at the door, his coffee poised
questioningly midway to his mouth and he appraised Oz silently. Oz nodded
at him, leaving Buffy to do the groundwork. Angel had never approved of
Oz’s actions towards Willow and was unlikely to be any more than civil to
him now.
As she made small talk, Buffy saw the uncertainty in
Angel’s face, the way he seemed to peer at Oz as an inspector would examine
a grimy kitchen. In response, she smiled more brightly at Oz, letting her
hands make little touches here and there, on an elbow, a wrist. Angel
sipped harshly at his coffee.
“Oz is staying in the village a few weeks,” Buffy
announced, showing Oz into their kitchen.
Angel stared as Buffy seated Oz in the chair he had
just left and sat beside him, beginning to chat animatedly. He was going to
be late for a meeting, the clock ticking, seconds dragging round. He
wondered then about the last time Buffy had talked to him like that. He
could not remember. It was a long way in the past, almost as far as Buffy
was from him. He said his goodbyes and left for work, all day the curve of
Buffy’s smile burning into his retina - the smile she had once reserved for
him. That night, Angel did not rush home.
Chapter Two
“I'm going crazy
A little every day
And everything I wanted
Is now driving me away
I woke this morning
To the sound of breaking hearts
Mine is full of questions
And it's tearing yours apart...”
Lyrics from Sheryl Crow’s Home.
~~
Angel lay back in his favourite chair, placing his feet
up on the ottoman. He had been home for over an hour and he had yet to see
Buffy. There had been the obligatory note - slipped hastily on the kitchen
counter - announcing rather helpfully that she was out and would be back
later. Whenever later was he was not sure, but as the seconds passed by on
the old grandfather clock, the tick reverberating ominously around the
quiet room, he began to worry. It was not like Buffy to go out without
first having casually mentioned it to him, but now it seemed that his solid
certainties were all crumbling like dust through his hands. Yet if he could
not trust her judgement, and allow her space, what did that say about him
and their relationship? He would wait.
He had barely seen Buffy since Oz’s arrival a week ago,
having been away in Bristol tying up one of the most lucrative deals in the
business’s history. Nina had, in her travels, happened upon what she
described as the most exciting artist on the British scene since Damien
Hirst. She had called Angel in a frenzy, insisting that it was essential
that Angel meet with them both straightaway. Not wanting to leave, yet
feeling obligated by both his father’s stern “Liam” down the line from
Ireland and Nina’s near-hysteria, he had gone anyway.
Buffy had accepted his absence as calmly as she had his
kiss goodbye. It seemed these days the only time that she made eye contact
was when she asked him to pass the butter at breakfast. Yet at night, after
they had both fallen into an uncomfortable sleep, he would wake to find
that she had scooted closer to him, her body spooning familiarly against
his. Then as the sun rose, Buffy seemed to drift further away, returning to
her side of the bed with regimented timing, ready for the day to begin all
over again. Angel never told her that he felt her every movement, heard
every sigh of her night time activity. He had been surviving for what
seemed like months on barely any sleep, and it was beginning to feel
natural. Coffee was his best friend, and seldom was he now seen without a
cup in his hand, from first thing in the morning to last thing at work
before he drove his old reliable Rover home.
He felt a pang of longing then for the car he had to
leave behind in LA: his Plymouth . Shiny, sleek and black, it had come to
be both a familiar friend and the scene of more than a few seductions -
all, of course, of Buffy. He had acquired it in a deal with Doyle, an old
childhood friend who had emigrated from Ireland to the USA with his family
five years before Angel enrolled at UCLA. However, Doyle had an unfortunate
knack of falling into all sorts of trouble and was only too pleased to ask
his old mate Angel for help. The deal basically was that if Angel could
prevent Doyle’s body parts from being scattered all over the Southern
Californian region, Doyle would reluctantly hand over his beloved car. Not
one to back down from a challenge, Angel had used his height and
intimidating glare to good effect, keeping Doyle’s skull intact and earning
his nineteen-year-old self some wheels. The timing had been perfect, for
the day after he had driven his dream car away from a heartbroken Doyle,
Angel O’Leary had set eyes on the most dazzling woman he had ever seen.
As he closed his eyes, he could still see that moment
all over again: the smooth skin of her hand as she touched his arm; the
shy, shielding dip of her eyes as he gazed back at her. Those were the
things that he thought about when he felt lonely, when sleep eluded him
night after night, and the red numbers of the alarm clock taunted him in
the darkness. Although Buffy’s slim form was the same body that had shared
his bed for the last seven years, the woman inside was not. He now wondered
whether moving to Devon had been a huge mistake on his behalf, and whether
he had ruined things for the both of them.
Three years ago, he and Buffy had had their dreams, but
somewhere along the way things had become less clear, the shiny on their
new life more faded and worn by the day. Like a fog, the thick city air of
London had descended over Buffy, swallowing her into the fast-paced and
faceless life of a city worker. Despite her glowing references from LA, PR
work in London had escaped her, leaving her prey to the ravenous world of
new media. And though that job had paid some of the bills and funded her
endless love affair with Oxford Street , Angel had seen a restlessness in
her that had made him nervous. At twenty-three, she had been a hungry,
squawking fledgling, needing challenge and varied sustenance to help her
fly. It would only have been a matter of time before she would have seen
another opportunity, another man with a bigger car and more promising
prospects. Another life that was not with him. So when he met Nina at a
launch, a feisty, determined woman, full of plans and ideas for expanding
the business into the sleepy Westcountry, Angel did not think twice. In his
mind he could already see the long rolling fields and the quiet country
pubs where he would share drinks with Buffy in the endless summer evenings.
It would be the perfect place for them to begin the life that he had
promised her when she had come to England.
Convincing Buffy had been less than easy however. At
the mention of Devon, she had fixed him with that questioning gaze and
wrinkled nose, informing him there had been a guy at her high school with
that name. “He was a bit flakey. Blew Cordy off a few times. And there was
something about Barbie leather interior seats…”
He had smiled patiently, loving the cuteness of her
humour but knowing that it was really a defence tactic. So resiliently, he
had began upon another tack, winding the whimsy of her heart around his
fingers as he made her fall in love with a beautiful idea. Her own cottage;
fresh air; plenty of space and time to work on building her own PR
business.
In the morning, she had given in her notice at work. A
month later they were finishing packing the contents of their small flat
and loading the boxes into a removals van, destined for a cottage a world
away. After eight months of London, they were heading for the sticks.
What Angel had not bargained for was the demand his new
business venture would place upon him, or the inertia that would fall upon
Buffy as she realised that the nearest city was over twenty miles away. Or
maybe it was the reality that her life in LA was over: there would be no
more parties, no more high-power meetings with the It-star of the minute.
Burning apple pies intended for the school fete and smiling woefully while
Fred good-naturedly baked replacement ones was now the highlight of Buffy’s
social calendar. It was rare these days that she even looked up when he casually
mentioned he needed a glamorous escort for a launch.
“Ask Nina,” she would suggest quietly, not noticing the
shadow of pain darkening Angel’s face.
It was how they were now; it was their pattern. And
Angel had no idea how to change it.
As the clock chimed, impassive and slow, Angel stood,
intending to make himself a cup of coffee. Then he heard the familiar sound
of a car’s engine rattling down the narrow lane that led to their cottage,
and looked out of the window expectantly. Of course. Buffy had been
somewhere with Fred. The two women had developed an easy friendship since
Buffy’s arrival in the village two and a half years ago, and often went off
for drives together in Fred’s old Ford Fiesta. As Buffy did not have a
driving licence or ever intend to obtain one, owing to her bad experiences
of Driver’s Ed in high school, it was the only real way for her to leave
the village other than using her own two feet.
He watched with a tiny smile on his face as he saw
Buffy exit the car, heading straight for the trunk. Then as Fred excitedly
opened it, a girlish grin of unashamed mirth on her face, Angel gasped as
he saw Buffy retrieve several bags, perky, sleek little bags from the sort
of stores one would only find in a city… like Exeter . This had been no
jaunt to the nearest Safeway; Fred and Buffy had been doing serious
shopping. And that could only mean one thing… their next credit card bill
would be a thing to dread.
She breezed into the cottage, Fred behind her, their
excited chatter filling the silent calm with a strange and uncontainable
energy. Angel found himself drawn to Buffy, walking towards her as if under
a spell, his hands reaching out as if to whisk her small body into his arms
and turn her around and around. She stopped suddenly as she saw him, her
hands closing upon the bags with a defensive determination. Fred was
immediately quiet, looking at the couple in slight concern.
“So I see you went shopping,” he ventured lamely,
mentally kicking himself as he saw the instant flare up in Buffy.
She shrugged lightly, sharing a furtive look with Fred.
“We decided that it was time that we put a dent in the credit cards,” she
reasoned, collapsing upon the sofa with Fred. He winced as she looked up at
him tiredly. Suddenly, he was acutely aware of himself towering awkwardly
over her. He shifted back, but still she grew more morose, her good humour
becoming more strained. “Well it’s not as if I ever spend any money...”
“I know,” he said quickly, silently pleading with Buffy
to not let this escalate into a fight in front of Fred. He gave her his
plaintive grin, the one that she had complained caused heart flips-flops
and thoughts which were sinful in a number of American states. “So, when do
I get to see the catwalk show?”
“You don’t,” she told him casually, gathering her bags
together and standing up. “I’m going out.”
He felt a pang of hurt, but masked it with a nod of
forced good grace, trying desperately not to cry out, ‘But why? You always
used to show me your clothes, couldn’t wait to, and you’d parade up and
down in front of me. What’s changed, Buffy, what’s changed?’
Instead he said nothing and let the moment pass.
Fred smiled nervously, a little embarrassed to be
witness to their domestic arguments. “I’d better go, y’all,” she announced
in her soft Texan drawl. “Wesley and the girls will be waiting.”
Giving her an apologetic look, Angel softly bid her
goodbye, wincing as Buffy gave Fred a close hug and promised that they
would meet soon. The door snapped shut and then Fred was gone.
Helplessly, Angel gazed at Buffy, his shock at her
bluntness quickly dissolving into a flash of annoyance. “You’re going out?”
he exclaimed, following her as she headed for their bedroom. “But you only
just got back. I thought we were going to spend some time together.”
