"It's not here

Disclaimer: Joss Whedon and David Greenwalt own everything.

First of all, many thanks to those who reviewed my previous fics so kindly. It is great to get feedback of any kind, except of course the evil flame variety. This fanfic, like the others focuses on the early relationship between Cordy and Angel. This is the first chapter of most likely four, but its still a work in progress so who knows… :)

As always it's a platonic friendship between C/A. Its practically canon, except that its set before Expecting and Wesley already works for Angel Investigations. Serena and Emily were featured in the episode Expecting and Jarod is my own character.  Let me know what you think, its hardly ground breaking fiction and is probably irritatingly slow paced, but hell writing the stuff makes my nights at work pass quickly! Review box is at the end, for some reason there's always a big space between my fic and the review box.. any tips on formatting would be welcomed… On to the fic….

Body Armour.

"It's not here."

Offering a silent prayer to the gods of patience and serenity, Cordelia released a long breath and lifting her eyes from the blinking computer screen, she levelled a hazel gaze at the befuddled looking vampire in the adjoining room.

"Yes it is," She craned her neck backward and regarded him calmly, "I told you to check the second drawer down on the left. You haven't checked it."

His dark eyes glinted with enlightenment.

"On the left," Angel echoed, clicking his fingers as he twisted around to his desk. Sliding the darkened wood drawer outward, Angel rummaged through the medley of weapons, stakes and scrolls contained within, his hand finally tugging the Text of Aberyion from beneath some withered manuscripts.

"Found it," he declared cheerfully, waving the eleventh century journal at his young associate. 

"Oh good" Cordelia murmured disinterestedly, her eyes shifting back to the computer screen. "Now, just sit and read your old book while I try to figure out how to print this invoice."  Her face creased with concentration as she tapped the keyboard with tentative skill, the effort provoking an uncooperative beep from the obstinate computer. Slamming a hand against the side of the monitor, Cordelia inclined forward with a dark frown.

"Print, goddamn you."

"Need some help?"

"No," came the curt response from the reception area of Angel Investigations, "I've seen you struggle with a calculator.

Angels head jerked up, the movement quickened with indignation. He was quietly proud of his increasingly proficient technological abilities, as well Cordelia knew. Mastering the modern evils of computers and fax machines was no different to conquering the telephone or wireless and he had managed that with little difficulty. Angel would have informed his errant young assistant of as much, where it not for the small wax bound book tucked in his hand. His fingers curled around the spined binding, his thumb flipping the pages. Deciding that the passages within would prove more rewarding than a verbal battle with Cordelia, the vampire swallowed a retort with grim effort and instead clamped a hand on top of his leathered chair.

Sitting down, he languished back comfortably, his long legs extending beneath the mahogany desk till his feet tipped against the newly polished wood. The vampire trailed a hand across the smooth waxed cover of the newly retrieved text, enjoying the sensation of texture rippling beneath his touch. A familiar anticipation gripped him, fuelled by an expectation of the countless wonders lurking beneath the ornately decorated binding. Reading a new book was for Angel, a very old pleasure, and one that he enjoyed with ritualistic reverence. Slimming the cover upward and overleaf, he hunched forward and read the text with vigorous concentration, his understanding of the long dead language rusty but adequate. The accompanying illustrations caught his attention for a time but it was the words written by a long dead prophet that captured him and completely absorbed, Angel lost his thoughts in the ancient prophecies.

                                                ***********************       

"Good computer. Good clever computer." Cordelia's congratulatory exclamation disturbed the brief silence, a few moments later. Chin cupped in palm, Angel lifted his head from the aged script and watched his assistant hop up gleefully to pad toward the dusty and rather temperamental printer perched on Doyle's old desk.

Must replace that printer, the vampire mused absentmindedly, every-time she tries to print something off, it causes …

His thought hung, suspended. Something about Cordelia had caught his attention and suddenly alert, Angel bestowed it upon her, undivided, his eyes clinging to her every movement. Her slim body curved forward as she leaned to inspect the invoice chugging shakily from the machine.

