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"Sole
Survivors"
an original fan story by Julie Fortune
This story is a work of original fiction; however, it
is set in the universe of Angel, created by Mutant Enemy productions and
the Warner Brothers Television Network. I make no claims to any copyrights
regarding these characters. This work is written entirely for my enjoyment
and the enjoyment of friends. Please e-mail the author with comments.
Please do not reproduce or copy without the author's
permission.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Author's note: This is a very specific "missing
time" piece from during and after the episode "Billy," an
episode I found especially riveting and powerful Even in the context of Angel's demonic universe, the
subject of male-on-female abuse rings frighteningly true. WARNING: Contains episode spoilers.
Special thanks to E. Bird for helping me avoid a BIG
error of fact ...
Billy Blimm was dead,
and that was a good. Cordelia didn't hate very well, although she could
hold a grudge like nobody's business; at the end, when she'd watched Billy
die, she'd still felt a little sick about it. Would she have killed him?
Yes. Would she have enjoyed it? No. And in the end, maybe that was the only
important thing.
Well, that ... and
the fact that Angel hadn't wigged out on her and turned all
stalker-psycho-abuser like all the other men Billy came in contact with.
Which she still feared, a little. But not enough to let him know it.
"You took
cabs?" he asked her. They were in the Batmobile, cruising back to the
Batcave, and it was a nice night even by California standards -- cool
evening breeze, a few stars shining through the blaze of city lights.
"Cordelia, how much?"
"Oh, I don't
know -- there was the cab to Lila's apartment, then the one over to that
other Blimm idiot's place, then out to the airport ... " She thought
about it. "More than the current bank balance. Because we haven't
actually gotten paid for saving the world in a while."
"I take that
personally," Angel deadpanned.
"As the person
who writes the check that keeps a roof over our heads, gee, me too."
"Sorry about
that. Hungry?"
"Starved.
Unfortunately, we have about two bucks and there are no drive-in blood
dispensers, so I'm thinking hotel food."
"Almost home
anyway," Angel sighed. "Fred really liked the ice cream, you
know? Except for the demon attack part at the end. Maybe I should get some
more ice cream, we're down to our last gallon."
"Maybe you
should get a part time job as a bouncer and pay for some ice cream. Not to
mention some fish sticks and vienna sausage, which is so gross I can't
believe I'm saying it." Cordelia sighed and leaned her head back
against cool leather. Wind feathered her hair, and she thought just for
this one moment she was as happy as she was capable of being. Except for
the hunger.
"It's making me
queasy, and that's an achievement," Angel said. He flicked her a
sideways glance when he thought she wasn't looking. He'd been doing that
more and more, she'd noticed. Looking. As if he'd never really seen her
before, or she was changing right in front of him. "Cordy?"
"Yeah?"
"I'm still okay.
In case you were wondering."
"You mean, am I
worried about you going all stalker-psycho-abuser on me? Nah. Been there,
done that, have the I-survived-Angelus souvenir keychain. Besides, I don't
think you hate women, not even deep down. You just hate yourself."
He chuckled. He had a
nice laugh, genuine and oddly childlike, and it made her smile.
"Thanks for the vote of confidence."
"You're
welcome." She covered a yawn as Angel pulled the car into the garage.
Gunn's truck was still here, and Wesley's car. Maybe there was still time
for a late-night snack after all. Fred would be up for it, so long as there
were tacos.
They walked into the
lobby and Cordelia headed for the kitchen, then stopped when she realized
Angel wasn't following. He was standing frozen, chain raised, looking up
toward the banister and the second floor.
"What?" she
asked. All the warmth and humanity had drained out of his face, leaving it
cold and pale and eternal. And scared.
"Blood," he
said, and bolted for the stairs. She pounded up after him, not seeing
anything much at first and then the overturned furniture, drops of blood,
smears of blood on the walls as they raced to the back stairs, up to the
third floor. Oh God. Fred. Wesley. Gunn. While she'd been laughing and
joking and thinking about fish sticks ...
Angel flung out a
hand to stop her. He was standing in an open doorway, looking in, and she
couldn't read the emotion on his face. After a few seconds he called,
"Fred?"
And Fred came out,
moving slowly, limping. She fell into his arms and Cordelia saw the puffy
bruise on the side of her face, the bloody lips, oh God no ...
