Title: Breaking Point
Summary: “It doesn’t matter.
If Dawn dies I’m done with
it. I quit.” Buffy in The
Gift. An AU where Dawn does
die in The Gift and Buffy
makes good on her word.
Rated: Mild R
Author: Kristi
Disclaimer: Not mine. All
belong to Joss and his
genius.
She nearly dropped the
plates she was carrying when
he walked in. It would have
been a first for her. She
recovered quickly delivering
the food to the proper
people, a couple of truck
drivers on their way through
Los Angeles then narrowed
her eyes in his direction.
The diner tended to have
repeat customers and he
wasn’t’ one of them. New
ones were a novelty.
“Look at the dream boat that
just walked in. Haven’t seen
him before,” Patty, the
night manager purred. Buffy
enjoyed working for Patty.
She had red hair that came
from a bottle, teased into a
relaxed version of a bee
hive and she was fun. She
was laid back but had a
biting wit and she’d become
almost motherly in the time
Buffy had worked there.
“Yeah…I’ll take care of
him,” Buffy replied and
walked over to the corner
booth he was sitting in. She
stood with her arms crossed
over her chest and an
eyebrow arched. “What are
you doing here?” She meant
it to be an accusation but
it came out softer then
she’d intended. She was too
busy focusing on the fact
that he looked happy, the
way he had that second year
in Sunnydale before her
seventeenth birthday, before
things had gone sour. She
wondered if there was
someone new in his life and
reminded herself she had no
right to wonder that. Until
Riley had left her for the
jungle and demon hunting,
she’d had someone new in her
life.
“I guess you wouldn’t
believe I came for a bite to
eat?”
“Unless you’ve had a moment
of perfect happiness and
gone evil and evil’s fashion
sense has drastically
degraded, no,” she smirked.
She was just being mean. His
fashion sense was
impeccable, understated and
unchanged. Black pants, dark
shirt, long black leather
jacket.
“I like the coffee here?” he
tried again.
“It makes you jittery,” she
informed him, rocking her
weight back on one foot.
“It used to,” he responded
and it felt like a slap to
her face. She had once known
him so well and now with
that one small comment she
realized she didn’t
anymore. She could see the
furrow of his brow, the
curve of his grin when he
was amused with her eyes
closed but she no longer
knew the man behind that.
“Then would you like the
whole pot or just a cup,”
she snapped in retaliation.
Her hands went to her hips
as her stance became
outwardly defiant.
“No.” His tone was soft,
quiet in the constant murmur
the diner emitted. He stared
at the menu when he said it,
finally turning his eyes to
her. A perverse side of her
was glad to see that while
he looked happier, those
dark brown eyes were still
haunted with guilt. “Willow
told me about Dawn. I’m
sorry.”
“You didn’t even know Dawn,”
she spat. “All you have are
memories that some damn
monks made up. Did you even
get those? Or are you just
here to convince me to keep
fighting. That’s what she’d
want…the only way to honor
her blah, blah, blah.” The
bitterness in her voice
curled in her stomach,
making her own stomach
recoil.
“She caught us kissing once,
threatened to tell your mom
unless you let her borrow
your green sweater. She said
the green looked better on
her anyway. She was wrong,
but it was pretty on her.”
The pain took her by
surprise, squeezing her
lungs tight and flooding her
eyes with tears. “I’m not
talking about this,” she
choked out and spun on her
heel to get away from him.
His fingers curled around
her wrist and she hesitated
only a moment before jerking
away. She might not slay but
she was still the slayer.
He let her go, ordered
coffee from another waitress
and remained in the corner
booth. Buffy rolled her
eyes, determined not to let
his presence bother her. She
took orders, delivered food
and made small talk with the
customers. Her shift was
nearing its end when Patty
walked up to her, elbowing
her lightly and grinning. “I
think Romeo over there has
the hots for you, Sweetcakes.
He hasn’t stopped staring at
you since you walked away.”
“He’s just in shock. He’s
used to doing the walking
away,” Buffy muttered under
her breath. She thought
Patty’s drawn on eyebrows
were going to hit her
hairline.
“Sweetcakes! You gotta give
a gal warning when an ex
that looks like that walks
in the room,” she exclaimed.
Buffy sighed and rolled her
eyes. “His name is Angel. We
used to date.” She knew
Patty would ask and she
hoped by volunteering
information Patty would lay
off the inquisition.