Pushing through the door, she flung the bags upon the
bed and stared back at Angel, her joie-de-vie disappearing under the weight
of her tired sigh. “Look, I’m sorry, Angel, but Oz asked me earlier if I’d
go down the pub with him. I honestly didn’t think you’d mind,” she said, a
little too innocently for Angel’s ears. She gave him a measured look then,
sitting down upon the bed demurely. “You’re free to come with, if you
want.”
“Okay then, I will,” he replied carefully, giving her
one final reproving glance before leaving the bedroom. “Have fun with your
clothes.”
From the steady shuffling of bags and the entire lack
of an answer, Angel assumed she would be doing exactly that. What precisely
she would be wearing when she emerged frightened Angel more than he ever
realised it could.
~~
Buffy saw Oz look up amicably as she entered the local
pub, The Horse and Groom, his expression remaining constant even as the
scowling figure of Angel came into view. Since she had emerged from their
room half an hour ago, Angel had been even more taciturn than usual, barely
commenting upon her outfit. Even so, she could feel his eyes upon her, the
way he was silently but moodily appraising the tight, low cut shirt and
hipster jeans, resentful of every sliver of bare flesh that could be seen.
In response, she had cheerily grabbed her purse and reminded him that they
were going to be late.
“Hey Oz!” she greeted, slithering into the booth as she
gave him a friendly hug. Oz merely nodded, and then looked up at Angel
questioningly, who stood staring stone-faced at them both. “Angel, you get
the drinks, okay?” was Buffy’s only comment as she stretched, settling back
in the chair, exposing more of her taut midriff.
As Angel gruffly asked Buffy and Oz what they would
like to drink, and then marched over to the bar, Buffy grinned at Oz. “So
you liking our little village?” she asked, picking up the beer mat on the
table and twirling it in her fingers.
For a moment Oz looked thoughtful. “It’s quaint,” he
finally decided. “Lots of fields and sheep. You don’t get a lot of that in
LA.”
“No,” she agreed, a tiny giggle in her voice. “Well,
apart from the sheep, maybe.”
“Good point,” he conceded, again glancing over at
Angel, who was now slamming change down on the bar with little response
from the barman. “Is he alright?”
She watched as Angel gripped their drinks, the glasses
clinking violently together. “He’s just tired,” she answered distractedly,
suddenly feeling a wave of discomfort wash over her. If Oz noticed, nothing
in his expression indicated it, so she changed the topic. “So you must be
psyched that The Dingoes are touring internationally at last?”
“We’ve had a few gigs in England so far. Something to
do with demand on our website,” he shrugged. “Especially in Newquay. Hear
that’s like a whole other country for those guys down there.”
She smiled back at him. “Well, it’s Cornwall… they have
the whole Independent Movement. And lots of pride in their pasties,” she
quipped, lightly brushing her fingers against Oz’s.
Oz grinned slightly at her joke, but moved his fingers
gently away.
“Guess I’ll see when I go down for the gig,” Oz
replied. “ Devon’s already there-”
The drinks banged on the table, and Buffy looked down
nauseously, her head feeling thick and heavy like cotton wool. Angel was now
sitting beside her, his body pressing hard into hers, as he glared into the
amber sloshing liquid of his pint.
“So Oz,” Angel finally spoke, his voice a barely
restrained threat. “How long you planning on staying?”
“A few weeks,” Oz answered coolly, unperturbed by
Angel’s obvious antagonism. He had never been one to rise to the bait.
“Thought it would be good to catch up with Buffy.”
“So I see,” Angel commented bluntly, swigging back his
drink heavily and wiping his mouth with an exaggerated swipe of his hand.
“Always good to have an Irish ale. Tastes much better than that watery crap
you get back at home, eh Oz?”
Shoving herself away from Angel, her stomach suddenly
lurching violently as if she had been rocked by a buffeting wave, Buffy
stood, placing a steadying hand on the table. “I’ve got to go to the
bathroom,” she said, rushing off before either Oz or Angel could stop her.
“What’s up with Buffy?” Oz asked Angel, unease now
clear in his eyes.
Angel shook his head despondently, watching as Buffy
disappeared into the bathroom. “I don’t know,” he said honestly, looking at
her untouched diet coke.
He was beginning to realise that he had not known for a
long time.
~~
An hour later, Angel and Buffy entered the cottage,
neither speaking. Angel threw his jacket uncaringly across the sofa,
pulling off his shirt and flinging it the same way. Buffy stood at the
doorway, hugging her arms across her body, waiting for the harsh words that
would eventually come. When Angel came past with barely a look at her, she
realised then what he was doing.
“You’re sleeping on the sofa,” she said softly,
listening to the bang of cupboards as he tore a blanket from their closet.
“Yeah,” he replied flatly, as he again came into the
living room. He sat down on the sofa stiffly, the blanket clutched in his
hand. “I’m tired.”
The words hung in the air, sharp and acrid. Buffy
stepped back, her hand upon her chest. “Oh,” she said, her head drooping
down, suddenly wanting to shut the door and curl into bed, away from his
coldly glinting eyes and this conversation.
“Oh?” he parroted then, his hand flying up as he tossed
the blanket back onto the sofa. She pulled back, startled, even though she
was standing across the room from him. “Is that all I get after spending
most of tonight wondering what the hell I did wrong?”
“So it’s all about you? How sweet,” she said icily,
stalking towards him, angry and hurt. “Well, what about what I want? I
don’t hear you asking about that.”
He felt the bitterness in her tone, felt it seep into
him and all he could do was look at the blanket he had just thrown down. “I
don’t know what you want. How could I know?” he asked quietly. “You never
talk to me anymore.”
He thought that he heard a choked laugh or maybe it was
a sob, her arms again clutching her body as if it would shatter. ”Maybe
it’s because you don’t want to listen,” was her barely audible reply.
As if a gale force wind had blown through the small
cottage, Angel felt his view of the world shake, the picture becoming
distant and hazy. He looked at her imploringly, his hand reaching out to
grasp hold of her trembling arms. She shook her head, edging away and his
hands fisted away into nothingness.
“I can’t believe you’re saying that. I am here for you
day after day. I’ve tried my damndest to make you happy. If that’s not
enough for you…” he stopped, unable to go on with that sentence, unable to
make concrete his worst fears. “If anyone’s not listening, it sure isn’t
me.”
“The saddest thing is I think you actually believe
that. But I can’t. I’m sorry,” she murmured, unable to look at him as she
left the room without so much as a goodnight. He heard the bedroom door
shut firmly.
“So tell me what to believe,” he whispered into the
cold, silent room.
There was nobody to answer.
~~
Angel woke with a neck crick. He rubbed at the sore
spot futilely, blinking his eyes at the morning sun. It had been a week
since his argument with Buffy, seven days of a lumpy sofa, cramped joints
and waking in the night shivering from the draft that blew in from under
the living room door. Of course, that was when Buffy was not stumbling
through the front door, slightly tipsy, her voice a shrill and hyper squeal
as she realised that their coat stand was not in fact a rather handsome
man. Two nights ago at 3 am , he had been treated to a rousing rendition of
“I’m every woman”, Buffy shrieking the words as she tripped through the
hall on her way to the kitchen. He presumed from the glitter wig he had
found slumped on the bathroom floor the next day that she had been to a 70s
night.
It was now a nightly ritual. Angel would come home,
much later than usual, exhausted, his arms laden with paperwork, as Buffy
would be flying out the door, still applying her lip gloss. She would give
him the obligatory goodbye, barely flinching as he merely grunted in
return, and then she would be off in Oz’s big white van, ready for another
night of wild fun. He had heard from Fred via Wesley that she had been all
over the place with Oz, sampling nightclubs everywhere from nearby Plymouth
to as far off as Exeter and Torbay . She had even been to Newquay with Oz
for a Dingoes’ gig. All the time dressed in tiny little skirts and shirts
that, more often than not, he considered to be a hair’s breadth away from
indecent. Even Wesley had noticed her change in dress, commenting with a
little nudge to Angel’s ribs that “his girl was getting feisty”. More like
out of control the way Angel saw it.
The Buffy he knew didn’t go out and get drunk every
night, wearing clothes that barely covered her. She wouldn’t just ignore
him when he asked her to stay in and then go out anyway. The woman that he
loved was kind, thoughtful and sensitive, fun-loving and witty. She loved
to take long walks through the fields and make daisy chains with Sarah and
Rebecca; she liked coffee first thing and watching trashy Australian soaps.
She felt safe falling to sleep with her head in his lap and agonised over
picking out the perfect present for her sister although she knew it
wouldn’t ever be opened. She kept trying to bake the perfect apple pie,
even though she hated it.
The Buffy of late wasn’t interested in any of those
things.
He knew Buffy loved to dance; she always had. Right
from the beginning of their relationship, she had become ecstatic at the
prospect of a night clubbing, carefully shimmying into a sparkly halter and
a pair of tight jeans. Being more of a pub man, Angel generally disliked
clubs but her enthusiasm was infectious. As she wrapped her arms around his
neck on the dancefloor, grinding her body lithely around him, wanting to
leave was furthest from his mind. In fact, more often than not, it ended
with Buffy’s back being pressed hard against a bathroom stall as he took
her, neither caring about the queue forming outside. That was before her
mother died, before her 15 year old sister Dawn needed a guardian and Buffy
moved with Angel back to an oversized house, filled with memories she was
not ready to have.
It was only natural after her hard life that Buffy
would want some fun. He understood that. He just didn’t know why she was so
hell-bent on having it without him.
Last night something in him had snapped and he had
reached for the whisky. Now the almost empty bottle lay discarded on the
floor and his head throbbed mercilessly in the unforgiving morning light.
Still, at least he had slept. He had not even heard Buffy come in last
night.
Raising himself from the sofa, Angel stretched his arms
redundantly and stood. Though it was 9 am on a Saturday morning, he was
certain that Buffy would still be sleeping, her tiny form wrapped
foetal-like around her stuffed pig, Mr Gordo. It was how he had found her
every morning, his heart performing a small cheer that she had chosen to
return home. He would then reach out, his fingers grazing the curve of her
cheek, suddenly fearful that she was as insubstantial and unreal as the
waking dreams that he had at night. Then reality would hit him as she
murmured in her sleep, her eyes fluttering as if to open. He could not be
caught in there, could not let her see how much pain he was in. No, the
idea was unthinkable.