"Where's
Wesley?" she whispered, and then louder, almost a scream.
"Wesley!"
"Stay
there," Angel said. He gently peeled Fred off of him and handed her
over; Cordelia took hold and it was like holding an ice cube, Fred was
freezing even though the hall was warm. She took off her jacket and wrapped
it around Fred's thin, shivering shoulders, wrapped her arms over that and
held her tight.
"You're
safe," she told Fred. "You're safe now. It's okay."
"No," Fred
whispered. "It's not."
When Angel came out,
he was carrying Wesley like a broken toy, and Cordelia screamed into a
muffling hand at the sight of the bloody scratches on his face, the swollen
bruises. "Gunn's still in there, he's out cold. I don't know if he has
a concussion but I wouldn't be surprised."
"Should I --
" Cordelia asked.
"No!" He
looked at Fred. "No. Stay together."
"But -- "
"Blimm got to
them," Angel said. He sounded tired and beaten. "Somehow, I don't
know how, he got to them."
"I'm
sorry," Fred whispered. She was crying silently now, tears spilling
down her face. "I'm so sorry, I didn't want to hurt them, I didn't
want to -- "
"Shh, it's okay,
it's okay," Cordelia soothed, but it wasn't, not really, she couldn't
imagine -- couldn't believe -- Wesley? Not Wesley. She knew him. And Gunn
...
Fred was crying too
hard to speak. Cordelia led her back down the stairs.
###
"He's
okay," Angel pronounced later, after taking a close look at Gunn.
"What did you hit him with?"
Fred was still
crying, but not as much; shaking like a leaf, though. Cordelia gave her a
cup of hot tea and watched the girl spill it all over herself.
There were bruises on
Fred's shoulders. On her arms. On her neck.
"A -- a chair
leg," she said. "He -- he told me to. Because we w-w-were trapped
in there. Wesley had an axe."
Angel sat back in his
chair and looked at her, at Cordelia, back at her.
"What about
Wesley?" Cordelia asked. "Is he -- "
"He's got a
concussion, at least, and he's not going to feel very good for a while. But
he'll live." Angel focused on Fred. "Are you okay?"
"Sure! Just --
just scared is all. And -- "
"Bruised,"
Cordelia put in. "And cut. With pulled muscles and a strained
knee."
Angel was trying to
find a way to ask. Cordelia took pity on him and turned toward Fred.
"Angel wants to know if Wesley raped you," she said flatly.
"Did he?"
Fred gasped out loud
and looked away. She was shaking even worse, if that was possible. Cordelia
held on to her hand, felt Fred cling with desperate strength.
"N-no,"
Fred whispered. "But -- but I think he wanted to. I think he would
have. Or maybe he would have just killed me?"
Her voice rose, like
that was the cheerful part. Cordelia felt sickened, sickened and angry and
worse, betrayed. Betrayed by Wesley, even though she knew he couldn't help
it. Betrayed by Gunn.
Betrayed by Fred, as
if it was even her fault, except that seeing what had been done to her made
it all real in a way that the wounds of strangers hadn't.
"Fred -- "
Angel didn't know what to say. He groped for something, and came up with an
inadequate, "I'm sorry."
"Quit
apologizing for your entire stupid male demographic and do something
useful," Cordy snapped. "Find something to tie them up
with."
"What?"
Angel looked completely taken aback. Cordelia met his eyes.
"How do you
know," she said, "that they won't do it again?"
###
Cordelia thought, and
Angel agreed, that Fred shouldn't be exposed to any more. They settled her
in her room, tucked safe in bed, and waited for Gunn and Wesley to wake up.
She shot looks at them now and then, but they seemed peacefully
unconscious. She wondered if they were going to be uncomfortable, with
their hands and feet tied up. She'd tried not to make the knots too tight,
but didn't dare make them loose, either.
Angel played a card.
She dragged her attention back to the game.
"Gin," she
said, and spread her cards on the table. Angel sat back with a groan. She
reached for the score sheet. "You owe me -- ooo! Eleven thousand six
hundred and forty-nine dollars."
"Do not."
He gathered up the cards and feathered them together with an ease that
reminded her he'd been around when cards were still a newfangled invention.
"Cheater."
