E-Mail: Caligryphy@aol.com or PsychoCrack@Hotmail.com
Rating: R, for now. Deals with themes of Dominance/Submission. Not much of a cute story, and will probably go to NC-17, but that's a ways off. Beware.
Disclaimer: Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, and the WB, whomever else is a producer god with a chunk of Buffy--they all own everything BTVS. I'm just borrowing it to live my sick fantasies through, and will return the characters relatively unharmed.
Archive: Please, thank you, anyone who wants it, take it, and send me the link, so I can visit it. <eg>
Warning: Again, Dominance/Submission, Angel/Willow, not necessarily in that order. If you aren't an Angel/Willow fan, it's probably best to turn back now. This way leads to madness and despair. ...Okay, I'm just having warning fun. This is my first attempt at a story where I give Buffy some credit for being a good person.
Feedback: I love it to the point of involuntary convulsions. Hope you enjoy the story, in any case. And another thing... I am a complete and total slave to the fanfic cliffhanger. <eg> I believe someone used the word 'tease'.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Sunnydale.
The mall courtyard was a neutral enough place, for their purposes.
After six years apart, a Slayer with a badge and a not-quite-as-broody (but still going strong!) vampire met. She had a cappucino. He was content to watch. Buffy had aged, but only in good ways. Her hair had drifted to a light brown color and her style had become more conservative. But her eyes still sparkled with the same impish fashion-following glee they had before.
It was ten minutes before either of them spoke.
"Hi, Angel."
"Buffy. ...Hello."
********
After the opening lines, conversation came easily. There were so many stories to tell of the years they'd been out of each other's lives. Buffy was on her third cappucino when they heard the loudspeaker announce the mall's closing.
"Crap. I'm never going to get to sleep after all that coffee."
"Should've thought of that earlier." Angel suggested with a hint of smile. The pair rose from the relative safety of the table and the topics of her first attempt at a career in advertising that quickly gave way to a life on the police force, and his acclimation with downtown LA.
"Well, you can't just drop me home now, else I might not ever see you again... before I tell you the rest of what happened to everyone."
"Nobody's... dead, are they?" He couldn't help but ask. Buffy grimaced slightly.
"None of the Slayerettes. Even Anya is still around. She teaches at an all-girls school in Sacramento. Let's go for a walk in the park. Otherwise known to tweedy-bird as patrolling." The Gilesean nickname had begun with Xander and was rapidly becoming a favorite with the students at Sunnydale U, where he still worked. "--Giles will always be Giles, of course. He's gotten grayer, but he seems like he always was. Stammer man."
"You'll have to tell him hello for me."
"You're not staying more than tonight?" The vampire shifted uneasily. Like every painful part of his past, even though Sunnydale contained less guilty memories, he instinctively avoided the area.
"No. Finishing the real estate deal, then I'm moving on."
"Where to?"
Angel looked thoughtful for a minute. "Probably New York. I've made all the memories I care to make in LA."
"New York. City of crime, sex, drugs, and lights. ...At least remember to send a postcard. We worry about you sometimes."
Neither wanted to admit it, but by the time they rounded the first corner of the old park where they'd alternately kissed and throttled each other, they knew.
The love that would never die... had done just that.
********
"...And after the last time, he and Drusilla should be in New York somewhere."
"I don't think they'll ever go away. If they don't come here, they go to LA. Never a moment's peace." Buffy scuffed her shoe against the ground as they reached the end of the park. "But, such is life as the Chosen One."
"Tell me about Xander and Willow."
"Xander graduated with a degree in business... he works with textiles, or something. He got married for awhile, but then was divorced really really fast. Poor guy. He's kinda lonely now. At least, that's how he always seems to me when he calls. And Willow..." Buffy sucked in a breath, deciding just to blurt. "Willow quit after her freshman year at Sunnydale U. She starting doing lots of writing, got a few things published under pen names, then vanished... God knows what she's doing. She never calls anymore and she doesn't tell me anything when she does. When she does call, it's always rushed, like it's an obligation." Angel shared her frown as the Slayer's brow creased further. "I think she's in trouble sometimes. I have a tracer... Managed to get a hold of one, me being Ms-Officer-of-the-law person now, and I keep waiting for her to call me, so I can find her and make sure she's okay."
Boots crunched on the gravel. "I'm sorry to hear that."
"Oh, don't worry about Willow. I keep telling myself I shouldn't. After all, if anyone can take care of themselves, it's Willow." Crunch. Crunch. Crunch. "Right?"
"I suppose."
At Buffy's front porch, all that needed catching up was caught, and the caffeine was beginning to wear off. Their eyes locked in an awkward silence.
"Well." He half-grunted the Angel equivalent. She tried to be bright about it. "Here we are. ...Uh..." After considering and discarding several methods of attack, she finally decided on hugging her ex-honey as tightly as she possibly could. But in a friendly way. He returned the display of affection, and with a kiss on the cheek, they bid farewell for another final time.
********
"Buffy?"
"...Wills? Is that you?"
"Yeah, hey. How's everything?"
"It's great, Wills, how goes it with you wherever--say, where are you these days?"
"Uh... I...I'm a-a-around." There came a scratchy cough through the receiver...
"Are you sick?"
"Oh, no, em, I'm peachy, dandy, fine, keen--peachy-keen--Is everybody there still okay? Like, Giles, Xander, Cordelia, are they okay?"
"...They're fine. Although Cordy's still in LA... Willow?"
"--Sorry! Dropped the phone!" A squeaky, highly enthusiastic laugh made Buffy pull the phone from her ear. "I hate w-when that happens, when you're doing something, and then something stupid happens, and oh god, Buffy!" The Slayer held the phone closer as gut-wrenching sobs filled the static. "I'm so scared. I'm all by myself again. I want to--"
"Willow?" The static picked up, crackling malevolently through the hacker's words.
"--ome. I'm so sca--" The scream came unexpectedly into the receiver, the Slayer dropping the phone, startled. By the time she'd fumbled it back to her ear, the haunting sound of a dial tone was all that remained.
"Willow?!" The trace flashed back incomplete. But she did have a lead.
New York. Willow was somewhere in New York.
Typical.
********
She'd rung Xander, Cordelia, Anya, Amy, her mother, the Rosenburgs, Oz, everyone else in the Sunnydale phonebook she still had from about five years ago. Not that she was a pack rat, Buffy just tended never to throw things away, in case she'd need them later. Okay, so she was a pack rat. But she'd found a use for the phonebook, finally. Which just goes to show you.
Still, nothing turned up but a few old friends who wanted to reminisce.
Kicking her nightstand in frustration, Buffy dialed Angel's number again. Ever since he'd discovered the Internet, it was impossible to get through to his apartment.
********
"Stupid AOL. ...Booted me again..." Angel waggled a finger threateningly at the screen. "I'll do it. I swear, I'll switch to Mindspring. ...Don't you--Sonofa--" He picked the phone up on the first ring. "Hello?"
"Angel? Great! I've been trying to get through to you all day--er, night. I found Willow!"
"Really? How is she?"
"I don't know yet, I mean, I only sort of found Willow. She's not here--She called, sounded like she was in trouble and wanted to come home. She's somewhere in New York. I really need your help. I can't get out there until Saturday--"
Angel frowned into the phone. <Just like Buffy not to take off work to save her best friend's life.>
"--I called all the airports, even the one in Nevada, and they don't have anything to New York this time of year. You know what the Christmas season is like. I waited at the airport on standby all of last night. There was this girl there that reminded me..." He thought the edge of a muffled sob came from her end. "I'm going on about nothing. Hang on. Okay. I need you to look around, see if anyone knows anything. She sounded like she was sick, and really needed help. Please do this for me, Angel! You're the only person I know up there that I can trust."
He nodded into the phone. <How could I think Buffy'd be that shallow? I'm a jerk.> "Of course I'll look for her. She's still my friend."
"Theoretically." Buffy put in. "We don't know what she's been up to. She might be messing around with magic again, and there's no telling what might've happened."
"I'll make the rounds now. I just wish I knew more people out here. Things might go faster."
"Any help would be a big help. Thank you so much, Angel."
"You're welcome."
"I'll be arriving on Saturday night, promise to call, even collect! if you find anything."
"No problem. Bye, Buffy."
"Bye."
********
He wandered the streets. The gangs didn't see him, because they're all waiting for a good target, not one that might turn out to be carrying a gun. The cops didn't see him, because they're all just waiting for the gangs to pick on someone, and he didn't look like a crack dealer. Crack dealers hang out; this man moved with a mission. Everyday people didn't see him because, let's face it, who cares if he's hot? It's after midnight and he could be a killer. Anyone out in this part of New York at this time of night in this weather was crazy anyway.