“Well his name certainly
fits him,” Patty said. Her
eyes raked Buffy from head
to toe then flitted over to
Angel’s booth. “Why don’t
you take off early? We’re
slow and he’s obviously
waiting to talk to you.”
Buffy shook her head. “No. I
need the money and he
deserves to wait.” She
hurried out from behind the
counter before Patty could
argue with her. She stayed
an hour over her shift just
to spite him, finally giving
up when Patty told her the
diner wouldn’t pay her over
forty hours.
She didn’t spare a backward
glance at Angel as she
walked out of the diner, her
bag slung over her shoulder.
She felt him when he walked
up behind her. His presence
had always set her very
bones on fire. “Why are you
still here?” she asked
without looking behind her.
“You gave me your
condolences. Your civil duty
is done. Go home.”
“What are you doing, Buffy?”
He finally asked.
“Going home. I worked a
twelve hour shift. I’m tired
and my feet hurt.” She
walked faster, irritated
that he kept up with her. He
followed her silently to her
apartment and up the stairs.
She put her key in the door,
unlocked it and stepped
inside, leaving the door
wide open. He stood on the
threshold, unable to come in
without her express
invitation. She walked
around her apartment,
slipped her shoes off, undid
the knot her hair was in and
disappeared into the
bedroom. She changed into
soft workout pants and a
wife beater before walking
back into the living room to
find him leaning up against
the invisible barrier that
kept him out. She rolled her
eyes, got a glass with ice
and filled it with water at
the sink.
“How long were you planning
on standing there?”
He shrugged in answer. “I’ve
got nothing but time and the
hallway is windowless,” he
answered with a glance at
both ends of the hallway.
“Fine. Come in,” she spat.
The barrier disappeared and
he stepped over the
threshold, closing the door
behind him. She studied him
with narrowed eyes. She’d
forgotten how stubborn he
was, how he used to wait her
out when he knew she wanted
to say something. She
continued about her evening
routine, brushing her teeth
and washing her face before
she finally sat down on the
couch next to him. She
turned on the small black
and white TV and pulled her
feet up on the couch,
tucking them underneath her.
If he could be stubborn so
could she.
He surprised her by wrapping
his fingers around her ankle
and pulling her foot into
his lap. He started rubbing
her foot, caressing the arch
and putting pressure on the
ball and heel. She watched
him, denied too long the
sight of him. She reached
out and touched her
fingertips to his temple,
sweeping her fingers back
through his hair and the
down the curve of his neck,
dipping beneath the collar
of his shirt. He closed his
eyes and leaned into the
touch like a great cat. It
brought tears to her eyes,
wondering how long it had
been since someone touched
him like this.
“Is it just my touch? Or has
no one touched you like
this?” The vocalization of
the words startled her.
She’d thought them, but she
hadn’t intended for them to
come out.
“I don’t know what the right
answer to that is,” he half
smiled, still rubbing her
foot.
“There isn’t one. Just try
honest.”
He nodded. “Just your
touch.”
“Good answer,” she smiled
softly. He took her other
foot in his lap and started
ministrations on it. “Angel,
what are you really doing
here?” she asked softly
after a moment.
“Your friends are worried
about you. You’ve refused to
see them since Dawn’s
death…I was worried about
you.” The concern in his
voice was palatable. He
focused on her foot, not
allowing his attention to
stray anywhere else.
“You know, the thing about
being a savior is they
never, ever fall. They don’t
break and they don’t bend.
If I saw them, they’d cry
and plead, ask me to come
back, remind me of my
destiny. I’m tired of being
a savior. I’m tired of being
their savior. I sacrificed
my life for the world. Sure
it was a shallow life, but
it was mine. I died to save
the world and didn’t get to
rest.” Her gaze went up to
Angel. “I sacrificed you…I
loved you more then I will
ever love anything in this
life and I stuck a sword in
you. “Tears filled her eyes
and she took a deep breath.
“I’ve given the world
everything…I thought it was
time it gave me back
something. Dawn was my
breaking point. She was that
last little bit of me that
was untouched. She was the
part of me that was going to
get everything I wanted. Now
that’s gone and all that’s
left is shell me.” Angel
reached over and gently
wiped the tears off her
cheeks, then pulled her into
his embrace. She relaxed
there, finding a refuge that
she could break down in and
cry for the first time since
Dawn’s death.
*
Buffy woke up with a crick
in her neck. She grumbled
and started to turn over;
realizing she was not in the
slightly lumpy bed her
furnished apartment had come
with. She opened her eyes to
confront Angel watching her.