"I do not
cheat," he said, and one-handed shuffled. "Not since I was ...
seventy? Eighty? Anyway, if I was cheating, how come you're up eleven
thousand dollars? Your cut."
She reached out for
the deck and froze as Wesley's light, cool voice said, "The unkindest
cut of all, betrayed by a friend."
She looked up at
Angel for reassurance, and then they both got up and went to Wesley's side.
He was awake and bleary, and his swollen, bruised face looked horribly
painful. His eyes were clear, though. She'd always loved his blue eyes,
never more than now.
"Wesley?"
she asked him gently. "Are you okay?"
He focused those
beautiful eyes on her and said, in Wesley's gentle British voice, "Do
I look okay?"
She didn't like the
dark undertone. "Wes, just relax -- "
"Oh, yes, just
relax while you fuck me over." She flinched. There was a special
venom, both in the word and the rage behind it -- from Wesley, who did not,
ever swear. "This is your doing, isn't it, Cordelia? You cowardly
bitches always stick together, running, hiding, whispering. I should've
made Fred beg for it, I would have if she hadn't been a cowardly little
slut and hit me from behind. No, I'm wrong, what does it matter whether she
begs for it or not? I'll just do it, and then I'll do you too, just you
wait. Just you wait. You'll beg, all right. Beg me to chop that lying little
head off that slutty body."
Cordelia had no
memory of moving but suddenly she was standing three long steps away from
him, pressed against Angel's cool, hard body. He was holding her hand. She
didn't remember him taking it.
Wesley exploded into
violence, fighting the ropes, panting and screaming, screaming horrible
things that she didn't want to hear, couldn't stand to hear.
Angel said nothing.
Did nothing. When she looked at him his face looked like a chalk Halloween
mask except for his burning eyes.
"We have to stop
this," Cordelia whispered. She was shaking all over, cold, freezing.
"Oh God, Angel, how do we stop it?"
"I don't know if
we can."
Wesley went limp
against the ropes. He was shaking with rage, and there was fresh blood on
his lips.
He grinned. That
predatory stare never left her.
"Slut," he
said. His voice was velvety-smooth and seductive. "I could've had you
when you were in high school, but I didn't want you, you filthy diseased
whore, because you had a mouth like a buzzsaw and you never knew when to
stop talking, did you? I'll bet you screwed half the school, didn't you,
while you were playing the virgin to me -- "
Angel let go of her
hand and walked toward him. He stood right over him, staring down with
those dark, violent eyes, but Wes didn't seem to even notice him. His
entire attention was locked on Cordelia and she felt naked and alone, so
very alone.
"Hey,"
Angel said softly. "Wes?"
"Look at
yourself," Wes said to Cordelia, as if Angel wasn't even present.
"Look at how you dress, you can't think we don't notice, even Angel
notices, and then when we respond even a little bit to what you're waving
in our faces you whine, don't you, nothing's ever your fault, but this is
all your fault, isn't it, Cordelia, it's all your -- "
Angel hit him, once,
hard. Wes went limp.
"Please shut
up," Angel said.
###
Hot cocoa. Cordelia
held the mug in her hand and even though the ceramic was ouchy-hot she
couldn't seem to feel it past the first tiny layer of skin. She was an ice
cube. An ice queen. God, how could he --
"Cordy."
Angel, who'd brought the cocoa -- even made the cocoa, that was some kind
of milestone -- crouched down next to her and tried to look her in the
eyes. She avoided. "Cordelia."
"Do you think
that's what he said to Fred?" she asked him without looking up.
"No wonder she's a basket case. And me all out of baskets."
"I need you to
start going through the books. Find out if there's some cure, some spell,
something. Okay?"
"Not down with
the looking-up now," she said. Her french-manicured fingernails had
blue cuticles, she was so cold. "Am I a tease, Angel?"
"Stop it."
"Well, am I? He
said you noticed. Do you?"
Angel didn't answer.
She finally looked up, and when she did, he reached out and took the hand
that wasn't wrapped around the mug. Boy, you know you're in trouble when
Angel's hands feel warm, she thought.
"Of course I
notice you, Cordy, I'd have to be even more dead not to," he said.
"You're beautiful. You're funny, and sexy, and strong. Men are going
to notice you, and that's okay, that's good, that doesn't make you a tease.
