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I own none of the
following characters. I don't intend to infringe on any copyrights. If you
enjoy this story, please let me know at RhinestoneDazzle@aol.com.
Profaned
Author:
Dazzle
Rating:
NC17
Archive:
Wherever you want
Spoilers:
Very few, but some information through ATS' mid-third season is involved.
Warnings:
Disturbing violent/sexual content. Do not read if this material is
upsetting to you.
Summary:
Two days later, Cordelia must face Angel once more.
Thanks:
To Inamorata for the great beta-read and encouragement
***
"You're
sure you're ready for this?" Gunn says.
He is
studying Cordelia in the dim light of the Hyperion's upper hallways; the
group has gotten around to replacing most of the bulbs in the hotel, but
not all, and the corridor outside this one room is especially gloomy. It
fits. In the darkness, she knows he can see the bruise on her cheek, the
cut on her temple. She hopes that he cannot see her eyes.
"Ready
as I'll ever be," she says. This isn't actually saying a whole lot,
but Gunn accepts it at face value.
He
goes to the door, puts his hand on the knob -- he's not moving all that
slowly, but it seems to her to take forever, as though the world were
trapped in slow motion, freezing in place. She feels a wave of dizziness
and nausea overtake her, and she clutches at his arm. "Wait."
Gunn
halts, goes shock-still. He doesn't ask her what's wrong, or try to hug and
comfort her, and for this she is so grateful she could weep. Cordelia asked
him to wait, and he waits, and they are motionless together in the hallway
for a very long time.
She
knows Angel can smell them, hear their heartbeats, on the other side of the
door.
At
last she says, "Gunn -- are you sure?"
"We're
sure." Gunn's voice can be so gentle when he chooses, maybe more so
because he chooses so seldom. "Angel's got his soul again."
Angel
never really lost his soul. It's a point that Gunn and Fred aren't as clear
on -- they weren't around, the first time. But Wesley and Cordelia
understand how it works, how Angel's soul doesn't leave him but is instead
rendered null, so that Angelus is, for however short a time, free to do as
he chooses -- whatever he chooses -- "The doximal?"
"Wore
off a day ago. Even if he was fakin' at first, he wouldn't be now. Besides
-- it ain't fake." Gunn puts one hand out, as though to touch her
shoulder, then thinks better of it and lets it drop. "Angel's back.
It's really him. You can tell."
Cordelia
hesitates a few moments more, considering how much Gunn and Wesley know,
how much they don't. But she trusts their judgment, and even though she has
only waited two days for this, she has already waited far too long.
"Stay outside," she says.
Gunn,
for once, offers no resistance to an order. "You got it." He
opens the door, steps aside, lets her walk in.
This
room is one of the most broken-down ones in the entire Hyperion; the roof
is intact, as are the walls, but that's about all that can be said for it.
An old mattress lies on the floor. No other furniture is inside. The
Hyperion's furniture is made of wood, and Cordelia knows without asking
that Wesley did not trust Angel to be alone with anything that could be
made into stakes right now.
(the
desk in the warehouse office was wooden and old and it splintered into tiny
pieces at the slightest friction and Cordelia had splinters in her back and
they bled and it took Dennis three hours to pluck them from her stinging
skin while Cordelia lay on her floor and cried)
One
shadeless lamp casts the only light, and this allows Cordelia to see Angel
by the window. She realizes without having to ask that they must have made
him stay in the basement, someplace where he cannot get to the sun -- not
by ripping away boards, not by punching through brick. But Cordelia is
disquieted by closed spaces right now, and they have brought Angel up here
for the night. For her. He is sitting on the floor, curled up into a ball.
Angel is turned in profile -- not looking at Cordelia, but not looking
away.
He
looks like himself again, and Cordelia feels the tiniest flutter of an
emotion she hadn't expected to feel: relief.
Cordelia
looks back over her shoulder; Gunn understands the unspoken cue and closes
the door behind her. She is alone with Angel again, and she would be lying
to herself if she did not admit that she was afraid. But Cordelia has never
been one to be ruled by her fears, not even now.
"Angel,"
she says. Her voice cracks on the word -- it's not so much emotion as
hoarseness, left over from the screaming. Angel flinches at the sound of
her voice, but he acknowledges her with the faintest nod. "Angel, look
at me."
She
expects to have to argue with him for this. But to her surprise, Angel
takes one deep breath -- purely a calming mechanism -- and turns his head
slowly toward her. When they are once again face to face, she can see it
all in his eyes -- the pain, the horror, the guilt. Cordelia remembers
once, not long after they all found out Angel was back from hell, Buffy
attempting to explain what Angel was like when she discovered he'd
returned. Cordelia couldn't quite picture it then, but now she no longer
has to. He looked like this, caved-in and shamed, like a beaten dog.
