Family: Blood Calls to Blood
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Chapter
14. Monsters of Chaos.
The Hyperion was in darkness.
Angel had followed Spike down to the garage and given him the keys to
the delivery entrance, together with instructions about how to find Fred’s
room."Not like I need them," grumbled Spike to himself, as he pushed the
heavy door open and listened to the protesting squeal of its rusty hinges.
I could track her anywhere, now. She ‘s giving off so many distress
signals, it’s like the sinking of the bloody Titanic. He switched on
the security light and squinted through the dust-laden air, inhaling deeply.
“Yup! Door to the left, then up the main staircase,” he chanted, repeating
the directions Angel had given him. As he passed through the inner lobby
door, a slight noise from behind stopped him in his tracks. He reached backwards
and yanked a figure out of the small alcove beside a second door.
“Oh, it’s you. What are you doing skulking around after me, young Frankenstein?”
he asked, recognising the young man who worked in Fred’s lab.
“Following you to find Fred, ” replied Knox with a slight smile. “We need
her.”
Spike frowned. “Yeah? And just who might we be?”
“Shhh – what’s that?” Knox jumped at the sound of a dull thump from above
their heads.
“Stay here,” Spike ordered. “Anything comes down those stairs that isn’t
me or Fred hit i. . .” Spike looked disparagingly at the young scientist.
“Hide.”
Knox didn’t argue, but as Spike sprinted away up the stairs, scaling them
in a few bounds, he crept up towards the source of the noise that had startled
him. In the dark corridor, light from a single bare bulb streamed through
an open door. Knox peered in cautiously and gasped at the sight of Fred,
standing on a bed, scribbling furiously on the one remaining bare patch of
wall in the room. The rest were covered with complicated mathematical formulae
and diagrams.
Spike stood in the centre of the room, slowly turning and taking in the
seemingly random marks on the walls. He approached Fred quietly and reached
out and touched her elbow. ““Why didn't you work on this at your desk, Pet?
There a paper shortage?”
Fred stopped scribbling and turned her head slightly. “Spike?” She frowned.
“You think it would be easier at a desk? I haven’t room to breathe on a
desk. I started with quantum mechanics there, but I need space . . . and
time . . .” She waved a hand, gesturing the wall behind Spike. “It’s all
about wave theory over there. And particle theory over here,” she indicated
the wall beside the bed. “But I can’t find the QED,” she complained. She
clambered down from the bed and stood gazing at a spot beside the dresser.
“Particle theory is very neat, don’t you think?”
“Well, if you say so, Princess,” Spike raised an eyebrow and squinted
at her. “I’ll take your word for it.”
“Yes, it is. All. Very. Nea . .” Fred rushed over to the other side of
the room. “Except this part,” she showed Spike an equation, then grabbed
his hand and dragged him to a corner beside the wardrobe. “Can you see this?
Einstein. Relativity. It’s so beautiful. Perfect in fact. That’s the problem.”
She stopped, suddenly aware of Knox’s presence in the room.
Knox walked over to the section she’d described and nodded. “You know,
all this could be the answer we’re looking for,” he told her, smiling.
“I thought I told you to stay put,” Spike growled, swinging round and
glaring at him.
Fred frowned at Knox in concentration. “You think so? I’ve been working
on it for so long. You think it’s nearly time?”
“I think we’ve almost missed the time,” replied Knox, ignoring Spike’s
glare.
“Time for what?” asked Spike looking at his watch. When did I get a
watch? he wondered.
Fred pointed at a line of equations. “Here’s the spatial geometry of the
de-Sitter universe, it’s Euclidean, so this, stands.” She indicated an equation
beginning AB(sqroot(x2-x1)2. “But it’s two- dimensional, so, what happens
when you take Lorentz’s transformations into account?” She scrawled on the
wardrobe door. “You see, simple rotations of space-time axes, according
to Miniwski, space and time are not separate, they’re a unitary entity –
space-time.”
Spike squinted at her from under increasingly furrowed brows and gazed
uncomprehendingly at what looked like a series of mesh ice-cream cones, joined
at their points or bases.
“Take the straight world-line through them, joining events that correspond
to the time line. Quantity T is equal to the difference in time – it’s the
proper time between events, measured by the clock.” She grasped Spike’s
wrist and looked at the watch, tapping its dial. “Proper time . . .” She
trailed off and swung back towards the section of wall she’d been working
on when Spike entered the room. “No, no! That’s not it.” She clambered back
on the bed before Spike could stop her and began crossing out and replacing
parts of her work.