“It always was creepy when
you watched me sleep,” she
grumbled. His arms fell away
from her as she yawned and
stretched, getting to her
feet. Her stomach growled
obstinately.
“Do you have eggs?” He asked
as he got to his feet and
went to her miniscule
kitchen. He opened her
refrigerator and started
rummaging in it.
“Yeah, second shelf, in the
back,” she directed. “I’m
going to take a shower.”
She emerged clean and
dressed to find an omelet
waiting for her. She sat
down, pulling one foot into
the chair. Angel sat a small
glass of orange juice on the
table and sat across from
her.
“So what are your plans for
the day?” he asked.
“I’ve got work at six, until
then…” she shrugged.
“So this is what you do ever
day? Work and…”he shrugged
in imitation of her.
“Pretty much.”
He nodded and watched her
eat her eggs. “You don’t
slay…ever?”
“Kind of the definition of
quit,” Buffy retorted. Her
voice had turned cold and
hard. She had known this
visit was about talking her
into fighting the good
fight. “I really don’t want
to talk about this.” She
pushed the half full plate
of eggs away.
He pushed the plate back.
“Finish eating. You’re too
thin.”
“How long are you going to
put off the lecture?” She
asked eyeing the plate of
eggs before picking up her
fork and fiddling with her
food.
“What lecture?” He asked and
irritation flared up in her.
“You know the one that goes,
you’ve got a destiny. Dawn
would want you to keep
fighting. It’s the only way
to honor her…so on and so
forth.”
“Obviously you know all
those things, so why should
I repeat them?” Angel asked.
“So you think I should get
right back to slaying, act
like it never happened, like
she never existed.”
“No,” Angel shook his head.
“I’d never suggest that.
You’re alive because she
existed. To forget about
her, or to act like she
didn’t exist would be the
greatest dishonor you could
do to her. The only reason
I’m here is because I am
worried about you. LA is a
big city. I thought you
might like to see a friendly
face.”
A smile curved Buffy’s lip
and some of the hardness
slipped away. “It’s a good
face.”
*
They fell into a routine. He
showed up every night at the
diner about an hour before
her shift ended. Sometimes
they’d go eat. He always got
an appetizer and nibbled on
it because she hated to eat
alone. Sometimes they went
to see a movie or took a
walk in the park. They
never encountered vampires
or demons. She was never
sure if it was by design or
the powers were finally
giving her a break. She was
betting on the first.
One night they were walking
through the park when she
stopped and turned to him.
“What are we doing here,
Angel?”
He glanced around the park
then back to her. “Taking a
walk? You said you weren’t
ready to go back to your
apartment.”
She shook her head at him.
She’d forgotten how literal
he could be sometimes. “No…I
mean here…us. Where is this
going?”
Angel took a deep,
unnecessary breath and
shoved his hands in his
pockets. “I don’t know. I’m
trying not to think to far
ahead regarding us. I know
we can’t have what I want,
but I love you too much to
let you go.”
“Don’t,” she said as shook
her head and fixed her eyes
somewhere over his shoulder.
“Don’t what? Don’t love you?
I didn’t know I had a choice
in that.”
“And don’t repeat my words
back to me, bastard,” she
seethed, sudden anger
flushing her skin red. She
wrapped her arms around her
waist because she
desperately wanted to slap
him.
“Tell me you don’t still
love me,” he prodded.
Everything inside of her
screamed. She felt the 16
year old girl she used to be
take her last breath as she
uttered the words, “I don’t
love you.”
“Buffy Summers, you’re a
terrible liar,” Angel said
after a moment’s pause.
She shrugged. “I can lie to
you if I want.” She looked
over the lake and shivered.
She wasn’t surprised when
his jacket draped over her
shoulders. She shoved her
arms through the sleeves and
pulled it around her.
Sometimes I wonder is it you
I want or just the notion of
your heart to wrap around so
I can find my way.”
He stepped forward and
enveloped her in his arms,
pulling her back against his
chest. He rested his chin on
the top of her head and she
could breathe for the first
time since Dawn had died.
“See, sometimes I think
maybe I stopped loving
you…maybe and that this is
all I want. When you hold me
I don’t feel lost. You give
me a place to rest, a
shelter from the storm,” she
whispered. “And then…then I
wake up in the middle of the
night hurting so much…I
lied.”
“I know,” he whispered back
and placed a kiss on the
crown of her head. They
stood silently like that
until the sun begin to turn
the sky rosy, then turned
and walked toward her
apartment with their hands
linked. He took the keys
from her and opened her
door, letting her step in
ahead of him. She made them
tea, using tea bags just
because Giles wouldn’t have
and then sat down on the
couch across from him.
