Angels and
Demons
by Nicole Clevenger (c) January
2001
Summary: An Action/Angel
cross-over. Enough said?
Warnings for language, violence,
and having to put up with Peter Dragon.
Spoilers: Takes place sometime
early on in both shows. Doyle's in this one. I think I started this shortly
after the first episode of Action aired on Fox. A teeny obsession... though a
slow one, it seems
Disclaimer: They're not mine.
Obviously, or I'd be making some money. I miss Action, so this is my tribute to
the Great Peter Dragon. The same can be said for Alan Francis Doyle. The Angel
bit was thrown in because I wanted to see those two men together. Friends?
Right... Comments and criticisms
welcome. (drewbug@san.rr.com)
***
"He's saying *what*?"
Stuart hesitated, and for the
fifteenth time today I considered firing him. Granted, the thought usually comes
to me at least twenty times in a day, but it wasn't even noon yet. I could
already tell it was going to be one of those long, drawn-out, double gin and
Swedish massage kind of days.
"He's claiming that we stole the
concept for The Eight Fighting
Samurai from him without fulfilling our end of the contract. I've already
had to talk to his lawyer this morning. They're asking for a full third of
domestic and half of foreign, plus a full page apology in the
trades."
I damn near spit hot coffee
across my desk at that last part. "An apology? Who the hell does this guy think
he is? I wouldn't take out an apology in the trades for Jesus Christ." Stuart
shrugged. I took another drink. It scorched my throat going down, making me even
less thrilled with this day.
Maybe I could counter-sue for
bodily injury.
"Look, this is ridiculous. Just
because Joe fucking Blow has decided to jump on the Peter Dragon bandwagon
doesn't mean we have to give him a ride. Tell him to get
lost."
Stuart looked down at his shoes,
then at the top of my desk. "We can't exactly do that…"
"Why not?"
"Well, for one, we actually *did* steal the
idea."
Oh. Okay. But still… "Creative
collaboration. Maybe he just planted the first little seed of what became a
billion dollar motion picture. That doesn't mean he *made* the movie."
"He wrote the first three drafts
of the script."
This was getting nowhere fast.
And I had things to do. "God, I am so
tired of writers who think that just because they put a few words on paper they
deserve all the credit." Stuart just stood there, looking at me. "Fine," I said,
waving a hand at him, "give this guy a couple thousand and make him go
away."
Stuart didn't move. "What
now?"
"He's got Risen and
Finch."
I swear all the blood in my body
ran cold. "Shit."
Risen and Finch were good. Damn
good. And this was publicity I definitely did not need. Not now, not after that
Slow Torture nightmare. I needed
good, solid writers to come up with the next blockbuster -- not something I was
likely to find if word got out that I was sometimes… well, a little less than
what some might consider to be *fair.* But, then, "fair" was such a subjective word.
***
Maybe now might be a good time to
jump in with a little introduction. I mean, I know that a lot of people think of
me on a level somewhere short of sainthood. But a man should have a chance to
explain for himself, right? To shed some light on the reasons behind his
actions. Because life isn't perfect, no way. Choices have to be made. *Sacrifices* have to be made. Sometimes
people get hurt on the way. All part of the game.
And there's no bigger game than
the one I play. Peter Dragon, Hollywood producer. Ever heard of DragonFire
Films? Yes that's right -- that's me. You really are sharp, aren't you? My
movies have made billions. Huge hits. Giant openings. Big stars. The whole
Hollywood dream. The *American*
dream, really. Lots of glitzy
gleaming golden moments, fifty feet tall for everyone to enjoy. Take a break
from your dull, pointless life and -- for just a few hours -- live someone
else's. That's what I do for people. Give them those few beautiful
hours.
But it's not easy, you know? It's
not like I can just snap my fingers and share this gift with the world. I have
to work to make things happen. And sometimes not everyone ends up happy with the
decisions that need to be made in order to get things done. They don't
understand that I'm working for the greater good. They're all actually pretty
selfish, when you get right down to it. All me, me, me… Not realizing that there are other
people involved too. Other people who suffer for their art as well. I can't even
tell you how many times I've had to get out of my warm bed to deal with a
spoiled actor at two in the morning, or missed a tee time because some director
wants to go over another casting revision…
Why the fuck am I telling you
this, anyway? You people only believe what you see in those stupid entertainment
magazines. Let's just go back to the story.
***
I kicked Stuart out of my office.
I needed time to think without having him hanging around like a lost puppy.
Besides, he had work to do. At least, I was paying him to work. He'd better find
something productive to do.
As for me, I had to get myself
out of this mess before it got any bigger. Or, rather, I had to *hire* someone to get me out. I firmly
believe that there is nothing that can't be done with some well-chosen help and
a little extra cash. I had the cash part; all I needed was to find the right
help for the situation.
A lawyer, no doubt about that. An
excellent lawyer. Because Bob Smith or whoever had done well for himself. Where
he got the money for it, I have no idea. Risen and Finch don't exactly come
cheap. Probably using the money I *already* gave him for his work on my
movie. Bastard. He certainly wasn't getting any more from me.
I stood up and went to the big
picture window behind my desk. Being less than a fan of sunlight on most
mornings, the blinds are almost always closed. But it really is a great view,
after one gets past all that daylight. Sprawling studio grounds, Hollywood
hills, blue skies… Plus I can see my car. I like to be able to keep an eye on
it.
I closed the blinds again and sat
back down. Who could I get to do battle for me? Preferably someone who could
settle this whole thing by this afternoon, no hassle. I needed a name scarier
than OJ Simpson. A name I could drop like a Van Damme bomb.
I needed Risen and
Finch.
Okay, no I didn't. There had to
be another good firm in this town. This was California, for chrissake. The Land
of the Lawsuit. There had to be someone around here who could give me a name.
Who did I know who'd had law troubles? Alright, stupid question. Better: Who did
I know who'd had law troubles that hadn't been splashed over every form of media
currently known to man? Because this had to be squashed down before even Hard Copy heard about
it.
I shuffled aimlessly through the
few papers on my desk, trying to come up with a name. Maybe the ever-helpful (if
you'll pardon the cloying sarcasm) Dick Marcellus could give me a suggestion. I
mean, a successful owner of "escort services" had to know a lawyer or two,
right?
There was a knock on my office
door. I'd recognize that timid tapping with a head full of valium and cotton
stuffed in both ears. Stuart.
"What?" I called. His cue to come
in.
He did. "Uh, I just wanted to
make sure you remembered your lunch with Andy Hallers."
I hadn't, and a glance at my
watch told me that I had to leave then if I hoped to be on time. Not that I
couldn't leave Andy waiting for a bit. We'd known each other for almost six
years. He knew better than to hold a little tardiness against me. What can I say
-- it's not always easy to be on time in this town. In fact, usually one plans to be late. Being on time just
makes you look too pathetically eager.
Besides, we both had far more
risqué things to hold over each other's head, should it ever come to that. Which
reminded me -- he never did finish telling me the story about that waitress and
his second mistress…
That was it.
"Stuart."
The man stopped so abruptly on
his way out the door that I thought he was going to end up with whiplash. He
turned on his heel and looked at me, waiting for orders. I wanted to scratch
behind his ears and give him a biscuit.
"Wolfram and Hart." A blank look.
"Call them. Set up an appointment for this afternoon."
Too much confusion, not enough
action. I hate having to explain myself over and over. But Stuart showed no sign
of catching on any time this week. I sighed and grabbed my
overcoat.
He moved with me to the door.
"It's a law firm. *The* law firm. The
one that's going to save our ass. Call them as soon as you walk out this
door."
He still looked skeptical.
Reoccurring thought number sixteen hit me.
I stopped and faced him, my hand
on the doorknob. I had to make this as simple as possible, obviously. "Remember
that whole incident with Billy Crystal and that thirteen-year-old girl a couple
of months ago?"
His eyes widened. "No, I don't
think I remember hearing about --"
I smiled.
"Exactly."
Point made, I headed out the door
and to lunch.
***
Okay, so maybe my reaction to
that waiter was a little extreme. I guess I could have lowered my voice just a bit.
But I absolutely can not stand ridiculous wannabe actors interrupting my meal.
Hell, they're more common than a blond in a brand-new BMW around this town. But
they all think they're the first, the best, the next Big Thing. Fine. Just not
during my lunch.
I didn't dump the rest of that
crappy soup on him, anyway. I thought about it, I assure you. So he got off
lucky. Maybe he'll get some sense and head back to Minnesota or wherever the
hell he crawled here from. Save him some time, a bit of heartbreak. I might have
even done him a favor, really.
Besides, Jeff Goldblum really has
that geeky intellectual market cornered. No one else is going to inch in there
any time soon. Andy agreed with me,
too -- just not as loudly. And he used to be a casting director. So there. I did do the kid a
favor.
Stuart was waiting for me when I
got back to the offices. Maybe I should teach him to fetch my slippers or
something. No, I guess that would be a bit cruel. He already brings me both the
paper and morning coffee.
I kept walking, past him and into
my personal office. He followed, as I expected he would. Ignoring him until I
was ready, I put my coat away and sat down. I heard him close the door behind
us, and he took up his usual spot in front of my desk.
He waited until I looked up at
him. He really is the best assistant I've ever had. Trained to perfection. Maybe
I'd have Wendy buy him a watch or something.