In
the darkness, Cordelia can see the shine of tears in his eyes, the faint
scratches across his throat. She had thought the scratches would be
entirely healed by now; she must have gotten him deeper than she'd realized.
(he
said he liked it when she fought and he laughed when she scratched him and
he grabbed her hand and bent her fingers back in his until she screamed and
he licked his own blood from her skin and then he took her twisted hand and
put it between his legs and she screamed for Wesley and for Gunn and even
for Lorne but not for Fred because then he would do it to Fred too)
She
thinks about the face that laughed above her, and then she looks at the
face crying beneath her, and Cordelia believes -- more surely than she ever
has, and it is a belief she has been very careful about safeguarding these
past few years -- that Angel and Angelus are two different people. They
share more than a body -- more than Cordelia had ever realized before, more
than she wants to confront right now. But Angelus wanted to hurt her, and
there is no such feeling in the broken figure in front of her.
Angel
whispers, "Cordelia -- I -- it's so useless to tell you I'm sorry --
but I'm so sorry --"
"I
know," she says.
"Will
you do it?" he says, and it is such a non sequitur that Cordelia can
only blink at him for a moment. Angel apparently doesn't realize that she
doesn't understand. Whatever it is he's thinking, to him it's completely
obvious. "I thought it would be Gunn -- or Wesley maybe -- but it
should be you. Would it -- will it help you?"
Cordelia
takes a step toward him, quietly astonished that she isn't too frightened
to do so. "Nothing's going to help me," she says. "Nothing
but time."
Angel
nods, accepting that. He holds out his hand, and she is shocked, thinking
he wants them to touch. But instead he says, "Then I'll do it."
He is
holding his hand out for a stake. Angel thinks she would only have come in
here with a stake. "Do you -- want to see it happen, or not see it
--"
"Angel,
stop it." Cordelia wants to take his hand then, can almost make
herself do it, but not quite. "I don't want you to die." As he
stares up at her, she sees his face blur behind the tears that are welling,
hot and damp, in her eyes. "How is that supposed to help me, huh?
Hasn't enough stuff happened to me without you dying?"
(she
kept thinking that this was really happening and she took her clothes off
because he wanted to watch and he said if she did it she could keep her
knees and she never felt so ashamed to be naked and he threw her on the
desk and it was really happening and the only light in the warehouse office
was a dull blinking fluorescent bulb that cast a yellowish light and made
everything ugly and he unzipped his pants and asked her how many times Groo
did this to her and it was really happening because she could hear herself
crying)
Angel
is shaking his head; she can see that much even through her tears.
"You should want me dead."
"YOU
want you dead," she says. She doesn't blame him; last night she tried
to imagine what it would be like, to come back to yourself and know that
you had done something like this, and she thinks that it's probably as bad
as having something like this done to you. Almost as bad, anyway. And last
night, balled up in her bathtub with shower water flowing over her,
Cordelia had moments when she wanted to die too. But she knew it wouldn't
solve anything for her, and Angel's death will solve nothing for either of
them. "I don't want you dead. I mean, staked dead. I want you
here."
"Still."
Angel's voice is thick, and only Cordelia's tears are preventing her from
seeing his own. She is grateful not to have to see it. "You still --
after I -- Cordy --"
"We're
gonna get past this," she says. This has been her mantra ever since it
happened. Cordelia is very attached to the idea of getting past this,
moving away from it as though it were something you drove by on the
highway, then watched in the rear-view mirror, getting smaller and smaller
until finally it vanished and might as well not have existed at all.
"You owe me, Angel. So you have to drop all this suicidal stuff right
now. I can't take anything else right now. I need to feel like we're gonna
get past all this. And that means you getting past it too."
"But
someone has to stake me. Or else it could happen again," Angel says.
His voice is slightly surer now -- he is arguing for his own death on
stronger, objective ground. "Now that Wolfram & Hart knows what
the doximal does, nothing will stop them from using it over, and over
--"
"Wolfram
& Hart never knew," Cordelia says. The vision that came too late
did at least tell her this much; thanks for the update, Powers That Be.
"Only Lilah knew. And she's -- Lilah has done all the talking she's
ever gonna do."
