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Author: Jo
Feedback : Pretty
please, whatever you thought of it. It will feed my muse for the next story
– honestly. Send it to thelibrarian2003@yahoo.com
Disclaimer: None of
these characters are mine. If they were, I’d look after them better. No
money will ever be made from this fic.
Distribution: The Angel Texts; Dark
Star’s Blood Roses Forum; The Angel
Elders Mansion; Scribes
of Angel
You want it? Really?
Gosh. Just tell me where it’s going please.
Spoilers: None
Rating: PG, but if
you don’t like Christian religious content being played with, don’t read.
Content: Angel.
Buffy. Maybe.
Summary: Why does
Angel always have to be Fate’s bitch?
TOMORROW’S GHOSTS
I’ve only been in
the cemetery for half an hour and already Buffy has found me. She always
knows where I am. She’s sitting on top of one of the tombstones, swinging
her bare feet around. Her high-heeled sandals lie discarded on the turf.
One of them has its heel buried deep in the grass, which is when it came
off, and she decided to stay barefoot for a while. I’ve never known how she
manages to fight in shoes like that.
It isn’t cold
tonight, not by a long chalk, but she’s wearing my old leather jacket. She
often wears it, but it still looks almost as good as new. I suspect it’s
worn better than me. No, I’m still not ageing. I’m just worn.
“Looking tired
tonight, Angel.”
I acknowledge the
truth of that with a grunt. I’ve never been much with words; well, I *can*
be, but it sometimes isn’t me saying them, and so I can’t trust the words
that come out. Least said, soonest mended. Do they still say that, I
wonder? So I stick with least said.
She chews her
chewing gum and peers around her. It’s a long time since I saw her chew
gum, and I wonder why, tonight?
“Seems like forever
since we were here together.”
Another grunt from
me. We parted a long time ago. I ought to move on, I really did.
She hops off the
tombstone and pads around me, her bare feet making the slightest whisper on
the mown grass. She’s inspecting me.
“You need to take
more care of yourself. You’re definitely looking seedy. Can’t have that.
Look at your coat – I can see at least three rips in it.”
I bet she can. Three
separate sets of talon marks, three times when something almost got me, but
she doesn’t know that, and I’m not going to tell her.
“And you definitely
need to get it to a cleaners. Couldn’t you dress better than that for me?”
No, my love. I’ve
got nothing else to wear, not even for you.
She takes a sniff.
“Good job vampires
don’t have B.O., Angel, but you really need to get that stuff cleaned up.
This isn’t like you.”
No, my love, it
isn’t. Please don’t ask me why. Please.
Suddenly she turns
back to her impaled sandal, and I think that it’s a pity the heel isn’t
made of wood. Her heel through my heart would be a mercy, although I can’t
tell her that, either. Properly dressed again, she takes her leave for the
night.
“I’ll be here
tomorrow, Angel, if I can.”
Tomorrow and
tomorrow and tomorrow…. No! I can’t think like that. So, I just grunt, and
turn away from her. When I can’t bear it any longer, I turn around, but she
is gone.
I take out two
vampires and a demon before I decide to call it a night. The demon was old
and toothless, but he fell to me anyway. Kill them all. Wasn’t that what I
once said? I must keep my vows. Look what has come from not keeping my
vows.
Dawn isn’t far away,
so I hurry back to my refuge. My lair. I’ve nothing fit to call a home
anymore. I’ve run out of money, and that’s why I find myself back here.
That’s why I find myself living in a crypt, where the dead, at least, make
no demands of me. There are no comforts of any sort in this lair. Leaving
aside that I haven’t seemed to earn comforts, I’ve only been back in
Sunnydale, although it isn’t called that anymore, for twenty four hours, so
it’s just going to be a case of curling up in a corner and waiting for the
next fight. And the next.
I’m at the door when
Wesley finds me. He, too, always finds me, and he never did have any sense
of timing. I pretend I’m just passing by the crypt. I’m far too ashamed to
tell him that this is what I’ve been reduced to.
He wants to know
what I am doing, why I look so shabby. I manage to persuade him that I’ll
see him tomorrow (tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow), and I hurry away.
When I creep back, just ahead of the rising sun, he, too, has gone.