First things first. "You have an
appointment at two at the Wolfram and Hart offices," he informed
me.
"Wonderful. With any luck we can
just have this all swept away by three." He wasn't smiling with me. Which meant
there was something else going on. Damn. That writer kid with the glasses was
probably back in the hospital or something. I waited, but Stuart wasn't offering
up any hints. "What else?"
Stuart shook his head, obviously
reluctant to talk. Which was simply wasting my time. "What?" I demanded
again.
"It's just…
Well…"
"Just *tell* me, Stuart."
"Nothing. Probably nothing." His
eyes fell to the floor.
I could feel my jaw clenching.
"And am I going to get to hear about this 'nothing' sometime within the next few
minutes?"
He looked up at me. Knew I was
irritated. Knew he'd better tell me now or get out of my office. "The person I
talked to over there…" He swallowed, then rushed on with it. "It just felt odd,
is all. Even over the phone. I got a really creepy vibe. Like something not
quite… *ethical* is going on over
there."
I started laughing; I really
couldn't help it. "And just when the hell did you become the spokesperson for
the Psychic Hotline?" He scowled at me, but didn't defend himself. "Christ,
Stuart. They're *lawyers.* They're
not supposed to be ethical. That's the most absurd thing I've heard since I
found out Keanu Reeves was going to do Shakespeare."
He still wasn't saying anything.
Fine. "I want you to get together any relevant information on this whole thing.
Everything you can dig up on this asshole, right down to his favorite sex toys."
That got a wince out of him. "I want to give our new creepy lawyer friends
everything we can to get this done today. We're going to leave in thirty
minutes."
I saw the "we" bit get his
attention. But he didn't argue. Just took a breath and left silently. Best
goddamn assistant I've ever had, I tell you.
***
The other writer -- Alan… or was
it Adam? -- ran into Stuart and I in the downstairs lobby. Almost literally, in
fact. Much too close for my personal comfort.
I have this thing about being
touched by people, okay? Sheesh.
"Peter. Stuart. I was just coming
to see you…"
I forced a smile. "How lovely for
us. And so soon after you're out of the hospital too." I almost choked on all the sugar
spilling out of my mouth.
"Uh, Peter… I've been out of the hospital
for a month now."
Oh. Like I cared. "I guess it
just seems like we haven't seen you in a long time. We've missed having you
around."
"I stopped by last week and met
with Stuart and Wendy."
Huh. Imagine that. I turned on my
best regretful face for my writer. "I just wish someone," a chastising look to
Stuart, "would have told me you were around…"
The kid's face lit up like I'd
just handed him a bonus check. "Actually, I have a couple of things I wanted to
talk to you about. And since you're here now --"
I glanced at my watch. "Jeez, I
wish I could. But I've got to meet with some people right now, Alan." I started
moving toward the door, Stuart in tow. Alan -- Adam? I really should write it
down -- followed us.
"It won't take long, Peter, I
promise. Just a couple of notes on some of these revision requests. Oh, and I
came up with some more ideas for the zoo scene…"
The limo was at the curb, back
door being held open for me. The writer was still talking, but I'd almost
completely succeeded in tuning him out by now. Just a few more
feet…
"Look," I said, without looking
at him, "I really do want to hear all this. Why don't I have Stuart call you
later today, and we'll set something up?" I slid into the back seat, opposite
Stuart.
Adam looked like I'd just told
him his cat got hit by a car. How could he possibly be so devastated by a little
wait? It's not like I actually even needed to hear most of what he thought he
had to tell me.
"Uh, okay, Peter. I'll… talk to
you soon then."
"Great, great. Soon." I motioned
to Lonnie to shut the door.
Finally a moment of silence.
Beautiful. I straightened my suit jacket and relaxed against the back of the
plush seat. "Thank god," I muttered, half to myself. "For a minute there I was
afraid he was going to climb right in here with us."
Stuart didn't say anything. He
was looking out the tinted window, watching the sidewalk stream by. I leaned my
head back against the seat and closed my eyes for a moment, trying to convince
my skin to stop crawling. That writer kid made me nervous. He was too -- I don't
know -- *eager.* Vulnerable. It
practically came off him in waves. Like he was dangling a piece of meat in front
of a pack of hungry dogs or something. I kept expecting one of them to jump up
and drag him off into the shadows. I was protecting him, really. Keeping him
safe from all the assholes out in this town just waiting to take advantage.
The fact that he was a damn good
writer just happened to be another great reason to keep him on my
payroll.
I slipped a hand into my jacket
pocket, feeling around in hopes of turning up some kind of mind-numbing bliss in
convenient pill form. Nothing.
Crap. I sighed and opened my
eyes. Stuart was watching me, but he had the good sense to look away quickly
when our eyes met. I wondered briefly if he had anything on him. Probably not.
If he was carrying aspirin he'd be
out of character.
I wondered how long this meeting was going to take. Hopefully not
long. Then I could call it an early day and be home before Charlie Sheen rolled
out of bed for the day. Not kidding -- he lived just down the street from me.
I've never seen anyone leave that house before dark.
Plus Wendy was supposed to be
getting in tonight. She'd been in New York the last couple of days, checking out
some filming locations. I doubted we were going to decide to do anything outside
of LA, but it never hurt to have options. Besides, she hadn't been there for a
while. I considered it one of the perks of sleeping with the
producer.
A producer whose bed had been
totally empty since she'd left. Not that I can explain why. God knows I'd had
plenty of opportunities. That blond in the red dress the other night, to name
just one. A delicious, curvy, green-eyed, willing one. But, for reasons even I
am unable to figure out, I didn't go over to her table and introduce myself.
Didn't send the waiter over with a drink. Didn't even get her name in case I
changed my mind later. Just paid my bill and left alone. And -- the weirdest
part of all -- I didn't even regret it.
So tell me what's wrong with me?
Huh?
Don't you dare start trying to
feed me some bullshit about me having feelings for Wendy, either. It's not like
our relationship is exactly *exclusive.* She's a hooker, remember.
And I'm not the most celibate of individuals. Sure, she's been spending most of
her time at my house, rather than that apartment of hers. But that doesn't
really mean anything. We're both free to sleep around. That's the way we prefer
it.
But, yeah, I miss her. Okay? I
admit it. However, that's still no reason for me to suddenly be playing the
one-woman gig. Maybe I'm coming down with something. That would make
sense.
The car pulled up to the curb and
stopped; seconds later, Lonny was holding the door open. I got out with Stuart
right behind me and turned to my uncle.
"Keep close, okay? I'm hoping
this won't take too long."
He smiled his ever-faithful smile
at me and nodded. "Will do."
I smiled back. You know, I think
my uncle is the only person ever to get a genuine smile out of me. Well, okay,
him and Wendy. (Hey, I know what you're thinking -- stop it. I *don't* have feelings for her, okay?) But
Lonny's always been around for me, ever since I was a kid. Never questions
anything, either. Just does what I need him to do, without complaints or
ulterior motives. He looks out for me. So I look out for
him.
I headed into the building,
Stuart on my heels. It was a huge office complex in the middle of downtown, and
the woman at the front desk told me that Wolfram and Hart owned the top seven
stories. Not only that, but they had a private express elevator that went
straight up to their lobby. Showoffs.
We took the elevator up in
silence. Stuart had been fidgeting since we got out of the car, and I'd been
able to ignore it. But now I'd had just about enough of his squirming. I glared
at him.
He met my eyes and stiffened. I
just raised an eyebrow at him. He shrugged apologetically and opened his mouth,
but before he could speak the doors opened. I moved past him and into the
room.
We had found Wolfram and Hart,
and they were apparently doing quite well for themselves. Their lobby was richly
decorated, from the thick blood-red carpet and tasteful leather furniture to the
paintings on the walls. I'm not an art critic, but I know crap when I see it.
And this was about as far from that as you could get.
The secretary was a very
attractive red-head seated behind an oak desk. She was so perfect that I figured
she must have been a model for one of the local agencies. Though, looking at
her, I couldn't imagine that she'd have enough free time to do this job as well.
I wondered what they were paying her to hold her to this instead.
She looked up and smiled politely
at us. I walked toward her, passing on the way a vase that looked exactly like
the one I bought for my ex-wife immediately after the success of my first movie.
These people were doing *amazingly*
well. I was still remembering how much that vase cost.
"Good morning, sir. How can I
help you."
I offered her my most
camera-worthy smile. "Peter Dragon. I have an
appointment."
Her smile brightened a notch when
she discovered that we actually belonged here. "Yes, Mr. Dragon. I'll let them
know that you're here. If you would take a seat, it should be just one
moment."
"Thank you." Stuart and I moved
to the black couch and sat down. I literally sunk into the thing, promptly
deciding that I needed this piece of furniture for my living room. I was turning
to Stuart to have him make a mental note of it when the door opened and the
secretary called my name.
Damn, that was fast.
The man who came to greet us
could have been the walking definition of "nondescript." Seriously. This is
coming from a someone who makes his living looking for details. In this man's
case, there were none. Average height, average shade of brown hair, average
nose, eyes, mouth… Getting it? I could have walked right past him ten minutes
later and not noticed.
I stood up, dimly aware of Stuart
shadowing me as usual. Everyman spoke. "Mr. Dragon?"
I nodded, then indicated Stuart.
"This is my President of Production, Stuart Gl--"
"He can wait
here."