Neither does what you wear, or what you say."
She felt a tiny frown
gathering between her eyebrows. "Then what does?"
"What you mean
by what you wear and what you say," he said. "Look, I need you
researching. Can you do it?"
She sighed and drank
a sip of cocoa. It was hot enough to burn her tongue but warmth flooded
into her as she swallowed, and the rich taste of chocolate warmed her in
different ways.
"Sure," she
said. "Just as soon as I change into my nun outfit, okay?"
He did something that
she'd never, ever known him to do -- she'd never even seen him do it to
Buffy.
He kissed the back of
her hand, like right out of the stories. It felt, well, incredible.
"Wes loves
you," he said. "Don't forget it."
She nodded, suddenly
short of breath, and watched him get up and walk back over to where Gunn
and Wesley still slept. Oh boy. That hand kiss was what she'd begun to
term, in her head, a Close Angel Encounter. And CAEs were both good and
bad. Good because, well, he was a hottie, no getting around that even if he
didn't have a pulse. Bad because he didn't have a pulse, he sucked blood,
and let's face it, not the most reliable boyfriend material in the
universe.
She sat there
watching his strong broad back for a long time before he said, without
turning around, "Research?"
"On it,"
she said brightly, and moved.
###
Billy Blimm's family
tree was, well, bizarre. Not the official Who's-Who version, but the one
she pried out of his slightly-less-satanic cousin, the one with the big
apartment and cool pool table. No money for cab fare, so she used the phone
and managed to convince him to start dishing the family dirt.
"Billy's mother
was, well ... different," Cousin Ick -- she'd forgotten his first name
-- Blimm said. "I don't know how much I can say -- "
"I'm very
discreet," she said. "Promise."
"Look, if this
gets back to Billy -- "
"Trust me, it
won't. How was she different?"
"Well, for one
thing, she had these red eyes. Not bloodshot, red. Wore sunglasses for all
of her trips out in public, you know, started a whole fashion trend that
way. And Billy didn't get along with her."
Cordelia, drawing
doodles on a blank piece of paper, wrote down sunglasses and mom hates
Billy. "Is that where Billy's thing came from? You know, this thing
with women?"
"Probably.
Although to be fair, Billy's mother wasn't a wild fan of men, either.
Including Billy's dad. No mystery to any of us that she died young."
"How
young?"
"Billy must have
been about four or five. They were already at each other's throats,
couldn't put the two of them together in a room. He'd attack her, I mean
attack, with whatever he could put his hands on."
"Wow. Anything
else you remember about Billy's mother?"
The cousin hesitated,
and then said, "The smell."
"Smell?"
"I was really
young, but I remember she always smelled like honey. That's weird, huh?
Hyper-sweet. Not like a perfume, but like -- like she just naturally
smelled that way."
Cordelia dutifully
wrote down honey. She said, "Anything else?"
"Not about
her," he said. "Let's talk about you, gorgeous."
The idea of dating a
Blimm, or even letting one think about dating her, made her nauseated.
"Let's not," she said, and hung up on him. She swiveled the chair
around and look at the pile of Wesley's arcane books with a heavy sigh.
"Red eyes. Her
own child hates her enough to kill her. Smells like honey. Oh yeah, this is
a piece of cake," she said, and picked up the first book.
She dropped it again
at the sound of Gunn's voice. She couldn't tell what he was saying, but she
could hear the tone and it wasn't good. Angel's voice responded, still just
under the level of comprehension. Better she didn't know. Wesley had
brought her right up to the edge of despair, seeing Gunn that way might
shove her all the way over.
"Why the hell
can't these jerks ever write in English?" she muttered, and reached
for Wesley's translation sheets.
###
"Sodaara
demon," she reported to Angel. It was getting light outside, a
beautiful rosy dawn through the morning's ozone-destroying haze. Her eyes
felt like they'd been rolled in sand and stuffed back in her head, and she
was pretty sure that she looked not unlike a Sodaara demon herself.
"Red eyes, smells like honey. They hate each other. They even hate
having sex with each other, but they've got some kind of mating cycle thing
that makes them do it. They usually try to kill each other after."
"Billy's
mom?" Angel guessed. He looked tired, too, and pale, though pale was
pretty much a standard. "So Billy got half the instincts of a Sodaara
demon and hated just women?"
