How She Died
Summary: I’ve never been
happy with the lack of
content we got regarding
Angel’s reaction to Buffy’s
death, so here’s my take on
it. This is immediately
after he finds out she’s
dead.
Disclaimer: Nope, if I did
we might have seen something
like this.
Rated: Pg-13 there’s a
couple words
I didn’t die. I
don’t know why I didn’t die.
I should have. I always
thought I’d crumble to dust
the second her soul left
this earth and my soul would
race to meet it so that the
two halves could be whole
again. But it didn’t and
that hurt as much as her
dying did.
I can hear them
downstairs. They forget how
good my hearing is. I’ve
finally stopped screaming. I
wasn’t aware that I had
stopped until I heard Cordy
comment on it. I knew the
moment I saw Willow what had
happened. There was only
reason Willow would be
there. I sat there long
enough for the little red
head to tell me how and then
I locked myself in my room.
Sometime after that I
started making this high
pitched keening sound. Cordy
kept asking what that noise
was and wouldn’t I shut up.
She had then said ”Oh well,
he can’t keep up that volume
for long.” Forty eight hours
later she was still
complaining about it.
Sometime during the three
days my soul screamed, they
had Lorne come over. My pain
knocked him out for six
hours. When he woke up, he
refused to talk about it. He
said there weren’t words for
that much pain anyway.
Cordy knocks on
the door. I know it’s her.
She smells like jasmine and
peaches. Vanilla is the only
thing I want to smell and
tears rush to my eyes
because I know I will never
smell that particular scent
of vanilla. It’s gone, just
like her.
“Angel, come on.
You’ve got to eat and you’ve
got to come out of your
room. We did this earlier
this year, remember the
whole closing yourself off
from your friends thing.”
Cordy says through the door.
I don’t answer.
Eventually she will go away.
“Angel, she’s
been dead a week. You’ve had
your little mourning period.
It’s time to move on.” Cordy
says.
I still don’t
answer.
“Oh God! What is
it with you and blondes?
First there was Darla and
now Buffy.”
My hand is on
her throat shoving her
against the wall before she
even realizes I smashed
through the door to get to
her. “Never make that
comparison again. Darla
killed me. Buffy brought me
back to life in every way
possible. She is the love of
my life and if I live for
eternity she will still be
the love of my life. The
screaming, that was my soul
screaming because its mate
is gone. It beat against my
dead heart for three days
trying to figure out a way
to get out of this god
damned shell so it could go
meet hers and now it’s dead.
Just like her so leave me
the fuck alone.” I dropped
her on the floor. I don’t
know how long she lay there
coughing and sucking air,
air that Buffy would never
breathe again.
It’s been a
month since the day I choked
Cordy. The hotel is an empty
shell, just like its owner.
In the end it is Gunn that
comes to see me. He walks in
the lobby. I am still
sitting in my room staring
at a picture of her. I have
sketched countless pictures
of her in that month and
they litter the floor.
“Yo, Angel, man
I don’t wanna be choked but
we kind of need you. Cordy
had a vision and I don’t
think we can handle this one
alone.” He yells at the
empty lobby.
I close my eyes
against it and I know as I
do its wrong. She never
closed her eyes against the
world, even when it killed
her, twice. I have no right
to close mine. I stand up
and walk out of the room,
making my way slowly down
the stairs. Gunn stares at
me like he didn’t really
expect me to respond.
“Hey, you look
like shit.” Gunn says.
I nod. “Yeah, I
feel like it too.” They are
the first civil words I have
said to anyone since I found
out.
Gunn nods saying
more with his silence then
he could ever say with
words. By mutual silent
agreement we get in the GTX.
Gunn gives me an address and
then resumes his silent
vigil.
“What are we
walking into?” I ask.
“Nest of vamps,
Cordy thinks there’s seven
or eight. They’ve been
snagging kids off of Sunset
boulevard.” Gunn says.
I nod.
The nest is one
of the bigger ones I’ve
seen. They don’t stand a
chance. I’ve been waiting
for over a month to take my
frustrations, my anger and
rage out on something. I can
hear her inside my head as I
fight.
“I don’t want
a friend.”
“I didn’t say
I was yours.”
Right
hook, left jab, duck, stake
to the heart.
“This isn’t
some fairytale. When I kiss
you, you don’t wake up from
a deep sleep and live
happily ever after.”
“No, when you
kiss me, I wanna die.”
Punch to the
kidneys, elbow to the face,
Ow, roll with it, kick up to
my feet, roundhouse, stake
to the heart.
“Angel, when
I look into the future all I
see is you. All I want is
you.”
“I know the
feeling.”
Side kick, body
jab, snap his arm, throw
another across the room,
uppercut, stake to the
heart.