Uh, *okay*… Stuart and I exchanged brief
glances, and I swear I saw a bit of "I told you so" stuck into his.
I turned back to the man. "I
would prefer if he came as well. He has information that could be
--"
"This meeting is between us, Mr.
Dragon. If your assistant is needed, he will be called. This will not take
long." He held the door open to the inner offices, gesturing for me to go
in.
If this guy interrupted me one
more time, I was going to turn around and head straight for Risen and Finch.
Conflict of interests be damned. They had more than one lawyer, right? I'd make
them find somebody. Because I wasn't about to put up with this shit. It's not
like I was trying to beat Murder One here.
But, being already here, I
decided that I might as well sit down and talk to these people. I walked through
the door, Nobody close on my heels. He shut the door behind us, then led me to
an office as sumptuously dressed as the reception room.
We sat down, facing one another.
The moment we hit the seats, his manner changed completely. It was nothing short
of bizarre. Suddenly I was on the other end of an open box of Cubans and a warm
smile. It made me want to jump up and make sure Stuart was still a few doors
away -- not in another dimension as I was now thinking.
I stayed where I was and waved
away the cigars. The man across from me closed the box and set it on the corner
of the desk, within my reach. The smile hadn't left, and it was starting to
creep me out.
Christ, now I was sounding like
Stuart.
"I do apologize for insisting on
meeting with you alone, Mr. Dragon. You see, here at Wolfram and Hart, we cater to
only the most exclusive of clients. And, because of our commitment to giving
these clients the results they demand, our methods are sometimes a bit…
unorthodox. So we like to keep things as intimate as
possible."
Okay, that made sense to me.
Fewer tongues wagging -- a policy I certainly could
understand.
He looked at me across the desk,
the concerned act working overtime. "What exactly is it that we can help you
with?"
Why did I get the feeling that
this guy already knew not only exactly why I was in his office, but also every
detail of my life? He probably could tell me down to the minute the last time it
was that I took a shit.
But this was just another game,
and I had to play along if I was to get what I wanted. At least, for the moment.
"I've got a writer suing me because he claims that he wasn't properly
compensated for his work on one of my past films. My assistant has spoken with
his lawyers already. I'm sure he has a copy of the relevant paperwork
--"
Everyman held up a hand. "No
need, Mr. Dragon. I already have all of that right here."
These people sure did move
quickly.
"In fact," he continued, "I don't
think we have a problem here at all. This is all fairly open and shut. This
writer obviously wants to bask in your rising glory, and is therefore inventing
these accusations in the hopes of insinuating himself back into your sphere of
influence."
Wasn't that pretty much exactly
what I said earlier? A flash of paranoia made me wonder if I should check the
offices for bugs or something. "What do you plan to do? How soon can I expect
this to go away?"
He smiled. "Consider it gone as
of now. We'll contact him shortly, work something out with his lawyer. But if I
were you, I wouldn't worry any longer. It's been taken care
of."
Wow. Perhaps I should get these
guys on the payroll. They could be quite useful to me for a lot of different
things.
Mr. Nondescript stood, and I
followed his lead. We shook on the deal, even though I admit that I wasn't
entirely sure exactly what the deal was. But things were working out in my
favor, which was the way I always liked them to go. Now all I had to worry about
was whether or not I still had cocktail onions in my bar at
home.
***
Stuart was nowhere. I asked the
secretary, but all she could tell me was that he had left shortly after I had
gone into the office. It wasn't like him to take off without warning, or without
me, for that matter. Usually he was
more difficult to get rid of than that mental image of Harvey Keitel dusting in
the nude. I took the elevator down, making the decision that if he wasn't
waiting at the car, he was finding his own ride home.
Into the lobby, out onto the
sidewalk. No Stuart. No car? That little prick took my *car*? I was going to kill him. String
him up by his favorite tie and let him hang there until Stallone won an Oscar.
Fuming, I pulled out my phone and
dialed Lonnie. Took him three rings to pick up. A record for him, I think.
Lonnie's not too big on the phone in the car. Usually he forgets he has it, so
when it rings, he can't always find it. I don't think he's forgiven me yet for
insisting he learn how to use the thing in the first
place.
"Uncle Lonnie, where are you?" I
demanded, before he even had time to say hello.
"Boss, is that
you?"
"Who the hell else is standing on
the street corner without his car?"
There was some mumbled
conversation in the background, as if he was talking to someone while holding
his hand over the mouthpiece. Apparently the lesson on the use of the "hold"
button needed to be refreshed.
"Okay, Boss, we're headed for you
now. It'll be just a minute..."
And there was the car, coming
around the corner. I hung up the phone. Whatever this little game was, it wasn't
very funny. Not to mention that it certainly wasn't winning Stuart any points in
his favor.
The car pulled up to the curb,
and the back door opened. Apparently Lonnie wasn't going to bother to get out. I
angrily pulled the door open all the way, and slid into the back seat to find
myself face to face with a girl I had never seen before. Stuart reached across
me to pull the door closed, brushing his arm against mine. I pulled back from
him and glared at both of them as the car hurriedly pulled away from the
sidewalk and into traffic.
"Would someone mind telling me
what's going on," I asked, my voice low and dangerous. I looked at the girl
again. "She doesn't exactly seem to be your type, Stuart."
She couldn't have been more than
eighteen at the absolute most. Her clothes all but screamed "streetwalker," and
her hair and makeup backed them up. Her eye makeup was smeared, making it
obvious that she had recently been crying rather heavily. The right sleeve of
her yellow, tight top was torn, and I could see scratches on the pale skin
there.
None of which explained why she
was in my car.
"Peter, this is Autumn. She needs
help."
"Yeah, I see that. What the hell
is this?"
Stuart launched into this big
explanation, the gist of which seemed to be that this girl was running from
something, and Stuart and my car seemed to be in the right place at the right
time. The only thing I knew was that this was all adding up to mean that I
wasn't going home just yet.
***
We ended up at the offices, which
were fairly empty despite the fact that it was only a quarter to four.
Apparently, the staff just assumed that when I was gone, they could be also. I
was going to have to clear up that little matter right away. And dock a few
paychecks, just to get the message across.
I followed behind as Stuart led
the girl into *my* office, settling
her on *my* imported leather couch.
Then he actually had the gall to turn to me and ask me to get his new friend a
glass of water. A very rude comment almost escaped before I saw that the girl
looked like she was going to burst into tears again. I did not need that, what
with the headache that had begun creeping into my skull as soon as I saw this
girl in my car. Besides, if I got her something to drink, maybe she'd calm down
and get the hell out of here.
I knew there were no cups in my
personal bathroom, so I had to go all the way out to the coffee station at the
end of the hall. There were a few hurriedly concealed looks of curiosity, which
I decided to ignore.
Stuart was kneeling on the floor
at the girl's feet when I returned. It was like some twisted tableau -- Mary
Magdalene being worshipped by the equally-sinning Homosexual in some parody of
Hell. Or something.
Apparently all that Catholic
school does make some kind of an impression.
Neither of them looked up at me.
"Not to break up this little party..." I began, which was enough to get their
attention. Stuart stood up then and took the paper cup from me, handing it to
Autumn. What kind of a name is that,
anyway? It's a *season*, for fuck's
sake.
The girl still had not yet
spoken. She would have been cute, I think, if she didn't look like such a whore.
A disheveled whore, at that. I saw that she was shaking.
Stuart noticed it too, taking off
his jacket at placing it gently around her shoulders. How very touching, really.
Especially the part where her eyes welled up with tears again. I could feel the
headache growing worse.
"So do you have some kind of plan
here, Stuart? Or were you hoping she could just live on my couch for the rest of
her life?"
It came out sounding a little
harsher than intended, and I saw anger flash across Stuart's face. It was gone
almost immediately, but I had seen the glare he gave me. Before I could say
anything, though, the door to my office opened without
warning.
A tall, dark man in a long coat
entered, followed by a beautiful young woman (mental note: get her name to our
casting people), and some poorly dressed shorter guy. Right behind these people
I could see Julie, the receptionist, trying to get past them and into the
office, hopefully with some kind of explanation.
Stuart was at my side, his body
between the group and the couch. I could feel the tension and nervousness coming
off of him. Me, I was just pissed at the intrusion.
"Who the hell are you
people?"
The dark one opened his mouth to
speak, just as Julie managed to force her way into the room. "I told them they
couldn't come in, Mr. Dragon, but they wouldn't --"
I cut her apologies off with a
wave of my hand. I wanted to hear from the good-looking, brooding one. Our eyes
locked, and I felt a bizarre shiver work its way down my spine. I held my
ground, though, not breaking the contact. Peter Dragon does not back down.
Surprisingly, it was the girl
with him who spoke up. "Angel Investigations," she announced, as if that was
supposed to mean shit to me. "He's Angel," she added, referring to the man who
was still looking into my eyes as if he could see right through me to all my
secrets. My mind flashed back to
the meeting with the Wolfram and Hart lawyer, and I had to bury another little
shudder.
When in doubt, go on the
offensive. "Angel, huh?" I said with a sneer. "That like 'Madonna' or 'Cher' or
something? Sorry to break it to you, but that whole one-name thing has gotten a
little stale."
His eyes narrowed just a bit,
then he looked away from me; I felt ridiculously relieved, like I had just been
released from something. His eyes went to Stuart, and then to the girl on the
couch. I felt Stuart stiffen even more beside me, but he relaxed suddenly when
Angel met his eyes. It was like some kind of unspoken communication had passed
between them, because Stuart actually moved out of the way and allowed him
access to Autumn.
