Title: Then and Now
Author: Kat, a.k.a. KallieRose
E-mail: [email protected]
Rating: NC-17
Pairing: Willow/Angelus
Disclaimer: I acknowledge Joss Whedon as god of gods. All the characters in this
story are his creation, along with Fox, the rest of the Mutant Enemy Crew, and
whomever else wants to lay claim to them. I'm merely killing time by putting
them in totally unrealistic situations :-)
Summary: Angelus takes an interest in Willow, in order to tick off
Buffy. But it doesn't quite turn out the way he expects it to.
Spoilers: Spoilers for season 2 Buffy
A/N: A huge thanks to Gabrielle and Lisa for all their help and
support. Without the help and encouragement of these two wonderful ladies
this story would probably just be stuck inside my demented little head./
Then and Now
Part: 21
"I do love you Willow, as much as I can," Angelus murmured softly, telling her the one thing in death that he never could have in life. He gave her one last kiss on the lips before raining a trail of kisses down her neck. His demon face slid smoothly into place and he slowly sank his teeth deep into the flesh of her neck.
Willow's sleepy eyes flew open as she felt the fangs pierce her skin. This was it, she realized in a burst of clarity. Tonight he had decided to kill her. He had given her clues, she realized in hindsight. His odd behavior this evening; his sense of distraction; even his tender lovemaking should have told her something.
And she had been so close to making it work too. The thought taunted her. Another day, maybe two, and the curse would have been re-cast and Angelus would have been no more. 'If only' crowded her head and her heart.
She felt the blood leaving her body
through the twin pinpricks in her neck, and just as blessed unconsciousness
descended upon her like a veil, something happened. Angelus' body jerked
forcefully, his fangs retracting from her neck as he was thrown back and away
from her. Her last thought as she lost consciousness was 'what?'
Angel's back slammed up against the wall of Willow's bedroom, and then he slid limply to the floor, pain and horror clouding his vision. His soul was firmly in control again, but he was having a little trouble adjusting to that fact. Waves of revulsion rocked his body as he remembered the redhead lying still on the bed. He pulled himself unsteadily to his feet, grabbing his discarded pants and pulling them on quickly, before sitting down on the bed to look at the girl.
Not 'the girl,' Willow. Oh god, Buffy's best friend. Willow. The shy little redhead who had fallen under Angelus' spell without much of a fight, and was even now at death's door. All thanks to him. No, put the blame where it truly belonged: all thanks to Angelus.
All that time that the demon had been in control, Angel had been locked in some sort of void, a formless limbo. He had been unable to move, to make himself - his body, do anything. The only thing he could do was watch with growing horror as Angelus had worked his charm on the girl, preying on her insecurities and driving a wedge further and further between her and her friends.
It had sickened him to watch it.
But what bothered him even more was that he knew there was an element of truth in what Angelus had done and said. Willow definitely was unappreciated and treated poorly by her friends. He, Angel, had watched it happen on more than one occasion, but had never really thought about it. His thoughts had always been so focused on Buffy that things like that had seemed to fade into the background. After all, it was Buffy who was the Slayer; Buffy who was his soulmate. But Angelus had been watching, listening, and waiting. During all the time that Angel had spent among them, Angelus had studied them carefully, and when he had gotten free, he had taken that knowledge and used it to attack the group where they were the most vulnerable: he had gone after Willow, their heart and the glue that held them all together. He had separated her from those that really had her best interests at heart easily, thrusting himself into that ill-fitting role with a smoothness that was hard to stomach.
A slight movement from the girl on the bed, merely a twitch, made the demon rail against his cage. He had been so close, the demon screamed, so close to having everything. 'Drain her,' it whispered desperately. 'Drain my girl. Turn her. Taste the elixir once again.' Nobody would ever know when he came to himself, it insisted. Hell, he could leave here and they'd never even know he had been there.
Angel tamped down on the thoughts with some difficulty, hurling visions of purity and innocence at the demon, causing the creature to snarl and curse impotently. 'Mine,' he howled. 'She was mine.'
'You would have left her dead,' he shot back. 'You would have destroyed her and used her as a pawn in your sick game.'
The demon screamed angrily as it acknowledged the truth, the fatal error it had nearly made. It slunk back into the shadows in shame, the silence in his mind a blessed relief to Angel.
What would she do when she woke? Would she hate him? Try to stake him? She would have every right, he acknowledged sadly. He had taken her innocence, her virginity, and had done things to her that she should never have had to bear. She had been pure and sweet, and had done his best to corrupt her and turn her away from her friends and those who loved her. And then he had tried to kill her. And he would have, if it hadn't been for the sudden re-emergence of his soul.
He pondered that for a bit - how had the soul returned? What had brought that about? If he had to guess, he would guess that he'd been cursed again, but that magic was long gone. Unless...he thought of the gypsy woman, the one who had masqueraded as a young teacher. Maybe she had some knowledge that had allowed her to recurse him? But if that was true, then why did she wait so long? Allow Angelus to wreak so much havoc?
Questions crowded his mind, and he felt a sudden feeling of overwhelming hopelessness at everything. He ought to stake himself right now, he thought. Put himself out of this misery and make sure that Angelus never cursed this world with his presence again. But he was weak; had always been weak, and knew that he could not follow through on his threat.
But maybe Willow would. If he gave her the stake...
He looked at her sallow face, reaching down to smooth a lock of hair back behind her ear. Her pulse and heartbeat were slow but strong. She had lost a moderate amount of blood, but with proper care she should be fine. But if he hadn't stopped when he did-
The sound of the ringing telephone penetrated his solemn thoughts, his eyes moving wildly to find the phone. Should he answer? Who would it be? He was going to need someone to help Willow, but what if the person on the other end of the line was Buffy, or Xander? Neither of them would ever forgive him. Especially after they knew what he had done to her.
His eyes latched onto the handset sitting on the nightstand and he picked it up slowly, placing it next to his ear without saying a word. He would like to know who was on the other end before he revealed his presence.
"Hello? Willow?"
It took him a moment to recognize the voice, but he managed to place it. It was the gypsy. Jenny - no, Janna, he remembered. She must have been working to re-cast the curse, and succeeded just in a nick of time. One mystery solved, at least.
"Ms. Callendar?" he asked hesitantly. How would he explain his presence here? Should he even try? She would probably figure it out given enough time.