I bar the crypt door
against the day, and huddle down into a corner. There is no sign of my
occupation of this place. I have few possessions, just the clothes I stand
up in, really, and the sword that I put down next to where I’m going to
sleep. When that sword breaks, or is taken from me, it’ll be tooth and
claw. I travel with less baggage now. The bare stone is cold and hard on my
flesh. That’s something else I have less of. I know I’m starving, and I’m
sure Buffy, or Wesley, or one of the others, will tell me about it, sooner
or later, but it won’t make any difference. I don’t eat much at all. A rat,
now and then, when I can’t stand the hunger any longer. I won’t starve to
death, now, will I? It brings other problems, though.
I tug my shirt out,
and inspect the flesh on my belly and chest. I’m much gaunter than I used
to be, of course, but I’m not healing well, either. The deep claw marks
have been there for a couple of weeks, now. They won’t really heal unless I
allow myself to feed. That means killing something, because once I start
feeding I won’t be able to stop. I can feel another slew of claw marks on
my back, but I can’t see them, and I can do even less about them than I can
do about the ones on my belly, so there’s no point in worrying.
I tuck my shirt back
in, and spend a little time, here in this almost total darkness, trying to
inspect my hands. I seem to spend a lot of time doing that. I spent a long
time looking for the blood that I could feel on them, but now I’m looking
for something different.
After a while, I
take out of my pocket the only other thing I have apart from the clothes
I’m wearing and my sword. It’s a book. Oh, not a printed book. They’ve all
gone, all the ones I had. It’s a journal of sorts. Not a diary, I couldn’t
bear that. An eclectic mix of extracts, bits of texts, things that I
remember but no longer own. Things to excoriate my soul. It doesn’t take
long to find the passage I want. It’s about tomorrow. I simply can’t bear to
read the first two lines, not after seeing Buffy, so I skip those.
"To-morrow, and
to-morrow, and to-morrow,
Creeps in this petty
pace from day to day,
To the last syllable
of recorded time;
And all our
yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty
death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life's but a walking
shadow; a poor player,
That struts and
frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no
more: it is a tale
Told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury,
Signifying
nothing."
I wonder, not for
the first time, if Macbeth could possibly be right. Life signifies nothing.
Everything that I have done, all the evil, the pennyweights of good, do
they signify nothing? The lives of all my loved ones? And I wonder, not for
the first time, whether I should ask Wesley when next I see him.
I fall into a
troubled sleep, and have nightmares about those I love. Nothing new there,
then. And the ghosts of the past come to visit, as they do each and every
day. I cannot bear it. All this time, and still I have not learned to bear
it.
*************
He sits with his
bare feet dangling in the stream, thinking about what more he can do. He
has laboured so long at his appointed task, and yet it seems no nearer
completion. He doesn’t hear the newcomer, but he knows someone is there. A
hand drops on to his shoulder.
“Hi, Gabe.”
“Hello, Az. Haven’t
seen you around in an age.”
“No. Must be at
least an age. Things to do, places to be, you know. The Boss just assigned
me back here.”
“You’re here on
business then?”
“No! Knew you were
here, so I just thought I’d stop by, see how things are.” Az has his
fingers crossed behind his back, even as he speaks.
“I’m on vampire
watch.” Gabe isn’t sure how much he should say to his old
friend…adversary…he’s not sure what to call him. Whatever, they certainly
go back a long way. They know each other so well that appellations like
friend or adversary no longer apply.
“Ah! Angel.”
“How did you know?”
“Word gets around.
How’s he doing?”
“Better than might
be expected, but not good. He’s lasted longer than anyone expected. He’s
going downhill, now. Personally, I don’t think it’ll be long before he hits
the point of no return. He’s almost there – another few days maybe. I’ve
got instructions for if that happens…”
Az curses softly
under his breath.
“Want to tell me
what’s been happening? If you don’t, I’ll understand. I know I’m out of the
loop on this.” He’s got his fingers crossed again, although he doesn’t know
why he should. Damn it all, someone like him can’t be expected to tell the
truth, surely? He sits down next to his friend and dangles his own feet in
the stream, feeling the exhilaration of the racing current. He’s really
missed this. If things don’t go right, he might never feel this again. But
not if he has any say in the matter.
Gabe turns to face
him, and sunlight makes the tears sparkle on his cheeks.