“I’m still not going back,”
she said as she dunked the
tea bag over and over.
“Do you think that’s what
Dawn would want?” he asked.
“I think Dawn would want to
go to her senior prom. I
think Dawn would want to
fall in love. I think Dawn
would want to go to college
to be a writer or maybe an
art major. That’s what I
think Dawn would want,”
Buffy answered as she fixed
him with a hard stare. “It
doesn’t matter what Dawn
would want. She jumped
instead of me and now she
can’t want anything because
she’s dead.”
She sat her tea down so hard
it sloshed over the edge of
the cup and spread across
the cheap coffee table.
Angel reached out and pulled
her close to him.
“I almost jumped after her.”
Her voice was a cracked
whisper against his
shoulder. “Did they tell you
that? Spike, of all people,
stopped me. I nearly beat
him to death as payment a
week later.”
“I’ve lived with Spike. I
want to beat him to death
too,” Angel half smiled.
If it was a smile he was
after, she gave him a brief
one before it disappeared
under the pain she wore like
a heavy coat. “I can’t do it
again, Angel. I can’t lose
someone I love because of
the life I live.”
“What if you lose someone
you love because of the life
you refuse to live?” he
asked. “The Hellmouth is
unguarded. You’ve got a
crack team of a witch who’s
just learning her own power,
a boy who I’m amazed
stumbles his way out of bed
in the morning, an ex
vengeance demon and a girl
who’s so shy I’m surprised
she doesn’t jump every time
they find something scary.
It’s a matter of time before
you lose one of them.”
“They lived for 16 years on
an unguarded Hellmouth. I
think they’ll make it,”
Buffy answered. “I’m going
home. I think you should go
home too. Like you said, we
can’t have what we want.”
She turned and went to her
bedroom, slamming the door
behind her. He was gone when
she woke up later that
afternoon.
*
They fell into another
routine, one they were both
much more familiar with. He
stalked her, following her
to work and home, even
window shopping. She
pretended he wasn’t there.
She was sure he told himself
he was protecting her but
she didn’t need protecting.
She’d never been a damsel in
distress no matter how many
guys had tried to put her
into that niche, the one
stalking her included. She
felt safe with him there,
safe and loved and she was
content to let it go on most
of the time.
He didn’t come into the
diner anymore and Patty
stopped asking questions
after she’d caught Buffy in
the bathroom crying one
evening. The waitress didn’t
know that she’d shed all her
tears over Angel a long time
ago. The tears were for a
life she felt was pressing
down on her waiting for
opportune moment to get its
fangs, pun intended, back
into her.
She reached her breaking
point in the middle of
taking an order. She put the
order pad down, marched out
of the diner and looked
around. He wasn’t
forthcoming with revealing
his hiding place. “Don’t you
have damsels to rescue or a
world to save?” she yelled
at the empty night, scaring
the life out of a homeless
woman shuffling by.
He seemed to materialize out
of the shadows, throwing
them back like a cape. “I
am.”
It took her a moment to
realize he meant her. Her
laughter sounded dry, like a
bitter bark. “I don’t need
you to save me, Angel. I’m
doing alright by myself in
case you didn’t notice.”
“I’ve noticed and that’s
what worries me,” he
responded as he fell into
step beside her. “You’re too
thin, you don’t have any
friends and you don’t go
out.”
“Sorry I’m not Miss Popular
Party. I hear you’ve got
Cordy working for you now if
that’s what you’re after,”
she snapped.
“Is it Survivor’s guilt?” he
asked. “Whether you realize
it or not, you’re not living
this so called normal life
you’ve always coveted.”
“I got over the normal life
obsession a long time ago,
Angel. You’re the one who
covets a normal life for
me.”
“Get out, Buffy. Make some
friends, go to clubs, buy
something pretty and live a
little,” Angel continued to
push at her.
She stopped, turning with
all the speed of a predator
and attacking with the same
ferocity. “You want to know
why I don’t go out?” she
screamed. “I’m afraid! I’m
afraid I’ll hear someone
scream or I’ll see a vampire
and I won’t be able to stop
myself from doing something
about it! I’m afraid that
once I take that step I will
never be able to go back.
Once I fall off the wagon,
it’s all over. My life goes
back to slaying, sacrificing
and losing everything that
matters to me! That’s why I
don’t go out at night! How
do you like the heroine of
this story now?”