Silence greeted him. He could practically hear the wheels in her head turning as she tried to figure out what was going on.
"It worked. The curse, I mean. It's - I'm Angel."
More silence. "What are you doing at Willow's house, Angel?" she finally asked, her voice suspicious and uneasy.
"It's a long story. One that I think would be better explained in person." He cringed as he spoke the words. How could he explain what Angelus had done? They would hate him, and rightly so.
"Fine," she said, her voice curt and distrustful. "You and Willow meet me and Giles at the library. If everything is as you claim, you can explain it to me there."
"Willow, well, she's not in any condition to travel." He sighed. How was he ever going to convince her to come to Willow's house alone?
"What do you mean? What have you done to her?" she accused, her voice sharp and fearful.
Angel knew that this would be the first of many such conversations he had. The thought made him weary beyond belief. He ran a hand through his hair, his mind looking for ways to convince the teacher of his sincerity.
"He was draining Willow. When the curse took hold. She's okay, but she's lost some blood. I think she needs someone to make sure that she's okay," and I'm definitely not the person she needs, he added to himself.
He looked down at the young woman on the bed, surprised to see her eyes following his movements as he talked on the phone. She looked pale, confused and sleepy, but other than that she seemed to be okay. Placing his hand over the phone's mouthpiece, he whispered to her. "Willow, it's Ms. Callendar. I think you need someone here, and she's probably the best person. Will you talk to her? Convince her that I'm not Angelus?" He held the phone out to her, willing her to agree.
She eyed him uncertainly. A look into his guilty, anguished eyes was enough to convince her that she was talking to Angel, but she still didn't quite understand everything that was going on. She finally nodded slowly but was too weak to take the phone from him. He laid it down on the pillow next to her ear, trying to keep his eyes off of the bloody wound on her neck.
"Hi Jenny," she said softly, her eyes drifting closed, as if even this was too much of an effort.
"Willow, are you okay? What did he do to you? Is he really Angel?"
"I'm okay," she answered slowly, eyes opening to gaze at the vampire curiously. Soulful eyes, check. Guilty expression, check. Expressions of concern and self-loathing on his face, check. "I think he really is. You did the curse by yourself?"
"I didn't want to wait until tomorrow. Once I had the orb, I just did it," her voice dropped to a whisper as she added, "I guess I was just in time."
"Yeah," she agreed soberly. "I'm so tired, Jenny," she yawned, her eyes flitting back and forth between Angel and the phone. He understood, reaching to retrieve the phone from her.
"Will you come? I don't know what to do for her right now, and she'll need someone around for a little while. Someone she can talk to," he added.
"I'll come," she agreed, after a moment's hesitation. "I'll be there as soon as I can."
"Thank you," he murmured, but he was talking to a dead line; she had already hung up.
Part: 22
Angel laid the phone back into its cradle, his eyes shifting to look down at Willow. Her eyes were closed, her face blank. He could tell from her heartbeat that she was still awake, but she didn't seem to have any interest in talking to him. He got up and headed for the bathroom, thinking that maybe a cold washcloth might help alleviate the headache that she was sure to have soon, if she didn't already.
He wondered what she was thinking, as he searched the bathroom for a clean washcloth. After a few seconds of searching he noticed the cupboards underneath the sink, and started opening doors until he found the ones that housed the linens and towels. He pulled a white fluffy hand towel out and turned on the water.
Did she hate him, he wondered?
Would she ever be able to look at his face again without seeing the man who took
her virginity? And what about Buffy? The thought of hurting his love
brought a white-hot stab of pain through his heart, but he knew that sooner or
later the truth about Angelus' relationship with Willow would come out. As
much as he wanted to, he had no right to demand that Willow keep such
information to herself.
Willow felt Angel's oppressive presence recede and breathed a soft sigh of relief. Her thoughts were jumbled and she wasn't ready to face him just yet.
She had been so close to death that she could barely comprehend it. A few minutes more and everything would have been over. For a moment she wondered where she would have gone. Was it the reward her Jewish faith promised her, or was the Christian heaven really what happened next? Or had there been something else entirely in store for her? No matter what, it would have been cold and lonely without Angelus.
Angelus...who had cared for her but was willing to kill her in spite of that. She supposed that she shouldn't be surprised. He *was* a vampire after all. And like he had told her only a day ago, no matter what face he wore, he was still a vampire underneath it all. Still a cruel killer. And still the creature she had fallen in love with.
She could hear him in her head, laughing mockingly at the silly human who thought herself in love with a vampire. The image of his face taunted her; made her want to crawl into a ball and hide somewhere nobody would ever find her.
Now Angelus was no more, replaced by Angel. Buffy's Angel. The Angel that looked at her now and only saw Angelus' actions and the effect they had on her. The only emotions he would ever feel for her were guilt and sorrow. And yet, despite everything Angelus had put her through, *she* refused to feel those emotions. Her time with him had been difficult, she admitted, but she had learned things about herself and the way she acted and reacted towards those she thought were friends. He had imbued her with a self-confidence and a sense of self-worth that she would hold with her always, regardless of what the future had in store for her.
She couldn't hate Angelus. Not now, probably not ever. He had done so much for her, even if he didn't realize it while he was doing it.
But what of Angel? She would never see him as Angelus, or as a substitute for him. They were too different for him ever to appeal to her in that way. And she knew that his heart belonged to Buffy, regardless of what had happened between them lately. Although the way the Slayer had been acting recently, she wondered if Buffy still harbored any feelings for him at all. But that wasn't really the point.
Buffy's name stood like a huge 'Do Not
Disturb' sign between them, and regardless of either of their feelings, that
would never change.
The feeling of a cold, wet washcloth against her forehead alerted her to Angel's return. The beginnings of her headache receded a bit, and she gave him a quick look of thanks.
She felt the bed beside her dip down, and looked up to see him facing her, a question on his lips just dying to be asked.
"Yeah, Angel?" Might as well get this over with, she decided.
He was silent for a moment, as if he was trying to choose his next words carefully. "What kind of game were you playing? What were you doing with him?"
She looked at him, wondering which answer to give. There were so very many. She had been trying to buy them all time so that Jenny could curse him again; trying to keep her friends safe; trying to keep Angelus distracted; even trying to find out more about herself, through her time spent with him.
"I don't know, Angel," she finally replied. "Those aren't simple questions."