“He never has a
moment’s peace. He’s been on the receiving end of every dirty trick that
anyone seems to know. And it’s gone on for so long. I don’t understand. I
truly don’t understand why the Powers would heap all this onto him, when
all he’s trying to do is the right thing. It seems so unjust. So unfair.
Why would they do it?”
Perhaps against his
better judgement, Az tells him.
***********
It’s night again,
and I’m out hunting. Times change, things change, but there are always
demons to hunt. Faith is coming over the cemetery, towards me. She’s a
fairly regular visitor.
“Hi, big boy.”
I give her my
trademark grunt. She doesn’t seem offended.
“You aren’t moving
so well. Still having trouble with those wounds?”
She seems to know
more about me nowadays than Buffy does. I’m not sure why that should be a
surprise. After Buffy stayed in Rome, Faith and I spent some time together.
It didn’t work, and it didn’t last for long, but it was more than Buffy and
I ever had. But it went bad, too. I should have known.
She leans
nonchalantly against a tall headstone, a little moue of distaste on her
lips.
“Listen, you really
gotta do something about yourself. B doesn’t want to see you like this.”
Too bad. This is how
it is, now. That’s when the demon hits me, from the back. I should have
felt it, I should have scented it. I should have *known*. But I did none of
those things. Faith leaps at it, but it bats her away as if she were no
more than a shadow. I manage to kill it, but now I have a sword thrust
through my gut that will be weeks healing. I take my leave of Faith,
because I can feel the urge to feed spiralling out of control. Time for a
rat, perhaps. So weak. I’m always so weak.
I don’t leave it at
a rat. I really should have, but I told you. Once I start to feed, I can’t
control it any more. At least I manage to hold it down to a couple of feral
dogs. I disgust myself. It used to be said that the good die young, so that
they may not be corrupted, and the evil live on, that they may repent. I
have repented. I have repented in every way I can imagine, and it has not
been enough. I have surely repented more than any creature on this planet,
and I cannot bear it any longer.
When I get back to
the crypt, I slip in quickly, before Wes finds me. I spend a little while
inspecting my hands again. Sometimes I worry that my nails are getting
longer and harder, and I remember Nest and Kakistos. Will I grow to look like
them? It’s vanity, of course, perhaps the last piece of hubris left to me.
I deserve to have the appearance of what I am. I think that would be too
much though, so, every night, I look, just in case.
The nightly
inspection over, I sleep once more with the unbearable ghosts of yesterday,
and the ghost of Macbeth in my pocket.
**************
“A WA…mmph…?”
Az’s hand is firmly
over Gabe’s mouth, until he can trust Gabe to keep quiet. At last, his
friend subsides, and Az lets him go. As Gabe opens his mouth to speak, Az
puts his finger to his own lips in the universal sign for silence. Gabe
mouths the words.
“A WAGER?”
He sits in appalled
silence, and it is a long time before he can speak. When he does, it is in
a hushed whisper.
“What do you mean, a
wager?”
Az stirs the current
up a little with his feet, causing a small tide of misery for the unknowing
creatures below. At last, he gives a small shrug. He replies in an undertone.
“Well, you know how
it goes. Tough guy talk, one thing leads to another, and then it’s game on.
Started with one soul bet against another, then it goes to double or quits,
and after a whole load of that it’s my apocalypse against your apocalypse.
After a while, it got to dominion over universes, and now it’s got as far
as cosmic destruction, without let or hindrance. Everybody’s Judgement Day,
all at once.”
“Bu…but, I mean, why
didn’t I know about this?”
“Guess you’ve been
busy here.”
Gabe seems to chew
this over, and it looks as if it sticks in his craw. Good, thinks Az. I can
work with this.
“But what’s the
actual bet? I mean, he’s been tried to the utmost, but I just do as I’m
told. I’m just a messenger, you know.” This last is said a little
peevishly. Gabe has been a messenger for a long time. He’d expected to have
moved on by now.
“Well, I think it’s
changed over time, depending on the stage of the wager. It’s down to
whether he cracks or not. The latest is that he’ll be driven to suicide
before he gets the girl.”
“Oh. Who’s winning?”
“We are, I think. My
Boss won the last bet, that he’d weather the problems thrown at him, and I
have to say, your Boss did a da..shed fine job of trying to bring him down.
Now, your Boss says Angel can stand anything your side can throw at him,
and my Boss says he’s had enough, that he’ll dust himself. What do you
think?”