Spike took her in his arms and gently pulled her away from the wall. “Fred,
you’re knackered. Why don’t you come with me and get some rest. You can work
on this later.”
“No. I have to keep going,” she protested. “There’s something I’m missing.
The maths and physics don’t explain it all, that’s the problem. Minowski’s
universe is a static one, in which all temporal cross sections are exactly
similar to one another and all particles, considered as four dimensional
objects, lie along parallel lines.”
“Well if the science doesn’t explain it, Pet . . .” Spike began pulling
her gently from the bed.
“But it does, it must!” cried Fred. “Minowski’s model demonstrates the
non static nature of the universe by the dissimilarity of temporal cross
sections and the non parallelism of the world lines of particles.”
Spike looked around for Knox for an indication of how he might distract
Fred’s concentration, but he had his back to them, studying a section of
wall.
Fred scrutinised the wall in front of her. “If time advances up the manifold,
this could be a new time direction, orthogonal to the old one. A fifth dimension
– hypertime – of course, the de-Sitter Universe again.”
Fred glanced at Spike’s blank look of incomprehension and began scribbling
on the wardrobe door again. “And once we have hypertime, the possibility
of hyper-hypertime.”
Spike sighed. “Glad you’ve got all that sorted then. Shall we go now?”
“No! If I don’t finish this, I’ll forget. Just like I’m forgetting . .
.” She stopped and looked shivered, looking wildly around the room. “Feigenbaum,
he’s the master of chaos. He has the solution. Where is he?”
“Who?”
“Feigenbaum. He’s got to be around here somewhere. He has the answers
- the master of chaos. I never . . .” Fred looked at Spike and smiled. “Spike.
What are you doing here?”
“Come to take you home, Princess. You need to get some rest. Everyone’s
worried about you back at the ranch,” he said .
Fred gave a small laugh. “Back at the ranch. You’re not taking me to Texas,
are you?”
Spike sat on the edge of the bed and patted the space beside him. “Sit
down for a mo’. Get your breath back. Then we’ll take a quick spin across
town to see some friends of ours who’re gonna help put everything to rights
again. Meanwhile – you,” he jerked his head at Knox. “Got one of those mobile
phones with you? Best give Angel a ring and let him know we found . . .”
Spike stopped at the sight of Knox taking a camera out of a bag and filming
Fred’s work. “What the bloody hell do you think you’re doing?” Spike sprang
to his feet and grabbed Knox’s arm.
Knox lowered his voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “It’s the only way
we’ll get her to agree to some back with us,” he said. “If she knows we have
her work on film.”
Spike turned to look at Fred. She’d climbed down from the bed and was
waiting, silently, for Knox to finish filming each section.
“You will help me, won’t you?” she asked Knox quietly.
“Of course. It’s what I’ve been waiting for my whole life.” Knox smiled
at Fred and took her hand in his. “Here, let Spike drive you back and I’ll
follow when I’ve finished up here. I don’t want to miss anything.”
Fred glanced over her shoulder as Spike led her towards the door. “Please
be careful,” she called. “You’re sure you won’t miss anything? It’s taken
me so long.” As they made their way downstairs, she explained to Spike
“It’s the only thing I’m sure of. Everything else is fading. I feel as if
I’m fading.”
--------------------
Fred’s face looked grey and drawn, large dark circles emphasising the
hollows under her eyes. Spike looked at her with concern as she fastened
her seatbelt.
“Are you ok?” he asked.
She straightened and stared out of the window, avoiding the question.
“Where are we going?”
“Somewhere safe. Angel and Wes are working on a way to get us all back
home safe.”
“Angel,” she murmured. "He was here, at the hotel, and then . . . And
Wesley, and someone else. A woman.” She frowned and chewed the end of her
hair in concentration. “Charles, his name is Charles.” Fred looked at Spike,
wide-eyed. “But you weren’t there. You’re Spike. You’re a vampire – with
a soul!” she finished triumphantly.
“That I am, love.” Spike sighed. “And I think I’m as in the dark as you
seem to be about what the bloody hell is going on.” Spike stopped the car
and turned to face her, serious, eyes searching hers for some assurance
that the Fred he knew was still in there. “Are you sure you want to go back,
Pet? ‘cos just say the word and we can take off and leave them to sort out
all this quantum thingy mumbo jumbo. We could be in Europe, or somewhere
else, far away from all this. Texas p’rhaps?”
Fred took his hand in hers and squeezed it gently. “I can’t,” she said
simply. “All this quantum thingy mumbo jumbo is what I do. It’s what brought
me to LA. And now, I’m needed.” She touched his cheek with her fingertip.