<Where do I start? Where do I even look? She's probably in an apartment somewhere, being tortured by some demon--Hey! What am I doing, thinking about stuff like that? God, I'm a sicko.> Angel realized he'd been mumbling aloud about the time a homeless man threw a beer bottle at his head. It didn't connect, thank god. But it reminded him of good old Willy the Snitch. Not that Willy was in New York, but that bartenders have a supernatural ability for picking up gossip. <If I had the slightest damned clue what I was looking for besides a beautiful redhead in trouble!>
He stalked the streets until dawn.
********
America Online: People Connection.
Angel couldn't sleep. And when he couldn't sleep, he was on the Internet. It was like being connected to the human race despite the sunlight. It, like cable television, made him feel more mortal.
Chat: Find a chat now
He clicked through the list. Nobody was on in the morning. Nobody.
AOL Member created chats: Places: New York City
Empty as hell. About four people talking. About web pages, of all things. <Web pages. Maybe Willow has a web page? ...Can't hurt to look. But what are the odds?> He typed in every search category she might be under, and still came up with about a thousand search results. <Oh, come on! That many people cannot be named Willow.>
<Ah-ha. I was right!> Most of the search results had nothing to do with people named Willow. There was however, a serious glut of people in Red Willow County who had web pages.
<Great. This could take all night.>
********
"Angel?"
"What."
"No need to get snippy about it."
"Sorry. I've been up all day."
"Doing what?"
"Internet searches. Last night I hit the club scene."
"And?"
"Nothing. I'll try again tonight."
"Thanks, Angel. I really appreciate this."
"I know. I'll call back later. Bye, Buffy."
********
His nerves were wearing thin. Much as he wouldn't admit it, his sleep schedule was very important to him. He'd become spoiled, working at night, taking a nap when he got home, checking his e-mail, sleeping the rest of the day. Social skills didn't come too easily to the vampire, so he didn't mind being a little closed-off. Thirty-six hours awake, subsisting on bagged blood and adrenaline. He'd drifted into a seedy bar at eleven, and had watched with some trepidation as it filled to the brim with leather-bound trash by twelve-thirty. As usual, no one knew who he was talking about. The bartender, a balding man of about fifty with three nose rings, was the last on the list.
"What'll it be?"
"Scotch and soda." His fingers drummed absently on the bar. "Can I ask you something?"
"That's what I do, son, I pour and I listen."
"I mean, really. I'm looking for a girl--"
"There's lots of places around here for that." The tender flipped a glass towards him, smirking.
"No, I'm looking for a specific girl. She's around five-eight, bright red hair, into magic, the occult. That sort of thing."
"We don't get much call for that sort of thing around here. All you're gonna find is generic hookers."
A blush threatened to rise in Angel's cheeks at how loud the bartender was becoming, then his cheeks remembered--they don't blush. "I'm not looking for a hooker--"
"Course, if you're into all that 'weird' stuff, there is a place. They might have exactly the girl you're looking for."
"I'm not looking for a brothel, I'm looking for a friend--"
"But that's only if you're into the, you know, freaky sort of stuff."
"What, the occult?"
"Yeah, You wanna know how to get there?" "Hundred bucks." The vampire scowled at the tender, and contemplated the reaction the rest of the bar would have to his trying to strangle the man. "Come on." Grudgingly, Angel handed over a crumpled hundred. "Of course, if you want them to let you in right away... that's extra. Another hundred." Angel growled this time, having to fight not slipping into game face. But he had so much money in investments, what's two hundred bucks? Even if it was a dead end, he'd at least tried.
"Thank you kindly, sir. Now, if you take the subway down east..."
******** It was an even worse part of town than he'd been in before. From a certain point of view. Sex shops and seedy bars are up-front. You know what goes on there, you know exactly what to expect. The blank, faceless building walls that surrounded him betrayed nothing of what they hid. People on this street didn't stroll. They nearly ran, fast as they could, towards the subway entrances.
<You've been through hell and back. Why're you worried about walking into a club? Even a strange, one... whose entrance is hidden down a dark alley... hmm.> A large metal door, one that looked pretty soundproof, loomed against the night. <Here goes the neighborhood.> He rapped on the door. Once. Twice. Three times. The whirr of a moving security camera above the door caught his attention. A speaker crackled on.
"We don't recognize you. Have you been here before?"
Angel swallowed and glanced around the deserted alley before speaking into the air. "No. No, I haven't."
"Who sent you to us?"
"Uh... Inspector Clouseau. He's a bartender, down at the club--"
"We do know the Inspector." The camera lens zoomed toward him in a leering way. "Who are you?"
"A...Angel."
The speaker crackled. "An appropriate title. Enter, Angel." The door slid open, stairs descending into blackness. Angel took a deep breath, albeit he didn't need to.
<What am I getting myself into?>
End Part 1
Suddenly he was back in hell. Unfamiliar hands seized his arms, several pairs. In the darkness of the room, he could only feel the hood being slipped over his head. He lashed out, trying to use his vampiric strength to bail out of the blackened room. Handcuffs met his efforts.
"Mr. Angel, please!" A voice issued from his left. Someone had his right arm, another at his left. At least three. Could be more. "We try not to surprise everyone, but so few newcomers are willing to wear the hood. It's necessary to keep our operation, and your identity, under tight security. If you'll just let the guards escort you, all your needs will be addressed." The pair of guards dragged him forward by the elbows.
"Where are you taking me?" He had fallen into step with the guards, who led him down several flights of stairs, right, left, then back and forth in so many directions, he lost his bearings easily. "I don't want any trouble, I'm just looking for a girl--" He no longer cared who he was talking to, there didn't seem to be much point in waiting to see. "She's about five-eight, bright red hair, big green eyes, ivory skin."
He was shoved into another small room, feeling the guards leave him. He felt the handcuffs give way and yanked the hood off his face hurriedly. He was met by a small blonde woman who smiled seductively. "My, my... You're a live one. Follow me." Another door slid open in the wall. Angel stepped through, bewildered by his journey so far.
The room beyond made him swallow. It was spacious, dark, and filled with men and women of every shape, color, and maturity. The ethereal glow of blacklights surrounded the packed crowd on the dance floor. Many of them were half-naked, dressed in... <Oh. Wow. New use for mesh.>
So this is what the 'Inspector' meant by freaky. Instead of going to a coven, he'd run into a bunch of bottom-feeding users. A whole *lot* of them, too. A couple hundred patrons, a large crush of them on the dance floor, the rest scattered over booths and the bar area, some heading towards the darkened back area of the club.
"I'm Cookie. Like the dessert." His eyes snapped back to the little woman, who'd apparently been trying to introduce herself. "Unfortunately, if you want to have me for dessert, you'll have to make an appointment, but... in your case..." He scrambled backwards slightly as she latched onto the lapels of his jacket. "I might just have to have you with my coffee break." Talented--and *way* too experienced--lips met his.
Angel would later liken the situation to removing a leech. There was a loud sucking sound, such as the filling of a vacuum, and Cookie found herself held aloft a foot in the air, at arm's length. His eyes steeled as he found himself entranced by the lines of her neck. It would be so easy to--No, won't think about that. Not here to eat. "I'm looking for a girl."
"Look, I'm straight up, I'm not into that D/S junk, aight?" Cookie kicked her legs in the air. "Put me down or I call security!"
"Listen to me." His voice lowered as vampiric strength floated her to the floor. "I'm looking for a girl. You probably haven't seen her. She's got bright red hair--Not the fake kind, the real kind--Big green eyes, she's about Five-eight, slender, drop-dead gorgeous, and the smartest person you've probably never met." His fangs flashed. "Now you just--"
"You talkin' about Laurel?" Angel pulled back his canines before they became much too apparent.
"Huhn?"
"Laurel." The petite blonde nodded and took another long leer. "Now I know why a looker like you decided to show up. She practically brings in customers off the street. You look about her taste, but I'll be damned if you'll get an appointment. They've been booking her solid." Her claws took another appreciative, if cautious, perusal of his bicep. "But I'll see what's going on back there. Don't wander too far." With that, Cookie flashed him a smirk and sauntered back into the writhing shadows that seemed to complete the club's idea of a good time.
"But I'm not looking for... Screw it." There was no way someone like Willow would be working here. Not a chance in Hell. He'd just have to tell the girl he wasn't here for their idea of a good time when she came back. And why was his assertiveness gone suddenly?