“I love you,
I try not to but I can’t
stop.”
“Me too.”
Hook jab
combination, duck, roll,
feint to the left, body
shot, stake to the heart.
“I love you,”
“I love you,”
“Close your
eyes.”
Roundhouse, hook, side kick,
stake to the heart.
“You still my
girl?’
“Always.”
Back
kick, roundhouse kick, right
hook, jab, duck, uppercut,
stake to the heart.
“Drink me.”
Jab,
duck, uppercut, roundhouse,
back kick, stake to the
heart.
“How’s
forever? Does forever work
for you?”
I look around.
There are no more vamps left
to dust. Gunn and Wes stare
at me, mouths agape.
“So, you didn’t
need any help with these
guys.” Gunn says.
“I was working
out some issues.” I say.
“Did you get
them figured out?” Wes asks.
I shake my head.
“Not even close.”
I went back to
the hotel. The next morning
Cordy, Wes and Gunn show up.
I guess they decided Angel
Investigations is back in
business. Cordy calls
someone to come fix the door
to my room. I still haven’t
said I’m sorry for choking
her, because in a way, I’m
not. She doesn’t understand
and she probably never will.
None of them do.
I can’t heal. I
can’t move past it. There
are so many unanswered
questions about her death. I
pick up the phone to call
Willow.
“Willow, its
Angel,” I say when the
little redhead picks up the
phone.
“Oh, hey how are
you doing?” She asks.
I want to rage
and scream and yell. It’s
not her fault. She’s trying
to be polite. I bite back my
anger at her words and
ignore the question. “Was
she scared?” It is a
question that has been
driving me crazy. I don’t
think I can handle it if she
was scared. She was always
so brave if she died alone
and scared it would be my
undoing.
There is a long
silence. I can hear Willow’s
throat working as she fights
against tears. Finally she
answers in a tight, choked
voice. “I don’t think so.
Dawnie says she was ready.
She said to tell Giles she
was okay, she’d figured it
out.”
“Figured what
out?”
“I don’t know.
Her purpose? Her destiny?”
Willow says.
“No. Her purpose
was not to die. Her destiny
was not to die.” Each word
is bitten off as I try to
keep my anger under control.
Willow falls
silent and it is
uncomfortable. I know my
next question isn’t going to
make things anymore
comfortable. “The clothes
she was wearing, was there
any blood on them?” I ask.
“A little, there
wasn’t a lot of blood
though, Angel. It was…neat,
I guess.” Willow says.
“Do you still
have them?” I ask
She takes a
moment to answer. “Yeah, we
put them in a Ziplock bag. I
couldn’t-we couldn’t throw
them away.”
“Can I have
them, please?” I ask.
“What? Why?”
Willow asks suspiciously.
I sigh. This was
the part I didn’t want to
tell anyone. “The blood it
holds the scent of whatever
she was feeling at the time,
fear, excitement, whatever.
I need to know that she
wasn’t scared, that she
wasn’t alone.”
I am surprised
when Willow agrees to send
me the clothes.
Three hours
later Willow is standing in
the lobby of my hotel
carrying a paper sack.
“Cordelia, just
tell him I’m here. I talked
to him on the phone three
hours ago.” Willow says.
“No way. I’m not
going up there. Last time I
spoke to Mr.
I’m-Brooding-the-love-of-my-life-died-saving-the-world
I got choked.” Cordy says.
I step out of my
room and lean over the stair
railing. “Willow, you can
come upstairs.”
“Oh, so you’ll
talk to her, but won’t so
much as say Good Morning
Cordy to me.” Cordelia
huffed.
I glare at her.
Willow sits down
in a chair across from the
bed. I sit down on the bed
with my hands on my knees.
She passes me the bag
silently. I take a deep
breath before opening it.
With agonizing slowness I
open the bag up and take out
the white sweater. It’s
fragile looking, like she
was. Willow was right. There
is very little blood but
there is some. I bury my
nose in the sweater, even
though I can smell it from
here. Tears flood my eyes
and spill over onto my
cheeks. For a moment I can
not speak.
“She was
peaceful and ready. She
didn’t feel alone or scared.
She was okay. She was at
peace.” I finally manage to
croak out.
Hours after
Willow is gone I’m left in
my room with my nose buried
in her sweater. It still
smells like vanilla and
sunshine and strength. It
smells like Buffy and I’m
going to have to come to
terms with the fact that I
will never hear her say my
name in that particular
timbre that she always said
it in. I will never see her
smile again, that smile that
made me forget to miss the
sunshine. I will never see
her fight again, a beautiful
deadly force of nature. I
will never see her cry again
and maybe that’s for the
best. She deserves some
peace after all this time.