This morning he promised himself that he would try hard
not to open the bedroom door, ball his hands together tightly and force his
feet to keep going until he reached the kitchen. Yet the panic again rose
in him, the memory becoming vivid that he had not heard the now familiar
slam of the front door as Buffy almost fell through it. What if she was not
home? What if something had happened to her? Unable to stop himself now, he
almost ran to the bedroom, flinging the door open and almost gasping as he
saw that she was not there. The bed was smooth, unslept in. She had not
even been home last night.
A wave of sickness overcame him, as unbidden, the
thought of her and Oz together sprung in his mind. Without closing his
eyes, he could see her hand winding in Oz’s, pushing him gently back upon a
bed as she straddled him. He could hear the way she screamed Oz’s name as
he brought her to the height of pleasure again and again. He walked calmly
from the bedroom into the bathroom, collapsing to his knees as he heaved
the contents of his near-empty stomach into the toilet bowl below. Rising
slowly, he then went to the sink, pushed the cold tap on full and splashed
water over his face, spitting the foul taste in his mouth into the sink and
watching dispassionately as it whirled away down the plughole. Just like
their relationship.
His fist had not really meant to hit the glass, but as
he looked up he realised his reflection was shattered, his hand dripping
with blood. He could not feel the pain though, could not feel anything as
he again held his hand under the force of the freezing cold water, then
wrapped it in his towel. Somewhere in his mind he vaguely wondered whether
he should go to hospital and get some stitches, or maybe call Fred and ask
if she would bandage it for him. Fred would be furious with him if she
found out that he had let a wound go untended. As a farmer’s wife come
potential nursing doctoral student, Fred was a stickler for hygiene. But
right now Fred’s opinion was the last thing on his mind, his still bleeding
hand not even a concern. His partner of seven years was cheating on him,
was being unfaithful, was playing away from home, was jumping the bones of
the first available man she had found. However he worded it, it still
amounted to the same thing. The trust was broken, his heart was smashed.
And that little scrawny imp of a musician Oz would soon be seeing the
better side of his undamaged fist.
Yet like a trickle of sunshine through the hazy rain, a
shred of doubt cut through his most vigorous convictions. He didn’t really
know for certain that she was sleeping with Oz; there was no proof other
than a neatly made bed and the absence of Buffy. He wanted to believe so
desperately that she would never betray him, never allow herself to be
touched by another man. It nearly killed him to even consider it. After everything
they had been through - losing her mother, the fight for custody of Dawn
and his transfer back to England – did he not owe her more than pronouncing
their relationship over without a second glance? Could he honestly live
with himself if he ended this without having solid proof of her infidelity
with Oz?
He decided with resounding clarity that he could not.
Tonight he would find out for sure whether he could
trust Buffy or not. Whatever the outcome, it was better to know. As he
clutched his hand at the sharp rip of pain, he knew he was kidding himself.
If they were over, Angel would have lost the whole of
his world.
~~
This afternoon, Buffy had woken up on a scratchy, lumpy
carpet, her throat dry and her eyes sore. For a little while, she had felt
groggy, not quite knowing where she was, but then she had heard a gentle
rumbling snore from the bed above her. Remembering her surroundings, she
looked up and saw Oz sleeping on his stomach, his arms spread across the
bed. She vaguely remembered that Oz had tried to make her go home, but she
had refused, saying it was too late. Eventually giving in, Oz had told her
she was welcome to crash on the floor.
So, the floor it had been, but from the dull ache in
her back, she probably would have been better sleeping at home. Not that
she actually slept that well at home; she just pretended to. She knew that
every morning Angel came in to check on her, and that he softly and
tenderly brushed her cheek with his hand. It took all of her willpower not
to open her eyes.
But she feared that if she did, she would weep from the
sadness in Angel’s eyes. And she had never, ever been able to bear that.
Not back in LA when he told her that he had to leave, or now, every single
time he looked at her.
However, it didn’t stop her from going out; it didn’t
stop her from wearing a variety of tight and revealing outfits. And as time
went on, she was having difficulty in reconciling her recent actions with
the expectations she had of herself and her relationship with Angel. Wasn’t
it supposed to be all long country walks and snuggling by the fire and
perfect idyllic coupledom?
She couldn’t even remember the last time they had spent
a night in together.
It wasn’t just Buffy who was questioning the
relationship. Fred was beginning to become suspicious, too.
Fred had asked Buffy what she was doing, going out with
Oz every night and leaving Angel at home alone. Buffy hadn’t had a good
answer for that. Perhaps it was because she honestly didn’t know. Perhaps
it was because she didn’t want to answer. Either way, Buffy had been rather
unforthcoming.
The subject had come up during one of those girly chats
that Buffy and Fred often had, whenever Fred had a spare minute. More often
than not, chats were squeezed in between Fred’s demanding baking schedule
for the girls’ school and the research she was doing for her thesis. The
routine for the chats was simple. They would sit back on the
Wyndham-Prices’ comfy, squishy sofa with Ben the dog at their feet, and
talk, gossip and giggle their way through a bag of tortilla chips and
brownies. Topics included anything from Ben’s love for Wesley’s holey
socks, or the new mechanic at the local garage. Mostly it did not include
Angel, and when it had done, Buffy had felt very uncomfortable.
She didn’t like to discuss her relationship with
anyone. Not even Fred, who had become the closest thing she had had to a
best friend since leaving LA. It was strange, in a way, how well they got
on, considering how different they were. Buffy was the Cosmo to Fred’s Journal
of Advanced Nursing, but their friendship worked. In many ways, Fred
reminded Buffy a little of Willow.
It was always nice to have a reminder of home.
She pondered then that perhaps that was what Oz was to
her. A living, breathing memento of everything her life in LA had been
before things went wrong. He was a flashback that allowed her to go out and
go wild, and pretend that she was 17 all over again. She tried not to think
about how many times Oz had watched with guarded concern as she sashayed past
Angel on her way out to another club. That tainted the fantasy a little,
and there was enough buffering against its edges as it was, threatening to
burst in and pummel it flat. She could never let that happen. She liked
having a life that was all hers.
Of course, she hadn’t told Fred that. She had just
smiled and told Fred that she was making up for lost time. The troubled
look in Fred’s eyes had said it all. They hadn’t talked about it after
that.
So now, as she sat on the floor of Oz’s B&B room,
she asked herself what she was doing. Why hadn’t she wanted Angel to see
her new clothes? Why did she push Oz into going out so much and insist that
Angel didn’t want to go? Why did she lie to Oz and tell him that Angel
didn’t care about her going out? And why did it make her feel giddy with
power that he did, and there was not a damn thing that he could do to stop
her?
And most of all, why was she really here, sleeping on
the floor of a B&B room, instead of in bed with Angel?
She had stopped understanding any of this mess a long
time ago.
Instead of trying to find an answer to her many
questions, she stepped into the scalding hot water of the ensuite shower,
and let it graze her too-tight skin. She had wedged herself into the
persona of “Happy Buffy” for too many years and now she didn’t where that
girl ended and where the real Buffy began. But the echo of the border was
there, and she felt it every time that she lost herself to the beat of the
music or slipped into a halter. The real Buffy was in there somewhere.
But, for now, she would have to wait: it was time to go
home and talk to Angel.
She just hoped that there was at least something left
to say.
~~
When Buffy came in some ten hours later, Angel was
sitting in the living room, eyes staring straight ahead, his bandaged hand
resting in his lap uneasily. She walked into the room, and stalled, looking
at him in frightened shock.
“Angel?” she asked cautiously, touching the bandage
upon his injured hand lightly. “Are you okay?”
He peered up at her, his face unsmiling. She was
dressed exactly as she had been last night, in a tight black corset top and
leather pants. But her face was bare of make up, her blonde hair scraped
back in an untidy bun. She had taken a shower at Oz’s, he was certain. He
could almost smell the generic scent of complimentary soap and shampoo,
almost see the red marks where she had rubbed her body again and again to
hide the trace of Oz’s caresses upon her skin. Yet there was no hiding what
was obvious to Angel.
He whipped his hand away from her grasp, half-heartedly
shielding himself from her with his other. “Leave it,” he snapped at her,
the venom hardly registering in his voice.
He watched the wounded look sweep across her face as
she crouched on the floor beside his chair. “I just want to make sure
you’re okay,” she said pleadingly.
“Just tell me where you were last night,” he requested
coldly, his eyes fixed at some distant spot in the fields outside.
“I stayed in Oz’s room. I slept on the floor. It was
late and I was tired, so Oz suggested I crash there,” she explained with no
hesitation whatsoever, edging closer to him. “I’m sorry I didn’t call.” It
was no good. Angel was closed off now, his mind on a one track mission. She
could only wait to find out where the final destination would be.
His next questions were simple, direct hits, his voice
strangely vacant as he spoke. “Why didn’t you call?”; “Why didn’t you let
me know where you were going?”; “Didn’t you think I would worry?” And every
answer was the same. She repeated over and over that she was sorry, the
tears now beginning to trickle freely down her face as he gave no reply,
only asking more questions.
“Are you sleeping with him?” he asked finally, his eyes
brutally boring into hers’.
For a moment, she didn’t answer him, literally gaping
at him as she tried to comprehend what he was asking. He could not have
just asked her that; it was not possible. And yet he was still looking at
her, his hand now gripping her arm fiercely. “Are you sleeping with him, Buffy?”
he demanded again, giving her a rough shake.
“No!” she screamed, her own silence breaking in an
explosion of emotion. “I am not screwing Oz, I have never screwed him. Do
you understand? Now just get your fucking hands off of me.” She pushed away
from his grasp determinedly, backing away as he stood, his face now
twisting in indescribable pain. “How dare you accuse me of that when I’ve
spent the last two and a half years playing housewife and watching that
whore of a woman come on to you.” She spat the word “whore” out like a bad
taste from her mouth, her view of Nina becoming startlingly clear to Angel.
“I don’t know what you mean,” Angel refuted, completely
floored by the venom of Buffy’s attack. “Nina and I have always been just
friends. You know that, Buffy.”
She glared at him then, her voice reaching a
screeching, ear splitting level. “Don’t you fucking patronise me with your
Buffy this and your Buffy that. I’m not your little pet dog that you can
just pat when you’re feeling bored –”
“Buffy…” he interjected, but she was on a torrent, a
crashing tsunami that would not cease until it had destroyed everything in
its path.