“But thank you. That was a sweet offer.”
Spike brought her hand to his lips and kissed her fingers. “Sweet? Don’t
think I’ve ever been called that before. And I’ve never been given the brush-off
quite so graciously – or for quantum thingy mumbo jumbo, either,” he chuckled.
He patted her hand and placed it back on her knee and switched on the ignition.
“So, it’s back to the monsters of chaos. Wolfram and Hart it is.”
“Wolfram and Hart,” murmured Fred. “Did you know they were demons at the
time of the Old Ones?” She stared into the distance. “The Wolf, the Ram,
the Hart. They’ve changed the name of the server, you know. They’re in control
of the computer system – and the interface for Wesley’s books. They’re the
expert system of the demon world – wait – expert systems – Feigenbaum. That’s
where I’ll find him.”
“In the computer?” asked Spike, frowning.
“No, silly, in my office. He’s a rabbit – with glasses,” she explained.
“Oh, a rabbit is the cause of all this chaos. That explains everything,”
laughed Spike. “Anya was right all along.”
Fred looked at him in surprise. “Anya?”
“Ex-Vengeance demon I knew briefly, one of the Scoobies,” Spike explained.
Wonder if she made it out of the Hellmouth? Hope so, she deserved
better than a grisly end or, god forbid, life with Harris, he thought
as he eased the Viper out of the alley into the traffic.
“What’s a Scooby?”
“You got a few years, or will the abridged version do?”
-----------------------
Angel stood facing his office windows, his back towards the others, who
waited patiently for his reaction to Wesley’s analysis of what had been
discovered the previous night. He turned slowly and gazed at Connor, his
eyes betraying a sadness that had been absent since Connor had regained
his memories. “You know, Wes, how much I hate being driven by any prophecies
you dig out of those books. Are you sure this one is to be trusted? I mean
‘the son fighting alongside the father’ has a familiar ring to it.”
He grimaced and fixed Wesley with a worried look; one that was devoid
of any accusation relating to Wesley’s actions with regard to a different
prophecy.
Before Wesley could respond, the phone on Angel’s desk rang. Angel picked
it up on the second ring. “What is it Harmony? Spike? Has he found . . ?
Oh, she’s there with him. Well send them both . . . Why is he in a mood? Oh.
Guess I forgot to mention . . .”
Angel replaced the receiver on its cradle. “Spike’s found Fred. He couldn’t
find us. We did tell him we’d be changing offices, didn’t we?” Angel looked
up from the phone to see four heads shaking their disagreement.
Wesley stood beside Angel’s desk and lifted a manuscript. “Getting back
to business. It’s not just the prophecy,” he said softly. “There’s Lorne’s
reading of Connor and Gunn’s painful audience with the entity in the White
Room. They all point to the same conclusion.”
“Which is?”
“That we need more from Ethan if we’re to make any progress with the method
by which we can return to our proper time.”
“Ah, yes, Ethan. Our little chaos-worshipper-in-residence. I think we’d
better bring him back into the spotlight to sing for me,” said Lorne reaching
for his mobile. “I’ll cancel all my appointments for the day. I’ll be ready
when I’ve recharged the batteries with a couple of migraine pills and some
strong coffee.”
Angel looked at him in alarm. “Are you sure you’re up to that, Lorne?
Only, last night you said ...”
“I know what I said, last night, Angelcakes. But if we’re heading back
to real time, it’s the least I can do to help speed us on our way down the
Yellow Brick Road.”
The office door swung open. “Hope that doesn’t involve a repeat performance
with Liz’s mighty necklace from yours truly,” said Spike, ushering Fred in.
“’cos I’ve sworn off the sparklies for the duration.”
Wesley raised an eyebrow at him. “As usual, Spike, I haven’t the slightest
idea what you’re talking about. But, no, the ritual I believe will be useful
for getting us back doesn’t involve your wearing any jewellery, although
there are crystals involved.”
Wesley gestured at Knox who had followed Spike and Fred into the room. “After
Fred left us last night, Knox and I unearthed information about the Old
One who plays a part in both Angel and Connor’s destinies; an Old One who
should have appeared at Wolfram and Hart by now but hasn’t. Knox has provided
some detailed information about her and unearthed a summoning spell that
should help us.”
“Old Ones? Fred was talking about Old Ones on the way back.” said Spike.
Fred looked at him in alarm. “Was I? I keep forgetting.” She turned a
complete circle, looking at each of them in turn.