The woman thankfully left him alone, and Angel, being a man of great intention but only fair innovation, made his way towards the bartender, waving him over. As he waited to be served, the vampire took in the conspicuous lack of exits.
"Can I help--Well! If it isn't everybody's favorite soulboy. What can I get ya, Angel?"
"Willy?" He could have recognized that voice in a wind tunnel. The man tipped his fedora and poured a gin and tonic, which he slid to the vampire. "I know ya don't usually drink, but hey, for old times." Willy bent closer. "By the way, I see any sudden violence directed in the vicinity of my face, and you're out of here so fast--" An unspoken threat remained unspoken, mostly because Willy the Snitch was a man of regurgitated gossip, and not one of linguistic skill. Besides, he'd never been threatening to anyone in his life, a fact that made him, happily, off everyone's hit list. "So what's going on?"
"You're a very poor imitation of Indiana Jones."
"So they tell me, so they tell me. But if I keep quiet about the vinyl underwear, nobody minds. I wear the companion pin-stripe suit on Fridays. Makes me look like one of those gangster snitches."
<It wouldn't take much either way.> "What kind of place is this? An underground club?"
The Snitch furrowed a brow. "Underground, yeah... You mean you just sorta floated in here without figuring it out? ...Hey! We've got rooms for that sort of thing! Yeah, you in the clamps!"
Angel made the mistake of glancing at who the Snitch was yelling at. He didn't think he'd be able to get the picture out of his head. He'd been rationalizing since he hit the main room, but he couldn't deny it any longer. "...It's... an..."
"S and M club. Yeah, basically. The atmosphere takes a little getting used to, but why should that bother the Sunnydale crew, right?" The Snitch practiced an overhand shaker catch, like they did in 'Cocktail'. "Look, we've got three of us at once. Hell, when's the Slayer gonna show up?"
"...Did you say, 'three'?"
"Yeah. You, me--though I don't even think I really count, but hey, you know?"
"Who's the third?"
"Laurel." Willy caught the look Angel was giving him, and whispered conspiratorially. "You know, the witch girl. Willow."
"Willow works here?!"
Willy grimaced visibly. "You didn't know?" He set the shaker down. "You should probably leave, while the getting's good."
"Where is she?" His eyes roamed the club for the hacker. "I don't see her!" He nearly wailed against the din. "Is Willow all right? Is she in trouble?"
"It's Laurel, now. She works in the rooms back there. But, if you ask me, it's a terrible idea to go and s... Angel?"
The vampire was already careening through the dance floor, moving like a soldier in a minefield, which meant he was going as fast as possible without hitting anything unpleasant. Reaching the back of the club, he saw a nicely decorated waiting area branching off down a hallway. He faintly heard a soft woman's voice coming from around the corner, and he power-walked down the rest of the hallway, seeing a man blocking his view of the receptionist at the desk. <Please let it be Willow. Please let this be Willow!> The man moved. It wasn't. "Damn." She couldn't be actually working here. Willow, innocent little Willow, could not be working here. He just wouldn't let that be true. And if she was, she <probably just filed or answered phones, or maybe she modeled or-->
"There you are!" His teeth ground against each other at Cookie's voice. "I thought I told you to stay put. Aren't you in luck, I'm such a shot, I got you in to see Laurel."
"You did?"
"Yeah." She nodded, no better than a cheap street whore in a seventies movie. You could hear 'Play that Funky Music' in the background as she sized him up like a block of meat. In this light, Cookie looked old. "Come on. You should have filled out paperwork first, but she had a no-show. I couldn't believe anyone wouldn't show up." She led him down another maze-like hallway, stopping at an open door. "But, first time for everything. Go on in and put on the hood. ...I was hoping we would get to have fun later, but Lady Laurel's going to tire you out, if I'm any judge, and I am. Maybe next time."
"'Lady' Laurel?"
"Damn skippy. You don't want to get on her bad side. Hurry up, get in. Don't keep her waiting." The door slid shut. He found himself in another seamless room, except this one had... features. There were racks... of... things. A hood lay on the table. He gingerly placed it over his head, and waited. A few minutes later, he heard an even, steady click. It got closer and closer until it was right next to him.
"Hello..?" His voice rasped out to the room.
"Shh..." The sound was more a rush of air than an actual word, but immediately recognizable to Angel.
"Wil--" He cut off slightly as something stuck between his lips, forcing part of the hood back into his mouth.
"No... Talking." Her voice was unmistakeable. Willow. This was Willow. His joy hit like a ton of bricks on the pavement when he realized something else.
It explained so much of the weirdness.
"That's a good boy." A gloved hand moved over his collarbone, caressing the taught muscle where his neck met shoulder. "You're so... tense... Mmm..." The doppelganger. Of course. It had all been a trick to lure Buffy out of her support range, to a place where she'd be vulnerable. Lots of vampires live on the wallets they lift from their victims, but some have been known to find jobs they can safely hold down in the dark. Her gloved fingers slid across his throat.
Hot, exhausted tears stung his eyes. This was worse than the first time. When the group had met up with the Vampire Willow at the Bronze, he hadn't had time to think about it. He'd just run to Buffy, still in shock. Then the real Willow had been okay. Still, Angel had walked home very slowly that night, as many of the others took some time to do after the event. Except this time she wasn't alive. The sweet little girl who had risked her life to save his soul had been turned. He felt beaten.
"On your knees." He heard the words, but stood there, dumbly letting it sink in. "I said... on your knees." Angel had another second to register the command before he felt the back of his right knee kicked in sharply. He hit the floor with barely a wince, stricken, grasping the hard flooring with both hands, like he was going to fall off of it.
"I see we're not going to be cooperative. ...That's all right. More fun." Another sharp kick sent him rolling onto one side. "For me." He couldn't see where she was going, and was having trouble sensing her. Going for the hood rewarded him with a third kick, this time to the wrist. "Naughty, naughty. I get to decide how we play." Her hands wrapped around his neck, dragging the vampire up onto his knees.
But just now, Angel didn't feel like playing. His right fist shot forward, knocking her back. At the same time, he grabbed Willow's falling body by the throat, snarling angrily, and ripped the hood from his face. He was ready to come up with something really malevolent and pithy to say, but stopped short.
The girl's weak hands clutched at his arm while at the same time, her feet were doing a patheticly spirited job of kicking at his nether regions. Angel's snarl faded. He couldn't smell or hear the pulse of Willow's blood--even her body temperature was practically that of the room, but he could feel every vein in her neck against the pads of his fingers. She had a pulse. His fingers loosened their death grip.
"Willow?" Same red hair, a bit shorter and sleeker than years ago. Same big, shining green eyes. Same flawless complexion, same soft skin, lips--
"Angel?" This was the voice he recognized. "L-let me---gluu..." He dropped her unceremoniously to the floor as two security guards who looked like they were Kevin Sorbo's stunt doubles burst in and grabbed him. He wasn't a match, especially not for the one of them who was a vampire. The guard hit him twice in the stomach before the three of them were halted.
"Wait!" The fiery woman on the floor barked. She rose to a height of nearly six feet in the monster stiletto thigh boots. They were black, as was the little of her bodysuit, apparently welded onto her sumptuous curves and sculpted from the same material as her boots... a sort of vinyl/leather/metal thing... Angel realized he'd been staring at exactly where the vinyl molded to the creamy skin of her hips. The guards hauled him to his feet at her sharp nod. The hardness came back in her face again. It was a subtle physical shift, but he swore he could see Willow go from the high school innocent he knew to this 'Lady Laurel'. <Dear God. Look at what she's...>
The riding crop she held nudged his chin upward forcefully. "Yarding's Coffeeshop. Corner of Eighth and Ten. Tomorrow night. Eight o'clock." Cold green eyes and a monotone betrayed no hint of what was to come. Lady Laurel flung the riding crop away and nodded to the guards.
"Willow, I need to talk to--" In a flash, Angel was re-hooded, hauled up several painful flights of steps on his back, and dumped into a garbage bin.
The vampire spat a sliver of greasy cardboard away. All he had left as evidence was a plain piece of black material and the string that went along with it. Angel was fairly sure he'd have to have a ballistic missile to break into the club again.
It was Thursday night. ******
"Hey, Angel."
Grunt.
"What was that?"
"Hi, Buffy."
"Still no news of Willow?"
"Y--No. Sorry. Got a lead. But I'm not sure."