Something…

A taut rigidity stiffened Cordelia's long back, her slight frame strained with sudden tension and recognising the signs of an imminent vision Angel sprang to his feet, the sudden motion sending the chair beneath him flying backwards. The vampire pushed it aside with a grunt of impatience, his eyes trained on the almost imperceptible sway of her body as he moved toward her with an unnatural speed, fervency ground in every step.

He had to reach her.

Cordelia jerked in the first throes of her vision, her head snapping back, the first plaintive cry escaping her thinned lips. Angel circled her swiftly from behind, looping a firm arm around her waist, his free arm pinning her outstretched hands downward. She lunged away from him with a violent desperation, instinctively fighting for freedom. Angel coaxed her back, a gentle but insistent tug drawing her closer, his grasp only tightening as he felt her weaken beneath the almost unendurable strain of the vision. He spun around, she leaning against him. The vampire flung a quick gaze the length of the office and inwardly berating himself for leaving the Manthorian Demon Lore Collection scattered upon the nearby sofa, Angel finally settled on the windowsill.

"All right Cordelia, it's all right," Angel promised soothingly as he eased her shivering frame against the ledge.

Cordelia's face contorted in pain, some fresh agony rocking her head forward so that it tilted against his chest. Angel inched closer and placed a cold hand upon her shuddering back, a vague hope of sheltering his friend from the imagery battering her mind lurking in the recesses of his own. Dipping his head downward, he strained to hear the foreign utterances she whispered to whatever darkness invaded her mind, ardent promises of acquiescence begging for release from this torment. Cordelia's insensible mutterings were caught by a sudden wincing sob, some new sight evidently shredding the last vestiges of sanity. Subduing a familiar rising helplessness, Angel contented him-self with raging against the PTB.

Send me my own damn messages. Can't you see how hard this is for her?

She clutched him tightly, calming slowly as her wrenched breathing grew even, whispers familiar. Gathering herself with painful effort, Cordelia pulled back and looked up at him, her misery bound eyes filling with tears.

"You have to go."

She tipped backward against the window, it cool from the chilled night air, and hugged herself wearily. "You have to go," she repeated, her eyes dulling with resignation.

Angel nodded slowly, giving her a little time to adjust, regretting as always, that the inevitable interrogation he inflicted upon her in the aftermath of a vision couldn't be helped nor avoided, and allowing her a few half breaths, he began.

"Where?" he asked softly, deliberately keeping urgency from his voice.

With a nod of practised assent, Cordelia slid to her feet and slipped past him, a fragile grace in her step. Angel was beside her in an instant, drawing back as with an unsteady wave of her hand the teenager shunned his support. Instead she moved hesitantly but independently toward her desk, the anxious vampire hovering behind. One hand clutching the desk-edge, Cordelia reached for a pen and with trembling fingers, she scribbled the address on a memo, sinking into her cushioned chair as with a swift stroke, she underlined it. The girl held the small scrap of paper mid air.

"That's where you need to go. There's a demon waiting for a girl that owes him something. It looked like she had completed half a calling ritual and he needs the rest done."

"Got it," Angel tugged the small scrap of paper from her light grasp, studying the address as he stretched down to open her drawer. He plucked a small bottle of aspirin from her open vanity case, nodding at the vial as he popped it in front of her. "Take two, if you need to. No more than that though, it can't be healthy taking painkillers too often."

He shoved the slip of paper into his pocket and tugged his black duster from the coat hook. Shouldering it on, Angel cast an uneasy glance at the young girl, "I can call Wes if you like, he can come stay with you till I get back."

Cordelia shook her head with careful movement, her small hand fluttering to her temple. "Believe it or not, Wes has a hot date tonight and I doubt he would appreciate my headache interrupting. Besides, I'm really not up to humouring his bedside manner tonight."

Angel exhaled as he glanced reluctantly toward the open doorway.  "I have to go," his voice was filled with quiet apology.

"You do" Cordelia affirmed with firm conviction. Opening one painful eye, she managed a half smile, "Angel, don't just hover there wasting a good vision, go, shoo, do the whole demon kill thing"

Angel nodded shortly, a fire for battle already surging through his dead veins, "All right, just go downstairs, get some rest and I'll grab something for us to eat on the way back."