I watched him kneel down in front
of her, adopting the same position Stuart had been in moments earlier. He began
to talk to the girl, but so softly that I couldn't understand what was being
said. I looked over at Stuart, to see how he was taking this. His eyes were on
the stranger and the girl, but he seemed to be comfortable with the way things
were taking place.
I, on the other hand, was far
from comfortable. There were too many strangers crowding in my office, and I had
no idea what was happening around me. Leaving the hushed conversation, I turned
to the woman who had come in with the handsome Angel.
"Who are you people? What the
fuck are you doing here?"
The guy in the background might
have raised an eyebrow a bit at my choice of language -- I couldn't be sure. But it
made me feel more in charge of the situation here, whatever that may be. And
that made me feel somewhat better.
The brunette didn't back away at
all. I had the impression that she didn't scare too easily. "Cordelia. That's
Doyle," she added, nodding toward the sloucher. "We're here for
Autumn."
"Okay," I said slowly, making a
show of holding on to my slipping patience. "So you're friends of hers or
something. Fine. Take her then. And I can go home."
"We need to leave,
now."
We all turned to see Angel
standing up, helping the girl to her feet. The perpetually serious expression on
his face seemed to have gotten even more intense.
"Great. That's exactly what I was
just saying. Take the girl, leave, and the next time, make an
appointment."
He was looking at me, and I could
tell that I wasn't going to be pleased with whatever it was he said next. "You
two have to come as well."
What? I took a step back, farther
into the office, toward my desk. "No way. I'm going home."
The sound of a throat clearing
turned the attention to Doyle, "Sorry, mate," he said in a decidedly Irish
accent, not really sounding all that sorry. Something about him and I didn't get
along already. "You're in some trouble now too, I'm
afraid."
I felt a bit unbalanced.
"Trouble? What the fuck are you talking about?" No reaction that time. Damn.
"Save it for later, when we get
you to a safer place, okay?"
It was most definitely not okay.
"I'm not going anywhere until I get some kind of goddamn explanation. Obviously
you people don't know who you're dealing with here. Peter fucking Dragon does
not jump just because someone tells him to."
Doyle was scowling at me, as was
Cordelia. Angel just stood there, looking serious.
"Look, you're in mucho trouble
here, get it?" Cordelia, moving into my personal space. "No time for this ego
trip thing you're on. There's big time baddies downstairs, and we have to get
out of here before they find us."
She was definitely tough, I'd
give her that. But she had to be accustomed to dealing with far weaker people
than me. "Who's downstairs? And why in the hell would they be after me and
Stuart?"
Before anyone answered, Angel
cocked his head to the side as if he heard something. "They're coming up. I hear
the elevator."
This was all too much. "How the
fuck can you --"
A hand on my arm: Doyle. Stronger
than he looked, I discovered as he propelled me out of the office and toward the
back stairs. Looking at him close-up, he seemed ashen, his features slightly
pinched as if he were in pain. I could understand that at least: The beat in my
head was increasing tempo with every new twist in this drama. I pinched the
bridge of my nose, trying to will the ache away. There was definite tension in the group,
and I began to seriously wonder what exactly it was that we were running from.
When we hit the stairs I pulled my arm out of his grasp with a snarl, but
instinct told me that I didn't want to be left behind. I hurried with them,
resolving only to get out of the building. After that, there was damn well going
to be an explanation before I went any farther.
Out the back door, we rushed
alongside another small building and ducked inside there. I noticed that on the
way there Angel seemed to keep awfully close to the wall, staying in the shade
and hurrying with his head down. No wonder the guy was so pale. Didn't he know
that that look went out years ago?
It took me a minute to figure out
what this building was used for, having never been inside it before. Then I saw
all of the meters and dials and such, and assumed that it was the housing for
all the readers that ran the office building. "Nice hiding place, guys. I'm sure
they'll *never* think to look in
here..."
Cordelia snorted behind me.
"Yeah, well... You're gonna just wish that we were staying here when you see
what comes next."
Angel, in the lead, opened a
small door in the wall, opposite the door we came in. All I could see was
darkness inside, but something smelled rank. Almost
like...
"No way. No fucking way. I've had
about enough of this secret agent bullshit. What's wrong with you people
anyway?"
No one bothered to respond, which
pissed me off more. Angel disappeared through the door, having to fold his
muscular body almost double to pass through. Autumn right behind him, then
Doyle. Stuart looked at me, a question on his face. Cordelia looked at both of
us, then rolled her eyes. "Come on, guys, we don't have all day here. It's not
as bad as it looks... We don't even get wet. Though that smell is a pain to try
and get out of clothes, and if... Well, nevermind. Get
moving."
When neither of us made a move,
she said, "Geez, I didn't expect you two to be such wimps." The skin on the back
of my neck bristled at that one. She shrugged and moved toward the door. "Fine.
Stay and become baddie bait then. I don't care."
We watched her take a deep breath and pass through into
the darkness. I couldn't explain why I did what I did, so I blamed the headache
that was running full-force now, blurring things just a bit. I moved through the
door, growling at Stuart over my shoulder. "Let's go, Stuart. This was your mess
to begin with."
It wasn't as dark or rancid as I
had been expecting. What did I know about sewers, anyway? These people though,
seemed to be experts. They moved quickly and sure-footedly along the narrow path
that ran beside the liquid muck. My dress shoes slipped a few times, and I had
to struggle a bit to keep up, all the while cursing strongly under my breath.
After what seemed as long as a
Kevin Costner movie marathon, we stopped and climbed a short ladder to the
surface. Angel lingered below us, not following us up. "Take them to your house,
Cordelia. I'll be there in a few hours." With that, he melted away into the
darkness below.
"He's not coming with us for the
fun?" I asked once we were in the light again. I was disoriented by the
underground travel and realized that I had no idea what part of town we were
in.
"Angel?" she asked, over her
shoulder. "He's not too big on social. He'll be around
later."
She led the four of us into an
apartment building and up a few flights of stairs. I was irritated and tired,
but no further answers were forthcoming. She let us in to a decently-sized
apartment. I wondered what kind of work she was doing to be able to afford this
place.
"Dennis, we have company,"
Cordelia called out as we walked in. I looked around, expecting to see a man
emerge from somewhere. When none did, I began to wonder if this pretty girl
might be a little short on the sanity.
"Dennis?" Autumn asked warily. It
was the first time I had heard her voice since this all started. I noticed a bit
of a lilt to it, some kind of accent that I couldn't place.
Out of nowhere, a blanket flew
past me to the girl. I assumed that Cordelia or Doyle had thrown it, and I
turned to give them a piece of my mind. But they were no longer in the room. I
swear that it wrapped itself around her shoulders, absolutely no one in sight.
I rubbed my eyes, cursing the
pain in my head. Now I was starting to see things? I dropped heavily into the
chair behind me, unable to do much but stare. It's not often that I'm at a loss
for words. Stuart was gaping at Autumn and the blanket, his mouth hanging open
like he was trying to catch something. The girl for her part, just looked around
the room, pulling the blanket closer around herself. "Uh, thank you?" she said
to the air.
Cordelia returned wearing
different clothing, took one look at the three of us and smiled. "I see you've
met Dennis already. He's not major into formal introductions," she added,
looking up as if she were speaking to someone. Her voice was jokingly
reproachful. My head pounded on.
Stuart actually spoke first.
"Who...?"
"Dennis is a ghost.
Duh."
"Ghost?" he repeated in a shaking
voice. I was just glad he was there to ask all the stupid babbling questions for
me, so that I didn't have to look like the idiot.
"He's friendly, aren't you,
Phantom Dennis?" The lights flickered once, then came back on. I decided that I
must be going out of my mind.
Autumn had curled up on the couch
under the blanket, and was somehow already asleep. I wished I could do the same.
Ghost. Angel Investigations. What the fuck was going on?
Really?
I had to get things back under
control, so I moved for a safer topic --as if I had been dealing with ghosts all
my life. "So where's Doyle?"
"Sleeping," came the reply. Was
everyone around here narcoleptic or something? "The visions really wear him
out."
I could feel the solidifying
ground begin to crumble again. Visions? It must have showed on my face, because
Cordelia laughed at me. "Yeah, visions. That's how we knew where to find you
guys."
Okaaay... As if that just cleared
everything up. A glass of water floated into my line of sight and hovered in
front of me as if I was supposed to take it. "That's real nice and all, Casper,"
I said to the empty air, "but the only thing that's going to cut it here is a
bottle of aspirin and a pint of bourbon."
Imagine my surprise when the
water glass upended itself on my head.
I jumped up with a yelp, only to
see Stuart trying to hide a grin. The smirk on Cordelia's face was quiet clear.
I stood there, dripping on the floor, trying to remind myself that I would only
look like an idiot trying to fight with the air. Didn't work. I could feel the
anger bubbling.
"Goddamn it!" I yelled, causing a
sharp pain to shoot through the inside of my skull. "Stuart, find me a towel."
After only a brief hesitation, he disappeared and returned with the requested
object. I tried to dry my dripping hair, get the water off of my face, while
Cordelia stood there laughing.
"I'm glad to see that you're so
amused by this," I said through clenched teeth, while I tried to get some of the
water off of my suit. "Maybe you'll still be laughing when I send you the
dry-cleaning bill."