"Listen, I was on standby for Saturday, but I just got bumped. I don't know when I'm going to be able to make it out there."
"That's fine, Buffy. I'll keep things up on this end."
"Right, Angel. Thanks. I love you, Bye."
Pause.
"Oh. Oh, gosh, I'm sorry... I... force of habit."
"That's okay. I understand."
"But I do love you as a friend, so I guess it works. I'm praying for you and Willow."
"You are?"
"I'm Catholic now. ...I guess some people are born again, I just sorta... needed it. I'm a better Slayer because of it."
"I'm glad of that."
"Bye, Angel."
"Bye."
Click.
End Part 2
Crazy Dream Sequence Warning!
********
Angel drifted in and out of consciousness for about ten sunlight hours. He really wanted to sleep. He really needed to sleep. This was going to get him killed. But he was terrified that clear thinking would keep her firmly in his thoughts. And that would make him crazy.
Willow wouldn't leave his dreams.
He remembered fragmented sections of nightmares. Acathla, Angelus, Evil Willow, and for some reason he didn't dwell on, lots of leather. And the last dream... more clear than the rest...
****** She stood at her window, red hair thick, braided, falling below her waist. A soft sigh floated out into the air. Willow was leaning against her balcony railing, humming softly, stargazing. "Star light, star bright..."
He could see her on the tower, even though he was far below, out of reach. Angel knew he'd fought hard to reach her prison. The briar scars still traced his bare arm. Though the danger in remaining was great, he couldn't control himself. The princess must be saved.
"...First star I see tonight..." He threw the cloak aside, dismounting the stallion and heading for the rough face of the tower with no door. His fingers were rough-worn from weeks on horseback, and well-suited to the task of climbing. The boots were a sharp-toed variety. He would have the princess, if it killed him.
"...I wish I may..." The tower face was laughable up close, full of nooks and crannies enough for a child. He wondered why she hadn't tried to come down before. He had almost reached the top...
"I wish I might... Have the wish..."
"I wish tonight." He finished the call, vaulting easily over the balcony to kneel at her feet. "Your majesty..." Angel removed his helmet, laying it next to his bended knee. "I have come for you, my Lady Willow."
"Who decided I was to be your lady?" Her white nightgown hung like gauze, billowing in the night breeze. At risk of being much too forward, he rose, taking her cool hands in his own, pressing a kiss on her gathered fingertips.
"I burn for you, my lady." He pressed a kiss onto her palm, urging her to stroke the curvature of his cheek. His hands came to her waist.
"I do not know your name..."
"Angel."
She smiled, fingertips running over his lips. "An appropriate title." His mouth swooped lower, but the princess ducked back. "Ah-ah. Be careful. I'm fragile."
"Indeed, my lady." His lips caught hers in a bruising kiss, taking her light form up in his powerful arms, crushing the princess to his chest. She whimpered pitifully against his assault. He stroked the small of her back, feeling the damp nightgown cling to her skin. Damp..? Angel pulled back.
Where fingers should be, there were claws, rending her ivory flesh. The nightgown's gauze lay wet with blood against her savaged skin. His fangs had slit the length of her lips. Rivulets of blood coated the floor.
Startled, he tried to lift her off his chest, but every time he tried to touch her, his hands would lacerate a new section of the girl. Her eyes were the worst. Cold and dead, mute from shock, her mouth opened in a silent scream to the heavens. Roughly, he threw her from him, sending her tumbling. The red-head hit the floor with a sickening thud.
He threw back his head, laughed heartily, and bent to drink, yellow eyes flashing.
******
Angel poured himself another bag of A and wiped the sleep out of his eyes. Tonight, he was going to see Willow again. Whether she was good or evil, he had no idea. Maybe it was the thought of her innocence that made his stomach turn so violently at the woman he'd seen last night. Maybe she had a good reason for being there. Maybe she was working undercover, tracking demons or--
Angel sighed again and looked at the clock. He was going to be late if he didn't get going soon. But he was scared out of his mind.
****(Coffeeshop)****
"...Where is she?" His hands wrung together nervously. Exhaustion in a coffeehouse could only lead to one thing. Drinking one espresso. Waiting. Drinking another espresso. Waiting. Drinking a latte, for variance. Waiting. Having a cappucino. Angel was wired like a Christmas light display. Then she walked in.
He half-expected the outfit to be black vinyl with studs, and swatted away the mental picture when it hit him. Willow smiled brightly at the waiter, bouncing slightly on her toes. She looked just the same, maybe a little older, but just the same as she had years ago. Her youth and beauty had seemed only to deepen. Angel was shocked. Buffy had changed. Cordelia had definitely changed. Willow looked exactly the same. But then there was last night...
He looked down at the murky depths of the coffee mug, coughing and praying that the tightening of his jeans would go away quickly. A lilting voice broke the silence.
"Angel." Her eyes shone with warmth. She stood there, a little awkwardly. "You came. I'm glad." Willow sank into the chair across the room gratefully, sighing a little. "I didn't think you would."
The priss in him got the better hand. "After last night--" He shook his head, frowning. "What was last night?"
Willow smiled brightly at the waiter, who handed her a coffee cup and a napkin. She looked from the napkin to the waiter, who blushed, smiled, and left.
"What was that about?"
"He gave me his phone number." Willow turned a shade of red only available at a Sherwin Williams paint store near you. "He's tried to flirt before."
"Willow... we need to talk."
"We are talking." Her innocent face took on a few lines up close. "I just... I don't want to lose another friend."
"Neither do I. What's going on? You call Buffy frantically, you run around, I see you in the weirdest of places doing God knows what--Wait, I do know what you do. It's disgusting, Willow. What happened to college? What happened to all the wonderful things you were going to do with your life? What happened to you?"
"I became me." Willow's eyes flashed cold again.
"That's no excuse--"
"Shut up, Angel. You're not my mother."
"I'm your friend."
"Then be quiet and let me talk." Her voice resonated and harmonized with the air. Angel tried to force his lips to move, but all that came from them was air. She stared down at him, a little of the cold leaving, but with a definite chilliness. "I didn't mean to cause anyone any trouble. By the way, if you're interested, this is a pretty handy spell for getting people's attention." The coffee met her unmarred lips, dream images flashing through his mind. "I've taken your voice away. I'll give it back to you in a minute. Just let me say my piece."
"I was plain old Willow Rosenberg. Useful, but ultimately not creative and nothing more than smart. Pretty, but virginal. Even when I'd had sex a couple of times, virginal little Willow. Fragile little Willow. Willow is a sad name, you know. My parents gave me that name because I was a colicky baby. I never stopped crying. I cried all through school and all through college, and I spent most of my life hating myself and wondering what was wrong with me." "I am a witch now. Not a Wicca. I gave up that whole goddess thing. I'm a witch in the true sense, the empowering, controlling one. I can hold the world in my palm. I'm practically a sourceress. I enjoy power. I like power. It gives me a happy, as we used to say." She smirked, sipping the coffee. "I left college because Oz was there, Xander was there, Buffy was there, Giles was there, and I couldn't be the person I wanted to--needed to be. I'm not cut out for life as a Watcher Wicca. And I don't want to have little baby wolves, and I don't want a husband who doesn't speak with inflection, and for one moment in my whole stupid, dumb life, I wanted to live. So I left." "I came here with a few dollars, my computer, and a willingness to do work. I got a job as a phone sex operator. I know, phone sex, with my voice, right? I was never very good at it, but as long as I spoke the lines... Easy enough. I published two fantasy/sci-fi stories under a pen name, still write a little, and through my telephone connections, got involved down at the Hall." "You once said to me that vampires aren't necessarily that different from their human selves beforehand. It's true. There are parts of me that I can't make known to the group, and I can't hide them in Sunnydale. But I can live here, in comfort and happiness, do what I want, when I want, and I don't have to be sad little Willow anymore. I can be Laurel. She suits me." Willow sipped her cappucino. She'd gone over the speech a thousand times in her head, knowing the day would come when one of them found out. "Oh, by the way, you can talk now."
Angel cleared his throat. "I'm not sure what to say."
"Then don't say anything. Just go back and tell them I'm fine."
"I can't do that. Buffy's worried. ...Why did you call her like that in the middle of the night?"
A flush again rose in her cheeks. "I'd been... working a spell... and my shift ran late, I forgot to eat... I was just... out of whack, and--"
"Lonely?"
"No!" She swallowed her acid tongue. "I mean, no. I'm fine, really. Just got a little carried away."
"Willow, you shouldn't be working in a place like that."