“I think you’re
winning.”
“Should we go take a
closer look?”
“Would it do any
good?”
“Don’t be so
negative, Gabriel. Surely you’re looking forward to Judgement Day? I know
we are.” Az has his fingers crossed again. Who the hell wanted everything
to be destroyed? What fun was that? His Boss was seriously worried that
he’d win the bet. That’s why he’d sent Az. Gabriel sighed.
“Okay, Azazel, let’s
go take a closer look.”
The archangel and
the demon slip into the cool jet stream and ride the winds around the
Earth.
***********
It’s still the
middle of the day when I wake up. I’m stiff, and I have a crick in my neck.
Buffy is here. She always finds me. I’d hoped she wouldn’t. Even in the
depths of my guilt and repentance, I never believed in sackcloth and ashes.
I used to have the best clothes that I could steal. Everything had to be a
statement, somehow. More sins. I’ve never been able to stop sinning, even
now, when I no longer even know what my latest sins are. My gut hurts, and
my shirt is stuck to the half-healed wound. She sees me wince and comes
closer. I wonder if she will offer to help, but she doesn’t. I’m glad of that.
She doesn’t say
anything, just stands frowning at me, displeased by something. I wonder if
she’s possibly displeased that I’m not dead.
When she comes, I
always try not to look at her, not to stare, not to want her as I’ve always
wanted her, warm and living in my arms. Today though, I look. She doesn’t
look any different from the girl I first saw, shining in the sunlight. She
looks younger than she has for a long time. Seeing her now, I wonder what
was the point of being dragged out of the gutter all those years ago?
Without that, I would have been truly dead by now, and I think I should
welcome that.
Still she remains
silent, inspecting my new accommodations. When she finally turns back to
me, reproach is shining from her young-old eyes. She slips from the door,
and is gone, lost in a blaze of light, where I cannot follow. Not yet,
anyway. I won’t be able to sleep again, so I pull my book from my pocket,
and turn to a well-thumbed page.
“Yesterday I loved,
today I suffer, tomorrow I die: but I still think fondly, today and
tomorrow, of yesterday.”
Lessing, some minor
18th century German playwright, knew a thing or two when he wrote that. He
didn’t know enough, though. Yes, I still think fondly of yesterday’s love.
How could I not? Despite all my sins and mistakes, despite the wretched
outcome for us all, how could I not still love her? As for the rest, better
to suffer than to die? Not any more. Not after all this time. Perhaps it’s
time for tomorrow.
***********
Gabriel and Azazel
ensconce themselves on top of the church tower. It’s the highest point
around. Az looks at the town around him, at this not-Sunnydale that the
vampire had returned to. There are resemblances to the original Sunnydale,
but big differences, too. Everywhere is different, now.
“How long’s it
been?”
“Since his soul was
stolen from Purgatory by the Kalderash?”
Az nods, and both he
and Gabriel shudder at the recollection. The Rom could hardly have expected
that particularly piece of insanity to go unnoticed or unpunished. If they
had thought that souls whose eventual fate had not been decided were less
noticeable, more expendable, than those finally allocated to one place or
the other, then they had been much mistaken. The Powers had been definitely
pissed off. Both of them.
“Two thousand, four
hundred and seventy three years, nineteen days and six hours.”
Az stares moodily at
the ground.
“Been a lot of
changes since then. Near-Apocalypses, fall of civilizations, that sort of
thing.”
“Yes. Big changes.”
Gabriel looks wistfully around. “It isn’t the prettiest place on Earth, but
it’s a lot better than nothingness. Strange, isn’t it, how whenever
civilisation rises again on this continent, they go back to what it was
like in the 20th century? I wonder why?”
Because that’s the
time I like best, thinks Azazel, and I keep pushing them that way. It’s
hard work, too. But he says nothing to Gabe.
“So, can I ask what
you’ve been up to with the vampire?”
“Well, I move him
around when I’m told to – it was difficult getting him to this new version
of Sunnydale, because he really didn’t want to come. It took a couple of
car wrecks, a murder hunt, and a bomb on a train.”
“You created a trail
of bodies? You?” Az is trying hard not to show his astonishment.
“Ran out of other
ideas.”
“Oh.”