"Gunn
killed her. Or -- Wesley? What --"
"I
did it," Cordelia says. The movement of a finger, the swish of a
crossbow, and an indistinct shape falling in the parking garage of a
company that will not consider any one dead body a particular surprise --
Cordelia tries to tell herself that's all it was. But it was a thousand
other things, too, and she knows that Angel understands them all as he
groans softly in grief. She knows that he's not mourning wretched, pitiless
Lilah; he's mourning the Cordelia who'd never taken a human life, the one
who never knew the sweetness, the true and pure and not-really-horrible
delight of taking a life you want to take. Cordelia's reasons are different
than Angelus' were -- she wanted justice for herself, and she wanted safety
for others, and given the number of times Lilah tried to kill her, Lilah
was fair game under her own rules. But the fact that Cordelia realized she
was smiling as she lowered the crossbow -- "We're gonna get past this,"
she repeats.
Angel
nods. As Cordelia wipes her eyes with her sleeve, her vision clears enough
to see Angel better; he is still shaking, and his cheeks are damp with
tears, but he is obviously trying to calm himself for her. "And
Wesley, and Gunn, and Fred?" he says. "You -- I guess they must
agree with you -- "
"None
of the others know. I mean, they don't know what happened --" With us?
To me? Cordelia doesn't have to decide what to say to Angel. She knows he
knows what she means.
(he
said he would take care of them downstairs and he told her to be ready for
more when he got back because killing old friends always turned him on and
Cordelia was frightened to move but she thought maybe she could break up
the desk for a stake and even if she couldn't at least he couldn't keep
pounding at her with the splinters in her back if she tore up the desk and
she pulled on her clothes so she wouldn't have to look at her body and the
door flew open and she screamed but it was Gunn and he said thank God they
had gotten there in time and Cordelia said yes, in time, thank God)
Angel
says, "You should tell them. Cordelia, you need them now."
"If
I tell them, they'll kill you." Cordelia thinks that Fred would listen
to her. Wesley, perhaps. Gunn never. And there is something way down deep
in Cordelia, something that thinks if Gunn went to execute Angel for his
crime, she might not fight as hard as she can. Might let her anger and pain
and horror look like helplessness, so the rest of her life, she could say,
I couldn't stop Gunn, instead of, I let Angel die. Cordelia does not want
to confront this part of herself, and perhaps it is this more than anything
else that has made her keep her silence.
"If
I die for this, it's what I deserve," Angel says. He is just stating
simple fact. "You shouldn't have to suffer in silence, Cordelia."
"Me?
Suffer in silence? I'm sorry, have we met?" Cordelia knows that, if
the situation were any less bleak, Angel might be moved to smile at that.
She'd smile herself. As it is -- well, it doesn't count as humor, not
really, but it feels good to be talking like herself for a moment, saying
the things she'd say in a more normal situation. "If I need to talk,
I'm going to talk. To you. It happened to both of us, Angel. Both of us
together. And that's how we're gonna work through it, too."
She
says it like she means it, and she very much wants to, though she knows
it's more difficult than she's making it out to be. It is
next-to-impossible, now, to imagine calling Angel up in the dead of night
and saying: I had a nightmare that you broke into my bedroom. Or: I
scrubbed myself so hard with the loofah this morning that my skin bled and
Dennis took it away, but I stayed in there for an hour anyway, washing
myself with my hands, and I never did feel clean.
Or
the terror that came to her last night as she fished beneath her sink for a
bandaid for the cut on her forehead, and her hand brushed against a box of
tampons: Could I be pregnant?
(it
hurt so much so much and she had always heard that it hurt but she'd had no
idea how much pain there was and he had one hand on her breast and the
yellow light made everything ugly and the room was cold and he was cold and
she could see her skin pebbled and pasty like chickenflesh next to his
wrist and he slid his other hand between them where their bodies were
joined and when he brought it up his fingers were red with blood from where
he'd torn her and she thought he would lick it off but instead he pushed
his fingers in her mouth and asked her how it tasted and she wanted to bite
him but she was already about to gag from the taste of her own blood and
she didn't want to taste his because she didn't want anything more of him
inside her)
Unlikely,
of course. Vampires don't make babies -- except for two of them, one of whom
happens to be the one who raped her. She knows that whatever the Powers did
that made Angel capable of fathering a child was something extraordinary,
something that counts as strange and unusual even in her mixed-up,
supernatural world. But what she does not know is if whatever was done to
Angel lasted only for a single night, or whether the change they worked in
him for their mysterious purpose was permanent. If it is the latter -- and
who's to say what's more likely? There's no guide, not for this -- then
there is a chance Cordelia is carrying Angel's child right now.
Maybe
she should wish that she is. Angel has been low with grief these many
weeks, as have all the rest of them. Wesley is perhaps second only to Angel
in his anguish; only the need to make up for his wrongdoing sustains
Wesley. Maybe that's what sustained Angel all those years when he had no
one. Angel had learned to bear the burden of guilt, but being an innocent
victim has undone him, in a way guilt never did. Cordelia didn't understand
how that could be, before two days ago. She is trying very hard not to
understand it now. If Angel were the father of another child -- that child
couldn't replace Connor, but it would give him something else to love and
to live for, help heal those wounds. And she has her own wounds to bear
from Connor's loss; she wasn't his mother, but it is amazing, how much you
can love a child not your own. How much you can miss him.