"Yeah, well. It's nice, actually. Let's me get alot out of my system that I need to get out." He arched a brow. "Well, geeze. It's not like I have sex with anyone. There's no blood-play. I just parade around in things I shouldn't be wearing in front of equally perverted strangers, and hit them." Angel gave her another strange look. "There's really much more to it, but... You won't tell the others what you found out, will you?"
"I've only talked to Buffy in the last six months. She won't hear it from me."
"Okay, then." Willow glanced at her watch. "I should get going soon. It's almost time for my shift." She rose to collect her purse.
"Wait. That's it?" Angel was still a little fried from the night before. "That's it? You tell me what's what over a cup of coffe and I'm just supposed to accept it? No. That's not the way things work, Willow."
"It's Laurel." She bent over, unexpectedly pecking him on the cheek. "And that's the way it's gonna be." Willow, aka Laurel, flounced out of the coffeehouse, swinging her hips hypnotically. Angel didn't even notice the waiter, a decent-looking guy in his twenties, come over. They both watched Willow leave.
"Man, that girl's something, isn't she? ...Hey, are you two going out?"
"No.... Why?"
"Just asking. Thanks."
No, they weren't going out... but he'd be damned again if he let her get away this time.
End Part 3
Willow shut her locker, tucking the last vestiges of her normal clothing away for the night. She turned the combination lock to zero, a little ritual, and set to fastening on her outfit.
It really wasn't that hard, being a dominatrix. As long as you were willing to suppress your inhibitions and your conscience, a girl could really start to get into it. It was hard to admit to yourself you enjoyed the kink, even more than the people who paid her more than lawyer's wages for wearing a leather bustier. After two years working in a Hall upstate, the corporation (Nobody quite knew who ran or owned them, but hey, they treated her right, why ask questions?) moved her to Manhattan. They'd set her up in a nice apartment and put her on a hefty salary with full medical. It was better than working for a computer company.
She wiggled her hips, cursing her damp skin. It was harder to get vinyl on than leather, generally speaking. Especially when it was all skin-tight. Next were the thigh boots. They always took a few minutes to finish lacing. The outfit was so tight on her it squeaked. Strangely enough, Willow loved it.
"Hey, Sheila." Another woman passed through the locker room. Actually, technically, Sheila wasn't a woman. But she may as well have been. You could hardly see her Adam's apple, and she was so sensitive about the whole thing. Sheila was a trannie who worked out front at the desk.
"Lady Laurel. Voluptous as ever. You know, I may just have to turn lesbian."
"You and me both. Nice shoes. ...Bet I could make more money that way."
"Oh, go with what works, girlfriend. You are the hottest thing in here. Besides me, of course." Sheila winked slowly, her carefully glued glitter lashes touching the blush of her cheek. "By the by, honey, you're booked up."
"Augh. Again? Do I at least have time for a break?"
Sheila glanced around conspiratorially, and then snapped her fingers. "Just for you, honey, I will see what I can do. Gotta dash now. Toodles!" Sheila tottered out of the room expertly on six-inch platforms. That was a drawback of working here. You were required to wear high heels. But you got used to them after awhile.
Thank god no one had mentioned the commotion with Angel. The two guards thought he was just an old boyfriend or something, come to make trouble. A few of the girls had that sort of problem. Cameras in the rooms kept a strict eye on what went on inside. The guards would leap to the rescue at the first sign of ignoring a safeword or outright abuse by the Dom, and likewise would come out with billy-clubs swinging to take care of the guys who gave into the impulse to give as much as they got. A girl really was pretty safe. Safer than on the street, anyway.
Time for the first appointment.
******** He'd followed her in the shadows, hardly believing Willow walked to work, and at night through that street. She was crazy. Nuts. Completely psychotic. Angel shoved his hands in his pockets, feeling guilty about lying to Buffy again on the phone. He couldn't tell Buffy himself about Willow's behavior, but knew he wouldn't be able to resist if she pressed. In a strange way, having Buffy there would be comforting. A woman can bitch-slap the sense into another woman far more humanely than a man is able. Just a gender talent, there.
She turned down a different alley, entered through a different door manned by a guy who was masquerading as a bum out in the alley. Angel also saw the camera sitting above the door. As Willow walked down the alley, she waved bouncily to the camera and spoke briefly with the previously sleeping bum, who held the door for her.
Angel didn't want to be seen by that camera, and was getting the feeling that Willow would eventually come out through that same door. He hoped. The vampire hunkered down behind a box, ignoring the freezing cold and the hunger pain he was getting. Soon, it gnawed at him, so he did something he'd not done in decades.
<Hungry? Why wait? Try a ...Convenient rat.>
********
She spun the locker dial open distractedly. The shift had been unusually grueling and even upleasant. Guess that's the way with all jobs, though, sometimes. Her Dom gear switched for jeans and a sweater, her head spinning.
<Not another headache!> Migraines were the worst. They'd been coming more and more often, lately. It was the magic use. Sometimes it was all she ever did. Conjure, from morning until night. Go to work. Come home, catch an hour or two of sleep, conjure. It was an awful, abusive power, but still she didn't stop.
Willow departed the hall at her usual time, walking out through the same alley, not paying a bit of attention to the drunk in the alley--Not the guard, the other bum--because eye contact is what gets them interested. She turned down the street, never noticing a shadowy figure following. She boarded the subway, no problem, and got on an empty car. The lines were deserted at three-thirty, so Willow was surprised to find she had another passenger to contend with. He sat straight across the aisle.
"Hello again." Her eyes darkened.
"Angel, I'm not in the mood for this right now. I've had a really awful day."
"It's nighttime."
"Whatever! Geeze." Willow crossed her legs demurely. All Angel could see was the memory/fantasy of her thigh boots pressed together. "Why are you following me?"
"I want to make sure you're okay."
"I'm fine. I'm a grown woman, I can take care of myself."
"Good, that'll save me a lot of trouble."
*******
They sat on the train for another hour and a half. The battle of wills was still going strong.
"Why aren't you getting off?"
"Why aren't you?"
"You're following me."
"Damn right."
"I already told you, I'm fine."
"You don't look fine." <You look beautiful.> "You look like Ally McBeal gone wrong." He tried another approach. "Look, Willow--"
"Laurel!"
"Fine, this is silly. Just let me walk you home--"
"So you can find out where I live and put up surveillance? I think not." The train pulled into Times Square. Willow looked out at the sign anxiously. Five people boarded. Early risers were starting to head to work. She counted the seconds carefully. Angel narrowed his eyes. One. Two. Th--
The red-head shot for the closing door, squeezing through just in time, nearly getting stuck in the door. She chuckled, before frowning at her own response. The train pulled swiftly away. Getting out her mace, never could be too careful, she took one step towards the stairs--
"Willow." Her eyes rolled and her foot stomped the ground.
"You're still here?" She turned to find Angel standing on the opposite platform. He'd managed to squeeze out the other door.
"Anybody coming?"
"What?" Willow hugged her coat to her body. "No. Why?"
It was like watching a trapeze artist. He sailed cleanly over the track, landing in a cat-like crouch. She shivered a little, that damn headache coming back again. "Fine. Come on, then. I only live a couple blocks from here."
Her eyes did that 'I'm angry' cold thing again, he noted with some discomfort. He was even startling to think of Willow as two different people. One, nice and sweet, the other, Laurel. If she turned out to have split persaonlities, he wouldn't be at all surprised.
********
"Uh... Willow?"
"Laurel. Get used to it. What?"
"What time is it?"
"It's about... five-fifteen. Why?"
"I'm... not sure I can make it to my hotel in time." He grinned sheepishly. "Could I...?"
"I got a spare room. Goddess knows why they gave it to me. A single would've been fine." She didn't even look back. Her headache was getting worse, and all her pills were on the counter. "You can stay until dark." Keys jingled softly in the dim light, and suddenly the entrance to her apartment was illuminated. "Well, don't just stand there. It's nothing special. ...Oh. You're invited in. Sorry." A blush rose again. <Why do I always do that?! Gods, I'm driving myself crazy. ...Just need to take some of the pills, then get to casting. I'll be fine.>
The apartment was spacious. It wasn't a palace, but it was nicer than most people in New York managed. The decor was light and colorful, a reproduction of 'Sunflowers' hung over the mantlepiece. He stopped to admire a distinctive sculpture for a moment, and then tagged along after Willow. Of course, being who he was, his eyes bugged out at the sight. She'd tipped about half a dozen little white pills into her hand, set them to her mouth-- "Willow, what are you doing?!" He snatched the bottle from her inexpertly, sending a shower of them into the sink. She folded her arms, then reached behind him for a glass of water.