“I’ve made sure he
meets the girl in every incarnation. The trouble is, he always thinks she
isn’t real. I’ve not been able to get them together, ever, since that first
time.”
“Why would he think
she wasn’t real?”
“Probably because
he’s haunted by all of them, all the time.”
“What?”
“Every minute of
every day, he’s haunted by the ghosts of the past. That was a standing
instruction. He tried to make friends again, you know, a number of times,
but none of them had the zing of that first grouping. He hasn’t tried for
nearly fifteen hundred years. That first group, they’re the ones he mainly
hallucinates. He still thinks that their deaths were his fault. Of course,
he thinks the deaths of all the rest were his fault, too… Buffy’s the worst
for him, so he gets her most often.”
“He’s been *haunted*
by his lost love for over two thousand years? *Two thousand years*? And he
hasn’t had a friend in the world for fifteen hundred years?” The poor
bugger, he thinks. I’m amazed he’s not banging his head on a padded wall.
Or dust. This stops. Now.
Gabe looks
shamefaced.
“I just followed
orders,” he mutters. Az decides to ignore that.
“Okay, let’s decide
how to deal with this. Now.”
“But…but, we’re on
*opposite* sides! If what you said is true, I’ve got to make sure he stays
alive, and you need to make sure he dusts. And I can’t remember now, am I
supposed to keep him away from the girl, this time? Or not?”
Az sighs. Gabe’s a
decent enough sort – for an archangel, of course – but he could be a daft
old buffer. Why was it that goodness always seemed to reduce the number of
brain cells? Perhaps they didn’t have any genes for sneakiness or low
cunning. He crosses his fingers again, ready to tell his next lie. His Boss
has given him carte blanche to end this game and keep the cosmos
intact, but if Gabe gets wind of that, his sense of honour would require
him to report back to his own Boss, and then the fat would be in the
hellfire. Az hopes the default position isn’t total cosmic annihilation.
“Look, Gabe, I
daren’t let anyone on my side hear this, because it isn’t quite in the team
spirit, but I really don’t want the world destroyed. What about you?”
Gabe eyes him up
warily.
“Well, of course, as
you said earlier, we all ought to be looking forward to Judgement Day. You
know, fulfilment of all our destinies, and all that.”
He looks around him,
and sniffs the breeze, redolent with the scent of citrus. He looks at Az’s
innocent-seeming face. Az has never, ever let the cat out of the bag about
anything that they’ve talked over between themselves.
“No,” he continues,
miserably. “I love this planet in particular. I don’t want nothingness. I’m
too old for a new start.”
“So, let’s start to
put a little action together. The game ends when he and the girl overcome
all and get it together, forever. What have you got planned today?”
Gabe tells him.
************
Buffy’s here again.
She’s curled up next to me, and her head is almost touching my shoulder.
Almost.
“What are you
reading, Angel?”
I show her my page.
Hamlet’s musings on death.
“…To die: to sleep;
No more; and, by a
sleep to say we end
The heart-ache and
the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir
to, ’tis a consummation
Devoutly to be
wished…”
She doesn’t read it,
though. She was never interested in my books. Perhaps, had we had time when
she was older, perhaps then she would have been. It never mattered to me
though. She gazes up at me, and she looks almost real. Sometimes, I’m
afraid for my sanity, because sometimes she looks as if she *is* real. I
think I see her walking down a street, or sipping coffee in a coffee house.
One time, I thought I saw her leading a mob bent on taking back their town
from corrupt warlords. That was during one of the periodic falls of
civilization. Those times when she looks real are times when I have to run.
So often in the past, I’ve wanted to think that my Buffy had been brought
back to life, but she hasn’t, of course. She’s in Heaven, and that’s where
she belongs.
Most of the time,
seeing the ghosts of yesterday harrows my heart. Not today, though. I’m
pleased she’s been to see me so regularly since I got back here. I tried so
hard not to come, but everything was against me, as if I was being herded
here. But I’m glad to have seen so much of her. Oh, I know she – and the
others – are just ghosts, hallucinations, but they are my constant, my
only, companions. And now I’ve decided to join them, if I’m allowed. I’ve
tried so hard, and I cannot bear to live any longer. So, tonight, I’ll
fight my last fight, and then I’ll wait for the sun. I’ll just open myself
to the light, and spread myself on it, thinner than the dawn mist. If I’m
not allowed to join them, maybe at least I’ll be granted annihilation.