The towel was pulled out of my
hands and began wiping up the water spilled on the floor. "Thank you, Dennis,"
Cordelia told the ghost. She looked up at me, her arms crossed. "Look, Mister
Big Shot, I don't know exactly what you've got shoved up your butt, but I've
taken on monsters far scarier than you. You don't even have claws, for pete's
sake."
Claws?
"So knock off the king of the
mountain crap. Remember that at any time we could just leave you out there for
Wolfram and Hart to find." A corner of her mouth quirked up endearingly. "And
you should try and be a bit nicer to Dennis."
I was still stuck on the first
part. "Wolfram and Hart?"
She nodded. "The big bad lawyers.
They're the ones who are after us. And maybe now you."
I glanced over to Stuart. "I...
We were just there..."
Cordelia sounded a bit impatient.
"I know. That's where we followed you from."
"No, I was just *there.* Like I hired them to settle
something for me."
Her features turned into a frown.
"Not real bright, are you? They're pretty much as evil as they
come."
I rubbed my forehead. "I needed a
good lawyer, to get rid of the writer who's riding my ass... Nevermind. You
wouldn't understand, I'm sure."
"Writer?" Suddenly she seemed to
perk up, even dropping the aggressive stance. "You're in the business then?
What, a director?"
She had moved closer to me, a
bright light shining in her eyes. "Producer. Peter Dragon, DragonFire Studios.
Don't tell me that that vision or whatever didn't already tell you
that?"
"No, they're not usually that
specific..." Her voice trailed off, as if she were speaking to herself. "Though
if I find out that Doyle knew and didn't mention it..." She looked back at me,
all smiles suddenly. "Anyway, you're here now. Did you say you wanted bourbon?"
She asked, heading for the kitchen. "I'm not sure if we've got any... but Doyle
may have left something here..." She disappeared into the other room. Stuart and
I exchanged looks, his complete
with one eyebrow raised at the shift in demeanor.
I wasn't particularly surprised.
The girl wanted to work. And to do that in this town, you had to know somebody.
I was, however, a bit annoyed that I hadn't thought to mention it sooner and
skip all the attitude.
Cordelia returned after a moment
with a full shot glass and a bottle of Extra-Strength Tylenol. I took both from
her gratefully, emptied four of the pills into my hand and knocked them back
with the shot. It wasn't bourbon, but it was some damn good whiskey. That Doyle
had taste in liquor, if nothing else.
The chair I had been sitting in
was thoroughly damp, so I took the only other chair in the room. Stuart inched a
little closer to me, hovering in the background as usual.
"Of course, now isn't the time,"
the girl was saying, "but when this is all over I'd love to give you my head
shots, my resume, an audition..."
"Of course," I responded, sinking
back into the chair. How had this become such a long day when the sun hadn't
even fully set yet?
***
At some point, I did end up
dozing a bit. Cordelia's phone rang and there began a long, repetitive
conversation about this bit part and that, a couple names dropped here and
there, and the price of the new skirt she had just bought on Rodeo. All together
wholly boring and minor league.
The next thing I was aware of was
opening my eyes to see Angel coming in the front door. I think he was wearing
different clothes, but it was hard to tell with as similar as this outfit was to
the last. I was beginning to get that he wasn't much of a pastel
man.
He met my eyes and nodded stiffly
-- I assumed it was supposed to be some kind of greeting. I remembered what the
girl had said about him being somewhat unsociable. Which was fine with me. I
wasn't exactly looking to make any new friends here.
The headache had gone, and I was
again questioning why I had let myself be dragged into this. These bizarre
people had cried Danger, sure, but I didn't see any. I wondered if they did this
often, picking people up and dragging them home. Maybe this was some kind of
fucked up Misery
thing.
Cordelia came out of the kitchen,
followed by Doyle, drink in hand. Stuart had somehow ended up on the couch
beside Autumn, asleep sitting up. I stood and stretched, and then nudged him on
the shoulder. He opened his eyes and looked up at me
blearily.
"Let's get out of here. I'm done
with this... whatever this is."
"We can't protect you if you
leave here."
I turned to Angel, who was still
standing by the door, coat still on. "Look, I don't know who you people are or
what you want. The secretive, shadowy danger thing is a great angle, and I can
see you've got plenty of practice. You've even got some kind of smug ghost.
Really, you should consider writing this all up and trying to land a pilot. But
I'm going to change the channel and get on with my life
now."
"A bit of a bastard, isn't he?" I
heard Doyle mutter around the rim of his glass.
Cordelia snorted. "What is your
deal? Didn't I tell you about all the badness and danger and stuff?
Geez..."
"Yeah, well, you all keep *saying* that, but I've yet to see
--"
A huge crash, like the world was
ending, accompanied by the sound of glass shattering across the floor. I swear I
thought I heard Cordelia moan something about her window, but all thought flew
out of my head when I turned to see what exactly was happening behind
me.
I make movies for a living. I
know all about camera tricks and special effects and bringing the somewhat
fantastical and unrealistic to life. But I never would have come up with
something like the thing that had landed ten feet from me. It just would have
been too unbelievable.
Not that I had time to
rationalize as it was happening. No, it was more like a flash of green and scaly
and *big*, and then I was knocked out
of the way just before Angel leapt on The Thing, coat billowing out behind him
in a visual effect that any director would have killed for. I was caught between
trying to stand and trying to crab-scuttle away from the fray as quickly as I
could. Angel was thrown across the room, smashing hard into the far
wall.
He immediately climbed to his
feet, looking none the worse for the impact, rejoining the fight just as Doyle
-- who had filled his place even as Angel was sailing through the air -- was
knocked backward as well. I saw Cordelia then, with what looked like a goddamn
*crossbow.* The Thing flailed out in
all directions (and I suddenly realized what Cordelia had meant about "claws").
Angel took a slash across his abdomen, but continued to fight as if it were a
papercut. In what could have been any length of time but felt like merely
seconds, the fight was finished as the monster went down with an arrow in the
heart.
Or where I assumed the heart
would be. On... whatever... that thing was.
Then, just to add to the whole
freakish surreality of the whole thing, the creature exploded into a green burst
of flame. A flame that somehow didn't catch on anything else, instead burning
itself out less than a minute later. With no trace left behind of anything
unusual at all.
I couldn't breathe. I was trying,
I assure you, but I couldn't seem to do it. There was a tightness in my chest,
like someone was sitting on me, and my vision started to go gray at the edges.
Something in the back of my head warned me that I was hyperventilating, but I
couldn't seem to do any thing about that.
Then I was being supported over
to what turned out to be the couch. I wanted to tell them not to touch me, tell
everyone just to stay the hell away from me, but I still couldn't get enough
breath. Someone was telling me to calm down; a hand was trying to push my head
down between my knees. Slowly -- far too slowly -- I began to get more air into
my lungs. The stars inside my eyelids started to fade as well. I guessed I
wasn't going to die just yet.
Unless something else jumped
through the window and ate me. Or gave me a heart attack.
"Peter... Peter, answer
me..."
That familiar voice sounded so
concerned; I lifted my head to find Stuart leaning over me so closely that I
could smell his fear and the remnants of his aftershave. His eyes brightened
when they met mine, and I could feel an answering smile moving across my face.
Then I realized that Doyle was right behind Stuart, staring down at me with what
looked like concern. Or pity.
Uh-uh. I pulled away from Stuart,
getting to my feet and ignoring the faint wave of dizziness when I stood too
fast. Stuart saw something though. "Peter, are you okay?"
"Fine," I growled, trying to will
the light-headedness away. Just another minute, and I really would be fine.
"But... Can I get you anything?
Maybe you should --"
Doyle still hadn't said anything,
just stood there, watching. Waiting for me to fall over, I'd bet. I wasn't going
to give him the satisfaction. "I said fine, Stuart. Leave me the hell alone,"
I said, scowling as the outburst sent another little ripple through my
equilibrium.
Cordelia emerged from the
direction of the other rooms I had yet to see. She was followed by a slow-moving
Angel, his open shirt showing off a thick white bandage wrapped around his
middle. Some papercut. He looked far worse than I'm sure I
did.
But he was still standing, and --
other than a wince here and there -- was managing any pain quite well. That was
assuming that such major bandaging was really necessary, and this wasn't all
some showy overkill complete with artificial grimaces. Who knew? Maybe he wanted
to audition as well.
He leaned against a wall, his
eyes on me. I got the feeling then that he was standing simply because I was,
like some kind of territorial alpha male bullshit. He didn't seem to realize
that I lived that
game.
Steeling myself for a version of
the usual power-struggle pissing contest, his words took me by surprise. "You
okay?"
No way was I falling for whatever
mind game twist this was. I opened my mouth to tell him to mind his own fucking
business, but Doyle was faster. "He's a regular dose of sunshine, this one is,
Angel. And about as big on gratitude as Princess over
there."
"Hey!" Cordelia protested from
where she stood, close to Angel.
Angel ignored them both. "Derak
demons always come in pairs," he announced, his voice low and serious. "We've
got to prepare for this one's mate. We might not have much
time."
At what point was I going to wake
up and find that this was all a dream?
"There's going to be another
one?" Cordelia asked, hands on her hips and a frown on her face. "There'd better
be room for a cleaning service in our budget, Angel. That, and a new window.