Cordelia nodded wearily as she massaged her temple, the circular motion doing little to ease the relentless throbbing behind her eyes. "Just be careful"

He swung the door back with a quick smile of reassurance. "Always am."

                       

                                                *********************

She could smell him, hear the heavy rasping of his breath as he neared his prey. She could feel his dark intention, his promise of death, insidious evil embraced with every fibre of his demon being.

Cordelia awoke with a start, the sudden movement immediately wobbling the precariously stacked manuscripts upon which her head rested. She lifted her head gingerly, the thoughts of toppling the painstakingly alphabetised pile too awful too bear. Her hands guided the journals into secure vertical uprightness and satisfied they would hold steady, Cordelia straightened, wincing as her muscles screamed with discomfort. She hauled her feet up and curled back into her chair, head leaning against the cushioned side. Her eyes drifted toward the window and the glittering city beyond, dark remnants of her earlier vision haunting her troubled mind.

A sickening dread settled in the pit of her stomach as with every vivid sense, she remembered the demon. She could smell him, see him, hear him. She had sent Angel out to fight him. The knot tightened in her stomach, ravelling itself into a cold fear.

"God Doyle," she whispered in the silent night air, "You never told me it was so damn hard."

His name spoken in the cold night inspired a familiar loneliness. A grief borne smile twisted her lips as memories of her friend played through her mind, a montage of stolen days, weeks, barely months, mockingly promising life without him. As a solitary tear escaped and strayed down her cheek, and closing her eyes, Cordelia remembered.

I can hear him laughing. I can hear his voice. As though he's just in the other room.

He's not. You're alone. You're all alone.

She brushed the rogue tear away with a slow sweep of her hand. "No more crying," the girl resolved softly, "No more crying." A smothering grief threatened, her words hopelessly meaningless beneath its weight.

I can hear him laughing.

Cordelia swallowed and scrunched her eyes tightly shut. Fighting an aching grief, she sought comfort in isolation. She clung to it, embracing the control it bequeathed upon her, allowing it to envelop her, its strange emptiness calming. Cordelia pulled her eyes open and rose to her feet, each limb uncurling with slow elegance. Standing perfectly still, in a surreal calm, she swept a long gaze around the dimly lit office, her eyes finally resting on Doyle's old desk.  

You're all alone.

Cordelia shook herself as though to dispel the whispering voice from her ear. "No more crying."

Eyes dry, heart cold, she spun shortly on her heel, tugging her bag from under her desk. Cordelia dipped her head beneath the strap, the velvet clothed bag crossing her chest. She paused, her eyes still drawn toward the empty desk opposite.

"Goddamn you," she said finally, and her gaze fixed firmly upon the door, Cordelia walked toward it, fighting the urge to run.

A deep pounding roused her from sleep. A loud deep thumping pounding that was accompanied by an equally loud voice. The teenager groggily lifted her head from the uncomfortably hard sofa arm and pulled herself into a sitting position with a soft groan. Drowsily running her hands over her sleep-smoothed face, Cordelia tugged her hair over one shoulder, her eyes moving dazedly toward the source of all the noise, her gaze darkening at sight of her brand new door straining at its hinges.

A sudden brittle energy tightened her limbs, spurring her jump upward and Cordelia stalked toward the entrance to her apartment in a few angry paces. She flicked the lock off with a sharp turn of her wrist and grabbing the handle, she flung the door wide open, finding as expected, a 245-year old vampire apparently preparing to slam forward with all of his might. Or at least of much of his might as would be needed to free her door from its hinges.

"I knew it!" Cordelia glared furiously at the surprised vampire, "I knew it. You were going to kick my door in. Again."

Angel straightened self- consciously. "No I wasn't."

Her glare darkened.

Angel cleared his throat. "I wasn't going to kick it in. More like, gently nudge it with my shoulder."

Cordelia released a breath of deep frustration, stepping back to motion knowledgeably at the door. "An entire week's wages Angel. That's what it cost to replace it after you bashed it in last time." A grimace stretched her lips, "Which admittedly was when you came to save my life but that doesn't mean you can make a damn habit of flinging your great big hulk of dead flesh against it every-time you take the fancy. Got it?"