In the close proximity, he noted her body temperature had started to rise to normal human levels again, and her cheeks were more flushed than when she'd invited him in. Willow's breathing was slightly labored, too. His hand closed around her wrist, nearly causing her to drop the glass of water. His voice was slow and full of threat. "I don't know what you've been taking, but you're going to spit those out right now." To show he was serious, the other hand came under her chin, for her to spit them in.
Laurel gave a bit of a cold smile, and dry swallowed. "You want them? You'll have to come in and get 'em." His grip loosened on her hand, and she pulled the glass of water to her lips, tongue flicking the edge before she downed the water, ridding herself of the acrid medicinal taste. She could've been wrong, but that must've been a gulp. She was getting to this one. He'd be easy to have...
<WHAT THE HELL AM I DOING?!?!> The empty glass slipped from her hands, shattering on the floor. Willow backed off a couple of steps, swearing under her breath. "God, I'm sorry. Stupid, silly, stupid me." She bent to pick up shards of the glass, her limp hair falling in front of watery eyes. She felt ashamed. Of her behavior, of how she'd disappointed everyone. "They're headache pills. I get migraines. I took two more than I should've, to help me sleep a little bit. I'm an insomniac, sometimes it's so hard for me to get more than a couple of hours' sleep, and then I go to work practically dead, and-and-and the body temperature thing is just so that I don't get jumped at night by some vampire cause there's a group of them that hunt alot around here and they harassed me before--" She hissed slightly, one of the shards stabbing into her hand. "--And now I cut my hand." Willow dumped the collected pieces onto the kitchen floor, trying vainly not to cry. It didn't work.
"Here. Let me see..." He crouched at her level, taking her palm in his. His subconscious wanted to lap at the small wound, but the rest of him didn't even think about it. Willow was hunting. "Just a scratch. Doesn't look too bad at all."
Her voice was tiny, in the shadow of the kitchen counter. "I'm sorry, Angel. I'm sorry for being mean to you. I don't mean to get like this, I really am happy, I really am. I like what I do, and I like who I am. I'm just... I just wish..." She didn't need to say anything. He took her into his arms, letting her incredible warmth pour onto his skin. He stroked her back softly, whispering soothing words into her ear as she cried into his shirt.
Cradling her until she was asleep.
End Part 4
Willow woke to a ringing sound in her ears.
Thank God it was the phone. "Hello? ...What? It can't be--Oh, shit. I'm sorry. I overslept. I'll be down there... Oh. Oh, she is? Won't they be upset? ...Right. I do have a little vacation coming... I'm just not sure what I'd do with my time. ...That's an idea, Sheila, but I didn't think you swung that way." Willow giggled. "I should let you go. ...Right, be free! ...Thanks. Yeah, uh-huh. ...thanks again, Sheila. Bye." Willow collapsed fitfully back on her sheets. She must've slept through the entire day. It was already eleven o'clock at night. It was the first time in weeks she'd gotten a good night's sleep.
"Wake up, sleepyhead." She sat up, quickly, grasping the covers, a warding spell forming in her mind. Then Angel flicked on the lights, looking a bit sheepish. "Sorry."
"I can't see in the dark, you know. Don't scare me like that." She regretted being so harsh once the words had been said. "I thought you were supposed to be gone."
"I stayed and made you some dinner. I was going to bring it to you, but every time I tried you rolled over and pretended I was your alarm clock." He gestured to his left cheek. "You whacked me pretty good."
"Sorry." She propped herself up on the cushions. "I usually never sleep so much."
"It's okay." Angel tried to keep watching Willow, but his eyes always strayed to the decor of the bedroom. It was very large, a queen sized bed only taking up a little more than a third of the room. The walls were painted black, covered with careful designs in white chalk and several substances he couldn't identify. Runes, sigils, something like that. A small hearth stood across from the bed. Little racks of potions and herbs littered the walls. Spell books were stacked on a low shelf in the corner. She had a collection to make Giles' mouth water. "I see you're still a witch."
"I told you that at the coffeeshop." He nodded, unsure of what to say anymore. The rest of her apartment had been easy to deal with compared with this. It was just... It smelled of thousand years old incense, power humans shouldn't have, ghosts and demons and bogeymen. It was creepy. It was scary. And the red satin sheets were unnerving him.
Did he mention the red satin sheets? She had red satin sheets. Red satin sheets that were tucked around her body, hugging the-- "What was that?" His mind had been wandering while she said something.
"I said, has anyone ever permanently anchored your soul?"
His eyes widened.
********
"That was it?" He blinked.
"That was it." Willow wiped ash from her hands, her smile genuinely wide. She had struck Angel dumb, once again. He just sat there, blinking, trying to form words that weren't coming. She ran her thumb over his forehead, rubbing away the ash that clung to it. He closed his eyes as her fingers lightly touched his skin.
The pair was quite a sight. They each sat cross-legged over a small incanting circle, aka, a circle drawn on the floor in white chalk, crossed with the correct stones and herbs necessary to call magic. In truth, Willow's magical command was so great, she really could've done it without the circles or herbs. But she'd learned from a great witch that magic is 'Eighty percent smoke, twenty percent mirrors. At least, that's what it's supposed to look like if it's done right.' Besides, laying out herbs and stones will always help you get into the mindset. "Say something."
Angel tried to swallow the lump in his throat. If he opened his eyes and looked at her now, he'd burst into tears. There's been enough sadness. "...Thank you." He heard her stand, her fingers leaving his forehead.
"Yeah, well. Knowing me is still good for something, I guess. I'm going out."
Surprised, he opened his eyes, glancing towards the door. But she was already gone.
"...Willow." He shook his head and went after her.
********
"Buffy?"
"Angel? Is that you? The connection sounds bad."
"I'm at a pay phone. Listen... I found Willow."
"You did?! Is she okay?"
"More or less."
"Don't go cryptic guy on me, Angel. I've been losing sleep over this."
"She's fine. She's... in a job she likes. She's got a great apartment." <She's changed her name and she's a dominatrix, she anchored my soul--> "She looks pretty healthy. But she is messing around with magic, and I don't think she has many friends here."
"Maybe I should fly out there--"
"No!" Angel frowned, correcting. "What I mean to say is, I think she's having enough trouble dealing with me finding her."
"You think Wills went away... you think she ran away from me?" Buffy's voice sounded forlorn.
"No, no, I think... I think she left because she wanted to establish herself on her own. If that makes any sense. She wouldn't run because of a few monsters. There are more out here than there. ...Buffy?"
"...It is me, isn't it? You found her, and she doesn't want anything to do with me."
"--It's not you, Buffy. Believe me, it is not you. I'm glad you sent me after her. I think she does need help. Maybe Sunnydale affected her more than we all thought. ...I--I don't know. I have to go."
"Ang--" Click.
********
Angel waited in her apartment with the lights off. After all, he didn't need them. He'd tried following her, but she'd literally vanished in the middle of an intersection. Disappeared. Willow had been striding away from him at her top walking speed, and then she Just Wasn't There. It was the weirdest thing he'd ever seen. "Witches."
So he'd gone and bought her groceries for the bare refrigerator he'd seen earlier. Then he'd booted up her computer and checked his e-mail through her network connection. And then he'd gone through her spellbooks, spent a very guilty ten seconds looking into her half-leather wardrobe, and now he was lying on her couch, waiting for her to come home. He was seriously contemplating getting some sleep. Her living room had no windows, which wasn't surprising. It was sandwiched in the middle of the building. No danger of sunlight invasion, and it was fast approaching four-thirty. He'd have to leave soon if he was planning on it.
<...Ten more minutes...>
********
Waking, Angel inhaled sharply. It's a reflex he'd never gotten over. He could hear the jangle of keys being pulled out of the deadbolt and dropped onto the table. "Willow?" He raised himself up on his arms, peering over the back of the couch at the doorway. He ducked again, quickly, as shoots of sunlight were entering the room. The door creaked shut after a moment. "Willow?"
She slid out of her coat, face red and windblown from the temperature outside. The next to go were her boots as she stumbled her way to the bedroom. Angel followed, bewildered. "Willow. Willow?" She didn't even acknowledge his presence. He followed her into the bedroom, noting that she swayed on her feet. It was as if she was under hypnosis. Her right hand tugged sloppily at her shirttails, untucking half of one side before collapsing face-first onto her bed.