“I am worth more than that, more than that ho, and it’s
just about time that you saw that,” she flung at him viciously, not even registering
the broken bowing of Angel’s head, the way he clasped his hands as if he
would break. “You just talk about your art, all damn day. It’s all about
you. Well I’m sick of your bullshit, I’m sick of my life being all about
you.” She paused then, looking at him defiantly. “I want my life back.”
His next words were a soft patter of rain, the
shivering of the breeze through wind chimes. It was more than a knee-jerk
answer. “So do I.”
She gave him one final, bruising look and then left the
room, walking to the bedroom and slamming the door behind her. He could
hear murmuring, the sounds of Buffy talking to someone and he presumed that
she was on the phone - probably to her new lover. Moments later, she
emerged with a small overnight bag and went straight out of the front door
into Oz’s waiting van.
Without a backwards glance, Angel calmly walked into
the bathroom, shedding his clothes as he prepared to take a shower. He,
too, had plans.
~~
The dance music pounded loudly from the heaving city
club, drowning out the drunken chattering of the horde of young women and
men who were queued outside. The rain had just started, slickening the
streets in a shiny grey haze. The bouncers stared on indifferently as the
women began to shiver, their carefully styled hair drooping flat against
their heads. There were no umbrellas here, no room for shelter. Once
inside, they would soon forget as they poured the first vodka slammer down
their throats and threw themselves onto the dance floor in a seething,
bustling mass. Only tomorrow with the first sneeze would it bother them.
Angel watched from across the street as a van pulled up
outside, and a small woman exited, flanked by a casually dressed,
red-headed man. Though he could not see the woman’s face, he knew it was
her instinctively. He followed them unnoticed as they were waved through,
the bouncers seeming too mesmerised by Buffy’s movements to push him back.
There was no other person who could become lost in the music like Buffy,
who could move fluidly as if she was merging with it, becoming it.
From the sway of her hips as she walked into the club,
her sheer backless dress clinging to every narrow curve, he knew what she
intended tonight. And he saw it in the awestruck faces of the men as they
stared after her hungrily, the lust rolling off them in waves, their
jealousy of Oz growing more potent by the second. The familiar pull of
possessiveness awoke in Angel, memories of nights when it was he who was
holding her hand, he who was protecting her from the desiring eyes. Yet
Angel kept back, slinking into the shadows of the heaving club, intent now
to observe.
Drawing Oz away from their table, Buffy shimmered
through the crowd, her shoulders and head swaying sensually to the
fluttering bass of the music. Oz stood before her, gazing at her perplexed,
unmoving as Buffy wound around him, grazing her body against his with
subtle, suggestive force. It was as if a spotlight had fallen upon them and
Oz had become her world, the flick of her head and the slow, steady
grinding of her waist and hips a primal reminder of all that was womanhood.
Her hands then slid around Oz’s neck and she was against his chest, leaning
back to fan out her long golden hair. From the edge of the dance floor,
Angel glared on, anger building in him - a slow burning rage like nothing
he had ever experienced in his whole life.
The song then ended and Buffy stopped. Oz firmly
unpeeled her hands from his neck, and gently took her hand in his. “I think
it’s time to sit,” he told her, leading her from the dancefloor. Stubbornly
Buffy shook her head, breaking away from Oz as she pushed through towards
the bar, stumbling slightly.
Angel came closer to them, sneering in disgust as Oz
followed and grabbed hold of her, steering her back towards their table. It
was just like Oz to be irresponsible, he inwardly raved, not to give a crap
about anyone except himself. He had proved it when he had left Willow ,
only interested in pursuing his musical ambitions with his band. Now he was
showing it yet again, letting Buffy become drunk, probably thinking it
would make it easier to seduce her later.
Angel did not hear Oz’s words, did not know that Oz was
telling her she had had enough to drink. All he saw was Buffy’s coy,
flirtatious smile, and the way she was leaning her body into Oz’s, her hand
sliding over his seductively. Then her lips had descended on Oz and she was
kissing him, her fingers digging into his forearm.
Oz broke off abruptly, pulling away. “That was
unexpected,” he said, hardly having time to take another breath before
Angel’s fist connected with his jaw, knocking him flat to the floor.
“And so was that,” Angel rejoined, his face livid as Oz
scrambled to his feet, clutching his aching jaw. “So what I’m really
interested in, Oz, was that the plan all along, huh? Come over to England ,
be all mysterious and musician cool and get my girl into the sack.”
Oz held out his hands placatingly, clearly troubled by
the scene that was unfolding. “You’re upset, you don’t know what you’re
saying,” Oz reasoned, positioning himself between Angel and Buffy. “You
know I’d never pull a move like that on Buffy.”
Sneering, Angel shoved Oz out of the way, and grabbed
hold of Buffy, yanking her from her seat as she shouted in protest. “You’re
coming home. Now,” he growled.
She slipped out of his grasp, shaking her head
vigorously. “I’m here with Oz,” she told him bluntly, not caring as Angel
thrust his face directly into hers.
“We’re leaving now,” he bit out, his hands now locked
firmly around her waist and dragging her towards him. It was then that he
felt Buffy being tugged away, Oz’s hands slapping against his chest,
driving him backwards with a loud clatter into a nearby table.
Angel stood slowly, seething as Buffy clung to Oz, her
eyes cold and immoveable. “Get your hands off my fucking girlfriend or I’ll
kill you,” he threatened, his voice low and dangerous as he stalked towards
Oz, his fist gripped in barely restrained violence.
“Mate, you’re out,” came a booming voice from behind
him and Angel cursed as he was held between two burly men and dragged back.
Still, he stared at Buffy, his hands reaching out
towards her. “Buffy!” he yelled. “Please come home with me now, Buffy.”
From her place by Oz, she shook her head again, her
expression resolute. “Do what you like,” she snapped. “I’m staying here.”
As he was hauled out, Angel watched horrified as his
girlfriend of seven years pressed herself more closely against Oz, her
fingers reaching into his hair and tufting the now strawberry blonde
spikes. He was powerless to act, unable to stop it as again she moved her
mouth against Oz’s, kissing him desperately, frenziedly. It was his worst
nightmare, his every suspicion confirmed.
“Buffy!” he cried, the tears already forming in his
eyes.
The bouncers uncaringly deposited him outside, not even
lifting an eyebrow as the powerfully built man fell to the ground, his body
shaking with emotion.
Then the shaking stopped. Angel looked up, his eyes now
dry. Brokenly he pulled himself from the ground, the fight drained from
him. Without looking back, he walked away from the club. It was too late.
He had lost her anyway.
~~
Buffy’s hands twisted in Oz’s hair as she kissed him
hard, tears now dampening her cheeks. This wasn’t how she had meant for
this to turn out, but it was happening anyway and she was kissing Oz, her
body grinding against his, and he wasn’t stopping her, wasn’t telling her
no. Her head felt woozy, the loud music of the club whirling around her, a
voice screaming despairingly. She broke off, panting harshly, staring into
the bewildered eyes of Oz.
“What are we doing? What are you doing?” he asked her.
She blinked her eyes, her tears now slipping away more
freely, mourning something she had irrecoverably broken. There was nothing
left in the world now that she understood; all meaning had fragmented into
emptiness. And Angel had walked away. She had made him do it, it was all
her fault, and now he was gone, gone, gone. Why had she been so angry? Why had
she been so determined to get one up on him? She had just wanted him to
know how much his accusation had hurt her, for him to feel the pain that
she did every time he smiled at Nina instead of her. Why did she have to
ruin everything? She realised then that what she had feared all along was
true: she was decay and, because of her, everyone and everything around her
festered and died. Her parents’ divorce, her mom’s death, her estrangement
from Dawn: she had caused every one of those things. She knew it deep in
her bones; a truth as certain and eternal as the rocks of Haytor. Angel
would leave her and she would be alone and now no one would love her and
she could barely breathe, breathe, breathe...
She felt herself shaking, and it was almost as if she
was going to fall apart. She wanted strong arms and firm kisses: a new
reality which made it all okay. She wanted to forget just for tonight.
It didn’t matter now; nothing mattered. Mom, Dawn,
Angel: they were all gone.
And she was tired of feeling alone.
“Take me back to yours, Oz,” she answered softly, the
meaning clear in her voice. “Now.”
Then she took his hand, leading him towards the
door.
Chapter Three
Buffy held onto Oz’s hand tightly, the rest of the
world fragmenting - colours, sounds, people skittering away. The drink she
had had earlier was now wearing off, the sick, dizzy nausea of too-much,
too-soon and “what have I done?” slamming into her like blocks of jagged
concrete. Angel’s face, his pained, slashed eyes – the memory screamed and
yelled and kicked. Yet still she was walking, her hand in the hand of a man
who had been her friend for the last nine years, who had only ever been a
friend, but now, it was all different. Nothing was the same anymore.
Everything that she had thought was real and solid was all plastic, fake,
bending in the ever-sobering reality that was swallowing her as they came
closer to the door. This was it. This was really it.
She was going to do the one thing that she had never
thought that she would do. That she had never even dreamed could be
possible. To cheat, to give herself to someone else, to someone who wasn’t
Angel. To tear up the memories, their dreams, their future, to set fire to
it and watch as it was consumed to nothing. To do the one thing that Angel
– jealous, sweet, possessive, passionate – would never forgive. Two
years ago, three years ago, he had been everything – food, water, heat,
love. Her reason for stepping on a plane, leaving a career, her friends and
the eighteen-year-old sister - off to college and her own life – that she
and Angel had fought so hard to keep from the custody of her useless
father.
When Buffy had told Dawn she was leaving, Dawn had
screamed, shouted, swore and slammed doors, promising never to speak to her
again. After that, there was nothing but Angel. His kisses, hugs and
promises of happiness and love; his begging, frantic phone calls when she
had said she couldn’t leave. He had wanted her so badly. So, she had gone
to him, to England , a place where she knew no-one. Her mother was dead,
her (little, beautiful, innocent) sister estranged, and her friends
barred from her across a cold, endless ocean. But there had been London ,
then Devon , and it had all gone to hell, along with her own identity. None
of this would have even been possible before England , before her mom died
and Dawn became her life.
Was it actually possible now?
She noticed then that Oz had released her hand, and was
looking at her with the most serious and lamenting expression she had ever
seen him give. Her hands felt clammy, her skin cold.
“Buffy, this is not going to happen,” Oz was saying
quietly.
She stared up at him dumbly, only seeing the sharp
movement of his mouth, the sound coming through like muffled static.