Because there's no way I'm putting some tacky cardboard up
there..."
"We'll take care of it later,
Cordelia." He sounded exhausted to me, and I didn't even know the man. But
I must have been right, because the girl was instantly guiding him to the couch
even as Doyle was brushing the few glass fragments off onto the
floor.
Angel tried to shake her off, but
she refused to be dissuaded. "We have to find somewhere else to move them to. We
don't have time for --"
"Enough with the Macho-Mania. You
can plan just as well from the couch." She looked to Doyle as if for backup.
"Cordy is right, Angel. That
thing almost sliced clean through you. Let her play Nurse Nightingale for a bit,
and then we'll head out."
Angel looked decidedly unhappy,
but he didn't get off the couch. I wondered just how badly he had been hurt. He
was still conscious, so it couldn't have been all that serious, right? But
Doyle's words bounced around in my head. //Sliced clean
through.//
It wasn't until then that I
realized that Autumn -- the cause of all this, in my mind -- was nowhere in the
room. Doyle and Cordelia were
focused on the injured man in front of them, and had their backs to me. But
Angel had seen me looking around and recognized what I was searching
for.
"She's resting in the other room.
She's going into shock, I think."
"Surprised she made it this
long," Doyle commented.
Angel tried to push himself off
the couch, but Cordelia's hand on his shoulder -- as well as the pain evident on
his face -- kept him down. "Someone should check on her again," he said through
tightly clenched teeth. Behind me, Stuart volunteered. Angel nodded at him. "You
do seem to have a calming effect on her... Damn."
The last word escaped his lips
somewhere between a groan and a whisper. Cordelia left the room, returning
quickly with a mug of something or other. I thought it might be alcohol, but I
couldn't smell anything. The liquid had steam coming off of it, so I assumed it
wasn't water either. Probably some of that herbal crap. These people looked like
they might be into that natural bullshit.
Well, maybe not Doyle. I was
guessing that his liquid diet consisted mostly of hard
liquor.
When the cup was handed to him,
Angel looked up at Cordelia with something like surprised confusion on his face.
His eyes slid to me, then back to Cordelia, who simply offered a small shrug. I
would have been curious about the odd exchange, but, due to the earlier events
of the day, I really didn't have it in me.
After drinking what must have
been half of the liquid in the mug, Angel spoke again. "We have to get Autumn to
somewhere safe until we can get her out of town. Any ideas?" he asked the other
two.
"The office would be too
obvious," Doyle thought aloud. "It has to be some place no one knows about..."
He turned to me, a devious grin on his face. "How 'bout your place,
mate?"
I took a step back, unconsciously
putting space between myself and this group. "No way. Not a chance in hell. I'm
not risking something like *that*," I
gestured to where the creature had gone up in flames, "coming to my house. I
just had new carpeting put in." This didn't seem to hold much sway with them, so
I tried something else. "Besides, Wolfram and Hart have my
address."
Angel paused in mid-drink, one
sculpted eyebrow raised. Cordelia leaned over to him and explained in a stage
whisper. "He hired them," she said, in the tone of someone discussing the
mistakes of a child. Then she brightened. "The good news is that he's a
producer, so when this is over I --"
"Later, Cordelia," Angel said,
cutting her off midsentence. Doyle smothered a chuckle, and Cordelia shot him a
dirty look. Doyle stuck his tongue out at her. Angel looked at them both with an
expression of tightly-stretched patience. For once I could sympathize with him.
"It's not so much about Wolfram
and Hart: Derak demons track their prey by scent." I noticed that it was
becoming less and less bizarre to hear a bunch of semi-rational adults using the
word "demon" in every other sentence. I wondered what that said about me and
this whole situation. Angel continued, "It's got the girl's trail. We can't ask
Mr. Dragon to risk his home for this."
Damn right they
can't.
"So you're saying that Mrs. Green
Yuck is going to come find us no matter where we go?"
"Mister, actually. The one that
came here was the female."
Cordelia groaned. "I do not get paid well enough for
this."
"So why don't we just stay here?"
Doyle asked. "If it's going to get us anyway, what's the point in
running?"
"You wouldn't be saying that if
this was your apartment facing certain destruction, " Cordelia told him. "Oh
wait, that's right -- If this was your apartment, no one could tell the
difference."
"Ha ha. Excuse me if I have more
important things to do instead of picking out furniture and paint chips,
Princess."
"And when exactly do you do these
'important things'?" Cordelia shot back. "In between all the drinking and
hanging around the office, is it?"
"Guys, guys... Enough." They both
glared at each other like fighting siblings, but neither said anything else. "I
need something constructive here."
Doyle was the first to break the
eye contact, turning back to Angel. "Okay, I repeat my question: What's the
point in running?"
I swear Angel actually squirmed a
little. He looked uncomfortable, but not just from his wounds. "We need to put
some space between us and it, to give us more time."
More time? That's it -- I was in
hell. A never-ending, horrible hell. Why couldn't we just finish this and then I
could go back to my life. I never wanted to see any of these people ever
again.
"Why do we need more... Oh,"
Cordelia started, suddenly answering her own question and mine. "You can't fight
them until you heal."
Now he was definitely squirming.
"I *can* fight. I will if I have to.
It's just that..." What looked like embarrassment flashed across his features,
quickly submerged. "It would be better if I had a little time, is all." The
admission looked like it had cost him, and I caught myself relating to him
again. I hate doctors; consequently, I also hate admitting that there is ever
anything wrong with me.
"If we hide at my house," I heard
myself saying, surprised as anyone in the room to hear the words that were
coming out of my mouth, "it will give you the time you
need?"
"We can use my apartment."
Stuart, coming up behind me and making me jump. I glared at him.
"There's no way I'm spending
god-knows-how-long in that cramped thing you call an apartment, Stuart. Besides,
at my house I know for sure there'll be some decent liquor."
Why exactly was I arguing for
this?
Angel was getting slowly to his
feet, unable to hide the grimace on his face. "How's Autumn?" he asked Stuart,
probably as a distraction for all of us, but still with genuine concern.
"Sleeping," he answered as Angel
began painfully buttoning up his shirt. "She's exhausted."
"She's not the only one,"
Cordelia said under her breath. I thought she meant herself, until I looked and
saw where her eyes were. Angel either ignored her or was concentrating on his
task so intently that he didn't hear.
This martyr thing seemed to be
pushing a bit far, even by my standards. Especially if we were counting on this
guy to be our champion. Even I could tell that this man was barely on his feet.
"Should he be in a hospital or something?"
Angel visibly straightened, his
face almost a blank mask. "I heal quickly. It's fine." The shortness of the
statement left little room to argue.
Cordelia and Doyle shared a look,
but neither said anything for a moment or two. Then Doyle broke the silence.
"All right, you're the boss, Angel. Princess, let's get these people moving.
Relative safety, here we come."
***
Doyle let out a low whistle. "I
guess you make some money, huh?" he asked, looking around my living room. And
paying a little too much attention to the crystal vase that sat on the front
table.
"Don't touch anything," I told
him as I left them and ran up the stairs. Despite all that had gone on, the only
thing I could focus on at the moment I walked in my door was the intense need to
change my clothes. Now that we had a little breathing time (no pun intended), I
was beginning to realize how disgusting the smell coming off of them really was.
Sewer, definitely -- Cordelia had been right on that one. And something else I
couldn't place... Monster, maybe? A shudder ran through me, and I stripped
quickly.
The shoes might be a lost cause,
I decided. Some kind of nasty looking slime on the bottom of one. I hoped I
hadn't tracked it through the house. To say nothing of the people that were now
in my living room. If there was so much as a smudge on my new
carpet...
I didn't feel comfortable leaving
them down there for long on their own, but I decided that I had to take a
shower. It was less than relaxing. The only thing I could think of while I was
in there was that either Doyle was going to make off with half of my things or
some big "demon" thing was going to suddenly come flying through a wall. I was
out and dressed in less time than it takes to list Don Johnson's Oscar
nominations.
Nothing -- including my walls --
seemed to be missing or broken when I came back downstairs. Doyle was stretched
out on one of my couches, watching Angel pace slowly like a caged cat; Cordelia
was sitting on the other, flipping through one of the trades that had been left
on the coffee table. Stuart was standing beside Autumn, who was sitting on one
of my bar stools, drinking what looked like water but could have been anything.
I doubted underage drinking was
one of our problems at the moment.
They looked at me when I came in,
then immediately went back to what they had been doing. So calm, as if we
weren't all waiting around for a law firm and a killer monster to burst through
the door at any minute. I wondered if I had any Xanex left
upstairs.
I did, and wasted no time taking
a couple to take the edge off. Follow that up with a gin and tonic, and I was
well on my way to becoming as mellow on the inside as I was pretending to be on
the outside. Demons? Hah. Claws? No problem. I'd fought studios, for crissake.
It was all the same thing.
Still, my mind was having a bit
of a problem fully accepting this whole idea. Well, part of it was. Another part
was taking care to memorize every FX detail for use sometime later. By the time
I had started on the second drink the drugs had kicked in, and I was well on my
way to believing that the whole thing had been a movie effect to begin
with.
An hour passed in silence. When I
realized that I was being hypnotized by the ticking of my own Rolex, I got out
of my chair and headed back for the bar. Angel was standing still now, a shadow
of a statue looking out the window into the darkness. I wondered what it was he
was expecting to see on my front lawn.