"I think that
had more to do with him really hating his mother and his mother hating him
back. Not exactly the Brady Bunch, more like the Bundy Bunch."
"So this touch
thing, that's a Sodaara specialty?"
"Yep."
Cordelia laid out the book for him. "They can change people, make them
feel whatever they want. Which would make sense why an important political
family like the Blimms might be willing to marry into the whole
demon-thing, if they used her to win friends and influence voters."
"Politics has
gotten so sleazy."
"Tell me about
it, Cousin Blimm tried to press the flesh over the phone." She leaned
over and pointed out the last paragraph, which was written in something
that looked like slug trails. "According to Wes' translation sheets,
that says anybody influenced by a Sodaara demon stays influenced unless
there's a special ritual performed."
"Great! Rituals.
I love rituals," Angel beamed. "What do we need?"
"Well, that's
the tough part," Cordelia said. "Two things. First, we need Billy
Blimm's blood, and I'm almost sure that if we go out there to hoover a vein
the police might not like it."
"The police are
going to be unhappy anyway -- you and me, both looking for Billy last night,
me threatening to kill him -- "
"Great."
Cordelia rolled her eyes. "Melodrama man strikes again. If we get Gunn
and Wesley fixed in time they can alibi us, right? And Fred?"
Angel gave her a
small, almost-normal smile. "We don't need to go back to the airport.
We've already got Billy Blimm's blood. Fred said that was how Wesley got
infected. He collected a sample of it."
"Oh. Then we
only have one other thing to get."
"What?"
Cordelia took a deep
breath and said, "The menstrual blood of a virgin."
Angel stared at her
for a long second and then said, "You're kidding."
"I so wish I
was."
"That's --
"
"Disgusting? Way
with you there, but I didn't write the spell. Apparently the medieval
sorcerer types used to really go in for that. Maybe there were more virgins
back then."
"I doubt
it." Angel looked lost. "Um, do you think Fred is still -- "
"How come you
didn't ask about me?"
He blinked.
"What?"
"I don't give
off virginal vibes? Just because I have fashion sense and know the proper
use of hair care products?"
"Cordy -- "
"So you just
assumed."
"Sorry," he
said weakly. "It's just that you're -- "
"So
trampy?" she asked brightly.
He looked even more desperately uncomfortable. "Help me out
here, Angel."
"So ...
beautiful?"
"Oh, good, make
it a question."
"No, I meant --
you're definitely beautiful.
And I'm sorry. I
shouldn't have assumed -- "
"That's
okay," she said kindly.
"Because I'm not a virgin. Jeez, short memory you have, demonic overnight pregnancy
ringing any bells? But lucky
for you, there's Fred. Who is
a virgin."
"Really?"
Angel, she saw, wasn't taking any chances she might get in another
psych-out. "You're
sure?"
"Not her gynecologist,
but yeah, she did some confiding late one night."
"Then about the
-- the other thing -- "
"Hey, vague it
up some more, that was almost clear. You mean the menstrual blood?" she
asked. He nodded and squeezed
his eyes shut, which was kind of endearing, really. "Do you know what happens when
women spend a lot of time around each other?"
"Um ... you ...
I give, Cordy, just tell me."
"Our bodies get
in sync, it's one of those mysteries of nature things. Fred probably knows some deep
biological reason, but anyway, I figure you're looking at another nineteen
days before you get any kind of menstrual blood, virgin or otherwise. By the way, be sure to write that down,
I expect you to be extra special nice to me next time. Want a calendar?"
Any second now and he
was going to give a little girl scream and run away, she was sure of it.
For a guy who sucked blood out of plastic bags -- on his better days -- he
was really squeamish.
"So what do we
do?" he asked. "Advertise?"
"Relax, I've got
it covered," she said. "The spell didn't say it had to be
fresh. Good thing our trash
service hasn't picked up for two weeks now. Nonpayment."
"Oh," he
said, and looked mystified. Then startled. Then sick. "Oh."
"Get Blimm's
blood," she said. "I'll be back, and if you ever tell Wesley
about any of this -- "
"I won't."
"Swear?"
"I'd cross my
heart, but I'd burst into flame."
"Fun-ny,"
she sighed, and went to change into clothes more appropriate for digging
through garbage for old Tampax.