“When was the last time you
saw your friends? When was
the last time you did
anything you love? You’re
sacrificing everything that
matters to you right now,
Buffy. At least before
there was a purpose to your
sacrifice,” Angel said.
“Is that what you think of
me? My life doesn’t have
purpose? Well guess what, my
life is all purposed out,”
she yelled.
“No…that’s not what I think
of you. I look at you and I
see a beautiful, strong
woman who’s a little
confused. You don’t know
where you even want your
life to go, only where you
don’t want it to go. You’re
scared. I get that. It
doesn’t make you any less of
a person. Everybody gets
scared, Buffy.”
“Leave me alone, Angel. No
stopping by the diner, no
stalking me and no creeping
in my window at night after
you’re done saving the
world. I’m trying to start a
life, one that doesn’t
involve slaying or creatures
of the night. I can’t do
that with you hanging
around.”
She didn’t hear him or see
him leave, but she felt it.
*
“Hey, Dawn! Wait up!”
Buffy spun around, dropping
the cappuccino in her hand
when she heard the blonde in
front of her yell Dawn’s
name. She watched, tracking
the teenager as she ran past
her, weaving through the
crowd on the side walk until
she caught up with a pretty,
slim brunette that wasn’t
her Dawn. They were never
her Dawn. Nausea overwhelmed
her as she stumbled into an
alley and emptied her
stomach. She straightened up
and leaned against the wall,
a cold sweat broken across
her brow. Two weeks and two
days ago had marked four
months since Dawn’s death,
and she’d forgotten about
it. Her sister had been
gone four months and already
she’d forgotten. She closed
her eyes, pushing her tears
down into the deepest part
of her.
The first place she
considered going was
Angel’s, but she pushed that
idea away. As far as she
knew he hadn’t stalked her
or so much as walked by her
apartment since she’d told
him to leave so she wandered
through LA, letting her
thoughts run amuck. The
sound of someone
slaughtering ‘Wind Beneath
My Wings’ made her hesitate,
half turning toward the
noise. Dawn had loved
karaoke. She and Mom had run
around the house singing
into hair brushes and trying
to coax Buffy to do the
same.
She hesitated again,
frowning then shrugged. The
sign over the building read
Caritas. She’d learned bits
and pieces of Latin due to
Giles and hours of research,
enough that she knew Caritas
meant mercy. “Need a little
mercy tonight,” she
whispered to herself as she
walked down into the club.
One look around had her
turning on her heel, not
only was Caritas a demon
bar, he was here.
“Muffin!” Someone yelled.
Buffy hesitated just long
enough for the green demon
in the bright suit to catch
up to her. “Sweetcheeks,
where are you going so
fast?”
Buffy turned back to the
green demon. “Excuse me?
I’ve got to-“ she gestured
to the door.
“Oh please, you’ve got sing
for me. I insist.”
She shook her head. “No…I
don’t sing.”
“Have you heard half of the
patrons here? They don’t
sing either; unfortunately
that doesn’t stop most of
them. I’m Lorne.”
Buffy shook the demon’s hand
hesitantly. She felt like
Alice down the rabbit hole.
Lorne put his arm around her
and guided her across the
room. Her eyes strayed to
where Angel sat at a table
with Cordelia, Wesley, and
two other people she didn’t
know.
“Oh don’t worry about him,
Cupcake,” Lorne smiled at
her as he guided her over to
the bar and sat her down.
“Sea breeze? Martini?
Something sweet and sugary?”
“Uhm…I don’t know,” Buffy
answered distractedly.
Lorne nodded, mixed some
things up in a glass and
handed her a bright pink
drink. “Try that Baby
cakes.”
“Buffy…” she told him. “It’s
Buffy.”
“Of course it is, Muffin.”
He handed her a book with
songs and lyrics in it. “Now
excuse me. I’ve got to get
Carlos off the stage before
my ears start bleeding,” he
said as he rushed off toward
the small stage. He nearly
had to pry the microphone
out of the orange demon’s
hands.
Buffy flipped through the
book. She could feel Angel’s
eyes on her and wasn’t
surprised when he sat down
next to her. He ordered a
whiskey on the rocks from
the bartender and withheld
any comment until it had
been sat in front of him.
“How have you been?”
Buffy looked over at him,
watched him take a sip of
the whiskey and shrugged.
“I’m fine. You?”
“Fine,” he answered tersely.