"So now what?" I asked him,
refilling my glass. "Intermission? To Be Continued?"
He looked at me -- that same
piercing, silent appraisal -- and then turned back to the window as he answered.
"He's searching the city. It could take him a while. Or
not."
"Might as well be talking to a
Magic 8 ball," I muttered, taking a sip. Needed more gin. Doyle approached the
bar while I was pouring, the incline of his head silently asking permission to
get another for himself. I nodded, picking up my own drink again. Much
better.
I watched him help himself. Again
the question surfaced: Who *were* these people?
"You do this often?" I heard
myself asking. Brain was beginning to lag a bit behind the tongue.
Comfortable.
He looked up at me, an eyebrow
arched. "What's that?"
"This. Fight...uh... demons." The
word didn't want to come out, it seemed.
The amused smile returned to his
lips. "Yeah. It's pretty much *what* we do."
Demons. Deeeeee-mons. Hmmm...
maybe I finally did have that breakdown after all, and I'm still on the set?
Where the hell did Stuart go, anyway?
Stuart was sitting on the other
couch, his arm still firmly around his new pet. She was staring straight ahead,
her gaze resting on a spot somewhere on my carpet. He was rocking her gently,
but she appeared totally nonresponsive. "What happened to her, anyway?" I asked
Doyle, nodding in their direction.
Doyle looked at Autumn, his eyes
sad. "Poor girl saw something she wasn't supposed to. Wrong place at the wrong
time and all that."
"So the *lawyers* are trying to
kill her? The jokes are true after all." There had to be pieces I was missing
here, because these were some big
holes. Of course, my attention span at the moment seemed short enough that it
probably wouldn't matter to me anyway, in a minute or two.
He shrugged. "Bit of advice?
Things aren't usually what they seem."
His smug little brush-off annoyed
me. "Thanks so much, Son of Cryptic. Did you make that up all by
yourself?"
Doyle's eyes narrowed a bit. "You
always treat people like this when they're trying to help you
?"
"I treat people like this when
they're wasting my time."
We were almost nose-to-nose by
this point, my anger matching what I could feel coming off of him. I'm not sure
why I wanted this fight, but I knew I did. I'd wanted it when he walked into my
office.
"Mate," he started, under his
breath, "if Angel didn't say --"
"What's wrong? Daddy got you on
too short of a leash?"
The guy packed more than I would
have expected, I'll admit that. Before I saw it coming, I was reeling back into
the bar's polished wood, literally seeing spots from the left he'd landed almost
dead center on my nose. What little I could make out through the sparkling haze
was the self-satisfied smirk on his face.
"You little prick..." I jumped on
him, swinging.
Things went a bit fuzzy there.
Some time soon after, Angel and Cordelia had us on separate sides of the room
like scuffling first graders in time-out. Cordelia had one of my monogrammed
bathroom towels and was pulling slivers of glass from Doyle's palms and
shoulder. I noticed that even the realization that I had lost some glassware
wasn't enough at that moment to dampen my spiteful happiness at his minor
wounds.
We continued to glare at each
other from our opposite corners. Angel looked back and forth between us,
frowning like a disappointed parent. "This isn't working."
"Right-o, let's pack it up and
leave this bastard to his own defenses."
Cordelia smacked him lightly on
the uninjured shoulder and he pouted at her, missing the look that Angel
directed at him. "We're not leaving anyone. You two are just going to have to
ignore each other."
"If I ignore him, he'll probably
run off with the nearest thing that looks expensive." Angel turned that look on
me. I had to make a supreme effort not to drop my eyes in the face of his dark
intensity. I didn't think the guy was going to ever blink.
When he broke the eye contact, my
gaze darted around the room, instinctively seeking out something less...
*threatening* to look at. It settled on Autumn, who was continuing to focus
completely on my carpet. If the fight had caught her attention at all, you
couldn't tell now. She simply wasn't there.
It was then that the perfect
solution to all of this came to me. "What if we took her to the hospital," I
began, all eyes in the room turning on me. "This evil monster thing will track
her *there,* right? Instead of here?" Seemed like a definite plus to me. No
monster, no mess.
"Peter --" I heard Stuart
protest. At the same time, Doyle's voice rose with, "You cold-hearted
--"
"Wait. He has a
point."
"What?" Cordelia and her boy
patient couldn't have timed it better had it been scripted. "Angel, we can't --"
and "Angel, you're not really going to --"
Stuart, for his part, simply
watched the arguing with his lips in a tight line, never releasing his hold on
Autumn. I knew that look. Stuart Glazer was unhappy. Whether he would do
something about it was another matter entirely.
Angel stood up, leaning with one
arm on the back of the overstuffed chair. "She needs medical attention. If she's
in the hospital, she can get that. I can watch her room, and grab the Derak when
it comes for her."
"Bait." Doyle spit the word out
with obvious distaste.
"I'll be right there. Nothing is
going to get to her. And it will be safer for the rest of you. You'll be out of
the way."
I still was not seeing the
downside to the plan. Sit back in my comfortable living room, drinking myself
into sweet, familiar oblivion while this self-appointed Batman took care of a
problem that wasn't even mine to begin with. Nope, no downside at
all.
The Dark Knight's sidekicks still
looked less than thrilled, though. "Since when has 'safe' ever been part of the
plan?" Doyle asked him. "The PTB didn't give me this power so I could sit back
and watch you get killed."
PTB? Great, more secret lingo.
Where did I leave my decoder ring again?
"No one's getting
killed."
Doyle stood up, separating
himself from Cordelia's ministrations, and moved closer to Angel. "That thing
came close to taking you out last time," he said softly. "You're not back to
full strength yet. You can't take this on alone."
"He's right," Cordelia agreed,
standing and joining them. "We're a team, remember? Brooding Protector,
Vision-boy, and me. And, since I do *everything* else around here" -- I saw
Doyle roll his eyes theatrically, barely dodging another blow from the girl -- "you can't leave me out
either."
Angel looked back and forth
between them, finally seeming to realize that neither was going to budge. He
sighed. "Fine. But someone should stay here, just to be sure."
"And," Cordelia said, continuing
the thought, "since the Testosterone Twins can't be in the same room together, I
guess that means me."
The taller man nodded, then moved
to kneel beside Autumn. I beat back the deja-vous with a large swallow of my
drink, which I was pleased to see had somehow managed to avoid being upset
during the fighting. Too bad the ice had melted. I hate
that.
Stuart was arguing with Angel,
trying to convince the other man that he should go along as well. The image of
me and the lovely Cordelia alone in my house was a pleasant one, but Angel
clearly thought otherwise. Too bad. I have to say I've never been hiding from an
otherworldly creature with a beautiful woman before. I bet the sex would have
been incredible.
Good to see that it merely took a
sci-fi near death experience to get me off of the "one-woman" track. Shit, I'd
forgotten about Wendy. When was she supposed to have gotten in? What the hell
time was it *now*? Oh man, was she going to be pissed...
I was distracted by the glimpse
of metal as Angel adjusted something in the lining of his coat. Cordelia was
keeping the crossbow with us. (Crossbow. Of course. Why wasn't I writing all of
this down? Between Stuart and I, we should be able to get some kind of a script
from all of this.) If Doyle was
armed, I didn't see it. Maybe the demon would be hungry for obnoxious
Irishmen.
Doyle helped Autumn up. She only
moved where he directed her, as if she had no will of her own. Christina Ricci
as the girl? No, too old. Katie Holmes in a darker turn? Hmmm. Not entirely sure
she could pull it off. What about that girl -- what was her name? Kirsten Dunst.
She'd done some good work. Have to dirty her up a bit...
Then Doyle was at my side. I
resisted the impulse to swat at him. Cordelia was at the door, talking to Angel
in a low voice. Stuart was standing with the girl, telling her god-knows-what.
Probably promising her the Happily Ever After ending. Sap.
Anyway, there was Doyle, doing a
fairly good impression of a gnat in my ear. "If anything happens to Cordelia
while we're gone, you're gonna be the one answering for it. Got
it?"
He didn't even try to conceal the
tenderness in his voice when he spoke of her, and the predator in me honed right
in to peg that as his weakness. I couldn't resist. "Oh, sure... But if you
happen to come back here and can't find us, be sure to check
upstairs."
I watched the anger take over his
face as my meaning dawned on him. I swear he actually growled. "Don't touch
her."
"Even if she
begs?"
Faster than I could react, Angel
had hold of the Irishman's arms, pulling him away from me even before he could
strike. I just stood there, my long-practiced smug smile firmly on my face.
Doyle snarled something under his breath that definitely wasn't English, then
straightened himself and walked toward the door -- with remarkable restraint,
I'll admit.
Though not to
him.
***
"So, do you actually *enjoy*
this?"
"Hmmm?"
We'd been sitting in my
completely uneventful living room for a little over two hours. Stuart had
retreated into the guest bedroom right off from where we were. Cordelia was
flipping through the latest Backstage West (Where had *that* come from?
Theater... psh.), finally silent after a long run of more directionless rambling
than I'd seen since the last Oscars. I don't know why I was trying to engage her
in conversation again, after she'd finally shut up, but the silence was
beginning to grate more than the sound of her voice.
Lesser of two
evils.
"This demon thing. You actually
enjoy doing this?"