###
Rituals. Lots of
oogley-boogley words and incense and candles and tossing stinky things into
open fires ... Cordelia was not a fan of rituals. But she got through it,
especially since all she had to do was standing there while Angel did the
incanting.
When it was over, the
whole hotel reeked of spoiled honey, which was not the Glade Fresh Scent
Cordelia would have chosen. But she could live with that.
What she was afraid
of -- still -- was that it wouldn't have done a damn bit of good, because
Gunn and Wesley were still unconscious even two hours after.
"Get some
sleep," Angel said as he sat down next to her. "You're brooding.
Only room for one brooder in the room."
She yawned, not
meaning to, and looked at the clock. Nearly 10 a.m. She'd been awake and
working for, oh, twenty-six hours? Sleep was just a dim memory.
"Nuh-uh, not
going," she said. "Not until something happens."
"Could be bad,
Cordy. Better if you're not here."
She shook her head
and let silence slip along for a while, then asked, "If it didn't
work, what do we do with them? Lock them up?"
"I don't
know."
"'Cause we can't
just let them go. It's not just me and Fred, it's all the other women out
there who -- "
"You don't have
to remind me," Angel said. "And I still don't know."
Gunn's dark eyes
opened. Wide. She nudged Angel but didn't say anything as Gunn stared
straight up, blinked, and then slowly looked down and around at the two of
them.
Angel slowly got to his
feet. "Gunn?" he asked. "How do you feel?"
"Like somebody
clocked me with a hunk of wood," he groaned. "Man oh man, my
head."
Cordelia leaned
forward and saw Gunn's eyes lock on her. Her skin shivered, but she tried
to relax. "What if I told you it was Fred?" she asked. Gun
blinked.
"Yeah," he
murmured. "I remember. Fred."
"Are you angry
at Fred?" she pressed.
"Hell
yeah," he said, and Cordelia felt her stomach do a five-story dive,
but then he smiled. "Girlfriend should have clocked me harder the
first time."
By the time Gunn was
untied and treated -- double vision was nothing new to Charles Gunn, at
least, and they had extra-strength goodies for the headache -- Wesley was
starting to come around as well. Cordelia got up to go to him, but Angel
held her back with one cautionary gesture.
"Wes?" he
asked.
Wesley opened his
eyes, and for the first few seconds looked mortally confused, especially by
the rope around his hands and feet.
It started as a look
of disbelief, then horror, then outright anguish. It wasn't right, to see
that look on Wesley's face, on anyone's face. His blue eyes skipped from
Angel to Gunn and rested on Cordelia, and then filled with tears of
absolute shame.
"Oh God,"
he whispered.
"Wesley,"
she said, and took a step toward him. He turned his face as far away as the
ropes would let him, and cried.
###
Gunn, more or less
okay, still needed a ride home; Cordelia took it on, knowing neither Angel
nor Wesley wanted her to be left alone at the hotel in Wesley's company.
Gunn's truck drove like a tank, but then it was a tank, a genuine
vampire-killing machine frankensteined together out of pieces of junk and
abandoned cars. Probably not street-legal. Little about Charles Gunn was.
"Hey," Gunn
said. She braked for a red light and looked over at him; he had his eyes
squinched shut against the glare of midafternoon. "I only got the
movie trailer on this one, but it was bad, you know? Wes caught the double
feature. You think he's gonna be okay?"
"I hope so, but
like you said, he had a front row seat at Fear-o-rama theater,"
Cordelia said. "Tune in next week."
"Hope not."
Gunn turned his face toward the sun. "I don't ever want to feel like
that again."
She wasn't sure she
wanted to know, but she asked. "Like what?"
He thought about it
until the green light came and she rumbled the truck through the
intersection. "Like there was no such thing as love in the
world," he said.
She reached over and
took his head. He held it a long time, not talking, still turned away.
"You trust me,
vision girl?" he finally asked.
"Sure." A
shade too much perkiness in her answer, covering up that tiny hint of fear
that still remained. His fingers tightened on hers.
"Probably
shouldn't," he said. He sounded very tired.