“What?” she mumbled.
She saw how his face became pained, his lips twisting
in the grip of strong emotion. The last time his face had been this
expressive was when he left Willow , when he told her he wasn’t what she
needed or deserved. That she was worth so much more than what he could give
her. Oh God, Willow…
“I’m sorry, Buffy. We can’t do this. This isn’t what I
want. You don’t either - not really,” he told her more firmly. “You’re not
thinking clearly right now.”
She nodded her head, not really knowing what she was
agreeing to anymore. The sickness she had felt earlier became more
powerful; she felt her legs wobble, and she stumbled forward. Oz grasped
her arm, but she blundered on, pulling away from him and the mistake she
had almost made.
“Angel…” she said. “Got to find him.”
Then she pitched downwards, the lights of the club
flaring harshly before she saw the hard concrete of the floor, and
anticipated the hard, heavy crack to her head. She didn’t care, not
anymore. Let the blood come to her mouth, let her vision spin and darken to
spots of murky white…
Then, there were arms around her - thinner, less
muscular arms than she was used to, but strong and sure all the same -
tugging her back to her feet.
“Yeah, I think you should talk to Angel. You guys need
to work this out,” Oz urged her, his arms still around her waist, keeping
her firm and steady. Yet still she swayed, the insides of her stomach
feeling like pincers tearing into her, her hand clamping over her mouth as
a rush of bile came up in her throat.
“Okay, first maybe we get you out of here,” Oz said.
The cold rush of night came upon her, the rain a
prickling drizzle on her coatless skin. She leaned over, and retched
violently. Nothing came. It seemed now that her stomach was as hollow as
her heart.
She stood, wiping her mouth roughly. Oz then pressed a
tissue into her hand. “Thanks,” she muttered gratefully, avoiding his eyes,
too ashamed to discover what she would see reflected in them.
“Buffy,” he nudged her gently. “I’m not blind. I know
you and Angel… things have been tense, but what is going on here? This is
not like you.”
“Not now,” she said, dismissing his questions, her eyes
empty. She stared down the road, looking for a Rover that once upon a time
would have been a black Plymouth . In another life, in another time. Cars,
like love, seemed to slip away, and become just another memory.
There was no sign of Angel’s car anywhere; he must have
left.
“Oz, please take me home,” she said calmly, still not
looking at him.
She knew that Oz was gazing at her, trying to work out
what she was thinking, what was going on, but he, too, was tired.
“Okay,” he answered, walking to his van and unlocking
it.
Buffy followed him, her body moving in unsteady,
shuffling clumps. He opened the door for her, and she got in, but before
she could close the door, his hand caught it, holding it still in his pale,
guitar-calloused fingers. Fingers that had once stroked Willow ’s soft skin
and brushed over her quivering lips as tears had run down her face, and he
had told her he would not be coming back. Buffy felt a sharp pinch of
conscience. How could she have ever thought of sleeping with him? He was
Oz, Willow-Oz - the old boyfriend who Willow had never quite forgotten.
All the people she could have wounded, could have
scarred, flitted through her mind, and she closed her eyes, trying to blot
out the images, the memories, and the pain. Willow , Dawn, Oz, Xander, and
stronger, insistent, more blatant, Angel underscored all of them,
everything. It hurt more than she had realised, ever could have guessed, to
think he could now be lost, fluttering away from her grasping fingers. All
because of one kiss, one mistake, one urge to scratch his seething, angry
words “are you sleeping with him?”
from her mind.
“This, none of it, ever should have happened,” Oz bit
out then. “I should have stopped you.”
She felt his pain and his anger, and instantly felt
guilty. She should never have placed him in this position. Finally she
looked at him, and clasped his hand. “No, Oz, this isn’t about you. You
didn’t do this,” she corrected him. “I did this and so did Angel. I don’t
know what’s going on with us, whether he’ll even want me…” She broke off,
unable to voice her inner dread. “But… I’ve got to try, I have to.”
Oz’s mouth quirked, as if in thought, taking in her
words; then he gave a little nod of his head, and waited for her to
continue.
“But I’m sorry that you got caught up in this. I’m
sorry… I didn’t mean for that to happen,” she apologised.
He let go of her hand, and gave her a simple, composed
look. “I know that,” he said, and she felt the comfort of their old
friendship returning. She smiled tiredly up at him, relieved and regretful
all at once. “Now let’s get you home.”
The door was closed and he walked around to the
driver’s side, getting in and starting the engine.
And she wondered then if she had a home to go to.
~~
After what seemed forever, the van finally pulled up
outside the little cottage that Buffy had shared with Angel for the last
two years. It was dark, no lights at all twinkling in the windows; Buffy
felt an overwhelming sense of trepidation. The house was never dark, no
matter what time of night she came home. All those times she had stumbled
in slightly drunk, there had always been the welcoming glow of the lamp
Angel left by the door - the one he knew that she hated but kept because it
had been a housewarming gift from Wesley and Fred. Even though Angel no
longer shared her bed, he still cared about her well-being, her safety; she
had never really thought about that before. She had never considered how it
must have felt for him to have his long-time girlfriend coming in at all
hours, having been out all night with a man whom he practically despised,
while he had slept on a lumpy, too-small sofa.
She shook her head, trying to clear her mind of the
clamouring of regrets and pain. She needed to be thinking logically, to be
filled with reason and sound argument which overcame the murky tatters her
relationship with Angel had become. Especially after tonight, after what Angel
had seen her do. She had no idea what it would take to convince Angel that
there was nothing going on between she and Oz.
She knew Angel was home; his much maligned Rover was
sitting in the gravel courtyard. She turned to Oz at last, her face pale. “Wish
me luck,” she uttered.
“You don’t need luck,” he reassured her. “Just be
honest with him. Tell him how you feel.”
She gave him a thankful smile and then climbed out of
the van. She heard Oz shut the door behind her and then start the engine.
He pulled up to the farm gates, shifted into reverse, and then turned the
van around. She watched as the last speck of dirty white van disappeared up
the pitch black country lane, feeling the sense of ominousness wash over
her again. She could not evade it any longer. It was time to go into the
cottage, to face Angel and whatever else was waiting for her. To go and lie
in the bed she had made, so her grandmother would have told her. Back then,
they were big on the blaming of women; yet, even with the heavy weight of
her own mistakes, Buffy still did not feel completely to blame. They had
both caused their relationship to falter: she, through her silence; he,
through his all-consuming focus upon work. The honest communication they
had gained through three years of living together in LA, two of which had
been with Dawn, had fallen apart over the years in England, evaporating
until neither knew what the other wanted anymore. How could they have
drifted so far apart?
With the lucidity of her inner-arguments bolstering her
resolve, she reached for her key and placed it in the lock. She was
determined to have her say, to air all the lingering doubts and fears she
had had since moving to England . And, of course, the ones she had held
even before that, when he had so abruptly departed from LA following his
graduation, leaving both she and Dawn to cope alone. She wanted him to tell
her why he had left, why he had needed so urgently to listen to his father
and give up everything that they had built together in LA. She wanted him
to tell her everything.
She turned the key, opening the front door. She
imagined for a moment that Angel would be waiting for her, sitting quietly
in the living room. He would be silent, hardly giving her anything, and
then he would explode and it would be lips and hands and skin, and
everything that they had both been withholding for the last three years
would tumble out. And then, it would all be fine. It would be alright; it
would. It had to be.
Then she pushed the door fully open and gasped, the breath
leaving her body in a swift stab of shock. In the hall were two suitcases.
She looked at them numbly, hearing the sound of drawers being opened, and
the sharp zip of a suitcase being shut. He was packing, he was leaving.
Walking towards the bedroom, she watched as, in the
dark, Angel mechanically folded clothes neatly and placed them into a
holdall. Her holdall. She could see its bright tassels glinting in the
slivers of moonlight, the tassels that so many years ago Dawn had
painstakingly made under their mom’s tutelage. It was then that she knew.
He would never take that bag, no matter how angry he was with her. He was
packing for her.
The composure that she had so diligently threaded
together, the logical explanations that she had swathed around herself like
protective armour, all fell apart and she found herself rushing towards him
and grabbing his arm. He froze for a moment, but did not turn. He then
resumed his packing.
“Angel,” she pleaded, her hand still on his arm. “Don’t
do this.”
He completed the emptying of the drawers, and Buffy saw
the last flash of silk as he tucked it carefully into the bag. “It’s done,”
he answered stonily, handing her the bag. “Thought that might come in
useful for your new boyfriend.”
She took the bag, flinging it down to the floor, her
nails now almost digging into the soft flesh of his arm. “He’s not my
boyfriend! You know that,” she countered, indignation in her words despite
everything she had promised herself. “I would never, ever cheat on you.”
He flinched away then, her hands dropping, empty,
towards the floor. “That’s not what I saw,” he spat out, not even looking
at her. “What I saw was you and that useless shrivel of a musician – if you
can call him that – all over each other-”
“Angel, it wasn’t like that,” she interposed, knowing
even as she said it that he would not listen.
“Then tell me what it was like, huh?” he snarled,
grasping her bag and slinging it out of the room with a grunt of menace.
She huddled on the floor, tucking her knees against her chest. “Was it hot,
did he make you tingle? Was it even better knowing that I was there, seeing
you tangle your fingers in his hair, kissing him? Did you get off on that?”
She rubbed her hands over her face, hardly knowing what
to say, her visions of this conversation quickly dissolving into a
Dante-esque hell. “No,” was all she could murmur.
“No?” he parroted her, regarding her with an especial
look of disgust. “Then, why?”
“I don’t know,” she whimpered, her arms cradled around
her. She rocked herself slowly back and forth, hoping and hoping that this
nightmare would go away, that she would open her eyes and it would be she,
Angel and Dawn, all sitting around the breakfast table, happy smiles on
their faces. She had wished herself away as her parents had fought and
bitterly slung accusation after accusation between them, except then it had
been Dawn who was scooped in her arms. And like now, when she opened her
eyes, the pain had never died away. It would still be there, stronger than
ever, bleeding into every corner of her life.
Yet as she looked up, she saw Angel staring at her, a
familiar softness in his eyes, his fingers flexing as if he would reach out
and brush a strand of hair away from her eyes. She felt the first
cracklings of hope since they had begun this conversation, and gave him an
anxious, tentative smile. It was then that the spell broke, and Angel
turned from her, blocking her from his sight. She had never felt so alone.