"...Willow?" He called softly. "Willow." She didn't move, but her chest did continue to rise and fall in a reassuring way. He grasped her arm gently. "Will." He pulled her over onto her back. Her makeup was much darker than it had been when she left the house, her hair in a harsh twist. Pulling back her eyelid carefully, he noticed her pupils were diallated. He released the redhead, brushing the pad of his thumb over her eyelash as it fluttered to rest against her cheek. She looked absolutely beautiful, if wearing a little too much makeup for his taste--<Wait. That's not makeup...> He pulled his index finger against her purpled eyeshadow. It came away clean. <Magic. She did her makeup with magic.>
It's dangerous not to end spells, but to let them last for hours until they burn away. When he looked down at the comatose hacker, he realized that's what Willow was apparently devoting her time to. Glamours and dematerializations, or worse, transportations...
He nudged Willow towards the center of the bed, pulling off her boots with minor difficulty. <She doesn't own a car, yet walks all that way to work... Right, sure. She probably transports there. That's why she had to buy a subway token when we rode, instead of having a pass. Probably transports herself food, clothes, whatever else she needs, that's why there's nothing in the fridge.> Angrier by the second, Angel yanked the covers out from under her and tucked the little witch in. None of the magic books had a speck of dust on them. They all either got cleaned regularly, or were used quite often. The vampire growled with suspicion it was the latter circumstance.
He searched all the rooms in her house, finding absolutely no beauty supplies--<All her preparations must be from magic...>--and a room that he'd previously taken for a closet. It was a small, wood-paneled room covered with more complex runes on the side walls and two circles. The first circle was carved into the floor, taking up the entirety of the flat surface. Lines crossed it, and little candles and stones were set strategically into it. The second circle was on the ceiling. This wasn't carved, but drawn. On further examination, it was angular, sixteen sided, each side of the circle--Well, not a circle, whatever the hell you call a sixteen-sided figure--Anyway, each alternating section of the circle was drawn in coal and then chalk. It also had lines criss-crossing it, almost in the same pattern as the lower circle. He wanted to step into the room to examine both further, and then came to another sobering conclusion.
These spread to the edges of the closet. You couldn't stand inside the room without being inside a circle. He would be a damned fool to step inside a magic circle without knowing what it was used for. And two facing circles... there was some sort of name for that. The room buzzed with magic. The vampire closed the door slowly, finding he'd slipped into game face.
You don't make a room like that as a hobby. And you don't keep it up unless you're going to use it. And you don't cast safe things in a room with complementing circles. Worst of all, you couldn't cast from the hall. Those circles were drawn so that the caster would be standing inside them. Casting inside a circle is dangerous. It enhances the affects of the spell towards yourself. At least, you could use it for that. He couldn't just leave, now. This was serious. He decided he'd talk to Willow about it. If she didn't come around...
What then?
********
"I made you some breakfast." He sat at her kitchen table, reading the New York Times. It was a weirdly normal scene. Coffee brewing, toast just out of the toaster. Except they were both dressed in black and he was beginning to realize how hungry he was becoming. It didn't really bother him much, he'd become conditioned against it.
Willow arched a perfectly made-up brow, wiggling her toes against the chill of the kitchen tile. "Why?" She removed one piece of toast, put it on a plate, and proceeded to nibble the corners while staring at him.
"...Because we need to talk." He said, after a moment. The paper was folded and placed aside.
"About what?"
"About you and your magic." Willow leaned back in her chair, sighing dramatically and rolling her eyes. "You have a problem, you know."
"I do not have a problem."
"I don't expect you to acknowledge it. I've seen that room with the circles in it. What do you use it for?--Don't lie to me, either. I can have Giles on the phone cross-referencing before you can so much as disappear."
"Don't threaten me, Angel. I don't like being threatened." The air sizzled around them. Her look could cook eggs.
"Why would you feel threatened?" Angel tried to remain calm as possible, folding his hands. "You know what I think, Will? That you called Buffy, not because you were lonely, but because you wanted someone to come here and force you to start taking care of yourself."
She glared. "It's for summoning demons."
"What?" Blink.
"The summoning room. It's for summoning demons."
Angel snorted. "Now you're just trying to scare me. You can't summon a demon if you're inside the circle as well." But doubt flickered there.
"Not if you want the demon to serve you. It's perfect if you want the demon's strength or power for yourself, without that messy business of having to rely on a demon to do your bidding." Laurel was really having to suppress her grin. He got paler with each word. "They always get it wrong anyway. They pull loopholes in your request on you, that sort of thing. You can't trust them."
"...You're lying to me." He pleaded, gripping the table. "Tell me you're lying."
"Nope. And the two complementing circles help with dismissing the demon quickly enough so that you can borrow it's power without worry that it's going to try and possess you."
"B-but what if you call someone too powerful?"
"There isn't anyone too powerful."
"Goddamnit, Willow!" He thundered, rising to his feet. The forlorn kitchen chair toppled over. "You have to stop this!"
"Why?" She continued to nibble the edge of the toast. "Because you're my friend? Because you care about what happens to me? Because I tried so many times that the group didn't know about to pull you out of hell and you never once said 'thanks'? Because your demon tried to kill me back when I was weak?" Her voice was flat and even. "Or is it because Buffy, the long lost love of your life called and said,--" She did a syrupy-sweet impression, "--Angie-poo? I'm scared. Boo hoo. Go find Willow, so I'll feel better about how I never once called her in all the time she was gone?" She fell silent. "I always was the one to call, you know. Sometimes I did move, but I gave Buffy my number, those first two years. I made sure I kept in touch. It was always, gee Wills, gotta dash. Sorry, in the process of running out the door--but we'll chat later. I guess she just forgot alot. But then there didn't seem to be much point in making the effort anymore." She pushed the half-eaten slice of toast on the plate to the center of the table.
"Not hungry?"
"No."
"Feel better?"
"No."
"I want to help you."
"How? You don't even care." She shook her head, taking the dish to the garbage can.
"I do too care. I've always cared. I just... didn't think you liked me."
"What?" She spun around to face him as he righted the chair.
"When I was with Buffy, I always got the impression that you didn't want much to do with me."
"That's impossible! I worked so hard to help you out, cause you were--"
"Because *you* were Buffy's friend. I thought you were helping me just because she asked you to." He picked up the dishtowel, and began clearing away the meal. "We weren't really friends without Buffy, you know, I didn't know--If I would've thought--" The eggs were dumped in the disposal. "If I thought you wanted to be friends over and above Buffy, nothing would've made me happier. I don't have many friends."
"I'm not going to stop using magic."
"Then I'm not going to leave you alone." He said simply, handing her a plate which she passed off to the dishwasher. "We're going to be friends now. I've made a decision. I don't know anyone in New York, and it doesn't look like you know many people--"
"Wrong." She shook her head, putting a spoon in the dishwasher. "We both know Willy." And then Willow smiled. Just a little bit. But it was a start.
********
"And you're sure you really want to keep working here?" He walked her to the employee entrance, ever the dutiful escort.
"I'm sure. Night, Angel. I'll see you..." She shouldered her bag. "When I see you." And stalked towards the metal door.
"...Could I walk you home tonight?"
"But it's out of your way."
"I plan on being in the neighborhood." And without the use of magic, he was gone.
********
Angel had a new daily routine. He woke up, checked his e-mail, had a drink, walked Willow to work, went to work himself, walked Willow home, and went to sleep. It was a regimen that seemed to work. He'd gotten Willow to call Buffy and right things with her. She'd even phoned a more mature Xander, who received her call with outright joy. But the weekends were the best. That is, Tuesdays and Wednesdays. They both had to work on Fridays and Saturdays, and had their weekends in the middle. Angel waited for the weekends. He and Willow would get together and go see movies, talk for hours over coffee, take midnight walks in Central Park. Never a good idea, but someone would have to be a moron to assault the witch. She was a force.
That Tuesday, he went over to Willow's again, finding her leaning over the counter doing a crossword puzzle.
"What's a four-letter word for mute..? Mute *is* a four-letter word! Gah!"
"Dumb." Angel ducked as she launched the puzzle book at him. "You have too much stress."
"So they tell me." Willow hopped up onto the counter, swinging her legs in the air. They'd agreed in the chatroom that tonight was definitely a movie night. "So, what'd you get?"
"Blazing saddles, What About Bob, Braveheart."
"I'm guessing it was a 'B' theme."
"Yeah. I almost got 'Bannanas' instead of What About Bob, but Bill Murray's so great in it." Angel made microwave popcorn with all the skill Orville Redenbacher could provide.