“Good.” The silence hung
between them unwieldy and
stiff. “I’m going to-this
was a bad idea. Tell Cordy
and Wes I said I,” she
mumbled as she slipped off
the stool.
“And our next act is a very
special one. I’ve got a
little blonde bombshell and
a half for you guys. Come on
up here, Buffy,” Lorne
crooned from the stage.
The ground did not comply
with her fervent prayers
that it open up and swallow
her as she made her way to
the stage. The powers that
be did come through in
making the stage lights so
bright that the audience in
front of her was blotted
out. At least she wouldn’t
have to look at Angel and
try to sing. She took a
deep breath as the music
started and her voice
trembled through the first
lines of ‘Somewhere Over The
Rainbow’ but gained strength
as she went. Virgin Records
wasn’t going to offer her a
contract, but no one had to
hold their ears and hum
while she was singing. The
last few notes of the song
were still ringing in the
air as she set the
microphone down and rushed
off stage with the intention
of sneaking outside. Lorne
was waiting there with open
arms.
“Love dove, where do you
think you’re going?”
“Home,” Buffy informed him.
He was charismatic, charming
and stylish but so was the
devil and she was growing
very tired of letting him
manipulate her into staying
longer.
“Don’t you want to know what
I saw?”
She quirked an eyebrow at
him. “Little, blonde, bad
singer?”
“So much more, Sweet cakes.
I’m an anagogic demon. I
read people’s auras when
they sing, see the future
that might be.”
“I would not have sung if
you’d told me that,” she
groaned.
“I know,” Lorne smiled.
“Nonetheless, you know what
I saw. You’ve known in your
heart for a long time.”
“Oh Gawd, how can it be
considered a future when
you’re so deliberately vague
that could be anything.
Maybe you saw that I
desperately want to be home
right now with my fuzzy
slippers and a pint of
Chunky Monkey!” she
shrieked.
Lorne shrugged. “That too,
but it’s not what I’m
talking about. Some people
have futures and destinies
that won’t make much
difference to anyone but
their closest friends and
families so if they abandon
them or stray off the path,
it’s not a world in peril
situation. I wish you were
one of those people, Slayer
cakes.”
“Did Angel put you up to
this? I swear to all that is
holy I will stake his ass
faster then he can blink if
he did.”
Lorne chuckled. “Angel
cakes? No, he wishes you
were one of those people
too, Honeybunch.”
Their conversation was
interrupted by a group of
men forcing their way into
the club and spraying
everything with gun fire.
Buffy dove over the bar.
Something semi soft broke
her fall. Her eyes crept up
a broad chest covered in
black silk, a neck as
familiar as her own and met
brown eyes that always
managed to reflect her soul.
“Angel,” she half whispered
unable to ignore that with
her head tilted slightly up
like this his lips were just
a breath away from hers. The
rat-a-tat of gunfire faded
into the background.
“We keep meeting like this,”
he whispered.
A woman’s scream shook them
both out of their stupor and
Buffy rolled off of Angel
and to her feet. He sprang
up beside her just as
quickly. There were demons
in various stages of dying
all around them but so far
the humans seemed to have
remained unscathed.
“Yo, Charlie Gunn! Come on
now. I know you’re here,”
one of the men with a gun
yelled.
“I’m right here,” the black
man Buffy had seen sitting
with Angel stood up. Buffy
listened as they exchanged
words. She glanced over at
Angel. “Want to tell me
what’s going on here?” she
asked in a whisper.
Angel shrugged. “Not sure,”
he whispered out of the side
of his mouth. “Gunn is one
of my crew. The guys with
the guns used to be his
gang. I think they’re a
little upset because I’ve
taken their favorite toy.”
“Tsk tsk, didn’t anyone
teach them to share?” she
whispered back with a grin.
She dropped into a slightly
offensive stance when Lorne
was grabbed and pulled into
the center of the room. The
situation was quickly
degenerating as the man Gunn
called Rondell pointed a gun
at him. She looked over at
Angel. “This something
you’re going to handle or
did you want some help?”
“Kinda something I should
handle,” Angel said as he
vaulted over the bar.
“Okay, let’s put the guns
down and calm down just a
little. You guys don’t have
a problem with humans so why
don’t you let them go.”
“Hell no. They’re all demon
supporters. Wouldn’t be here
otherwise,” Rondell said.
“You’re the vampire, the one
with a soul.” He rolled his
eyes as he said it. Buffy
bit her tongue to keep from
interfering. This was
Angel’s town and Angel’s
problem and besides she
didn’t slay anymore.