“So, you hooked up with Oz, hit the clubs, lived it up
and practically spat on seven damn years with me for no reason?” he
questioned, his tone incredulous. “Please, I deserve more than that.”
His words hit her brutally, tearing at her heart. He
sounded so betrayed, so hurt. Had she really done all those things he was
saying? Had she really destroyed everything they had ever had? All she had
wanted was to feel free for one tiny moment, to feel something beyond the
drudgery and the endlessness that was her everyday life. She had never
meant for it to go so far. He had to understand.
“And what about what I deserved?” she then whispered.
“What about all the dreams I had?”
He faced her again, staring down upon her pityingly.
She almost felt sick. “This was supposed to be our dream, Buffy. Our dream
together, the thing that would make it alright after everything you went
through with losing your mom and bringing up Dawn,” he told her. “Did you
not get that?”
She looked down, gripping her hands into her calves,
watching as the pinky skin blanched and pimpled like the wrinkled covering
of a goose. A bitter chuckle then broke from her mouth, and he gaped at
her, bewildered.
“That wasn’t my dream. It never was,” she rebuffed
bluntly. “I wanted to be big in PR, I wanted to see Dawn graduate college,
and I wanted you to stay in LA. I saw us getting married, having kids,
doing Disney movie family things…”
His eyes fluttered shut, and the pained, softly
anguished grimace that she only seen once before – the day he had left her
at LAX, clinging onto his old sweater, weeping into it quietly – was there.
She had never wanted to fall into his arms more and promise him that
everything would be fine, but it was not in her power to do. It needed them
both to want that. All she could do was finish what she was going to say.
“So, I need to know this… I know you told me, but I
need to hear it again. I need to know the truth. Why did you leave LA?” she
asked him softly.
He sighed heavily, a hard edge to the strangled breath
that whistled out through gritted teeth. Then he sank down upon the bed. “Is
that what all this is about?” he rasped. She merely looked at him sadly,
urging him to continue. His lips snarled in annoyance. “I can’t believe
this. I can’t believe that you slept with some guy that blew off your best
friend because you were pissed I left LA four years ago!” She gave him a
sharp look, and stood, leaving the bedroom. He stalked after her,
continuing to rant caustically. “Okay, so maybe it’s not that simple but
right now, you’ll have to bear with me, I’m not thinking so clearly. Might
be because my girl just slept with some LOSER!”
“I did NOT sleep with him!” she screeched at him. “How
many times do I have to tell you that?”
“I can’t believe anything you say anymore,” he
muttered.
She went to him, pushing her hands against his chest,
banging and banging in her frustration. “So, why are you still listening?
Why are you still here with me?” she yelled.
He glanced down at her coldly, taking her hands from
his chest and holding them loosely in his hands. “Because you haven’t left
yet,” he replied.
She ripped her hands from his grasp, her anger blazing
in her like a million fireworks erupting at once. She had never more than
in this moment wanted to fling him across the room and smash his delicate
art sculptures to fragments, as shattered and smashed as the pieces of her
heart.
“Fine. I’ll go, get my ass out of here, and leave you
to that bitch and all your little art chat,” she sniped. “Maybe that’s why
you left LA… to cop a feel of Nina’s hot little body. Well, she’s welcome
to you. She’s only getting my sloppy seconds, anyway.”
She saw his face change, the earlier coldness
dissipating into something like hurt, before hardening into impermeable
steel once more. “That’s not why I left and you know it,” he said, his
voice strained and harsh in the unnatural stillness of the darkened
cottage. “My father needed me and I had to come back. I had to, Buffy. My
family had given up enough, scrimped and saved to help me pay my way
through college, to help me achieve my dream. I thought you understood
loyalty, what family means… but maybe not.”
It struck her then, the absurdity of the parallels
between them and the distance that had grown between them as they had
spiralled further and further apart. It was like the splitting of dreams,
the wispy fragments that had once bound them coming apart in her hands.
Families, goals, aims: a future that given them nothing but the semblance
of the life they actually wanted. She understood the pull, the power his
father would forever hold over him, as hers would over her, but she could
no longer let that be the basis for her entire existence.
This was no longer about hurting him. She tried to let
the bitterness go, like balloons of lead escaping into a crystalline sky -
weighed down, never quite making it.
“I understand it more than you’ll ever know,” she
responded, the emotion in her bare, stripped to its core. She thought of
Dawn: the graduation that would be coming next year, the graduation to
which Dawn would invite no family, except for the friends Buffy had had
since high school. They were Dawn’s family now, Buffy merely a bitter
aftertaste.
“That’s why I gave up my life for Dawn, that’s why I
gave up our happy little bubble to make sure she had everything I could
give her,” she continued. “That’s why I hated myself for leaving her and
coming here to be with you, for giving up my entire life and more.”
“You didn’t have to come,” he mumbled.
“No, I didn’t. But I did, and for what? For us to drift
apart, for you to treat me like some lameass accessory who has no job and
is dependent on your cash handouts?” she asked him cuttingly, feeling the
tears pricking at her eyes at last. “You were everything I ever wanted,
Angel… We’ve blown it, haven’t we? It was the biggest mistake I ever made
coming to England . I never should have left Dawn, my job, my life...”
There was a stunned silence, both of them flattened by
the force of Buffy’s words. She stared blankly up at him, again a sense of
unreality settling upon her: this was happening, this was really happening.
“Perhaps you’re right,” he concluded, his voice flat,
the energising anger of earlier now sizzled away to nothing. “We should
have ended it when I left LA. It was never going to work.”
She found her face now damp with tears at his words.
“Angel,” she murmured. “Please, I-I…”
She reached for him, but he crossed his arms, slipping
away from her. There was nothing left that she could say.
“Just go. Go stay with your new boyfriend.”
After she had made the phone call, she waited at the
door. Angel stood further down the hall. Neither of them spoke, neither
were able to look the other in the eye. Finally, she saw the dazzling flash
of Oz’s headlights and began to move her cases, one by one, out of the door.
As she hefted the last one, her holdall upon her
shoulder, she turned to Angel one last time. His face was closed, his mouth
set in a frowning, impenetrable wall of hurt.
“Bye, Angel,” she said, feeling herself almost choke on
the words they had never before been able to say to one another.
He didn’t answer.
As she closed the door, she heard a terrific crash and
glass shattering. It had been the lamp, it had to be. It was the only
breakable thing that they had in the hall; the first thing that had ever
been brought for the both of them.
And now it was irrecoverably broken: destroyed by
Angel’s hands – hands which had been guided by her actions and words.
She looked hopelessly up at the sky, finding no answers
there but the dull twinkling of the overtired stars.
What had she done? What had they both done?
~~
The room at the B&B was small, almost cramped, its
overly floral wallpaper practically vile. But it was a room, somewhere
Buffy could stay. Oz had managed to talk the owner, Mrs Hirst, into giving
Buffy a room, no doubt charming her with his laconic wit. “Jennifer”, as
the owner had insisted Oz must call her, had looked sharply at Buffy,
almost shrivelling Buffy with the weight of her stare. There was no escape
from anyone in this village; everybody knew everybody and they all would
now know that that American girl had walked out on that lovely man,
Angel. No doubt Jennifer would delight in informing the entire village of
every sordid detail she could, and probably would even go to the lengths of
embellishment if it proved necessary.
Buffy had quickly decided that she would give her no
help whatsoever with that mission.
“Goodnight Mrs Hirst,” she had said pointedly, almost
glaring at the woman.
Mrs Hirst, thankfully, had finally taken the hint and
retreated back to her quarters, but not without several sour glances back
at Buffy.
“If you need anything, or to talk, I’m here,” Oz had
offered.
“I promise I’ll talk, but right now, I need to sleep,”
she had replied, before wrapping her arms tightly around him. “Thanks for
everything.”
He had nodded, and then
departed, leaving her on her own as she had asked. It was only now that she
was lying on the thin mattress of the bed, still fully clothed, that she
realised she would not sleep. Her mind was too full of thoughts, too full
of memories. So, she closed her eyes and let herself become submerged in
them, letting the present time, the ugly bedsit and everything that had
happened tonight ebb away. The whispers of the past were far more inviting.
She remembered a simpler time. It had been one
Thanksgiving, back in 2001, and they had all been eating the
almost-dessicated turkey Angel had rescued from her efforts. Strangely, she
hadn’t felt inadequate, only grateful that she had had a boyfriend who
understood how important this custom - that he saw as strange and just
another excuse for people to stuff their faces before Christmas - was to
her. It was about families and memories and making things right. It was
about giving her sister a home.
So, they had sat around the table, Angel at the head,
Buffy and Dawn side by side, with Willow and her partner Tara, and Xander
and his on-off girlfriend Anya making up the remainder. For a few moments,
there had been a kind of awkward silence as everyone had wondered what to
say, whether to compliment the food or talk of other years, when it had
been Buffy’s mother, Joyce, who had been hosting proceedings. Buffy had
felt their uncertainty like a tear in the atmosphere, the easy laughter and
jokes of a normal family Thanksgiving being sucked out, leaving them all in
a mirthless, wordless prison. Yet, despite that, it was Angel’s actions
that she remembered most clearly – the ones that had made the Thanksgiving
of that year memorable for them all.
She didn’t even realise a wistful smile had appeared
across her lips, or that she was clutching the bedcovers so tightly that
the nylon material in her hand was sheathed in sweat. She only felt the
comfort of the past, the emptiness of the present and the swirling
blackhole of the future.
She had no idea that only half a mile across the way, a
man whom she had severed from her life was sharing her thoughts, her
memories and her dreams.
It was an irony that thankfully she was spared.
~~
Thanksgiving 2001, Los Angeles .
Angel watched them all, a group quiet and maudlin, and
saw Buffy’s face drain of all forced festivity and light. He wanted more
than anything for them to talk, for them to ask Buffy what she had used to
season the turkey or how Dawnie had fared with the cranberry sauce, or for
them even to just blurt out whatever they were thinking. Surely it had to
be better than this slow and enforced torture?
He didn’t want another event like Dawn’s 15th
birthday, where it had all started sanguinely enough, but as the tension
between the sisters had rocketed, and the friends ran out of things to say,
it ended with Dawn screaming in her bedroom and Buffy locked in the
bathroom, sobbing pitifully. It had taken him the best part of a night to
subdue them both, and convince Dawn to allow her sister to enfold her in a
huge, breath-strangling hug and make the peace again.
