Notes: So I made the chauffeur young Shadwell, but patterned after young Michael McKean, who I was desperately in love with back in the day XD
"Ooo, I get a limo this time. Fancy, fancy," Crowley mumbles, not nearly as impressed as she's pretending to be. She'd much rather drive herself in her own Bentley and in her own sweet arse time. But she needs to keep up appearances.
There are always two eyes and a camera lens on her at any given moment.
Even though it's the literal buttcrack of dawn, she's not alone. There are about thirty asshats, armed with cameras, camped out on her doorstep, climbing over each other to snap a candid of her for the gossip sites. A photo of her emerging from her rented townhouse fresh-faced and ready for another day on set will fetch an easy hundred pounds.
But if she looks like she rolled out of bed, drank a bottle of whiskey for breakfast, then fell down a flight of stairs, landing face-first onto a mountain of cocaine? Those pictures would fetch considerably more.
That's what she gets for going through a horrendous break-up while having the nerve to be rich and famous.
She thought that when the production moved filming away from London and out to California, the buzz surrounding her personal affairs would die down. On the contrary. It seemed to get worse, in part because the states don't have the same paparazzi laws the UK does.
She can't sit down to take a proper shit without seeing a flash pop off.
Despite how she feels about her life at the moment, she went for class over crass. She shies away from hard drugs, and she can't justify looking less than her best, especially in public.
She refuses to let anyone see her sweat.
"Antonia! Antonia! Over here!" the pariahs beckon, some of them whistling for her attention like she's a dog. "Antonia! Hey, Crowley!"
Crowley.
That's the one that gets to her - burrows into the roots of her teeth and makes her head pulsate with rage. It keeps her feet moving when she might have stopped to exchange a polite hello, given out an autograph. And the sick thing is these vultures probably realize that.
That's why they keep doing it.
Who talks to people like that? When did it become acceptable to bellow out someone's last name as a means of getting their attention? Is it too much to ask for them to shove a 'Mrs.' in front of it? Have these glorified stalkers forgotten that, if it weren't for her and stars like her, the only jobs they could get would be snapping photos of families at Legoland for minimum wage?
Ugh.
Too much thinking too early in the morning.
She could write an entire essay on how much she loathes pap culture, but today, she can't be bothered caring.
She's filming one of the most anticipated scenes of her whole career on one of the worst days of her life.
That's the hurdle she needs to focus on.
She slaps on a smile and waves, sliding her glasses down her nose only far enough so they can't see how red her eyes have gotten from crying.
"Oh, 'ello, loves! I didn't see you all here! So nice of you to greet me at 5:30 on this fine winter morning! Oh, careful there. You spilled your coffee. And I think you just kicked that poor lad in the face. You wanna give him a hand up there? He's bleedin' all over the pavement."
Crowley greets her guests this way every morning, killing them with kindness, as subtle an eff you as she can come up with when her brain cells have yet to kick in for the day.
Coffee. She needs coffee. About a gallon-and-a-half of it.
And a shot of bourbon might be nice.
Crowley glides through the crowd, an angelfish among sharks, and comes out unscathed.
A man with brown hair, pale skin, and striking blue eyes, wearing a fitted, black uniform tailored to within an inch of its life, opens the car door for her as she approaches.
"Good morning, Mrs. Crowley."
"Good morning, Mr. Shadwell. It's nice to see you." Crowley slides into the car, thankful when the chauffeur shuts the door. She sinks into the leather seat and tosses her sunglasses aside. "God!" she moans, burying her face in her hands. "I don't want to do this! I want to stay home, eat ice cream, and drink tremendous amounts of alcohol! I definitely don't want to be snogging anyone today!"
Aziraphale, who had been waiting patiently with a small box of assorted cookies and wearing a sympathetic smile, frowns. "Wow. Thank you, my dear."
Crowley's head snaps up, her face splotchy, and red enough to rival her hair in seconds. "Aziraphale! I am so sorry! I didn't know you were …! That's not what I meant!" She takes a deep breath in, lets it out slowly. "It's not you, angel. I swear it isn't. I just don't feel particularly romantic today."
