SCRIBES OF ANGEL
FanFic
________________________________
By
the Chimney With Care
Author:
Christie
Rating: PG
Content: Friendship
Spoilers: Season 2 through The Trial
Summary: Angel apologizes to Cordelia. Set after The Trial.
Disclaimer: The characters in the Angelverse were created by Joss Whedon and
David Greenwalt, and belong to Twentieth Century Fox, all rights reserved. This
story is not for profit.
*
He knew
eavesdropping was usually a bad idea. Finding out all kinds of things he didn't
want to know in the first place; although the idea of knowing them always
sounded like a good idea before he actually knew them.
Hence
the eavesdropping
But he
couldn't stop eavesdropping on Wesley and Cordelia. It started soon after Darla
came into the picture. And it hasn't stopped since. He'd learned that they'd
alternately worried about him, and been royally pissed off. He'd learned that
Cordelia hates Darla, with an uncharacteristic vengeance. He'd learned that
Wesley was tired to the point of ambivalence about the whole situation.
They
both felt like he didn't need them, didn't want them around, and would never
confide in them again.
And
that hurt him. Because it wasn't true.
So it
was over, and Angel wondered, why wasn't Cordelia back in Sunnydale for the
holidays? Why wasn't Wesley spending time with Virginia Bryce? Why didn't he
know these things? They were his friends, and he didn't have the slightest clue
as to why they were still at the Hyperion Hotel near midnight on Christmas Eve.
Cordelia
was fiddling with the stockings she'd hung above the fireplace. Four of them:
labeled Cordy, Wes, Angel and Gunn. She wrote the names herself on the old
fashioned red velvet, in a sparkly glitter pen. And he was touched, for some
reason, that she did.
She had
every reason to be mad at him, but she remained constant, his friend in the
face of everything unspeakable that had happened in the last months. That was
his Cordelia, strong, if not unflappable.
She
didn't give up, Cordelia. And he truly loved her for it.
*
Once
again, Cordelia pinched the velvet between her fingers, lifted, and let it go.
She sighed, scrutinized the four stockings hanging from the fireplace, and
finally turned away.
"I
think they're straight, Cordelia," Wesley said dryly, lifting one eyebrow
above the rim of his glasses.
The
girl scowled at him and stepped back to the fireplace. "I want them to be
perfect. The stockings were hung by the chimney with care. *Care* Wesley."
She
closed her eyes and sighed inwardly at her small outburst. It wasn't about the
stockings, or Wesley, or the fact that it was Christmas Eve, or any of those
things. It was Angel. He had barely been around since Darla was turned. He'd
pulled further and further away each time they tried to go to him. Wesley had
stopped trying. Cordelia was determined to reach him, if it killed her. Not
that Christmas was it. Christmas was never it, not when it came to vampires.
But it was - something. And she had to do *something* because if she wasn't,
she was doing *nothing* and that wasn't Cordelia Chase's style at all.
As if
reading her mind, Wesley spoke.
"Angel's
fine, Cordelia. It will do you no good to obsess about him. You saw how much
good it did him to obsess about Darla."
"Stop!
Saying! That! Name!" Cordelia shouted, her voice echoing off the marble
walls of the considerable lobby. "I'm sick of hearing about Darla! Darla, Darla,
Darla! Can ANYONE talk about ANYTHING other than DARLA?!"
*
He knew
he had to approach her then. It had gone on long enough. He retreated back
inside his room and picked up the neatly wrapped gift on the edge of his bed.
Silver paper, a bright red bow. It had taken him four tries and almost a whole
roll of paper to wrap it just right.
Fifteen
minutes later, the vampire had summoned the courage to descend the stairs.
Wesley had left; he'd heard something mumbled about phone calls to make, and a
terse goodbye between his Seer and the former Watcher. No Merry Christmas, no
friendly hug. Barely a glance.
The
tension between them was his doing. Guilt weighed on his shoulders and he
nearly turned around and raced back up the stairs to his suite. But the sight
of Cordelia stopped him.
His
dearest friend, slumped on the round sofa in the middle of the lobby, head in
her hands. He was sure she wasn't crying, but trying valiantly to resist
threatening tears.
"Cordelia?"
An
awkward pause, then he pushed out unnecessary breath. He couldn't remember the
last awkward silence between them. Current moment notwithstanding.
"I
heard Wesley leave." Then, more quickly, "Are you okay?"
She
nodded, but he didn't believe her. Partly because she didn't offer verbal
confirmation, mostly because the look in her eyes said she was anything but
okay.
"I'm
jealous of Darla. That's why I don't like her."
The
statement might have surprised the girl making it as much as it surprised the
vampire to hear it. She clamped her hand over her mouth, and a blush crept up
to color the skin still visible beneath her eyes. The eyes, the eyes that said
*whoops, did I just say that out loud?*
Angel
stepped forward. One step, then stopped. Didn't know why he even moved except
that he was so surprised he'd nearly tripped over his own feet. "Jealous
of Darla?"
Because
perhaps that's not what she'd said at all. It was possible. Probable. Very
possible and probable.
But she
nodded. Embarrassed. Vulnerable. The Cordy no one hardly ever got to see. Only
he and Wes had the privilege, on occasion.
"You
gave her all your attention for weeks on end. And I got jealous. I'm trying not
to - you know, hate her - since she's a vampire now and all and it doesn't
really matter, but I did. That's why I was mean to her when she was around and
that's why I can't stand hearing her name. Okay?"