How Buffy at a mere 20 years of age was expected to
make the transition from big sister to legal guardian and hard-ass
disciplinarian so quickly was beyond Angel’s comprehension. He did not
understand the junior high school’s unbelievably ruthless attitude towards
Buffy as guardian, or the harsh, unsupportive approach of the social
worker. All Buffy wanted was to keep her family together, to be there for
her sister and to fulfil the promise she made to her mother to look after
her little girl. Angel did the best he could, managing between college and
his part-time job in the bookstore of the Summers’ family friend Rupert
Giles, but still it never seemed enough. Buffy herself was already
hard-pressed by the demands of her course and playing mother to Dawn, so
much so that the shifts she pulled at the local fastfood joint left her
exhausted. He honestly did not know what more anyone could expect of Buffy.
She was already struggling to mesh disparate aspects of her life and build
her newly changed relationship with Dawn – all whilst grieving. He thought
that they forgot that she, too, had lost her mother.
He, though, hadn’t forgotten at all.
He was the one that held her as at night she had yet
another bad dream, her body shaking with emotion and terror, the tears damp
on her cheeks. He didn’t need to ask what she had been dreaming about; the
blank, hopeless look in her eyes was enough to answer his question. It was
the same look that she had had after her mother had died, moments after she
had found her dead, lifeless body and had called the ambulance, and the
paramedics had confirmed that Buffy’s mother was dead. Angel had arrived
soon after they had left, having broken almost every traffic law known to
man to reach the house as soon as he had received Buffy’s garbled call. It
was only when he walked in the door and saw Buffy’s face that he knew. He
had no need to see the body. All he could do was hold her hand and wait for
the coroners.
So, now he made it his mission in life to keep her
smiling and happy, to inject every bit of normality and stability into her
life that he, as a 21-year-old college senior, possibly could. He took her
on dates, surprised her with flowers and more often than not, vegged out
with she and Dawn on the sofa, watching some corny chick flick that both
sisters ended up snivelling at. Except for the boredom factor, it was worth
it. He would give every cent he had and more to keep his little family
safe. He would make the sacrifices that no man of his age would normally
make – Buffy deserved that from him and more. She was his entire world. If
all it took was a little intervening, a little diplomacy, he would play the
buffer between Buffy and Dawn for as long as it was needed. Things would
get better. They had to.
And now, at this moment, as Dawn stared sullenly down
at her turkey-laden plate and Xander twiddled with the fancy napkin which
Buffy had so meticulously arranged, Angel tapped his glass, mock-formally,
and smiled warmly at the others.
“As you know, this is a very special occasion and also
very sad. It’s the first time Buffy’s ever hosted Thanksgiving and the
first time I ever ‘helped’,” he said, ignoring Dawn’s snickers and Xander’s
incredulous look towards Buffy. “Okay, it was more of a team effort, but
this is Buffy’s gig and I think she’s done a terrific job.”
He paused and watched as the murmurs of agreement
railed around the table, with even the normally sharp-tongued Anya
confirming that Buffy’s mashed potato was the creamiest that she had ever
tasted. The blush of colour to Buffy’s face, the crinkling of her eyes, was
enough for Angel. He wanted to freeze the moment there, and keep her in
that happy, compliment-propped mood forever.
He knew, though, there were words that could not be
left unsaid. “However, we all know this is a difficult time of year. It’s
our first year without Joyce,” he continued more sombrely, seeing the pain
that at once crossed Buffy’s face and also Dawn’s. “Which is why I wanted
to make a toast to her, remember her the way she would want to be
remembered. Is that okay?”
He gazed at the other members of the table, watching as
they nodded gently or gave him a tiny encouraging smile. Even Dawn looked
up from her plate. It was only Buffy who remained completely silent.
“Buffy?” he prompted, a little nervously.
She sighed, a little tiredly, and he wondered if he had
completely had the wrong idea and prepared himself to make the most
heartfelt apology of his life. Then she had given him the most grateful,
barefaced smile he had ever seen, the glow radiating from her in waves of
warmth.
“I think it’s a wonderful idea,” she murmured.
So, then he raised his glass, feeling his own throat
become dry and scratchy at the poignancy of the moment. “To Joyce,” he
toasted.
“To mom,” Buffy had whispered back, leaning across the
table to clink glasses with him. He had held her gaze then, and given her a
long and gentle kiss, not caring that the others were watching or that
their meal was probably going cold.
After that, nobody remained silent. It was the first
ever successful social gathering that was held in the Summers-O’Leary
residence.
Buffy promised him that she would remember it always.
Angel hoped that she always would.
In his sleepless state, Angel reached for the whisky
and took a violent swig from it. The brittle tang of the alcohol burned his
throat, making him gasp and sputter for air, but it did not rid his brain
of the ceaseless memories, or her face, or her smile. Buffy – she was in
his skin, in his blood; she was the reason he woke up in the morning and
went on, day after damn day. She kept him sane when everything around him was
a crazy, heaving freakshow. Now she was gone.
He didn’t think he had accepted that yet. He didn’t
know if he wanted to.
She said that she hadn’t been with Oz; she swore that
it hadn’t been any more than what he’d seen, a kiss given in the heat of
the moment. He didn’t know what to believe, didn’t even know if he cared,
but he was reaching the bottom of the bottle anyway.
And at last, he felt consciousness leave him, the
alcohol completely numbing his brain into a dreamless sleep. He did not
think of Buffy anymore.
~~
The bright sunshine bit through the clouds, covering
the entire village in a pretty, soft light. In the distance, Buffy could
hear children laughing and playing, the sound of grass being mowed. She
vaguely remembered that Angel had been talking about the grass in their
backyard, but he had never gotten around to cutting it. It didn’t really
matter now anyway. Angel and she were… over. She had left him only last
night. Though the words choked her to think, let alone say, she had to
repeat and repeat them until they drove into the resistant tissues of her
mind. Yet the thrums of “ex”, “former boyfriend”, “estranged lover” meant
nothing to her. It was almost as if the concept of she and Angel were so
deeply intertwined that to cleave them apart was incomprehensible.
With time though, she reasoned, she would forget, she
would move on. One day and counting, the plan had yet to kick in.
Buffy sat on the picnic table outside the Horse and
Groom pub, waiting for Oz to return with their drinks. This was the same
pub that just over a week earlier, she had sat in with Oz and Angel. Then
that brought memories of her argument with Angel afterwards. It was hardly
a pleasant memory, but she forced herself to dwell on it, to push it into
the recesses of every cell that screamed Angel, that begged for her to come
to her senses and return to him. This, she told herself sternly, is
why we are over. This is the result of seven years of love – it
ended up consuming us. We were just too damn young, anyway.
She hardly noticed as Oz placed her drink in front of
her, a hardy JD that Oz had promised her would be just what she needed.
Something about hair of the dog, although just what a dog had to do with a
raging hangover, Buffy had no idea. But her sunglasses were helping,
blotting out the unexpectedly strong sun. Now all she needed was some
paracetamols.
“So,” Oz posed, snapping into her thoughts. “You gonna
tell me what’s been going on with you and Angel?”
She shrugged, trying to keep it light-hearted, but the
twinge of heartache in her eyes was more than a giveaway. “We’re just
over,” she murmured. “There’s no going back now.”
Oz took a thoughtful sip of his pint, and glanced up at
Buffy. “You say that, but I can tell you don’t really mean it,” he
suggested, raising his eyebrows at her “what me?” face. “There’s
history there, like a ton. And you don’t give that up easily.”
His voice seemed to thin at the end of his sentence,
his look drifting inwards to some private, unshareable place. She realised
then that she had more in common with Oz than she had ever thought.
“I know,” she mused, taking a long draught of her shot.
“But I just think that right now, we can’t be together. Or something. Like
we got into a rut and somehow just never got out, and now all we need is
time to be ourselves again.”
“Is that you or Angel you’re talking about?” Oz
challenged, fixing her with one of his oddly zen-like stares. Strangely, it
was as effective as Willow ’s “resolve face”.
“Oh-kay,” she relented, rolling her eyes at him in mock
annoyance. “I think it’s me…”
“Good call,” he allowed.
“Thanks… I think,” she replied, frowning slightly. But
then she saw that he was really looking at her, leaning slightly back in
readiness to listen. She relaxed instantly and allowed the things that were
hidden in her to finally come out into the light of day. She found herself
telling him about the pain that she had felt when her parents had divorced,
and how it had torn her whole world apart. How, at only 17, she landed
herself with a 12 year old sister who shadowed her every move, and a
neurotic mother who would barely let either of her daughters out of her
sight for fear that she would lose them, too. Their father had practically
abandoned them, having more or less made it clear that he had no time for
his kids now that he had his new jailbait secretary on his arm.
“So, when I escaped to college, it was like freedom.
I’d never felt so… light. Meeting Angel then – it was just perfect. But
then you know, you were there,” Buffy continued, catching sight of Oz’s nod
of agreement, gently prodding her to continue. “And it was great. We were
happy. And then mom… she was gone. And there was too much responsibility,
too little time. We hardly ever went on dates after that. It was all we
could do to keep Dawn in school and the social worker off our backs.”
“Yeah, I heard,” Oz murmured.
“But we got through. He was like… my rock, you know?
The one I could depend on for anything,” she explained, rubbing at her eyes
as the stab of headache pain she had been fighting all morning returned
with a vengeance. “Then, he left.”
“To England ?” Oz guessed.
“Yeah,” Buffy murmured. “He had to take over his
father’s business. They have a super-weird relationship, and it’s all like,
if his dad clicks his fingers, and calls, “Liam!”, Angel comes running.
Which I get and I’m not dissing, but you’d think he would have thought
first of me and Dawn. He always told me we were his priority.”
“What makes you think you’re not?” Oz pressed suddenly,
downing his pint in one large gulp that was more typical of Xander than Oz.
She could almost feel the agitation coming off him in waves. He still
feels guilty, she realised. Oh God.
She looked back at Oz carefully, her fingers sliding around
a loose strand of her hair. “There’s just little things… like his work
coming first, like that Nina chick who works with him. God, I hate that
woman,” she bitched, imagining Nina’s face as a dartboard she had just
scored a bullseye on. “But that’s not it. It’s just he doesn’t see what
I’ve given up, what I’ve left. I was on the verge of making something of
myself in LA, of seeing my sister become well-adjusted and happy. But I
quit it all for him, because I needed him.”