###
Wesley was gone when
Cordelia got back to the hotel. She found Fred and Angel sitting in the
kitchen, sharing a gallon round of Mint Chocolate Chip ice cream. Fred
spooked when Cordelia came in, ready to bolt. Dammit, she was doing so
well, too, Cordelia thought. Still, cave girl was out of her room. That was
a good.
She made straight for
the silverware drawer, got a spoon, dropped in a chair between Angel and
Fred and scooped away.
"Gunn okay?"
Angel asked.
"Peachy to
partly cloudy," Cordelia answered. "You know what this needs? A
shot of vodka, straight up. And maybe some valium. 'Cause I don't know if
ice cream really covers the trauma of me."
"Oh, I don't
know," Fred said. She sounded bright and cheerful and as fragile as a
soap bubble. "Ice cream does a lot." She dug her spoon in, ate,
and shyly glanced at Cordelia. "You were really incredible."
"Excuse
me?"
"Angel told me
you followed that Billy, and you wouldn't give up, and you almost shot out
his jugular with an arrow -- "
"Technically, it
was a bolt," Angel put in.
"And you weren't
afraid of him at all. Not at all." Fred sighed. "I was really
afraid. I've never seen anybody -- like that. Especially Wesley. He was --
"
Cordelia looked from
Angel to Fred, eyebrows raised, as she sucked another rich creamy delicious
minty mouthful from her spoon. "Are we having the talk now?"
"What
talk?" Angel asked.
"The one where
it wasn't Wesley's fault and Fred shouldn't blame him."
Angel shrugged.
"Except maybe it was. A Sodaara demon can let out your primal
impulses, but it can't create flaws if there aren't any. Wesley's got some
big bad demons down there. A lot of men do."
Fred slapped her
spoon down on the table hard enough to make them both jump.
"Hey!" she
snapped. "Don't you ever say that. Don't you ever tell him any of this
was his fault, because it wasn't! Wesley is a good man, good, he doesn't
feel like that, not even deep down!"
"Sorry, I just
meant --" Angel said in surprise.
"He would never
hurt me. Or Cordelia."
"Sorry."
Fred was on the verge
of tears, but they were angry tears. She shoved her chair back from the
table. "I thought you were his friend!" she said, and ran out.
Angel half-rose to follow her, but Cordelia pushed him back down again and
took another bite of ice cream.
"Fred's
right," she said. "Don't say that to Wes. He's got plenty of raw
torture material, he doesn't need any help manufacturing."
"I just meant --
"
"Yeah, I know
what you meant. Id monster, everybody's got one, you're the undead expert
on evil alternate personalities. But I can't believe that every man I meet
has gone some evil secret desire to hurt us, and neither can Fred,"
she said. There was a particularly big chunk of chocolate in the cool green
ice cream; she slapped Angel's hand and went for it. "We can't, Angel.
Because if we believe that, there's no reason to trust any of you.
Ever."
"Maybe there
isn't."
"Well, you're
just full of the cheer today, let's pass the purple Kool-Aid."
Cordelia sighed. "Think he'll come back?"
"I
wouldn't," Angel said honestly. "It was the hardest thing I've
ever done, coming out of hell and knowing I'd have to face all of you for
all the pain I caused. Face Buffy."
"But you
did."
"No
choice," he pointed out. "And you've never let me forget it, have
you?"
She was embarrassed,
but only for a few seconds before practicality kicked in. After all, Angel
needed reminding. Evil Angelus was always only one really great orgasm
away.
She lost her appetite
for ice cream. So did Angel. They poked at it for a while, then returned it
to the freezer. Cordelia rested her aching head in her hands.
"I feel like the
plane crashed and I'm the only one left standing," she sighed. Angel's
hand brushed lightly over her hair.
"We're all sole
survivors," he said. "That's the way it works. We survive alone
in this world."
"I don't like
your world."
He smiled bitterly.
"Hey, I just work here. Want to make it a better one?"
She nodded -- head,
hands, everything.
"Keep believing.
In me, in Wesley, in Gunn ... in all of us." His phantom touch got
just a little bit stronger, stroking her hair. Gently sensual. "We all
love you, Cordelia."
When she looked up,
he was gone, vanished, ghosted. Nothing left but his unwashed spoon.
"Men," she
said, and took it to the sink.
She'd never admit it
to Angel, but she loved them back.
-- end --
Email: juliefortune@attbi.com
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