Rondell looked at Gunn, a
smirk forming on his lips.
“This is your chance,
Charlie. Prove to us that
this *thing* ain’t your
friend. Prove that you’re
still one of the gang.” He
took a stake out of his
pocket and tossed it to Gunn
who caught it with one hand,
his eyes never leaving
Angel.
“This is madness. He has a
soul,” Wesley intervened. He
gained points in Buffy’s
book for that.
“He’s a vampire,” another
thug Buffy was fairly sure
was named Gio insisted.
“With a soul.” She was
unable to hold her tongue
any longer. “He’s a vampire,
with a soul.”
“You think that makes him
the same as us?” Gio asked
his attention riveting to
Buffy.
“Well I’m not all judge-y
but from my standpoint, it
makes him better. He’s not
the one shooting innocent
people,” she shrugged and
lazily leaned against the
bar.
“These ain’t people,
Blondie,” Rondell bite off.
He shot at a demon in the
head to illustrate his
point. White blood
splattered on the wall
behind it. “Ain’t nothing
human bleeds that color.”
“Buffy, maybe you should
stay out of this. Let Angel
handle it,” Cordelia piped
up. She was busy cowering
behind a table comforting
Fred who was whimpering like
a small child.
“Maybe you should worry
about your clothes, Cordy.
I’m betting blood is hard to
get out,” Buffy snarked
back.
“Maybe you should all shut
up!” Rondell screamed. He
sounded like he was
beginning to lose it. He
looked at Gunn. “So, what’s
it gonna be. The vampire,”
he said the word like it was
dirty, “or your old gang.”
Gunn looked from Angel to
Rondell and back to Angel.
“Let me make it easy for
you, Gunn,” Angel said as he
let his game face slip into
place. “Take a look. This is
what I am. Deal with it or
don’t. But make a damn
choice.”
Buffy went into high alert
when Angel stepped toward
Gunn. It might be Angel’s
problem to deal with but she
wasn’t about to let anyone
stake him in the process.
“That ain’t gonna happen,”
Gunn said as he dropped the
stake to the floor.
“I knew it!” Gio screamed.
Before Buffy realized what
was happening, Gio had his
gun pointed at Angel. There
was a deafening rat tat of
fire and when the smoke
cleared Angel was lying on
the ground. Buffy cleared
the bar in one fluid motion
and started advancing on Gio.
“Uhm Slayer cakes, you might
not want to do that!” Lorne
shrilled.
Buffy grabbed Gio by the
throat and shoved him up
against the wall
simultaneously twisting the
hand his gun was in until
she heard bone crack. The
gun clattered to the floor
with an unnaturally loud
sound because the bar had
gone silent.
“Oh…well never mind,” Lorne
chirped. “Nice to know the
demon anti violence spell
doesn’t extend to slayers.”
“I really don’t like it when
someone hurts my boyfriend,”
she growled.
She caught a flash of
movement out of the corner
of her eye as Rondell
grabbed Fred from behind the
table. He held her in front
of him like a shield.
“Alright, you let him go.
I’ll let her go.”
Buffy twisted Gio’s arm up
behind him and she shoved
him away from the wall
toward Rondell but she
didn’t let go of him. “I
don’t know her. She’s
nothing to me. My main
interest in this deal is
getting Angel out of here
alive.”
“Buffy…” Angel said as he
got to his feet, his hand
against his stomach. Buffy
could see blood seeping
through his fingers and
staining his dark shirt even
darker. “She’s one of my
crew.”
Buffy looked to Angel and
then to Fred. After a moment
she sighed and let Gio go.
She moved over to Angel,
ducking under his arm to
help support him. She
touched her fingers to his
stomach gingerly and they
came away stained with his
blood. She had to swallow
past the lump in her throat,
reminding herself that a
gunshot wound couldn’t kill
a vampire.
Rondell laughed and kept his
tight hold on Fred. “I don’t
make deals with demon
lovers.”
“You know kids, as fun as
it’s been, it’s really
closing time,” Lorne tried
to intervene.
“Shut up, Demon. We’re gonna
close you down for good,”
Gio said, quickly recovering
his bravado.
Lorne looked at Angel and
pointed to the watch on his
wrist. Angel shrugged in an
expression of what do you
want me to do.
“I’ve got an early
appointment tomorrow with
three ladies. I’d like to
look my best. You
understand,” Lorne said to
the gang members but his
eyes never left Angel.
Angel looked at Lorne, his
eyebrows shooting up toward
his hairline. Lorne nodded
and tapped his watch again.
