Title: Captive of the Soul
Author: Yatzee
Chapter 9


From his perch on a rooftop, Angelus looked out over the city. He had liked to do this before, though his thoughts then were so predictable, so maudlin. Whenever he had looked at the lights, he imagined the lives they represented, imagined himself protecting those lives. Envied the happiness he believed they felt.

But now, Angelus saw the lights as an expanse of opportunity such as he'd never known. His soul had overtaken him just before the advent of electrical lighting; Angelus had been forced to do most of his hunting in an era in which the majority of people were at home before dark. Practicing his trade in those days took skill. Patience. Craft. If you aimed higher than an endless diet of prostitutes and dockyard thugs -- and Angelus always had -- you could spend weeks or months plotting out the means for a truly fine kill, and still be frustrated. But electric lighting meant that people stayed up later. Stayed out later. Stayed vulnerable.

Humanity was there for the taking, and the challenge now would wholly be a matter of artistry. He felt a bit like a painter who had made do with a few tubes of color, only to be gifted with a rich and varied pallette.

Sunnydale had given him an all-too-brief taste of the luxuries an electric world had to offer the vampire, but the town was too small, too quiet, to really provide the best hunting grounds. But Los Angeles -- oh, he could spend a dozen lifetimes here and never even come close to drinking his fill.

He inhailed deeply -- not for breath, but for scent. The rain had just stopped falling, so the air was disappointingly clear, but he could still tell so much. Two women nearby: one with a fresh manicure, both with far too much hairspray, a little drunk -- No, not yet. He wasn't really hungry, and they would be so easy, so cheap. Besides, there were more important things to take care of first.

Like beheading a certain blonde.

***

Cordelia had her knees hugged to her chest as she huddled against the passenger door of her own car. She'd begged off driving, claiming that she was too upset for it. Wesley was shaking a little, taking deep breaths as he went, but so far, he seemed to be holding together a whole lot better than she was.

But that had to be -- that could only be -- because Wesley wasn't thinking what she was thinking. About the way this might have to end.

Finally she said, in a tiny voice, "We don't have to kill him, do we?"

"I hope not," Wesley said. "We should be able to end the trance, as soon as we find a replacement for the crystal --"

"And how are we gonna do that?" Cordelia said. "Just drop on by Ancient Meditation Crystals Warehouse?"

"They're actually a rather popular item at Rick's," Wesley replied. "Our greater problem will be finding Angelus before he does any harm. At least there's no way he can reach Sunnydale before sunrise. We'll have time to warn Buffy."

"Because, as always, Buffy's the first and only thing on his mind," Cordelia muttered, and Wesley grimaced a little at the bitterness in her voice. But after a moment, Cordelia straightened up and looked over at him. "Wait a sec. What if she's not?"


"Beg pardon?"

"What if he's not going after Buffy first?"

"Possible," Wesley said. "But certainly he'll return to Sunnydale very soon. That still represents our best chance of finding him."

"I'm not so sure," Cordelia said. "Remember what he said when we were in the circle? He said he was gonna win friends and influence people. What does that remind you of?"

"I believe it was a self-help book of some sort. Dale Carnegie, was it?" Cordelia shook her head impatiently. "No, no. Yesterday, when we were at the old office and Kate showed up with her Fraulein Fuhrer act?"

"That's a bit harsh."

"Says you. But that's what she said to Angel. That he really knew how to win friends and influence people."

They rode in silence for a moment as Wesley considered. Slowly, he said, "He could simply have been reminded of the phrase."

"Or it could just be coincidence," Cordelia admitted.

For a few more moments, they were quiet, and then Wesley looked over at Cordelia again. She glanced back at him. "We've got to find Kate," he said.

Title: Captive of the Soul
Author: Yatzee
Chapter 10


"You're not on the domestic-terrorism task force, are you, Lockley? No? Then why the hell won't you let this go?"

Her supervisor's words were still ringing in her ears hours later. He'd been angry at her, and with good reason; Kate was neglecting other work to do this. Spending her free time snooping around a crime scene that was probably none of her business. She had admitted it, apologized, promised to direct her efforts elsewhere.

And yet, here it was, the small hours of the morning, and she was looking at the burned-out hulk of a building that had housed Angel Investigations, not so long ago.

"I have got to be crazy," Kate said. Nobody heard, except possibly the
homeless woman crouched on a nearby corner, but even she gave no sign, just kept muttering to herself and rocking back and forth.

Kate sighed and took another deep swallow of coffee straight from the thermos. She didn't really need the caffeine; these days, she seemed to run on some strange, ever-ready source of energy, something that burned inside her day and night. Something that sometimes seemed to be burning her up.

Just nine months ago, everything in her life made sense. She was a cop. She had duties and responsibilities, most of them laid out nice and neat, in writing, for handy reference. She did her job, did it well, won the approval of coworkers and superiors. She had a couple of guy friends at the station who were good for a beer or a game of poker sometimes. She didn't have any girl friends, but she didn't much feel the lack. She had a dad. Maybe he wasn't the greatest dad in the world, but he was there -- and she maybe, just maybe, had a chance of finally winning some respect from the man. And when Angel walked into her life, she had thought, for the first time in way the hell too long, that she might have found a man who wasn't intimidated by her job or her strength. Who had his own sense of self, his own intelligence, his own drive. Who just happened to be damn good-looking on top of all that.