"It's all right. I know what you mean. I feel the same way."
Crowley squares Aziraphale with a stern look. "Wow. Thank you."
Aziraphale ducks her eyes, her cheeks turning pink as she offers Crowley a cookie from the box. She wonders if Aziraphale made them herself. She often does bake to pass the time. So much so that she's become quite good at it.
Life hasn't been treating her too kindly, either.
The cookies are delicate little things, intricately frosted in red, green, and white, decorated as bells and angels and snowflakes in honor of Christmas.
Because it's Christmas.
Crowley is having the worst day of her life a week before Christmas.
Sigh.
There is usually champagne, no matter what vehicle the studio sends to pick them up. She wonders where it's gone, searching about for it. Crowley and Aziraphale rarely avail themselves to it, preferring to wait till after the shooting day is done to have a nightcap.
But today, it feels like a necessity.
Leave it to the studio to not provide them a bottle of bubbly on the one day Crowley longs to drown in it.
"I didn't know Shadwell was picking you up first," Crowley says, starting small talk to ease the tension. Crowley and Aziraphale don't usually have trouble making small talk.
Today is an exception.
"Well ..." Aziraphale clears embarrassment from her throat "... I was just … you know … a few blocks down the way."
Crowley sits up further, leans forward with interest. "So you did it. You left him. You left Gabriel."
"Yes," Aziraphale replies quietly. "I couldn't stay. Not after …" She stops and sniffles, turning her head to hide eyes that must be as red as Crowley's. Crowley doesn't know.
She only ever notices how incredible they are.
Crowley rests a comforting hand on Aziraphale's knee. "I know."
"Yeah," Aziraphale says with a slightly bitter laugh. "So does the whole world. In fact, the photogs knew I was leaving before I knew. You should have seen it. I could barely get past them."
Crowley pulls a box of tissues out of the side panel and offers her co-star one. "They're bottom feeders. The lot of them. Try to ignore them."
"Easier said than done."
"I know," Crowley repeats, feeling exceptionally useless. She's in the exact same boat, but her heart hurts more for Aziraphale.
Aziraphale doesn't deserve what she's going through. She doesn't deserve such a public break-up.
She doesn't deserve having her name drug all over social media by an emotionally manipulative bastard who thinks he's God's gift .
Crowley gazes out the window at the sky above. The forecast said it would be clear and sunny today, but it's cloudy and grey. It matches Crowley's mood. Everything is cloudy and grey.
Well, maybe not everything.
The cookie she's eating isn't. It's sweet and crisp and melts in her mouth. It puts a smile on her face.
That helps.
Aziraphale helps, too.
Even gloomy, melancholy Aziraphale helps.
Just being in Aziraphale's presence helps.
"Living in the public eye isn't all it's cracked up to be, is it, my dear?" Aziraphale asks, though it sounds as much like a statement to herself as a question for Crowley.
"Not on days like today. But that's the trade-off for being a star, I suppose."
"Would you ever give it up?" Aziraphale asks, taking a nibble of her Madeleine.
"I can't say I would. You?"
"Nnnn ... no."
"There isn't anything else you wanted to do?" Crowley asks, latching on to her hesitation. "Not even when you were younger?"
"Well ..." Aziraphale bobs her head back and forth. "To be honest, I have always wanted to own my own bookshop. Or perhaps work in a library. But that's only if acting didn't work out. Acting has given me so many opportunities I could never have dreamed of. And all the great people I've met? I mean, this is what? The fifth film we've starred in together?"
"It is."
Aziraphale chuckles. "Some of them have been real winners."
"I know! The roles you get offered when you're just starting out are criminal! Let's see, we've been rogue enemy agents from different factions …"
"High school frenemies …"
"Alien co-conspirators …"
"Jealous rivals …"
"And now … lovers."
"Yes," Aziraphale says bashfully. "And today …"
Crowley smiles. "We get together for the first time."