“Have you remembered me, yet?” asked Connor, stepping towards her.
“Of course, you’re Connor. You’re a student at USC, doing your internship
here,” replied Fred, smiling broadly at him.
“So, you don’t remember me from before?”
“Before? Before what?” Fred flinched and turned to Spike. “Was there a
before?”
Wesley shook his head sadly and led her to the seating in the centre of
the room. “Fred, why don’t you sit here for a while and I’ll explain everything
to you when you’re rested.” He turned to Spike. “Spike, would you mind asking
Harmony to bring some tea?”
Spike threw up his head and roared at the open door. “Harmony!”
Harmony popped her head around the doorframe. “You don’t have to yell,
Spike. I can hear. Vampire hearing, remember?”
“Oh, ‘scuse me, Miss Touchy, I thought you were way down the corridor
at your desk, where you’re s’posed to be, not listening at doorways,” Spike
smirked at her.
“Yeah, well, I am Angel’s assistant. I came to – assist,” Harmony tossed
her head at him.
“Yeah? Assist then. Get Fred some tea. “Camomile all right, princess?”
Fred nodded, wearily and turned her attention back to Connor. “Were you
at the Hyperion, before all this?” she asked. “It’s just, there’s a woman
who worked with us. But I can’t remember who she . . .”
“Cordelia,” replied Connor, quietly, moving across the room to sit beside
her. “You don’t remember Cordy?”
Fred looked away from him towards Wesley and Angel who were standing side
by side regarding her with concern. “Did she come here with us? Where is
she?” she asked.
Connor took Fred’s hand in his. “Cordy’s dead.”
Fred looked at her hand in Connor’s. “Dead?” she whispered. “How? When?”
Angel moved closer and crouched beside her. “She was injured in a fight
. . .” He stopped and looked at Connor, not wanting to re-live the painful
moments that had led to Cordelia’s death and the deal with Wolfram and Hart.
“And she went into a coma that she never came out of. She died a few weeks
ago.”
A single tear rolled down Fred’s cheek. “She’s like a ghostly memory.
I can see what I think is her face, but I can’t recall anything else.”
Angel walked back to his desk and picked up a picture frame and passed
it to her.
“This is Cordelia,” she ran a finger over the image. “I know something
about her is important, but what?”
“She died before I could tell her I loved her,” whispered Angel, taking
the frame from Fred’s hands and arranging it carefully back in the exact
spot from which he’d removed it earlier.
“She knew,” said Lorne. “And she knew that you knew she loved you.”
“If you’re gonna go into one of those Noel Coward, routines, I think I’m
gonna puke,” said Spike, scathingly. “Shouldn’t we be getting on with the
moving travelator of time instead of slipping back down memory lane?”
Harmony came in, carrying a tray of tea for Fred. She set it down on the
low table in front of the sofa and turned to go. “Anything else I can do,
Boss? Fetch anything? Anyone?”
“Good idea, Harmony,” replied Angel, tossing her a key. “Go unlock the
mail room stationary closet.”
“You want stationary supplies? I’m not the paper person, I’m more of a
people person.”
“It’s a peop . . . person I want you to bring to us. A slippery character,
name of Ethan Rayne. He’s been locked in there all night, so he might want
a bit of freshening before he gets here.”
“Right Boss, anything you say,” said Harmony brightly moving towards the
door.
“Oh, and Harm,” Spike called after her. “You feel like a little snack,
feel free to indulge..”
“Harmony, Don’t listen to Spike . Ethan is human, just not a very nice
human. . . Oh ok,” said Angel off Spike’s querying glance, “I know I gave
you permission to get information out of him any way you could, but that
did not include biting him.”
“Well, guess I was wrong,” interjected Gunn. “I said it’d come down to
a team vote about that.”
“Now I’m confused,” said Harmony, retracing her steps and coming back
into the room. “Do I or do I not get to have a little taste?”
Five voices answered her, simultaneously.
“Yes.” said Spike grinning at Angel.
“No!” cried Angel glaring at him.
“No!” Wesley exclaimed, looking up in alarm from his seat beside Fred.
“No!” Lorne added his voice to the protests.
“Don’t look at me, I’m new to all this,” said a bewildered Connor, raising
his hands in a gesture of surrender.
“Guess the nos have it,” Harmony reasoned, shrugging. “So, you just want
him here, all fresh as a daisy and ready to – what?”
“Sing,” said Lorne. “And tell him I can provide Karaoke for almost anything
he has in mind. But I’ll need notice of anything pre-1920s – or classical,”
he added as an afterthought.