But
there are other wounds now, even fresher, and if they are not as deep as
those from Connor's abduction, they are deep enough. A child born of her
violation would reopen those wounds, keep them fresh forever and ever.
Maybe that would not be true -- maybe they'd heal anyway. But maybe they
wouldn't, and Cordelia cannot bear even the thought of still hurting about
this ten and twenty and forty years from now. So she hopes that Angel
cannot have children, by her or by anyone, not now nor ever again, if it
means that she will be safe.
And
this is just one of the things she can't tell him. How will they do this?
How will they begin to get past it?
Angel
is looking up at her, and she can tell he is wondering the same thing. They
have promised to bridge a gap that seems unbridgeable. They are looking at
each other from the opposite sides of a crevasse that can so easily swallow
them whole.
He is
the one who breaks the silence. "I'd rather have died than have done
that to you."
"I
know." And she does know it, but the words are somewhat comforting
nonetheless.
"And
I'll do -- whatever you need to feel safe, Cordelia. I'll leave, or I'll
stay, or I'll guard your door, or I'll be guarded, or, or -- whatever might
help. Cordy. I don't know what that would be, but I don't care what it is,
I'll do it."
Turn
back time? Get rid of your demon? Cordelia rejects the impossibilities
half-formed, not even thoughts yet. She tries to keep her courage about
her, tries to push through the mire of fears and doubts and anguish and
terror that has held her these past two days. She tries to find solid
ground, to set foot on it, to name just what it is that is horrifying her
the most.
In
her heart, she has always known. But even here, even now, it is hard to
give it voice. It is hard to admit that the worst thing he did was not anything
he did to her body.
Slowly,
Cordelia says, "You said something to me that night. You made me say
something to you."
Angel
tenses, and Cordelia feels her own skin flush hot-then-cold. She has put
her foot on that ground, and now is the moment when they will deal with the
worst terror of all. Cordelia now knows that Angelus and Angel are two
different people, but she will now find out just how much they share. Just
how much of Angel's goodness and hope and heart can belong to the demon,
too.
"Did
you do it because -- was it just to be cruel? Just to make it hurt more? Or
was it because it was real? Because it was something you wanted to say
--"
"Something
I wanted you to say?" Now, and only now, Angel cannot meet her eyes.
"It was real."
And
her worst terror is now her worst truth.
(his
hands were around her throat and he was choking her not hard enough that
she would die but hard enough and her nose was bleeding from the times he
had punched her and she was fighting for breath and he wanted her to tell
him that she loved him and he wanted to hear her say the words while he was
inside her because he had loved her for so long and she never noticed and
she never gave a damn and maybe she gave a damn now and now he would let
her live if she said it because he wanted her to remember this for the rest
of her life and he wanted her to think of this moment every time she said
that she loved someone and every time someone said he loved her and between
her gasping for breath and her tears she didn't think she could say
anything but then he began slamming her head onto the table and she cried
out that she loved him she loved him she loved him she loved him and he
threw his head back and he yelled that he loved her as he came)
Cordelia
is grateful that Angel isn't looking at her right now; she is grateful to
have this one moment to feel the hurt of it, nothing more.
Angel
loves her. She does not love him -- not in that way -- though in the past
few weeks, as they grew closer after Connor's abduction, she had for the
first time begun to consider. To wonder. She knew what they were like
together in grief and in gladness, in anger and in humor, and she either
liked or could deal with it all. His ultimate strength in his grief had
moved her, and the deeper understanding between them as time went on had
called forth something in her that she had never expected to feel for her
best friend. Cordelia is not in love with Angel, but three days ago she was
asking herself whether or not the impossible might be possible.
But she
did not know this could happen to them. Now it is futile to wonder what
might have been. Whatever he feels for her, whatever feeling for him had
been flickering into flame within her, is now as useless as the baby
clothes still folded in a drawer in Angel's room. As useless and as
heartbreaking.
Angelus
did not just defile her body. He desecrated the love Cordelia and Angel
feel, as friends and as woman and man, and made it unnamable ever again.
Long after her bruises have faded and her cuts have closed and her EPT has
come back negative, this will be between them. This is the one wound that
will not heal.
The
yellow light made everything ugly. She had no idea how much pain there was.
This is really happening.
Angel
says, his voice low and desperate, "Cordelia --"
"We're
gonna get past this," she says, and once again she hopes beyond hope
that it is true.
*****
The
End
*****
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