“What the hell you talking
about? You and the vampire?”
Rondell asked as he grabbed
Lorne by the suit lapels and
jerked him to stand near
him.
“Slow down, Stud muffin.
Angel cakes and I were just
talking about closing time,”
Lorne assured him. Rondell
looked from Lorne to Angel
with narrowed eyes.
“Last chance, Gunn. You help
us slaughter these guys and
come back to the gang or
take the vampire’s side and
you’re on your own,” Gio
offered, handing Gun another
stake.
There was a bright flash
that lit up the bar and a
smile curved Angel’s lips.
“Play time,” he whispered to
Buffy as they separated. She
disarmed Gio, confiscated
his stake and tossed him
toward the entrance like he
was a rag doll. Angel took
care of Rondell’s gun by
kicking it out of his hand,
into the air, catching it
and pocketing it in his
jacket. “Guns, never a good
thing. They don’t kill
vampires and they generally
get humans hurt,” he warned.
Gio collected himself and
shambled back toward his
gang who were gathered into
a tight knot, staring at the
demons surrounding them.
Buffy imagined they were
feeling a bit like mice in a
snake cage. She, Angel,
Wesley and Gunn formed their
own little force facing off
against them.
“Come on! Fight back! It’s
four against ten and one of
them is a little girl!” Gio
yelled.
“Yeah…we saw what that
little girl did,” one of
them observed. They watched
her warily, expecting her to
turn into something
bloodsucking or human eating
at any moment. Buffy just
smiled at them.
One of the demons Gio had
been mercilessly taunting
and degrading slunk up
behind him. Its head split
and a huge insect type
creature emerged. It dipped
its head and gulped Gio down
in one bite. Rondell picked
up a shot gun and unloaded
it into the demon’s chest.
The remainder of the gang
members scattered.
*
Buffy taped the end of the
gauze she’d wound around
Angel’s stomach and dipped
her head, pressing a kiss to
it. She sat back against the
couch and glanced around the
lobby of the hotel.
“I think I knew it all
along.”
“Knew what?” Angel asked as
he shrugged his shirt on and
started buttoning it up.
“That eventually I’d have to
go back.” Her voice was
tired, resigned. “And part
of me even wants it.
“We’re very much needed in
the world, Buffy. We don’t
always like being the front
line, but until evil decides
to give up its day job…we’re
needed.”
Buffy nodded, accepting what
Angel was saying. She looked
over at him from underneath
her lashes. “I don’t want to
give everything up.”
“You don’t have to. Dawn
wasn’t something you gave
up. She knowingly sacrificed
herself because she thought
this world was worth
saving.” He reached over and
placed his fingers under her
chin, tilting her head up to
meet his gaze full on.
“And what about you? I had
to give you up,” she asked
her gaze never wavering from
his. She watched fascinated
at the gambit of emotions
that ran through his eyes.
Guilt, pain, love and
finally hope.
“I’ve been thinking about
that,” he said as his hand
dropped to the curve of her
neck. “When I left you it
was because I didn’t want to
be a burden to you, a
hindrance. I foolishly
thought that a love like
ours could exist without
need on both sides. The last
few months that you’ve been
here, I’ve realized you need
me too. I can’t see you
every day. In fact there are
a lot of cant’s in our
relationship and maybe there
always will be but I’m
willing to work with the
cans and see what comes out
of it.”
Tears shone in Buffy’s eyes
and she leaned in and placed
a chaste kiss on his lips,
pulling away before it could
become more for fear that he
would change his mind the
way he had when her mother
had died. “Besides, you’re
doing the saving Los Angeles
thing and I’m doing the
saving Sunnydale thing.
That’s gonna take up some of
our time.”
“Exactly, but occasionally
I’ll have a free weekend,”
Angel smiled.
“Or I will,” Buffy grinned.
Angel nodded. “I’m going to
talk to Wes about doing some
research into my soul and
binding it. Don’t get your
hopes up though. It’s an old
obsolete curse. I don’t even
know if there is any kind of
precedence for magic like
what I’m looking for.”
Buffy couldn’t contain the
smile that lit up her face
but her cheeks hurt with the
effort of trying. “No hopes
getting up here,” she
promised even as her heart
spun plans for long, lazy
weekends spent in bed.
He wrapped an arm around her
waist and pulled her into
him. His lips caressed hers
in a soft kiss and she was
reminded of kisses before
her seventeenth birthday,
kisses filled with hope.