"Was this just some bizarre way of committing suicide then?" he asked sharply, his voice beginning to rise in anger and frustration. "I've become aware that things were bad with your friends, but don't you think your death would have been a little far to go for revenge?"
He thought she was doing this to get back at them? Did he really think she would do something like that? "You were there, *Angelus*," she spit the name back at him wearily. "What do you think he would have done if I had told him to go away? You know what he's capable of. Tell me! Tell me what he would have done." Her outrage cost her dearly and sapped her of what little strength she had.
"You don't know what he would have done. Neither of us do." He looked so far away, sitting so far above her and pronouncing his judgments.
"Get real," she said with what would have been snort of derision, had she not been so weak. "He would have gone after the rest of them. Xander, Giles, Jenny, Buffy," she ticked of their names on the checklist in her mind. "He would have done far worse to any of them than what he did to me."
Angel closed his eyes in defeat, dropping his head down into his hands. He silently acknowledged what they both knew to be true. Angelus would have gone after each and every one of her friends, killing them slowly and painfully, glorying in his revenge against her. She would have been left alone, desperate, afraid, possibly insane. Thoughts of Drusilla filled his mind, and for just a moment he imagined she had red hair and haunted green eyes.
Shaking his head at his fanciful thoughts, he raised his head from his hands and looked Willow in the eye. "What you did was reckless and foolhardy, Willow. There were other ways--"
"Don't tell me what I should have done!" she hissed, her eyes sparkling with anger and contempt. "I did the best that I could, and I won't have you telling me that I was being stupid or -- or reckless or whatever!"
Angel stared at her in surprise, never expecting to hear such a strong response from the young woman who was usually so calm and accepting. He wondered if it was because of her association with Angelus.
"Willow--"
"Don't 'Willow' me, mister. I'm through talking to you," she muttered, closing her eyes again and giving quite a good impression of being asleep. If it wasn't for his vampire senses, he might have even believed it.
Confusion filtered through the guilt, and he wondered what he could do. Everything he said to her seemed to provoke a violently negative response, and it was obvious that that was not what Willow needed at the moment. Before he could think of anything else to do or say, he heard a knocking at the door, and breathed a sigh of relief. The gypsy was here. Maybe she would have a bit more luck talking sense into the redhead than he had.
"I'll go let Ms. Callendar
in," he said quietly, leaving Willow to her thoughts.
Angel opened the door to a very nervous Jenny Callendar. Motioning her inside, he gave her a wide berth, due in a large part to the wooden stake she held firmly in her hand. She looked at him uncertainly, moving towards the stairway. Since Willow didn't seem to be downstairs, chances were that she was in her room.
"I think we need to talk before you see her," he said softly, trying to move her towards the living room while at the same time staying as far away as possible from her newest 'fashion accessory.'
She acquiesced, moving into the living room and perching uncomfortably on the couch. Her muscles were tense and ready for flight at the slightest suspicious movement by the vampire. "What do we need to talk about? And I'd like to know why you are here, if you don't mind my asking," she insisted grimly.
Angel settled on an uncomfortable chair on the other side of the room, keeping the woman's attitude towards him in mind as he sat down as slowly and unthreateningly as he could. "Willow and Angelus were...involved," he finally told her.
The silence stretched uncomfortably between them as the young woman digested this information. "Involved? Would you care to elaborate on that statement? Involved how?"
Angel sighed, staring down at the carpet as if he could wish his guest away. "They were sleeping together. Regularly. They talked too. Sometimes. They were...friends, maybe?"
Jenny stared at him in horror. "You bastard," she muttered, her eyes narrowing to angry slits. "I swear, if you've hurt her, I'll stake you myself," she vowed.
"I think--it was consensual."
"WHAT?"
Part: 23
Willow lay on the bed, drifting slowly into slumber, letting the murmur of Angel and Jenny's voices wash over her like a blanket of white noise.
A sudden, sharply shrieked "What?" broke her descent into sleep, rousing her mind again to wakefulness. Her ears strained to hear more, but the voices again went quiet and it was all she could do to figure out whether the speaker was Angel or Jenny.
Finally, her mind began to wander, her
body started to relax, and within minutes she was fast asleep.
"You're telling me that Willow was with him willingly?"
Angel twisted uncomfortably in his seat as she shot the accusation at him. Her tone seemed to imply that no matter how he tried to explain it, in her eyes it would always be rape. And maybe she was right. Willow was so young and innocent, not even old enough to be considered an adult. How could someone so young make an informed decision about something like that? And thinking back to how Angelus had treated her those first couple of times they were together...
"I don't know," he confessed softly. "There were times when she had a choice; when she could have said something to someone and put a stop to all of this. But she never did. Hell, sometimes I would swear she was happy to see him. In the end I think she cared for him. I know he felt something strong for her, in his own way."
Jenny looked across the room at him, staring him down angrily. "Demons don't have feelings for humans, Angel. They don't care about them. Humans are food to them, nothing more."
He met her angry gaze with his own calm one, smiling sadly at her sharp words. "Don't be an idiot," he said, watching her flinch slightly at the implied insult. "You know that's not true. The evidence is lying right upstairs in that bedroom. If all she was to him was a meal, she would have been dead days ago."
She shook her head, trying to deny his words. A thought crossed her mind. "How long has this been going on?"
"About a week," he admitted softly.
Angel watched her through hooded eyes, wondering what she was thinking right now. Was she blaming him? Did she think he was trying to take the easy way out for his demon's actions? Was she right?
"She was killing time, trying to distract you," she murmured, and he was surprised to see traces of guilt in her eyes. "Waiting for me to re-curse you. It would have been sooner, if only Xander hadn't broken the Orb." She looked away, embarrassed, as if somehow this was all her fault. "If I had only known what she was doing..."
Angel felt surprise, and something akin to respect, as he thought about the fragile girl upstairs. When he had asked her earlier what her motivation was for her actions, she had never really answered the question. Maybe now he had his reason why. He had greatly underestimated her; her abilities and the lengths she was willing to go for her friends.
And she had done something that few others had ever been able to: she had fooled Angelus too. Not only had she managed to keep a secret from him, but she had also worked against him without ever showing the smallest hint of duplicity. Angelus could sniff out betrayal better than anyone he had ever known. Yet she managed to conceal something this important from him; he had to respect her for that.