Of
course it was okay; it was as okay as it was over, since Cordelia was obviously
done with embarrassing confession time and Angel wasn't going to risk the wrath
of dragging it out any further.
So he
cleared his throat, and changed the subject. "How come you didn't go back
to Sunnydale for Christmas?"
Cordelia
made a face. Nose scrunched up, like she'd sooner entertain the idea of dating
Xander again than going home for the holidays. "No one will miss me there.
Besides - " she touched her temple. "Work."
The
vampire smiled, sort of. It was lopsided, and really half-assed, but it
counted, considering the limited amount of smiling he'd done the past few
months.
"You
can have visions in Sunnydale and call me, Cordy."
She
might have responded, argued, had she not noticed the present he held. Her eyes
brightened, if only momentarily, then she regarded him warily.
"Is
that a present?"
Angel
looked down at the gift; almost surprised it remained in his hand. He'd nearly
forgotten about it, but thrust it in front of him, sort of eager to give it to
her and get it over with. Not that he didn't want to get his Seer a present. He
did. But shopping for Cordelia wasn't just an errand, it was a world-class
event. The chore to top all chores. Really, the hardest thing he'd had to do in
a long time. Nevermind the business with the trials.
So in
typical Angel fashion, he'd looked at books. Convinced himself that Cordy would
be happy with a book. That she didn't want a silk scarf, or a silver bracelet,
or a new pair of shoes. She'd love a book.
Love
it.
He'd
compromised, and found something he hoped could pass for thoughtful without being
too - Broody Boy.
"Yeah,
it's for you."
Her
eyes lit up once again, she might have even squealed a bit, grabbed it from his
hands and settled on the couch to open it. Angel stood, hands sunk into his
pockets, and watched. He was nervous.
Nervous
because he gave Cordelia a present. Nervous because he wanted her to like it.
Nervous because he wanted her to understand that with this gift came his
deepest and most heartfelt apologies. Nervous because he wanted to tell her
that she was everything real in the world to him, and that without her he might
as well watch the next sunrise on the Santa Monica pier.
She
turned the leather bound journal over and over in her hands. Smelled it. Real
leather. Opened it to a random page somewhere in the middle. Closed it. Opened
it again, randomly, this time more toward the back. Closed it.
Smiled.
"I
love it."
"I
wrote something in it. The first page." Angel pointed in the general
direction of the journal. Cordelia's eyes grew wide, turned up at her boss.
She
read aloud:
"She
walks in beauty, like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry skies;
And all that's best of dark and bright
Meet in her aspect and her eyes:
Thus mellow'd to that tender light
Which heaven to gaudy day denies.
One shade the more, one ray the less,
Had half impair'd the nameless grace
Which waves in every raven tress,
Or softly lightens o'er her face;
Where thoughts serenely sweet express
How pure, how dear their dwelling-place.
And on that cheek, and o'er that brow,
So soft, so calm, yet eloquent,
The smiles that win, the tints that glow,
But tell of days in goodness spent,
A mind at peace with all below,
A heart whose love is innocent!"
Angel
fidgeted in the silence that followed. "It's by Lord Byron," he
finally offered. "He wrote it in 1814 about his cousin but - I thought it
fit you…"
The
Seer stood, threw her arms around the vampire's neck and hugged. Hard.
"Thank
you," she whispered. "It's beautiful."
Angel
hugged back. Hugged until she let go, and he was forced to. She was smiling
when she stepped back into his view. Smiling big. Smiling her Cordy-smile. Her
crazy-Cordy-smile. Then she was laughing.
"I
have something for you too."
She
tripped over to the desk and he watched her, noticing how long and tan her legs
looked stemming from the black suede skirt she filled in so nicely. She
disappeared behind the desk, then reappeared, holding a green gift bag.
"I
don't wrap," she announced, handing him the bag and stepping back. Clasped
perfectly manicured hands around her new leather bound journal again and
waited.
So he
looked inside the bag. Moved the tissue paper away, and extracted a journal,
near identical to hers, only paper-covered. The vampire smiled, turned it over
in his hands.
She was
not apologetic when she said, "It's not leather. I guess *some* people
take in a bigger cut than others around here."
And he
smiled a larger smile then, almost a grin, something Angel never did. But he
looked at her, eyes shining, and felt the connection again.
It made
him warm.
Guilt
crashed in anew.
"I'm
so sorry for how I've been acting, Cordy. I don't want to lose you - " He
paused. It was that. But that was too much for now. "I don't want to push
you and Wesley away. I want to be able to talk to you."
She
nodded. "I know."
And she
did.
"I
know," she repeated. "I'm always gonna be here for you, no matter how
wigged you get. You should know that by now, Angel."
"I
do. That's why I owe you an apology. I knew that. I took advantage - "
"Oh
please!" One hand released the leather bound journal and she waved it in
the air with gumption. "Look Mr. Guilty Pleasure, get over it. You were a
jerk for a while, but you're not now so I'm over it, you're over it, we're over
it."
Dark
eyes widened. "You sure?"
She
whirled around, walked toward the fireplace where the stockings hung.
"Duh. Like I want to relive *that* trauma." Fingers pinched the red
velvet of the stocking marked Angel. She paused, silence settled quietly over
them like a fresh blanket of snow.
"Merry
Christmas, Angel."
"Merry
Christmas, Cordelia."
END.