Tomorrow, I’ll just be one of tomorrow’s ghosts.
***********
“So, we’re agreed
are we? Tomorrow, we make sure that he sees the girl. How old is she now?”
“Fifteen.”
“That will do.”
“Do you think this
will work, Az?”
“Absolutely, Gabe.”
“You don’t think
we’ll be caught? You know what my Boss does to people who don’t obey?” Gabe
shudders, thinking of the aftermath of the last rebellion. Az pats him on
the shoulder, despite his own shudder of recollection.
“If anything goes
wrong, I’ll say it was all my fault, that I deliberately messed up your
meticulous arrangements. He can’t do much worse to me than he’s already
done.”
Gabe looks at him
gratefully.
“Thank you, my old
friend.”
“No problem,” says
Az, a little gruffly.
*************
I’ve killed the only
demon I could find tonight, and I’m on my way to church. That’s where I’m
going to do it, at the Church of Saint Michael. Michael, the warrior
archangel. I’ve been a warrior for over two millennia, now. If there is
such an archangel, maybe he’ll speak up for me. Besides, the steps face due
east.
They still hold the
Compline service, where people can go to meditate on, and repent, the small
sins of the day. Mine don’t come into that category, but if I sit quietly
at the back, perhaps I can make a very private confession. And then, when
the church closes, I intend to wait on the steps for the morning’s sunrise.
There’s a nice, light breeze tonight. With a bit of luck, they won’t even
have to go to the trouble of brushing me away.
*************
“Pssst! She’s here!
Quickly!”
At Azazel’s words,
Gabriel hurries to the other side of the church tower, to join his partner
in crime. He’s shaking a little from the magnitude of what he’s about to
do, then he gets a grip on himself and mutters a few words. Being a
messenger, he likes to use words to bring things about. The vampire,
hurrying along the street towards them, ‘happens’ to glance into a side
street, and he freezes like a startled deer. He’s seen the girl, walking
towards him.
The demon and the
archangel see the emotions play across Angel’s face – fear, love,
disbelief, and sheer, naked need. Then he turns away to look in a shop
window, leaving plenty of room for her to pass him by, unnoticed.
“Oh no!” Gabe is
dismayed. He’s done this so many times, and it has *always* gone wrong.
“It’s going to go wrong again! What can we do?”
Az manages to hold
in his sigh of frustration, wasting no time reflecting on the archangel’s
underused brain cells.
“It’ll be fine this
time. You’ve done it just right, I’m sure. Very subtly.”
Surreptitiously, he
waggles his fingers. That always works best for him. The girl’s
ridiculously high heels catch in a gap in the paving stones just as she
draws abreast of the window-shopping vampire. She tips headlong into the
dark-coated figure, and the contents of her bag spray across the pavement.
As she topples from the broken heel, he instinctively opens his arms for
her, and she takes the vampire to the ground, where they sit in an untidy
heap, surrounded by lipsticks, compacts, combs, hairbrushes and other girly
things. There’s also a small stuffed pig.
There, thinks Az.
Deny that, if you can; disbelieve that you just got a warm armful of Buffy.
“Ouch! Oh, will you
just look at that! My heel’s broken. And ouch again. I think I broke my
ankle.”
She is trying gamely
to stand up, but she can’t. The vampire seems stunned. Sinking back to her
knees, she puts her hand on his arm.
“Are you okay,
mister? You look hurt. I’m sorry, I feel like a complete klutz.”
She pauses, to
really look at him.
“Hey, do I know you?
My name’s Buffy. Are you sure you’re okay? You look as if you’re having a
heart attack…”
And he thinks that
he might be, in the loosest sense of the word. When he speaks, his voice is
gruff, rusty from disuse. He can’t remember the last time he did anything
but grunt. And he can’t seem to get the words past the lump in his chest.
“No… no… I’m… um …
fine. Erm… I’m…I’m Angel. Let me see that ankle.”
Gently, he feels the
ankle, testing its movement.
“No, I think it’s
just twisted. Shall we, erm, shall we get all your stuff off the pavement…”
Angel picks up the
stuffed pig, and holds it out to her.
“Oh, poor Mr Gordo!