"She knew? She knew you were trying to give me back my soul?" He wanted confirmation.
Jenny nodded absently, her thoughts drifting elsewhere.
The demon inside him raged at her betrayal. He would tear her from limb to limb, make her plead for her life as he tortured her for hours, never letting her sink into the blessed relief of unconsciousness.
'She'll be nothing but dust by the time you're in control of this body again,' Angel told the demon resolutely. 'You'll never ever harm her or anyone else again.'
'She is mine!" it insisted. 'Mine to discipline, mine to fuck, mine to-'
'Kill?' Angel finished, his own anger rising slowly. 'You'll never be in a position to hurt her again. Ever.'
"Angel?"
Jenny's soft voice brought him out of his thoughts and concentrated his attention back on her. "Sorry," he apologized, ducking his head slightly. "The demon-it's obsessed with her. With her betrayal. If he-if he ever got loose again, Willow would be in grave danger."
The brunette smiled sadly. "I think we'd all be in grave danger, if it came to that."
Angel nodded his head slowly, his thoughts fractured as he tried to calm the demon while carrying on his conversation. "Yes," he admitted sadly, "he'd kill you all. But he'd make Willow hurt. With her it's personal. She bested him at his favorite game-betrayal. That's not something he'll forget anytime soon."
They sat lost in their thoughts; when Angel stood up, Jenny moved back further onto the couch, changing her grip on the stake so that it again pointed towards Angel, ready to strike.
"I think I'd better leave now. The sun will rise before too long, and I should really be elsewhere when it does."
"Yeah, facing the consequences of your actions would be no fun at all," Jenny snipped at him, her muscles tensing as she watched him move towards the door.
He stopped and turned towards her, his hand on the doorknob. "Do you really think it's a good idea for me to be stuck here another day? I don't think either of us want that."
She gave him a dour look before throwing out her arm in a 'fine, get out of here,' sort of gesture.
"You'll stay with her at least until she's awake?" he asked, wondering now whether she had been the best choice to stay with Willow. Perhaps Giles would have been a bit better at comforting Willow?
"I'll be here for as long as she needs me," she retorted. The words 'unlike you, you coward,' were left unsaid, but hung in the air between them.
"And the rest of them?" he asked.
"Her friends?" Jenny thought quickly and came up with the standard excuse. "She's been sick a lot lately. I'll just tell them she's had a bit of a relapse." Her eyes darkened with anger as a realization hit her. "It was you, wasn't it? She wasn't sick at all. It was just a cover because you had been fucking her, and feeding from her. Gods, how could I have been so blind?"
"Yeah," he agreed sadly, his guilty eyes looking anywhere but at her.
"Get out of here," she demanded, angry at him for the demon's actions, but just as angry at herself for her blindness.
"Fine," he said quietly, opening the door and stepping out into the night. The door clicked quietly closed behind him.
Just to be sure, Jenny walked quickly to
the door and operated the security bolt, listening with satisfaction to the
sound as the bolt slid home.
It was the light in her eyes that finally woke Willow up. She had closed the curtains and covered them with something heavy so that Angelus would be okay.
"Angelus!" she cried anxiously, her eyes popping open as she looked fearfully around the room for a pile of dust. Instead, she saw Jenny Callendar reading, sitting comfortably on the small chair that he often had used when he had come here to watch her sleep.
Her eyes widened as she the events of the previous evening fell down upon her like raindrops. Angelus was gone; Angel was back. He had tried to kill her-Angelus, that is. Not Angel.
"Jenny?" Willow whispered softly, watching as the sound brought the other woman's attention to her. Ever the curious student, Willow's eyes sought the title of the book her friend had been reading. The title, Ancient Romany Curses, made her even more curious. She wondered if it was just reading for fun, or whether there had been a deeper purpose. Maybe a way to permanently affix Angel's soul?
The thought bothered her, although logically she knew that it was for the best. But the pain of his loss was still too new, too raw, for her to feel any sort of happiness at the thought of Angelus disappearing forever.
"Willow?" Jenny asked, pulling her chair closer to the bed so that she could look down at the pale redhead. "How are you feeling?"
Willow did a quick check, then smiled wanly. "I'm alive, I guess. Thanks to you, that is."
The young teacher frowned as she tried to pick her words carefully. When she finally spoke, her voice was soft and soothing. "I'm not going to yell at you and tell you how what you did was foolhardy and dangerous. I think you already know how close you came to death, and maybe that's enough to convince you of how serious this was. But I do hope you'll tell me how you got to this place, okay?"
Willow began to nibble at her lower lip, eyeing the other woman uneasily. "Jenny-"
As if Jenny could sense her thought, she added quickly, "I'm not going to judge you, or tell you that you screwed up, or anything like that. I just think that you're going to need someone to talk to," she tried to convince the redhead. She added softly, "Someone who knows the whole truth."
Jenny waited for the inevitable brush-off. Willow looked so forlorn, so weak and pale laying there, but Jenny could see that the young woman wanted nothing more than to tell her to take a flying leap. But as she watched, the hard quality left Willow's eyes and they grew softer, and then began to fill with tears. The brunette reached out a hand, gently pushing the red hair away from the pallid face, waiting patiently for Willow's decision.
"You won't tell anyone? I mean, not even Giles? Nobody at all?" the hesitant words were quiet and shy.
"Just between the two of us. Nobody else will ever know, I promise."
"I'm so tired of lying, Jenny. There were so many, you know? First they lied to me, and then I lied to them, and then, when he came to me, I lied to myself. And it just got to be too much. Now I think it would be nice to just tell the truth."
So she did. She told Jenny about all of it. The initial meeting, the seduction, the sex, the blood. All of it. Her voice was soft and low, but sometimes the emotion in it was so thick that Jenny wanted to cry for all the young woman had been through. But she listened closely, never interrupting, and gave the girl all the silent support that she could.
And when Willow cried her eyes out for all that she had lost, Jenny held her and comforted her, and didn't try to feed her the meaningless platitude that 'things will be okay.' She knew such words would be hollow and useless.
Later, after Willow was all cried out and sleeping peacefully, Jenny let her own silent tears fall, grieving for the loss of the innocent young girl she had once known.
Part: 24
Angel wandered the dark night streets, oblivious to the hard rain that pelted him, meandering without purpose or destination. Thoughts of Willow filled his head. Now that he knew the motivation for her actions, that she had entered into her liaison with Angelus in order to save her friends and buy them time, he couldn't stop thinking about her.