Now she had a reputation as the station psycho, an obsession with things she used to laugh off in horror movies, the fact that her last date had both witnessed her public humiliation and turned out to be undead, and a small plot in a cemetery where she could kneel in the dirt and finally pour out all the words she'd wanted to say to her father, now that he could never hear.

And the only thing all those changes had in common? Angel.

Fallacy of causation, she reminded herself. Angel's connected to all of this, yeah. But did he make any of it happen? Or do I just need somebody to blame for the total destruction of my life?

Intellectually, she knew that Angel had not killed her father. But that was the beginning and the end of what she knew about him; everything else was jumbled up, confused, dark and terrifying and mesmerizing all at once.

She looked again at the blackened rubble of the building. Kate leaned back against her car, trying to remind herself how soft and warm her bed would be, how much better she'd feel in the morning if she'd spent more time sleeping, less time knocking around this place.

Besides, when she'd been here the day before, Angel honestly looked pretty depressed, pretty shaken up. Like most of the fire and accident victims she'd seen, he'd been half-angry, half-zoned. His friend -- yeah, call him that -- really had been hurt in the blast. Surely Angel wouldn't have endangered him. Or destroyed his own home.

So why can't I believe it? she thought.

After a moment, Kate screwed the lid on the thermos and tossed it back into the car, then double checked her weapon before reholstering it and heading into the building. If this checks out, she told herself, then that's an end to it. If Angel didn't have anything to do with this, then I'm just gonna let him be. Let the whole thing be. He can go after the creepy-crawlies from another dimension, and I'll stick to the human criminal element.

If this checks out.

As she carefully stepped underneath the yellow CRIME SCENE tape, she felt a tiny shiver in her back, as though she were being watched. Kate whirled around, took a look at the area -- and saw nothing besides the old homeless woman, now staring at her with frank interest. Kate shook her head as she turned back toward the door. "Lockley, you're
losing it."

***

"What are we going to do if he kills her?" Cordelia said as Wesley struggled to keep the car steady through a sharp turn at high speed. "I mean, it's not like he can help it or anything, but you know Angel. King of Guilt. He'd never get over it."

"Although I realize the situation would be problematic for Angel, I think it would be rather worse for Officer Lockley," Wesley pointed out.

"Like I care," Cordelia muttered.

"Cordelia, you don't mean that," Wesley chided -- gently, he thought. So he was surprised when she dropped her face into her hands. "Cordelia?" he said again.

"I don't know if I mean it or not," Cordelia said. "I keep telling myself this is the new-and-improved Cordelia Chase. But I feel just like the old Cordelia. Right now I ought to be worrying about Kate and Buffy and the rest of humanity. But all I want is my friend back, so we can all go home and get some sleep."

"That's not wrong," Wesley said. "I'd rather like that myself. But we do have to stay focused on, ah, the big picture."

"I don't do big-picture," Cordelia said miserably. "I seem to be a small-picture person."

"Nonsense," Wesley said. "Why, ever since we first met, I've seen you plunging into the most frightening battles the Hellmouth had to offer. You've never shied from the hardest work."

To his surprise, this speech only seemed to dampen her spirits further. She shook her head. "You never saw the real me. You just saw what I wanted you to see."

"That's ridiculous. You were always in the library, always volunteering to help out --"

Cordelia muttered something he couldn't quite catch. "What was that?"

"I said, that was -- that was only because I was trying to impress you. Because I had a crush on you," she said, then added in a rush, "Way back then a whole long time ago."

"Right," he said, a bit embarrassed by their first acknowledgment of that long-ago infatuation. Then he thought -- good Lord, after what we've each heard tonight, what is there to be embarrassed about?

"Cordelia, I don't know about your motives, but I know that you understood the work we were doing. How dangerous it was, how much depended on our success. You knew that facing the Mayor could very well have lead to your death. And you never once flinched from the prospect. I may not have seen the real you, but I saw -- the best you. As far as I'm concerned, that is the real you, more and more every day."

She looked over at him for the first time in a while, a soft light in her face he hadn't seen in a while. "You really think that?"

"I really do."

"That's the nicest thing anybody's said to me in a long time," Cordelia said. "Maybe ever."

"You deserve it," Wesley said. "Besides, I spent a fair amount of time pretending to be brave for your benefit. Though I don't see how you or anyone could have been fooled." When she grinned, he could feel himself smiling back despite everything else that was happening --Good Lord, man, he thought. Concentrate. "We're almost at the office. If
she's not there, we'll head straight to police headquarters, try to get in touch with her there."

"Right," Cordelia said, squaring her shoulders as if for action. But she was still looking over at him. "Wesley?"

"Yes?"

"If it weren't for all her superpowers and stuff, you would totally kick Faith's ass."

Wesley stared at her, and she shrugged, a little sheepishly. "I know it's not some big poetic speech or something --"

"No, no," Wesley said, smiling again. "That was marvelous. Wildly untrue, but marvelous."
Chapters 11 & 12
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