Well, he’ll wash. I seem to have made you all dusty too – they never sweep
these streets often enough, do they? And look, I’ve ripped your coat. I’m
sorry… We’ve met before, haven’t we? I know we have. Where was it? I’m
sorry, I can’t remember…”
He interrupts her,
his voice soft with incredulity, with pain, and perhaps with just a little
wonder. There’s no room for hope, not yet. Maybe that will come later.
“Don’t worry. Look,
let’s get you up and then I can take you to the hospital, have your ankle
checked. It’s not far. If I hold on to you, do you think you can walk, erm,
hop there?”
The smile she gives
him is dazzling.
From his vantage
point, Az breathes a sigh of relief, which is cut short by a mild curse
from Gabe. Even a mild curse is a surprise, coming from an archangel.
“Oh, fiddle-di-dee.”
When Az turns to
look at him, Gabe’s face is ashen.
“I’ve forgotten that
wretched curse! That was such a masterstroke, we thought that your Boss
would never be able to counter that, but I don’t know of any way to get
over that. What are we to do? We’ll all be doomed!”
“Don’t worry, old
fellow. We’ll keep watch, and I’m sure we’ll see that everything will be
fine. First things first, but I’ve no doubt something will come up.”
Az looks back to the
little street scene. The tiny crowd that had gathered is now starting to
drift away, as the vampire helps the Slayer-to-be to her feet. He sees the
tiny frisson that runs through Angel as he grasps her hand, and Az realises
that not only does Angel now know for sure who she was, but he also knows
for certain what she will be, and how much help she will need. He won’t
abandon her. Across the street, a young, dark-haired woman stands,
transfixed. Then she rummages in her bag and pulls out a very, very old
photograph. He knows what it shows. Angel. She’s his ace in the hole.
This is what has
occupied so much of Az’s time in recent centuries. He’s worked for
generations on the remaining members of the Kalderash clan, inflicting them
with all the plagues and pestilences he could think of, without actually
wiping them out. Boils, hives, diseases of sheep, that sort of thing.
Eventually, they took the hint, and went to consult a Sibyl. After she’d
eaten the magic mushrooms, he’d sent her the necessary oracular utterance.
The Kalderash must right an ancient wrong if the clan are ever to prosper
again. It has taken them years to discover what that sin was, and how to
fix it, and this young woman is the one chosen to remove the clan’s bad
karma. Now she has spied her quarry. Things are really looking up.
Gabriel’s voice
comes at his side, anxious.
“You really think we
can work it out?”
“I *know* we can.
We’ll take suicide watch on him for a bit, though, eh? Constant
supervision? Just to be sure?”
Gabriel nods.
“Can we do it
together?”
“Sure, old boy, why
not. Well done. You really did well this time.”
Together, they sink
to street level, and follow the pair, she leaning on his arm, he unable to
take his eyes off her, as she hobbles towards her home. She’s declined all
his efforts to get her to the hospital. If she thinks it odd that anybody
wouldn’t have an autocar in this day and age, she has said nothing. Az
feels the gypsy following at a distance, intent on learning about Angel’s
habits, the better to complete her task.
The nightwatchman
walks down the street, his voice clear above the small sounds of evening.
“Nine of the clock,
and all’s right with the world…”
It might well be,
thinks the demon. It might well be.
THE END
28 November 2004
Author’s notes
1 In her awesome
essay, ‘Idol Reflection’, Kita wrote:
“…the nameless
Powers of both good and evil are constantly fighting to have him on their
side, his existence and deeds were prophesized by ancients, and the fate of
the world occasionally depends on his orgasms.”
Gave me an idea. Why
does Angel always have to be Fate’s bitch? And will he get to the end of
his tether? Thanks, Kita.
2 The two lines from
‘Macbeth’ that Angel couldn’t bear to read?
“She should have
died hereafter;
There would have
been a time for such a word,”
2 Gabriel is, of course,
the archangel, the messenger of God.
3 Azazel is a fallen
angel. According to some sources Azazel was a leader of the grigori (also
known as "watchers"), a grouping amongst the fallen angels.
Interestingly, Azazel" is found in the Bible in Leviticus 16:8, 10,
and 26, but is not listed as an entity or spirit. The word is translated
"scapegoat" and simply means "the goat of removal." The
scapegoat (the azazel) is sent to wander in the desert, carrying the sins
with him while another goat is sacrificed to God.
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