He wanted to cry for the young woman who had been seduced by the demon. She was not insane; he had not turned her into another Drusilla, but she was now damaged nonetheless. He doubted that she would ever be capable of a normal relationship with a man, not after the things that Angelus had done to her. The things he had taught her to enjoy.
The sounds of her screams of passion echoed through his head, courtesy of the demon. Feelings of hopelessness and self-loathing filled him, and he knew that it would be so easy to give in now. To ignore the soul and go back and achieve another 'moment of happiness' in Willow's arms. He could turn her and keep her by his side forever. Never again would he have to feel shame or guilt for anything he did. Sure, it was the easy way out. But considering the alternatives, it sounded so very tempting.
And then he thought of Buffy.
His girl; she was sunshine and brightness and everything that was good in this world. Even now, after everything that had happened between them, he wanted to see her so badly that it hurt. He needed her forgiveness and understanding; needed her to know that even when the demon was taunting her, HE had been locked away inside, and he had never stopped loving her.
And how would Buffy feel about him after she knew about Angelus and Willow?
The thought made him stop and grab a lamppost for support. She would be so hurt; he could imagine the look of pain and betrayal in her eyes. And she *would* find out, he knew. Girls talked. It might not happen immediately, but someday Willow would let something slip, either by accident or in anger. And then Buffy would know.
Would she stake him, her heart heavy with anger and sadness? Or merely slay him with the anguished look in her soft hazel eyes? Either way, he was sure to find out sooner or later.
But what should he do right now? Should he go back to the mansion and face Drusilla and Spike? Face their pitying looks and angry accusations? Or should he hide from them, just like the coward that Jenny had accused him of being?
He was relatively sure he knew what their reactions would be. Regardless of Spike's accusations of abandonment the last time this had happened, he knew that the blond would have no use for a souled sire. They might tolerate him for a bit, but as soon as Drusilla realized that she could not tempt him into 'happiness' again, they would be gone for good. Or perhaps they would just lock him out of the mansion and leave the rising sun to be his executioner.
As he sank deeper and deeper into despair and guilt, his feet guided him to the only place he could still call his own: the small apartment he had lived in prior to Angelus' re-emergence. When he saw the door before him, it was as if he was awakening from a dream. This home was perhaps the one thing that still existed from the days before Angelus had made such a nightmare of his life. Somehow he felt that if he could just get into the apartment, it would be as if the nightmare was over, and those things had never happened. He would be able to immerse himself in the comfort and illusion of that place and all would be right again.
The door swung open quietly at his touch, allowing him a glimpse into the past. It looked exactly the way it had before. Before his life had changed so drastically because of one blonde slayer.
He entered slowly, closing the door firmly behind him. It just seemed wrong that this place had remained exactly the same, while everything else in his life had changed beyond comprehension.
Running his hand lightly over the bookshelves, he watched as dust fell slowly to the floor. As he circled the room, he noted that all the flat surfaces were covered with a light coating of dust, and he wondered if he should do something about it. Somehow he knew that if he decided to dust the room, he would be making a commitment to stay. Otherwise, why bother?
He could still run; could still retreat from this place and leave behind all that had happened. Europe would be beautiful right now; perhaps he could find a small village where nobody would bother him, or talk to him, or ask questions that he didn't want to answer. The thought entranced him, and without even thinking about it he had taken a step back towards the door.
With a sigh that was almost a groan, he turned and grabbed an old sock that was lying on the floor and swiped it over the dusty surface of an end table, watching without interest as dust floated to the floor.
No, he couldn't run. If only to prove the gypsy bitch wrong, he wouldn't run.
But he knew it was more than that. There was such comfort in doing penance for his prior actions. Helping Buffy, her friends, and even the Watcher, had become something so ingrained that it was almost a part of him; something that defined him. And although he hated to admit and had fought hard against it, he felt like he belonged here.
He remembered when he had been with Willow - when *Angelus* had been with Willow, he quickly corrected himself. She had said once that she felt sorry for Angel; that his life before he had met them must have been lonely and sad. As much as he hated to admit it, she was right. Going back to the existence he'd had before, where he touched nobody and nobody touched him, was almost as bad as being Angelus again. That way of life had been empty and without merit.
Angel had no idea how long he stood there, staring at nothing and thinking about everything. It could have been minutes, or it easily could have been hours. In the back of his mind he felt that icy trickle down the back of his spine that told him that sunrise was coming, so it must have been early morning.
The sound of movement and a heartbeat, coming from outside the door, was what had finally pulled him from his reverie. Who would be nosing around here at this hour?
His first thought was that it was another vampire, but the heartbeat scuttled that idea almost immediately. Was it some punk out for a thrill? A homeless person looking for shelter from the driving rain? Or some sort of demon that *did* have a heartbeat?
Tired and confused, he decided to make himself scarce, ducking into the small closet that was almost unnoticeable because of the way it was set into the wall. There were vents in the door at eye level, made to look like the grates of a forced air heating system, and as he secreted himself into the closet, he trained his eyes on the room, observing as much of it as he could through the vents.
He listened with curiosity as the door opened slowly, carefully, and then closed almost soundlessly. Soft footfalls alerted him to the fact that the interloper was nearby. Burning with frustration, he waited for the person to cross his field of vision, pushing his face up against the grate at an awkward angle, knowing that horizontal creases would be pressed into his face from the pressure. A faint familiar scent reached him as the intruder finally crossed before him, and his heart leapt with dismay and excitement.
It was Buffy.
He hesitated for a moment, his hand already on the handle of the door. Should he open it? Reveal his presence and see what her reaction was? Or should he stay silent and wait for her to leave, waiting for the right moment to reveal himself to her? Maybe he should wait for Willow and Jenny to tell everyone that his soul was back before he made an appearance.
But then he thought about the young woman who had snuck into his old apartment, for some reason he couldn't even begin to figure out, and he knew that he couldn't wait any longer. He had to get it over with. Surely, after taking a look deep into his eyes, she would see the soul and know that it was Angel she saw and not Angelus. So he took a deep, hopefully calming breath, and opened the door, looking out into the room cautiously.
There she was, sitting on the bed, staring out into space. Somehow he had thought that there would be tears, or a sentimental clutching of his favorite shirt. But instead, there was a strange, calculating light in her eyes when she finally saw him.