Angel shifted from one foot to the other, "You weren't answering. I was worried."

Cordelia threw her hands in the air, exasperation carved into every nuance of the gesture. "Okay, that would be because I was asleep. You know, sleeping, common mortal thing, hell you even indulge in it most days yourself."

"Its barely after ten, you didn't leave a note at the office, I thought maybe something was wrong…"

The Pope couldn't keep his temper in a situation like this. Cordelia gave up trying.

"So what, you were going to cause criminal damage because I didn't leave a note? Geez, overreact much Angel?"

"And you know what with the lights left on, office door wide open and no sign of you…" Angel shrugged with deliberate nonchalance, "But you're right, I overreacted."

"I turned the…" Cordelia began hotly when memory struck, silencing her momentarily. An expression of burning mortification worked its way onto her face, and she turned away from him, taut fingers raised to her forehead. "Oh" she said, pacing back into the apartment. "Oh. Oh God."

She swung around to face the vampire still hovering in the doorway. "Oh Angel, I am so sorry. Really, I am."

Angel stepped inside, his gaze scouring the apartment. "Its all right, I just wanted to check and see that you were okay." His eyes narrowed, "You are okay right, nothing happened earlier?"

Cordelia balanced herself on the edge of a chair. "Yeah, I'm fine. I was just whacked and I didn't think. I can't believe I didn't think."

Her employer dropped onto the sofa with a weary sigh and propped his feet upon the smoothed edge of her coffee table. He sank his head against the soft panel top and allowed his battled body to relax. Reaching over, Cordelia pushed his feet down mechanically, her eyes still trained on the tufts of carpet gathered around her shoes.

"I can't believe I did that."

Angel shifted his head sideways, "Forget about it. All's well that ends well and all that and are you even listening to me?"

Her head jerked up, an uncharacteristically shy smile jumping to her lips, "Sorry I know, no big deal right?"

A frown buckled his forehead. "Are you sure you're all right? No headache?"

Cordelia smiled again. "No, nothing, like I said, just tired." She pushed herself backward into the chair, swinging her legs around deftly, "So, you caught the demon guy?"

"Yeah. Pretty ugly guy."

Cordelia shivered as echoes of the vision renewed their whispering. "Yeah tell me about it." She shifted abruptly, digging her heels into the corner of the chair, immediately regretting the movement, as she felt Angel's scrutiny of her intensify. She pulled her eyes upward to meet his own, pushing a fresh smile onto her face.

"So, bad guy killed, forgetful associate reprimanded, what else is on tonight's agenda?"

Angel didn't answer but leaned forward, his dark eyes contemplative. "What is it?" he asked finally, unconvinced by her apparent composure.

Cordelia shrugged blankly. "What's what?" She regarded him with outward calm, the quick moistening of her lips the only sign of her disquiet.

Angel nodded thoughtfully, as though her response had confirmed some silent suspicion. He ignored her question, instead pulling a slow gaze over her small peaked face, his eyes gradually attracted by the rhythmic tapping of her hand against the dark patterned cushion resting upon her lap. Suddenly aware of the movement, Cordelia stilled her fingers and slid her hands beneath the cushion with awkward unease.

Angel surveyed her, a quiet anxiety brewing in his dark gaze. Cordelia was rarely downcast and never subdued. There was an unnerving air of despondency about his young Seer, an uncharacteristic and a disconcerting vulnerability that he had sensed for some time now. Old angers surfaced and Angel fought them firmly. Getting pissed at the PTB or the demons who had killed Doyle or Cordelia's parents for allowing her to come to this hellhole city in the first place, was as Angel had discovered in recent weeks, a pointless exercise that inevitably led him to the same thought.

I don't know how to help her through this.

And yet, Angel mused, they muddled through. The visions, the investigations, life without Doyle, he and Cordelia were getting by. Though by the looks of his Seer, just about.

"Cordelia," Angel finally broke the pensive silence, his voice low and undemanding, "Are you going to tell me what's wrong?"