“You love him,” Oz stated simply.
“Yeah,” Buffy agreed reluctantly, again the rush of
regret, pain, guilt bearing down upon her. “But sometimes love just isn’t
enough.”
For a moment, they were hushed, watching the slow
gaggle of horses passing by, listening to the click-clack of their hooves
upon the road. Then, Oz spoke.
“So, I’m leaving soon. Going out to Europe ; maybe
Australia later.”
“Oh,” she murmured. She looked down, feeling a pang of
anxiety. The only person who was still speaking to her, still supporting
her, would be leaving her life. There was no one else here that she could
depend upon. She couldn’t even go to Fred, her closest friend in the
village; it would be too awkward, what with her husband being Angel’s
cousin. And she knew that Fred wouldn’t understand anyway. She was too much
of a starry-eyed romantic to comprehend that realistically love doesn’t
conquer all, however much you really want it to…
Oz understood that.
Still, Oz’s sudden announcement was no great surprise.
He was a born roamer, the call of freedom in his blood. He had understood
her instinct to cut loose perfectly, and hadn’t once criticised her for it.
Not even when she was out every night, drinking, laughing, dancing wildly,
and blithely ignoring her problems with Angel. All he had done was gently
remind her that she should talk to Angel, and then had said no more. Even
now, after she had used him to make a point to Angel, he was still there
for her as a friend: her completely platonic, non-judgemental friend. She
had been able to share things with him that she had never told Willow or
Fred for fear of their reaction. And she hadn’t really been able to
communicate with Angel for a long time – the one person she should have
worked harder to talk to…
Not now, she
scolded herself.
That was why it would be so difficult to see Oz leave.
It would have been nice for him to have been around just a little longer,
but it wasn’t his job to worry about her problems; he had his own life. And
just lately, she had made him feel guilty enough.
So, she looked at him with enthusiasm and asked, “How
long you going for?”
“Six months, maybe a year,” he shrugged.
“Well, you’d better send me a postcard from Rome ! I’ve
always wondered what it would be like there… I almost wish I could escape
somewhere, too,” she mused wistfully.
“You could go home, at least for a little while,” Oz
suggested, then seeing Buffy’s pained look, amended, “Okay, maybe not
home.”
“I just couldn’t handle going back right now,” she
admitted. “There’d be so many questions from the guys and they’d all want
to know why I split with Angel. And then there’s Dawn… she already hates me
for leaving. I don’t want her to know I left LA for nothing. She’d be
furious.”
“The wrath of Dawn,” Oz considered. “Tough deal.”
“Yeah,”
Buffy agreed sadly, sliding her hands around her drink. She thought about
taking another sip of the bitter, tangy liquid, but remembering her drunken
behaviour the night before, decided against it. Alcohol obviously did not
always agree with her.
“I want to see Dawn more than anything, and make things
right again. But first I need to get my head together,” Buffy clarified. “I
want to make sure I don’t end up making things worse.”
“Sounds reasonable,” he replied, giving her a wry
smile. “On both counts.”
She returned his smile wanly, thinking of the minefield
that was her relationships with both her sister and Angel. Whether or not
she was with Angel, she couldn’t pretend that he didn’t exist. She had to
consider how her actions now would affect him.
“Hope so,” she said. “Other than that, what can I do?
Angel doesn’t want to talk to me, neither does Dawn. Not that that’s new.
It’s a mess.”
“So, take some time out,” Oz told her.
“Sounds good,” she answered, feeling the warmth of the
sun on her face as she gazed up at the sky. It was turning into a perfect
Sunday afternoon. “But some of us don’t have readymade trips to Europe with
their bandmates.”
She saw him frown, looking at her with an
uncharacteristically conflicted expression. Then almost as if it had never
been there, it was replaced with his usual composure. “If you want some
time to think, you’re welcome to come with,” he offered.
She gazed up at him in shock, her face twisted in
disagreement between complete elation and pained refusal. “I don’t know,”
she muttered, thinking of Angel and the mess that she still had to sort out
with him. “How can I just leave? There’s Angel and everything…”
“I just think, maybe, you need some space. This could
be it for you,” he explained. “Maybe then you’ll know what you want.”
She thought for a long time, staring into her drink.
Leaving England and the life that she had created with Angel would be a
huge move, and one that she could regret. What if Angel had the wrong idea
and thought that something actually was going on between she and Oz? It
would be an all-too easy assumption to make, especially as he was already
paranoid about her friendship with Oz, but still – Oz’s offer was tempting.
Everything here seemed flat and lifeless, her life just stalled. Her
relationship with Angel was over; there was nothing left for her here, and
she wasn’t yet ready to face the pain that going home would bring. For now,
she needed something that would bridge the chasm between the tatters of her
old life and the unknown blank of her future.
Going travelling could fill that gap. It was the
perfect opportunity to gain the freedom that she had yearned for since her
parents’ divorce – a life without pressure and expectation.
Could she honestly let this opportunity pass?
“Okay,” she said at last.
She had always wanted to travel. And now there was no
better time.
~~
It was four o’clock in the afternoon when Angel heard
the front door of his cottage open. He looked up wearily from his time-worn
spot on the sofa, where he had lain slumped for the best part of the day,
wondering who the hell would disturb him. Then, as if somebody had shone a
bright shining light upon his world, the thought hit him: it could be
Buffy. He dragged himself up to standing, pausing for a moment to steady
himself from the dizzy feeling that swept over him. He had not eaten since
Buffy had left and his head throbbed from his hangover. But he could not
let Buffy know what a mess he was in; he just couldn’t. He had his pride.
He quickly regained his equilibrium, and shuffled towards
the door, almost tripping over the litter of beer cans that were strewn
across the living room. Repressing a hissed “fuck it”, he opened his mouth
to speak, a hundred, thousand, million expressions coming to mind. But as
his eyes fell upon his visitor, they dissipated into dust. “Oh. It’s you.”
“You sound disappointed,” Wesley retorted, a hint of
reproach in his voice. He then stepped into the living room, looking in
disdain at the discarded cans and the empty bottle of whiskey. “I was going
to tell you we’d saved you both a Sunday roast, but it seems a little
redundant now. What on earth happened to this place?”
Angel merely shrugged, walking back to the sofa and
flopping back upon it. “Short story? Buffy’s gone,” he said flatly,
reaching for the last unopened can of beer that was nestled in the corner
of the sofa. He pulled the can open with a satisfying clack. “And in the
last few hours, I didn’t get around to hiring a cleaner.”
“She left?” Wesley spluttered. “Angel - why?”
“Pretty much we had a fight, she kissed Oz, we’re
over,” he explained blandly, taking a swig of his drink. “Turns out I
wasn’t what she wanted after all.”
“You’ve got to be wrong,” Wesley reasoned, staring at
Angel as if had just told him that the world was secretly overrun with
vampires. “I know that things haven’t been easy lately, but I just thought
it was a blip. That Buffy needed to let down her hair and live it up….”
“Nope, she wanted to leave,” Angel corrected him,
conveniently omitting the fact that she had really had no choice. That was
an extraneous detail that Wesley did not need to hear right now. The
concern currently blaring from Wesley’s features was bad enough; he didn’t
need the lecture as well. “Don’t start with the pity,” Angel urged his
cousin. “I’m good.”
“Hmmm, yes. Overindulgence in alcohol always did bring
out your best side,” Wesley drawled, stalking to the sofa and snatching the
beer from Angel before he could take another sip. Angel scowled at him but
did not move. “What would Buffy think if she saw the state of you?”
Inwardly, Angel groaned. He was going to get the
lecture anyway. Now he knew how Wesley’s students felt.
“None of her business, now. It’s over,” Angel said
tightly, kicking the cans from beneath his feet. “So, save the sermon,
Wes.”
“I’ll save my sermons when you’ve got some sense in
that thick skull of yours!” Wesley snapped. “You need to speak to her; you
need to sort this out. Or have you completely forgotten you love this
girl?”
Wesley’s sharp words hit Angel with all the force of a
Molotov cocktail, and his gaze plummeted to the floor, away from Wesley and
his cutting truth. Yes, he did love her. He didn’t even need to think about
it and certainly could not deny it, but right now, this wasn’t a question
of love. This was about trust and he wasn’t sure that it was there for
either of them anymore.
“Angel, she’s your dream,” Wesley pressed, his tone
gentler. “You’ve said it yourself, many, many times, and that can’t have
changed.”
Angel’s eyes were drawn to the fields outside his windows,
and in the distance he could see the old oak tree under which he had found
Buffy, half-drowsing, more times than he could count. He would never find
her there again.
“Dreams change,” he told Wesley bleakly.
And sometimes they did. Sometimes they died.
And there was nothing left in the ashes.
~~
“You were everything, everything that I wanted,
We were meant to be, supposed to be, but we lost it,
And all of the memories, so close to me, just fade away.”
Lyrics – Avril Lavigne’s “My Happy Ending”.
End of Chapter Three.
Next Part
.
Just a few notes to help explain things referred to in this chapter:
1. Damien Hirst is a very
famous British artist, based in London. According to Damienhirst, an
unofficial fansite: “Damien Hirst is an influential young British artist
whose works are known for their controversial subject matter. He won the
Turner Prize in 1995 and continues to shock, entertain, and educate. Hirst
works with a variety of media, but is probably best known for his series
involving animals preserved in formaldehyde.”
Credit Damienhirst (http://dh.ryoshuu.com)
2. Cornwall – is an English county to the south of Devon. Cornish people
are very proud of their heritage; there is a long-running campaign for
independence for Cornwall from the rest of England.
(On an aside, a British TV network has announced that for its alternative
to the Queen’s speech this Christmas, it is going to show a Simpson’s
episode where Lisa will be campaigning for independence for Cornwall. I
thought that was pretty cute. *G*)
3. Cornish Pasties – pastry filled with beef and onion. It’s a very famous
produce of Cornwall.
4. Pint – read beer.
5. Haytor Rocks is an ancient site containing a number of granite rocks,
situated on Dartmoor – a huge moor in South Devon, S.W England. There are
photos here for those who are curious:
http://www.chycor2.co.uk/westcountryviews/dartmoor/haytor/haytor.htm
AN:
1. JD is Jack Daniels whiskey.
2. B&B – Bed and Breakfast accommodation, usually for tourists
.
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