"Angelus," she said, giving the words no particular emotional emphasis. She didn't even seem surprised to see him there, and he wondered at her lack of emotion. "What do you want? Decided to go slumming? Take a look back down memory lane?" The words came out angry and hostile; now that was more what he had expected.
His state of calm was shattered by her bitter words and the sharp daggers of her eyes as they flayed him. He couldn't speak for a moment, just stood there swaying slightly. Confusion, sadness, bitterness, and a little bit of anger rolled through him, leaving him unexpectedly weak and tired.
"Buffy," he groaned, putting all of his soul into the name, hoping that something in the sound of his voice or the sadness in his eyes would make her realize that he was no longer the demon. But it didn't work. She still stared at him with those same angry eyes.
"It's me, Angel," he tried again, his eyes meeting hers, showing her that the demon was no longer in control.
"No," she cried, anger coming to the surface, turning her voice rough. "You bastard, I don't know what kind of a sick, stupid game you're playing, but you're NOT my Angel."
His heart sank at the angry words. Maybe it was a stupid, romantic notion, but he had hoped that she would look into his eyes and see the soul there. That somehow she would just *know* that he was back. But that wasn't the way it was happening.
"Buffy, please. Jenny found the original gypsy curse. She, Giles and Willow managed to curse me with the soul again. It really is me. It's not a trick," he pleaded, coming to kneel before her as she sat on the bed, her head held in her hands.
She flinched and blanched when she saw how close to her he was, but he wasn't being at all threatening and finally she looked at him, taking in the lines of anguish and sadness etched in his face. Maybe it really was true, she thought. She knew that Giles, Willow and Jenny had been spending a lot of time together the last several days. Perhaps that was why. But why hadn't they told her about it? They were afraid to get her hopes up, probably.
"Angel?" The words were tentative, questioning, seeking reassurance.
"Yes, Buffy," he whispered happily, knowing that she finally understood.
Part: 25
Angel watched as the door closed softly behind Buffy's retreating form, the blonde having left to spread the news of his return. Yeah, that was something that Giles and Xander would be happy to know, he thought bitterly. The two men had never been fans of his, although he had to admit that Giles had always given him a fair shake. Xander, on the other hand...well, it didn't really matter now anyway, did it?
He sat down heavily on the bed, his head buried in his hands as he considered the events of the last couple of hours.
Seeing Buffy had been difficult. No, more than difficult. Almost impossible. He had expected his emotions to come to the surface at the sight of her, and they had. But other than that, nothing had gone as he had expected.
He had expected her to know that it was him, to see the soul in his eyes when he spoke to her. The fact that she hadn't known it, had still seen him as a demon, even after the soul was back, changed things for him. Made him think more seriously about his feelings for her, and about how deep her feelings were for him.
Willow had known. The minute she had seen him with the soul, had looked into his eyes, she had known that he was Angel and not Angelus. He knew it because he had seen the resignation and disappointment shining in her eyes.
But Buffy hadn't known, and the thought made him wonder if she would always see a bit of the demon inside him, whether it was there or not.
She knew he was a demon, had seen him with his face full of fangs and ridges, but had she ever really accepted that fact, and all that it meant? He suspected now that the answer was no. And as a result, their relationship would never be the same.
Then again, it couldn't have been the
same anyway. They could never make love. He could never be 'truly
happy' without the re-emergence of Angelus, and that was something he could
never, EVER let happen. Willow's life, and the lives of her friends,
depended on it.
The sound of the phone ringing brought Willow back to consciousness once again. The sound stopped, and she heard Jenny talking quietly to whoever was on the other end. She opened her eyes, not surprised to see Jenny still sitting in the chair next to her bed, the phone held tightly to her ear.
"Yes, Buffy. I know." Pause. "I cursed him. That's why he's back."
Silence.
"I know, yes, it's wonderful," Jenny agreed politely, rolling her eyes in annoyance. Apparently Buffy was off on a round of 'My Boyfriend's Back' and Jenny seemed less than thrilled. When she noticed that Willow was awake and watching her, she quickly stopped the eye rolling and merely sat still and listened as Buffy went off on another excited babble.
Jenny made a motion with the phone, pantomiming passing it to Willow, but Willow shook her head emphatically, even though it made the room do a weird, spinny thing. Talking to Buffy was definitely not on her list of things to do right now. She still harbored strong feelings of resentment towards the blonde for her behavior over the past couple of weeks, and there was no way she wanted to talk to her now, much less listen to her prattle on about her lost love, now returned to her.
"Oh, I'm sorry, Willow's still asleep," Jenny said, forcing something that sounded like regret into her voice. "She hasn't been feeling well, and she asked me to come and bring some books over so she could research."
Apparently Buffy wasted no time on false concern, merely saying a couple of words, and then a quick good-bye. Jenny held the handset away from her and made an angry face at the phone before putting it back in the cradle to recharge. "That is one incredibly self-absorbed girl," she stated coldly. "I mean, I know she saves the world and is the chosen one and all that, but she can really be a selfish bitch too."
"What did she say?" Willow asked, her eyes wide with surprise at Jenny's strong words.
"Part of it was what she didn't say," Jenny admitted. "I mean, I didn't expect a big tearful thanks or a parade in my honor or anything, but a simple 'thank you' wouldn't be too much to ask, do you think? I mean, I restored her boyfriend's soul and kept him from killing anyone else. Oh, and then there was the snide little comment she wanted me to pass on to you too. Something along the lines of 'Have Willow call me when she's done playing the martyr.' Yeah, that kind of pissed me off as well."
Willow's bitterness threatened to overwhelm her at her so-called-friend's decidedly unfriendly words, but she kept her temper under control. She still felt a little weak, although she felt much improved from earlier. But wasting time and energy on being angry at Buffy was something that she could not afford to do. Besides, what was the point? It certainly wasn't going to make Buffy change.
Her hand found its way to the gauze bandage on her neck, flickering idly over the pieces of plastic tape that kept it in place. Turtlenecks were definitely the shirt du jour for a while. She didn't want anyone putting two and two together and coming up with, well, four.
Jenny's thoughts mirrored her own. "I'll get you some turtlenecks at the mall if you give me your size," she offered eagerly. She just felt so useless right now that anything concrete she could do would be an improvement. "You should wear more jewel tones," she confided. "Dark green, navy blue, maybe even cobalt. I'll pick some shirts up after school tomorrow and bring them by, okay?"