She looked up at me like I'd just
signed Pauly Shore as my next romantic lead. "Yuck, no. Demons are evil, and
usually tend to explode. That, or drip goo over whatever I happen to have just
gotten back from the dry cleaners. Do you have any idea how expensive it is to
get demon innards out of any kind of fabric?"
Couldn't say that I
did.
"Besides, we don't always fight
demons. We help people." She smiled proudly at that thought, but her expression
darkened a moment later. "Unfortunately, we only seem to help the *unpaying*
people... No matter how often I explain it to him, Angel thinks that the whole
money issue isn't really all that important. I could show up in rags for what we
get paid, and he wouldn't even notice."
I tried to picture her in rags.
Despite the chemical haze I was floating in, it still turned me
on.
"Not that Angel's not great, but
you might have noticed he's not the best conversationalist. I swear, if Doyle
wasn't around to talk to, I'd probably go agro."
"What about Doyle? Are you
two...?"
That Pauly Shore look again. "As
if. Not that he's -- well... I
mean, Doyle's sweet. But he's not exactly financially solvent, you know? A girl
needs a man who can support her. And Doyle's definitely not that man. And not
moving that way any time soon, either. No thank you. Xander Harris was one loser
too many. I've hit my quota for life."
Xander Harris? I decided to just
let that slide all together. However, the part about her wanting a man to
support her... No problem. I could do that -- just ask my
ex-wife.
I was about to hint as much, when
someone began pounding on my front door. It didn't sound like a Jehovah's
Witness either. The two of us headed for the door. I noticed she was holding her
weapon, and I couldn't decide if that made me feel better or
worse.
I had barely turned the knob when
they burst in. Doyle looked like he'd seen his share of a fight, complete with
the rapidly swelling right eye. He was almost carrying Angel, who staggered
along with his feet barely tracking on the floor. Cordelia immediately grabbed
his other arm and pulled it over her shoulder, and the two of them supported him
to my couch.
"He's bleeding again," Doyle
offered in explanation as he pushed aside the leather jacket lapels and began to
unbutton the other man's shirt. Angel mumbled something and tried to lift his
head from the back of the couch, but he was less than successful.
Once the silk shirt was moved out
of the way, I could see that the white bandage was now soaked in red. I heard
Cordelia suck in a breath, but I was having trouble pulling my eyes away from
all that blood. At least the couch was black. Unlike the
carpet.
"Do you have a first-aid kit?"
she asked me, barely looking away from her friend.
Did I have --? "No. I don't
usually have guests bleeding all over my furniture.
Sorry."
Doyle glared at me, then jumped
up and left the room. I watched Cordelia fuss over Angel, wondering vaguely how
I could possibly squash the story if this man died in my house. Too bad Wolfram
and Hart were the ones we were supposed to be running from. I had the feeling
that they'd be able to handle something like this.
Wait, maybe they still could. I
mean, it's not like I was an active participant in all of this. It wasn't my
fault that these do-gooders kidnapped me and involved me in this bizarre scene.
They couldn't actually hold me responsible, could they?
"Here, we'll use
this."
Doyle was holding, much to my
horror, my fine guest sheets. Those cost more than he'd probably ever have in
his pocket at any time in his entire life. Stuart wandered into the room a
minute later, a somewhat bewildered look on his face. One look at his flattened
hair told me that he had been using those sheets up until a moment ago. The look
he gave me was slightly apologetic.
"Hold on. You can't --" The rest
of the sentence was lost in the loud ripping sound that filled the room. "You're
paying for those," I informed him. Paying clients or no, I was getting
reimbursed for this.
Doyle ignored me. Surprise,
surprise. With a bit of effort, he peeled the wet bandages off. Angel groaned
but still didn't open his eyes. I managed to grab the disgusting bundle before
Doyle dropped it on my carpet. I hurried it to the trashcan, then proceeded to
scrub my hands until they were raw. These days, it paid to be paranoid around
blood. What a great time to be alive.
"Looks like the wound reopened
during the fight," Doyle was saying when I reentered the room. He was rewrapping
Angel's midsection with what used to be my sheets, but the injured man still had
not shown any signs of awareness. I wondered how much blood he'd
lost.
"What happened?" Cordelia asked,
watching Angel worriedly.
"Demon showed, just like he knew
it would. We managed to get it out into an alley on one side of the hospital
building... It was a tough bastard, I'll tell you that. I went down, and when I
came to, Angel was staggering away from me, leaving a trail of red behind him.
He almost made it to the street when he collapsed."
"What about the demon?" she
demanded. "Did you get it?"
"...got
away..."
We all turned to look at Angel,
as if unsure that the gravelly words had come from him. "I...lost it..." His
eyes were mere slits, pain creasing their corners. With obvious effort, he
lifted his head from the back of the couch and moved as if to sit up. Both
Cordelia and Doyle held him down easily. He fell back against the pillows,
breathing in short, quick pants. "No time. It's... loose. Probably...
followed..."
"That thing is on its way
*here*?" No answer. "What about going for the girl?"
"It's angry..." His eyes were
closed again, and every word sounded as if it were being forced out.
"...revenge..."
"Great. Just fucking
great."
"Real helpful," Doyle
snapped.
Before I could come back with a
reply, Cordelia intervened. "Not now, you guys. We have *way* bigger things to
deal with."
As if on cue, the front door flew
open, wood splintering as it crashed against the wall behind it. Cordelia made
some comment I didn't quite catch -- something about being invited in, I think.
Out of the corner of my vision, I saw Doyle helping Angel to his feet,
supporting him as if *that* meant he could fight. I grabbed the closest
weapon-looking thing that my hand closed around and backed as far away from the
creature as I could. I didn't even know what I was holding -- other than it was
heavy.
I couldn't seem to pull my eyes
away from the monster long enough to look.
Bigger than the other, if my
memory could be trusted. And definitely *not* FX, as surreal as it seemed. This
thing had horns, wicked looking points sticking right out of its skull. Did the
other one have horns? Did it really matter?
And then came the action-sequence
rush of motion. Angel managed to launch himself at Mrs. Thing, only to get
knocked backward over the arm of the chair with one sweep of a green arm.
Surprisingly, he was struggling to get back up when I glanced his way. This guy
was super-human or something.
A glimpse of light on glass as a
paperweight my daughter had bought me flew across the room to bounce off the
demon. Stuart. The Thing recognized the source as well, and turned on him. A
fierce, animal yell brought its attention back around just as Doyle landed on
its back. It tried to shake him off, but was having some difficulty. Angel
meanwhile was on his feet again, however unsteady. Amazingly, he got a few solid
kicks in before The Thing flung him away again. This time he hit the floor and
didn't move. Stuart moved toward him, only to get knocked down by a flying
Cordelia. She landed on top of him, not showing much sign of rising either.
Stuart was squirming underneath her, trying to free himself. Blood speckled the
once-pristine white carpet, and there was a decent amount beginning to spread
from Angel's prone form.
My carpet. My brand-fucking-new
carpet that took three days to install because the first time it wasn't cut
right. My beautiful fucking carpet that cost me more than my last movie spent on
film. My carpet that had to be ordered specifically from one particular company,
because they were the only people who carried that exact
shade...
"Goddammit, you ruined my fucking
carpet, you son of a bitch!"
Later, I was able to see the
absolute lack of any kind of thought that went into what I did. Later I realized
exactly how stupid I had been, how close to becoming monster food. Later I dosed
myself with Valium for three days and did nothing but lie in bed and shake for
hours at a time. But right then, all I could see was red. Everywhere. And I
charged.
The impact sent stabs of pain
shooting all the way up into my shoulder. I screamed, dropping my weapon and
falling to the floor, clutching my arm in agony. Imagine my surprise when the
weapon stuck. Multiply that by six, and you'll come close to the look of shock
on the demon's face, right before he burst into green
flames.
***
It was decided by the group that
Stuart and I were probably not in any danger, considering that the girl was no
longer with us, and that the demon team had failed. The reasoning went that
since the demons were tracking us on their own -- and since neither lived to
report back to its masters -- that our involvement in the whole affair was
fairly speculative. At the very least, I was informed only a few days later by
that writer's lawyer that the suit against me and DragonFire Films was being
dropped. I took that to be a sufficient sign as to my status in the eyes of
Wolfram and Hart.
Still, the do-gooders insisted on
keeping a surreptitious eye on us for a while more. I never did see any of them,
but occasionally I would get that creepy, shivery feeling that only Angel had
ever been able to produce in me. Maybe I was imagining it. Maybe not. What I
didn't imagine was the bloodstains all over my living room, or the loss of my
new carpeting. Took them almost as long to pull it out as it did to put it in,
plus this time I had to throw in some extra to keep certain things from getting
out to the press.
I took a week of vacation, most
of which -- as I said -- was spent inside my house. I had new locks installed on
the new front door, and I decided to leave the hardwood bare for the time being.
I didn't end up sending Angel and Co. the bill, though I was tempted. Especially
after Wendy (whose flight had been delayed by almost ten hours, thank christ)
came home, and I spilled the entire story -- realizing again just how much I had
been screwed out of during this whole thing.
Turns out, in case you were
wondering, that I had stabbed the demon with the metal poker from my fireplace.
Apparently metal isn't a favorite of these particular creatures. I wanted to
call everyone who'd told me that a fireplace in LA was a waste of time, but of
course I didn't. Who'd believe a story like that anyway?
I'm still not sure that I
do.