Cordelia smiled tightly. "Nothing Angel, I promise. It's just…"

Angel lifted a questioning eyebrow. "Just what?"

Cordelia twisted the frayed cushion threads through her fingers. "Tiredness, just tiredness."

"Tiredness" Angel's voice was filled with quiet disbelief. When Cordelia grew tired, she grew cranky. Not strangely quiet. "That's all?" he prompted gently.

Cordelia pulled the cushion from her lap, dropping it to the floor. "That's all," she promised brightly "So, you know, I really should head to bed, catch up on some rest. Clambering to her feet, she mustered a quick smile. "You don't mind, do you?"

Vaguely conscious of the unnatural pitch of her voice, Cordelia stretched her smile, an inward hope that Angel would leave slowly dashed by the way in which he held her gaze, his eyes a peculiar mix of hesitant concern.

Please just go Angel.

Angel sensed her quiet desperation. She didn't want him to push. And he decided, pushing himself to his feet, he wouldn't, at least not, tonight. "Get some rest, take some time to yourself in the morning, there's no need to rush in."

Cordelia nodded and smoothed an invisible crease from her skirt, the task apparently consuming her attention. A distinct feeling of unease chilling his stomach, Angel stepped closer and tugged the soft cuff of her sweatshirt, pulling her reluctant attention toward him.

"You do know" the vampire said quietly, "If anything is bothering you, I'm here."

Cordelia evaded his searching look, dipping her head as she edged past him, so that he barely caught her whispered reply.

"I know."

                                                *********************

A small smile crept onto her face, every trace of despair forgotten as she watched him, childlike in the mist, his figure lone beneath the arches. Her heart leapt with sudden pure pleasure and she chided herself for ever believing he had left.

What was I thinking?

Leaning against the cool marble walls, cold from the twilight chill, Cordelia followed his playful movements. He lifted his hand, only to drop it, watching with fascination as it vanished into the dense fog that curled around him. The Irishman lifted his head idly, his gaze caught by her own, a silent surprise leaping into his blue eyes. His sheepish grin acknowledged her presence and with an outstretched hand, he beckoned her forward.

Want to kiss a dead man Princess?

Cordelia eyes snapped wide open, the dark of her bedroom almost smothering. Dragging her sweat layered body into an upright position, Cordelia struggled to catch her breath, pulling short gasps from the warm night air.

Just a dream, the girl reassured herself as she shifted backwards, her spine knocking against the headboard, Just a dream. She kicked the duvet to the far end of the bed, and curving a clammy hand under her heaving ribcage, Cordelia concentrated on easing her breathing.

Beside her, the bedside lamp flicked on, throwing a dim slant of light across the bed. Cordelia turned nervous eyes toward it.

I am awake right?

Anxiety faded, a low jolt of relief rippling through the girl as she remembered that she wasn't alone after all.

"Dennis," she murmured, momentarily closing her eyes in quiet gratitude. Everyone should have a dead roommate.

Her cell-phone slid from the polished surface of her dresser, dipping down to float toward her. Drawing to a slow halt above her hands, the phone hovered uncertainly mid-air.

Cordelia pushed her sleep-tangled hair from around her face, "I'm okay Dennis, it wasn't a vision, I don't need to call anyone."

The ghost was apparently unimpressed by her response for the cell-phone jerked a little closer.

Cordelia sighed, a sudden irrational irritation surging through her, "Drop it Dennis" she said shortly as she slumped backward,  "It was just a nightmare. Remember those from your non-dead days? Geez, I'd have thought your Mom inspired more than one."

The room temperature plunged to an icy cold, and the cell-phone dropped to the bed with a soft thud, the lamp switching itself off with equal abruptness, leaving Cordelia sitting in the pitch black of darkness. She sat in the quiet for a short time, her thoughts alternating between penitent ruminations and annoyance at her own thoughtlessness. Dennis was particularly sensitive about his mother and she knew it. Worse still, he knew she knew it.

Only I could manage to piss off a dead roommate.

"Dennis," she began quietly "Dennis, I'm sorry. I didn't mean that. I really didn't. I just, I just…" Her voice trailed into silence.