"Eep, school!" Willow exclaimed, realizing that this was probably Monday, and that not only had *she* missed class, but she had caused Jenny to miss it too.
"Relax, Willow," she insisted, pushing Willow back onto the bed easily when the redhead tried to get up. "I called in sick and a substitute is taking my classes. Then I called Giles and made him promise to give your homework to Xander, who will bring it by later today. You're covered."
Willow relaxed a little, but it was obvious that something was still bothering her.
"What?" Jenny asked her, amazed that the young woman could even think about her schoolwork with everything else that was going on in her life. She leaned forward a bit, trying to encourage Willow to explain what was bothering her.
"Giles. Did you tell him..." the words drifted off uneasily as Willow tried and failed to find a way to ask what Giles knew.
"I had to tell him something, Willow," Jenny admitted, frowning when she saw the other woman's face begin to close down. "I told him that I did the curse, that Angelus is no more, but that he was at your house when it happened. That Angelus had tricked you into letting him in."
Willow considered the fantasy that Jenny had woven for Giles. It wasn't perfect, but she thought it would probably do. She knew that the older woman disliked lying, and had probably found it even more distasteful because she cared for Giles. "Thank you," she said finally. "Not just for that, but for everything. For coming when I needed you, and for being my friend, and for covering for me with Giles, which I know wasn't easy. Thank you."
"Any time," Jenny replied, her
hand reaching down to brush away the hair from Willow's forehead. She got
up and leaned over the girl, giving her a gentle kiss on the forehead, and then
headed downstairs to grab some more juice from the refrigerator.
At long last night began to fall, and as the sun finally sank below the horizon, Angel reluctantly opened the door and left his apartment in search of his childer. He felt them through the bond, even as he tried not to. Drusilla was angry and upset, and if he was still and quiet, he could imagine her standing tall, her long, thin fingers pressed tightly against her cheeks as she swayed back and forth in agitation. She knew something was wrong, even if she didn't quite know what it was. Or maybe she did. It was hard to say.
He knew Spike was nearby, although he could not feel any type of emotion radiating from the blond. Spike had always been able to shield himself from Angelus, a skill that was quite unusual. And something that Spike took advantage of to the fullest.
Angel's footsteps took him inevitably to the mansion, although he was surprised to see that the windows were dark and empty. Maybe they had left of their own accord? But no, he could sense Spike nearby, and before too long he saw the other vampire walking towards him, his long black coat billowing out behind him.
"Angel," Spike said to him, his tone emotionless. Not Angelus, not sire. Just Angel. They knew.
"Spike."
"Not big on long good-byes," the blond muttered, looking deep into Angel's eyes, searching for a trace of the sire he knew lurked inside of him somewhere, but finding nothing.
"You leaving?"
"Yeah, Dru's in the car, all packed up. She had some crazy idea of tying you down and screwing that soul back out of you, but I told her I didn't think it worked that way."
Angel hung his head uneasily, fighting hard to keep his demon under control. A part of him wanted nothing more than to submit and let Dru do just that, but he couldn't do it, couldn't risk the health and happiness of all the humans he knew just because he was too weak to face those he had hurt. "Nope," he confirmed, "Has to be true happiness. Sex is something different entirely. It just happened to be the catalyst this time."
Spike nodded solemnly, not surprised by what Angel told him. If sex was all it had ever taken, Angelus would have been back a hell of a lot earlier. Vampires had needs. "See you next time you get happy," he promised, a melancholy smile on his lips as he said the words.
Angel smiled too, a sad, pained expression that had very little to do with happiness. "Be careful," he told his childe. "And take care of Dru."
Spike nodded again, gave Angel one last look, and then turned and walked away.
Angel watched until the darkness covered Spike like a cloak, and then turned and retraced his steps, finding himself back in his apartment again without really remembering how he got there.
Part: 26
Willow sat at the computer, attacking the keyboard with a ferocity that was one part speed and one part frustration. She had been here, stuck in her house, for two days now and that same frustration showed itself in almost everything she did. She felt much better today, which was both a positive and a negative. On the positive side, she felt better. On the negative side, that improvement in her health had made her restless and eager to rejoin everyone else in the 'real world.' Tomorrow, she promised herself, she would go back to school. No matter what.
Jenny had come back yesterday with the promised turtlenecks; some were sweaters and others were sleeveless t-shirts. Willow had tried them on eagerly, surprised at the way the simple, elegant colors had made her look older and more sophisticated. Not to mention the fact that they hid the bite mark *quite* handily.
Xander came by as well, dropping off homework and telling tales. He mourned the return of Angel, and had advised Buffy to stake him anyway, since you just never knew when the vampire would get happy again. Willow laughed and pretended to commiserate, but her heart really wasn't in it. Xander had seen this as well, and after a half hour he left, promising to return the next morning to pick up her homework and make sure it got to Giles, who would pass it to the appropriate teachers.
The homework had been a godsend. Complex math problems and essays on Global Warming quickly drew her mind down another path, a path not plagued with memories of Angelus and the look in Angel's eyes when he had gazed upon her. She thanked Xander and the Sunnydale School District for giving her a way to distract herself.
A tentative knock at her french doors broke her concentration, and she turned quickly to see a large, dark figure at her door. 'Angelus!' her heart cried out. But she knew the hunched figure on her balcony belonged to someone else. Someone so close to the one her body craved, and yet so completely different.
It was Angel.
Moving slowly, unsure and uneasy, Willow crossed to the door, opening it and moving aside as he entered the room. She had no idea why his presence was making her so uncomfortable. Was it because of who he was, and conversely, who he wasn't? Or was it something more complicated than that? Maybe it had something to do with the fact that every so often she missed Angelus so badly that she briefly considered the notion that maybe Angel *was* close enough to the one she missed. Or maybe it was the lingering fear that she would lose control completely and do something really stupid, something that would unleash the demon again, and bring about all of their deaths.
She knew that the last fear was baseless. No matter what he was going through right now as a result of Angelus' little evil spree, he still belonged to Buffy. And nothing that Willow could do would change that fact. Simply put, he could not achieve 'true happiness' with Willow.
Yeah, those kinds of thoughts were getting her nowhere, Willow acknowledged sadly.