"I'm saying we go in that order."
"Sounds like a plan. Here." He tossed Willow the bag of tapes, and she dutifully went off to fulfill her role in the video night. She got out the blankets and popped in the first video, letting the credits roll as he poured the popcorn into a bowl.
By three, they were both in tears.
"...I just...Can't believe he's dead." Soft but uplifting bagpipe music played through the cast of characters.
"It's--" Sniff, "Not fair." Angel wiped away a tear with the box of tissues Willow had fetched at the end of What About Bob. Braveheart guaranteed a sobfest. Of course, his tears were bloody, so the pile of tissues looked a bit like someone had experienced an explosive nosebleed. They watched the rest in silence. Angel clicked off the television, looking over at Willow, who was curled up in the blanket. "I guess I should go." She looked so pretty there, in the dark. He could feel the heat she gave off, sitting this close.
"What are you doing tomorrow?"
"Nothing."
"Want to stay here tonight?" He took a long look at her, before she blushed.
"No, I don't mean... you know, I mean, just... I have an extra room. I hate to send you home in the middle of the night."
"...Okay. Sure." He smiled. They both retired for the night, but Angel kept tossing and turning. Eventually he just got up and wandered through the house, cleaning up in the kitchen and living room. He stifled a yawn two hours later, and went back to the bedroom to try again, seeing Willow's door was open a crack on the way. He couldn't resist, and peered in at her. She was the true angel. She looked almost ethereal, glowing. ...She was glowing.
"Angel?"
He glared, stepping inside the room. "You've been casting."
She stretched, bathing in the red satin. "Helps me sleep. Can't you sleep?"
"No. Willow, I--" All the sudden, he felt lightheaded, like he was floating. The room spun slightly. He stumbled forward, clutching the edge of the bed. "What's happening?"
"Shh...Shh..." She made soothing noises, pulling him onto the bed with her. "Helps you sleep. Don't fight it. Just let go..." Her tolerance was much greater than his, and the vampire dropped off quickly, his head in her lap. Willow's eyes drooped, and it was seconds before she drifted off amongst the clouds.
End Part 5
Warm fingers idly stroked his hair.
"Willow?" He felt wonderful. Like he was lying on marshmallows and had severely overdosed on Prozac.
"Mmm?"
"What is this?"
"Oh, you're just buzzin' a little. It'll wear off soon enough."
"...You shouldn't be casting." He tried to put a growl behind it, but it came out like a purr. His head was resting on Willow's stomach, and she was taking full advantage of running her fingers through his hair. He moved one hand to her knee, idly tracing circles on it with his thumb.
"Right."
"I mean it." He squeezed her knee for emphasis.
"Stop! That tickles." Angel caught Willow's hand in his own as she swatted at her knee. "No fair. You're stronger than I am."
"I don't know about that, you floored me pretty quick for someone so small." He squeezed her knee again.
"I'm not small."
"You are too." He slid one arm underneath her, hugging her waist. For now, he was extremely content. Nothing could affect his good mood. "I'm going to be angry at you when this wears off."
"I won't be here when it does."
"Why not?"
"Got called into work. Lady Nightshade and Mistress Immiya both got sick." She untangled herself from Angel, who made the most adorable puppy-dog eyes.
"Tell them you can't go."
"I wish I could." She looked longingly back at Angel's waiting arms, the spell's effects having long been cleared from her mind. He would be feeling it for at least another hour. For a vampire, he had a low tolerance. "But I have to."
She walked to the mirror, almost gliding, and peered into it's depths. When she looked away, her face was perfectly made-up, her hair fresh and bouncy. Willow bent over the bed, the lethargic vampire taking in the sight of her nightgown appreciatively.
"I could walk you." He offered.
"If you can so much as stand up in the next hour, I'll be impressed." She laid a kiss on his forehead, and went out.
Angel snuggled into the space where Willow had lain. It still carried her warmth and smell.
********
The circles breathed.
********
"What do you mean, no?"
Willow had not gone in to work.
"No, Laurel. It's too much." The rest of the coven sat quietly, letting Zion speak for them. He was an old warlock, powerful enough to be called a wizard but diplomatic enough to know warlock was the best choice.
Willow shifted position. This wasn't going well. She'd arrived at the meeting on perfect time. There were always seven chairs clustered around the center table. Tonight, there were six. "Why? Are you all afraid?" She scoffed.
Zion held a hand up to stay the group. "No, Laurel. Just sensible." He rose on withered joints, leaning heavily upon a hand-carved staff he'd made long ago. "None of us expect to die by the hand of magic. None. What you've suggested so far have been innovative, creative ideas. We've listened, even helped you with some of them. But I'm telling you this not as a friend, but as a fellow dabbler in the Art; If you continue along this path, you will destroy yourself and everyone you come in contact with." The staff thudded against the ground, backing up the man's inflection.
"Y-you--" Tears stung at her eyes. <This isn't fair! They're treating me like I'm some kind of child!> "...Listen. I can cast better than anyone in this room." Five pairs of eyes shared bemused glances. "I-I can! It's true. You know it is. Don't expect me to deny it just because you all happen to be older than I am! Magic isn't supposed to be nice and safe. It's about incredible, dynamic ch-change! You can't just stop, you have to go forward, beyond safe limits, or else you won't be more than a kid with a magic book, doing tricks other people thought of before."
"Laurel." Zion peered out from under bushy white eyebrows. "There is an old saying my father used. 'Bravery is synonymous with stupidity.'"
She advanced a step, nose to nose with the old man. "I am *not* stupid."
Zion didn't budge. "Prove it."
She could feel hot tears of embarassment threatening to leak out of the corners of her eyes. "I already have. If you can't see that, maybe I d-don't want to be a part of this coven anymore."
Peter, the third in the group, a man of about 35, lowered his hood. "Good. Then that saves us another chunk of trouble." Zion glared at Peter, who stuck his nose into the air defiantly. "Someone should let her know."
"Let me...? Let me know what?!" <I'm not going to cry. I'm not going to cry.>
The old man turned on his heel, marched towards his chair, and sank down, creaking as he went. He had found her himself. Zion felt a bit like Obi Wan must've, when he realized his star pupil had a thing for black capes--Not that Laurel didn't have a thing for black capes, she'd been honest with them about that--but she'd had so much potential. And it was being wasted. "We... don't want you to continue being a part of the group."
"What?"
Peter spat. "Are you deaf, harpy? Go home and spank someone. You're not wanted here anymore."
"Peter!! That. Is. Enough!" Zion glowered. Magic was being drawn by someone in the room. The others could feel it, and they were drawing magic as well.
It had never gone down in the history books, but many a good coven has been dispatched by their own fireballs during disagreements. Witches didn't like to talk about it.
"Willow, I think it's best if you left." Willow's head snapped to attention. <Willow?! Did he just call me ...?>
"What did you call me?" Her eyes narrowed.
"Laurel, calm down." <They know! How could they possibly know? Angel? It couldn't be. Of course. That was why they were kicking her out. They'd found out what a weak-willed little thing she'd been out in Sunnydale, that she was lying to everyone-->
"I will not calm down! This is... This is..." She silently pled with Zion. <Don't make me leave.>
"Laurel. You're embarassing yourself. Go quietly, go now. Peace be with you." He raised his hood, as did Peter, albeit not before he snickered.
"Fine. I don't need any of your help." She stalked towards the exit, planting one heel on a small table of bottles and sending it crashing to the floor. "Parlor tricks. Just a bunch of goddamn fucking parlor tricks. Have nice lives."
The six watched Laurel leave. Zion was silent. Aumber, a matronly woman, spoke from the recesses of her hood. "She's going to get herself killed."
Peter nodded. "Sooner than later, I hope."
******** Maybe Willow would have recanted, had she known her brain was playing tricks on her. She had heard Willow, but Zion had said Laurel.
Willow opened the apartment door, checking. Angel had gone, leaving a note. 'I need to talk to you when you get back in. Call me.' She crumpled it, tears pouring down her face. "Such a fucking joke, that's what you are, Willow Anne." She marched down the hall, opening the little closet door and stepping inside the dormant circles.
They breathed in her scent.
<Wait. I'm stronger than that. I don't even need to use them.> She left the closet in favor of the circle on her bedroom floor, the one for everyday use.
The other side seethed.
She stripped down to her witches' robe, the one Aumbre had sewn for her when she first joined the coven. Barefoot, she stood in the circle, raising her arms straight out.
The demons heard.
End Part 6