The lamp sparked beside her, her faltering apology evidently enough to appease the offended ghost. Cordelia exhaled deeply. "Thanks Dennis," she said softly, stretching to turn her alarm radio around.

5.30 am. A whole three hours sleep.

With deadened energy, Cordelia swung her legs around the side of the bed and stood, her feet sticky against the carpet. She padded to the bathroom, its clinical freshness jarring every weary sense.

Shower. Dress. Work.

Cordelia focused on the three simple tasks, managing to preoccupy her mind with the detail of each so that it wasn't until she stood under the streaming water, hair soaking wet, eyes closed tightly, that the dread, a sinking weight, returned.

                                   

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"You found the Text of Aberyion?"

Sudden enthusiasm lightening his accent, Wesley stretched forward and swung the journal around, dropping into a chair with an air of veritable delight. "I thought you had mislaid it."

"Hmm? Yeah it was in my drawer, Cordelia reminded me." Angel answered from the open doorway of his office where he stood, coffee mug in hand. He sipped on the hot drink, curls of steam gradually masking his face with a clammy mist, "Have you noticed anything odd about her lately?"

His fingers delicately separating the pages, Wesley murmured vaguely, "Ever so."

Angel lowered his mug, his eyes fixed on his employee. "Ever so what?"

Silence answered him.

"Wesley?"

 

The Englishman spared him a distracted glance. "Hmm? My word Angel, the quality of this edition is quite astounding. I haven't seen a copy in such pristine condition from that era before, I rather think…"

"Wesley" The vampire's voice was filled with quiet demand, "I asked if you had noticed anything odd about Cordelia." 

Wesley looked up reluctantly, a hand settling his glasses more securely on the bridge of his nose. "Odd?"

Satisfied that he had the other man's attention, Angel leaned against the sturdy doorframe and took another gulp of coffee, "I think maybe something's wrong."

Wesley considered the vampire silently. So that was it, he might have guessed as much. Angel had been muttering quiet concerns about their young associate for some time now, concerns that couldn't be entirely held as unfounded. A hand loosening his tie, Wesley cleared his throat as he shifted in his seat. "I know she has been quiet lately…"

Exactly" Angel interrupted, wagging a finger knowledgeably at his fellow associate, "Quiet and listless and a bit too reasonable for my liking." He pushed himself from the oak doorframe and slid a hand over the polished wood. "Something's wrong" he said in a tone of certain finality, "Something's definitely wrong."

Wesley looked at him in quiet amusement, wondering not for the first time, just how Angel had survived for so many years. Considering he had lived through two centuries, numerous wars, countless battles and the perilous Sunnydale Class 99 Graduation ceremony, he could be exasperatingly dim.

"Angel," the ex Watcher said, mild irritation trickling into his voice, "Of course something is wrong."

 

Angel's hand stilled and he turned slowly toward the Englishman, his expression askance. "She's told you something?"

Wesley smiled thinly. "Angel, I don't pretend to know Cordelia as well as you do. However, I can only surmise that any individual, let alone a nineteen year old ex May Queen would find a new city, the loss of a dear friend and mind numbingly painful visions quite a lot to contend with. I would imagine that yes, something is quite wrong, I would go so far as to say Cordelia is struggling with all that she has had to face recently."

The vampire's face pained with sudden truth, the expression quickly masked by another of practised reserve. "I know," he said softly, running a finger the length of the Text of Aberyion, "I know she has had a lot to cope with. This city, the visions." His finger circled a wooden crevice. Throat dry, he swallowed. "Losing Doyle hasn't been easy."

Wondering if that sad guilt would always settle in Angel's eyes when Doyle was remembered, Wesley tried again, his voice filled with characteristic kindness. "I didn't mean to bring up painful memories Angel, I simply wanted to point out that for a nineteen year old, Cordelia lives a very strange life. Its entirely natural that from time to time, she grows a little reticent."

"That's all you think it is?" Angel asked slowly, "Just reticence?"

"Cordelia is a remarkable young lady," Wesley told the vampire, quiet confidence etched in his tone, "She has the strengths and resources to carry her through. But there's no harm in keeping on you and I keeping a close eye on her."