She watched as Angel looked around the room nervously, obviously just as uncomfortable as she was. Finally he made up his mind and settled on the edge of her desk. Taking his cue, she sat back down at her computer, twisting in the swivel chair to face the frowning vampire. Her hands found their way to her lap, twisting restlessly as she waited for him to tell her why he was here.
"I thought we should, uh, clear the air," he finally told her, waiting for her reaction.
Clear the air. Such a vague phrase really. Make sure our stories fit together was probably more to the point. "Jenny told Giles that you were here when she cursed you. That you had tricked me into letting you in, and that you bit me," she blurted out. "The rest of them don't know anything, but Jenny had to tell Giles something."
He looked taken aback at the blunt statement, but considered the story. "I see. That should work," he allowed. "What does Jenny know?"
"Everything," she said flatly, a myriad of emotions flowing swiftly behind her eyes. He saw brief glimpses of regret there, mixed with sadness and grief and longing. He wanted alternately to grab her and hold her, or retreat in the face of such raw emotion, but he stood his ground, merely gazing at her with impassive eyes.
"I needed someone to talk to," she added quietly, and he cursed himself for forgetting briefly that this was just as rough for her as it was for him. Maybe more; when someone was as young as she was, every moment and every emotion was that much more intense. She hadn't yet learned to deal with a love that could never be. He'd had plenty of experience on that subject.
"Have you seen her yet?" Willow asked quietly, knowing from the look in his eyes where his thoughts had taken him.
"Yeah," he acknowledged. "I saw her that first night back."
"Of course," Willow said bitterly. "Of course you did."
Anger flashed in his eyes, quickly calmed. "It wasn't like that!" he objected, feeling guilty even though he had no real reason to. At least, not for that. The guilt made him even more angry, and he allowed it to show in his eyes as he faced her bitterness head on. "She was waiting for me in my apartment when I got back. I thought about hiding, but I knew I'd have to face her." Just like he knew he'd have to face Willow. Neither of the confrontations were easy.
"Ah, a tearful reunion and good times for all?" she asked sarcastically, lashing out at him the only way she could.
"Willow," he groaned, bringing his hands up to run them slowly over his face, trying to calm his emotions with the gesture. "I'm-I'm trying to make this better, but I don't know how. We're going to have to see each other. It's inevitable. And-"
"And you don't want me to tell Buffy that I was your dirty little secret," she sneered, jumping up from her chair and running to the other side of the room, her forehead resting gently on the wall, hoping to mask the sight and scent of her tears from him.
"That's not what I meant!" he cried, quickly closing the space between them. His hands clamped onto her shoulders, swinging her around to face him. Eyes closed, face drawn, she looked every inch of the anguished lover, so very much more vulnerable than Buffy had been that first night back. Twin tracks of tears lay wet on her cheeks.
The demon inside him reveled in the tears and the show of weakness, demanding that he pull her in close to kiss the tears from her face and taste her despair. It was all Angel could do to retain control long enough to let go of her, his hands releasing her as if scalded by her warmth. The demon sneered at him for his weakness, taunting him in an attempt to make him lose control again.
As she stared at him with those haunted green eyes, he retreated to the safety of the desk. Distance and lack of contact made the demon easier to control, he was grateful to realize. He would have to remember that.
"What do you want from me, Angel?" she said finally, the weight of her pain and despair showing once again in her soft voice. "I won't tell Buffy, or anyone else, if that's what you're worrying about. But I can't do this thing," she motioned between the two of them, "where we pretend like nothing ever happened. It did. It's going to take me a while to get used to it, and move past it." She wandered to the bed, sitting down and resting her elbows on her knees as she gave him an intense stare. "I know you're not him, but you look like him. Something in me reacts to you, whether I want it to or not." How ironic that she should suffer from the same fate as Buffy. She could see the face of the man she loved, but knew without a doubt that it was not him. Would never be him.
Only Buffy's lover had come back. Certainly they would never be able to be lovers again physically, but she could still touch him, talk to him, just be with him. Willow would never have that again.
"So what did Buffy say?" she asked quietly, a little part of her dying as she said the words.
Angel didn't want to discuss this. His feelings for Buffy were confused enough as it was; discussing them with Willow wouldn't do anything except bring about another bitter outburst from her, and make him feel even more guilty. "It was...awkward," he said finally, looking down at the floor.
She was surprised he had answered her. His discomfort was obvious. Apparently Buffy was a subject to be avoided. "Did you see anyone else?"
A brief nod. "I saw them all for a bit last night. Figured they would want to know that Dru and Spike were gone." The angry glares from Giles, Jenny and Xander had been difficult to bear. Cordelia had merely been indifferent, which didn't surprise him much. The cheerleader had always had one priority, and in her tunnel vision everyone else seemed to fade into the distance. If it didn't affect her, she was hard put to show much enthusiasm. Buffy, on the other hand, had been subdued but, well, affectionate. She had taken any opportunity to touch him, as if worried that he would disappear if she didn't. He understood her actions, and the psychology behind them, but the way that she flaunted her happiness in the faces of the others made him uncomfortable. He had tried to put a little distance between them, for decorum's sake, but he seemed to be fighting a losing battle.
"Did anyone-did they mention me?" she asked quietly.
"Yes, you were missed," Angel told her, hoping to ease her fear about seeing her friends again. "Cordelia even said she missed you," he added. Okay, so maybe Cordelia's actual words had been, 'When is Willow back? I'm tired of doing her crappy research,' but still, it couldn't hurt to stretch the truth just a little bit, could it?
Buffy's mood towards Willow fluctuated wildly between wanting to share her happiness and excitement with the redhead, to complaining about how she wasn't there helping them research. There was one thing he and Angelus actually agreed upon: Willow needed better friends. But that was her problem; not his.
"Will you be there tomorrow night?" he asked.
"I think so," she confirmed, trying to hold down the panic she felt at seeing the others again. Buffy's words the other night had cut deeply; the blonde had accused her of being a martyr, of all things. If only Buffy knew. Or maybe it was better that she didn't. Willow was just going to have to call upon that well of inner strength that Angelus had unwittingly brought to light. She would walk in with her head held high, and ignore any and all barbs slung in her direction. It might not be easy, but she *would* get through it.
"See you tomorrow night," she
said calmly, effectively dismissing the vampire.
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