Hearing Crowley say it makes Aziraphale's heart race, her pulse thrumming so fast it disappears.
The day Aziraphale found out she'd gotten the role of Crowley's love interest and not the 'jealous ex' (the role her agent originally pitched for her since they play adversaries so well) was a dream come true. The studio felt the two of them could take their insane sexual tension (the studio's words, not Aziraphale's, although she doesn't disagree) and use it to fuel the plot of their latest 'friends-to-lovers' rom-com.
Aziraphale has always wanted to be a leading lady. Deep down, she prayed that her first time, she'd play opposite Crowley. Now that it has finally happened, the role of her dreams comes with the greatest perk in the universe - an intimate moment with Antonia.
In front of about three dozen crew members, but still.
It's Aziraphale's chance to indulge her crush, which she plans to savor since it may not come around again.
Not in the way Aziraphale wants.
As friendly as Crowley is to her, as flirty as she can be, Aziraphale doesn't know for sure whether Crowley shares her feelings.
"If you don't mind my asking, when did she tell you?" Aziraphale asks.
"She didn't." Crowley snorts humorlessly. "I woke up, and she was gone. I thought she had left for work. She had a table reading at six that morning, so I wasn't immediately suspicious. Not until I started noticing important things were missing - clothes, toiletries, her contact lenses, her laptop …"
"Did she tell you why she was leaving?"
Crowley chews her lower lip at the question she'd known was coming ... the answer she's debating whether or not to give. "Eventually." She glances up at Aziraphale, flashes a sly grin, and decides to go for broke. "She left because she thought I was falling in love with my co-star."
"Really?" And just like that, Aziraphale dies, her heart shrinking into nothing and blowing away on the wind. "W-which one?" she asks, solely for conversation's sake.
This time, when Crowley snorts, clamping a hand over her mouth to keep from spraying crumbs all over the interior of the limo, it's genuine. " You , you gumball!"
"Oh. Oh !" Aziraphale's expression of shock is so endearing, Crowley can't look at it too long. There's a glow about her. It's like staring into the sun. "That's ... that's funny. Gabriel broke up with me for the same reason. Because of ... you. At least, that's the excuse he gave on Twitter ... and Instagram ... and Facebook." Aziraphale's glow dims as she talks about her ex. Their relationship, and separation, weren't as civil as Crowley's. In reality, trouble had been brewing behind the scenes for a while.
She's glad they finally went their separate ways, but it stings just the same, finding out that someone you once loved, who you thought loved you back, just wanted someone to push around. To control.
"That is funny. Not funny ha-ha. Just ... funny. Who would have thunk?" Crowley goes back to her cookie, taking small bites while keeping an eye on Aziraphale.
Aziraphale glances out the window as the limo slows, approaching the gates to the studio lot. Crowley doesn't follow Aziraphale's gaze.
She doesn't need to.
She knows what Aziraphale sees by the way her face falls.
Aziraphale had hoped they could slip in quietly, but there's already a mob three feet deep waiting for them. The photographers and fans won't be able to see a thing through the car's windows. The tint on them is darker than dark. Still, the whole lot will be on high alert with them here.
Inevitably, a handful will slip in.
They may even find their way on set.
Aziraphale doesn't have the energy to deal with that.
Not today.
"How are we going to get through it?" Aziraphale asks. "Filming this scene? The timing is ... uncanny, to say the least."
"Think of it this way …" Crowley slides across to Aziraphale's side, sits as close as they're both comfortable with. Crooking a finger beneath her chin, Crowley draws Aziraphale's attention away from the gathering crowd and over to her eyes instead "… we get to spend the entire afternoon making each other feel better. That's how we're going to get through this. Agreed?"
Aziraphale's eyes lower, flicker to Crowley's lips unintentionally. When they travel back up, she notices Crowley's eyes do the same. She swallows hard. At this distance from Crowley, from her mouth, Aziraphale only has the wherewithal to say one word. She makes it count. "Agreed."