Angel nodded in thoughtful agreement. "No harm at all."

                                                   *********************

Winding the fluffed towel around her damp hair, Cordelia tightened the belt of her bathroom robe, the fabric light and wispy against her bare skin. She wrapped her fingers around the crystal glass and drew the vessel to her lips. The scotch burned her throat, its liquid smoothness heating her deep within. Cordelia lazily ran her tongue over her teeth, soaking up the bitter taste of the spirit. Enjoying it.

"Dennis?" she pushed the words from her mouth with effort, this third glass of scotch taking effect, "Phone please?"

The telephone skidded through the air, slapping abruptly into her outstretched palm. Cordelia squinted at the dial-pad and with great concentration, punched the number of Angel Investigations. The girl sat upright, ignoring a sudden wave of dizziness.

Clear head, clear head.

"Angel Investigations. We help the hopeless."

A smile broke on Cordelia's face. Wesley, not a problem.

"Wes, hi its me."

"Cordelia, good morning. I was just about to call and see if you were…"

"Wesley" Cordelia couldn't quite manage a conversation and she didn't intend to pursue one. "I'm not going to be in today. I'm a little tired."

Well done. No slurring.

"That sounds wise Cordelia, Angel and I were just saying…"

"I know, he told me to take it easy, which is what I am going to do, so I'll see you tomorrow okay?"

"All right then, have a nice day Cordelia."

"Bye Wes."

Cordelia watched the receiver slip from her hand to the dark carpet beneath.

"Easy peasy, lemon squeezy," she murmured as her hand grappled for the scotch bottle. Refilling the glass, Cordelia watched the liquid swirl and churn its way around the vessel and as she stared, entranced by its agile swishing to and fro, for a time, she forgot. 

                                                ***********************

The dance floor, sporadically illuminated with colourful flashes of artificial light, teemed with barely clad bodies.

"I'm clad," Cordelia announced, her voice ground with firm conviction. Serena slid a cool look sideways.

"Clad?"

"Clad" Cordelia confirmed gravely. Hands outstretched, she invited Serena to inspect her outfit, "Look at me, Clad girl, I'm clad".

Serena's lips twitched, a half smile escaping her. " To think I had to bully you into coming out with us tonight. Happy pills starting to work, Cordy?"

"Oh yeah" Cordelia agreed blissfully. She tilted her head back, her world weightless and free. "Happy, happy, happy."

"It's a good way to feel," the words floated past her, the voice smooth.

Cordelia spun around on her barstool, the movement slowed in motion. Steadying herself with a giggle, she looked up and found her gaze settling on a dark-haired stranger. He looks like Angel, she thought, immediately revising that impression as she scrutinised him more intently. He was tall and dark, yes, but shared nothing of Angel's striking features. There was something intriguing about him though, his slim face besetting a natural beauty, his quiet confidence drawing her closer.

"Feeling happy is good" she said with a small smile.

"But new?"

She hesitated, confusion furrowing her face. Her gaze clinging to his own, she studied him silently.

What would he know?

Exploring the depths, she found a wealth of experience in those eyes, a dark chasm of knowledge. He knew.

"Very new," she agreed slowly.

"It shouldn't. You should always feel happy. There's so much you have, so much you could have."

He spoke plainly, without fervour, the words delivered as undiluted fact. He stared into her eyes and she fancied whimsically, her soul, with steady conviction in his gaze. The music faded, those near diminishing in presence so that all else was forgotten.

"I understand Cordelia. I promise you, I know what it's like."

An irrational rush of happiness burst inside her, chemicals pushing through her.

He knows my name. He knows me.

"What's your name?" Out of the thousand questions, she chose the most important. Her voice was strangely calm and sounded terribly distant for she didn't feel at all calm or collected.

A smile glided across his face. "Jarod."

"Jarod." She liked the name. "How do you know me?"

His smile widened marginally, as though her question was ridiculous. As though she should know the answer. He leaned a little closer, his light breath warming her lips. "I would know you anywhere Cordelia. You're one of us."