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Family: Blood Calls to Blood
Chapter
2: Deal with a demon.
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Angel
dropped his eyes from Spike’s, closed them and buried his head in his hands. As he watched,
Spike was reminded of the awful moment he’d watched Buffy jump
to her death; the time when he had openly wept in front of her friends,
too traumatised to hide his feelings from those who’d shown him nothing
but contempt. Spike had never seen Angel like this before. He felt ill
equipped to deal with Angel’s sudden loss of
emotional control.
He’s
coming apart, Spike realised; the shock felt almost physical,
as if he’d been punched. Perhaps Angel feared for someone he loved
very deeply? Nothing else could account for allowing him to witness
this slide towards despair.
Spike
panicked. "Is it Buffy? What’s happened to her?"
Angel
was unable to reply, lost again to the numbing dismay that
overwhelmed him.
Spike
frantically scanned Angel’s desk for clues, for anything that
might indicate the source of Angel’s fear. 1950s clock and penholder
. . . T.V. remote . . . empty video case . . . framed photographs.
He picked up one of the pictures. It showed Cordelia, smiling directly
at the camera, flanked by a goofy, grinning Angel and a serious,
straight-faced Wesley.
Cordelia.
Could it be Cordelia?
Spike
opened his mouth to articulate the thought but stopped as his
attention was drawn back to the video case beside the remote.
He reached for the controls and, just as his thumb was about to
connect with the play button, felt it jolted out of his hand. It
skidded across the desk and clattered to the floor.
In the
same instant he heard Angel snarl, "That has nothing to do
with Buffy . . . and absolutely nothing to do with you."
Spike
braced himself for the blow he expected to come next, but it
never came. They were interrupted by a knock on the door heralding
Wesley’s entrance to the room. Without pausing, Wesley strode
over to the TV and switched it on.
"You
should see this."
A news’
reporter faced the camera, a microphone in his hand. "As you
can see behind me, the whole campus has been cordoned off. The
number of bodies taken away for post mortems so far is nine, but
the police estimate that there may be as many as twenty more inside
the student accommodation block. This particular building is reserved
for students in their Freshman year at the college." The camera panned
over his head to show paramedics carrying a stretcher bearing a body
bag to the nearest ambulance waiting outside the building. "There is
no explanation for what took place on the second floor," continued the
reporter. "All we know is that all the victims are male. Someone, or
some thing appears to have ripped their bodies to pieces."
"A large-scale
demon attack coming so soon after Eve’s memo. It can’t be co-incidence.
What do you think, Angel?" Wesley looked away from the TV, at
Angel still slumped in his chair, eyes downcast, seemingly oblivious
to the news broadcast. Surprised by Angel’s lack of reaction to the
images on the screen, and sensing something else was wrong, Wesley
crossed the room, stopping mere inches away from the silent vampire.
His foot came to rest on something on the floor beside the desk.
He froze
as the video clicked to life. Lilah’s voice.
"Hey
Ace, if you’re watching this, then I’m dead - still. Sorry, couldn’t resist,
always wanted to use that line. Guess I’m unique in that I
got to use it after I died. Seeing his big day must
have come as a pleasant surprise? Believe me it took some time to
persuade the Senior Partners to let me do this for you. I just thought
you might need a little reminder why it would be best if you didn’t
do anything that might jeopardise his future."
Guilt
and anguish flooded through Wesley at the sound of Lilah’s
voice. He dared not look at the screen.
"That
part where he talked about 'helping the helpless'; the conviction
that he’s doing the right thing. - Got to me, right here. - Gosh,
forgot - you can't see me, hand on heart here. I digress - The idealism
of youth, so easily corrupted."
Wesley
risked a glance at the screen. It was blank, save for the Wolfram
and Hart logo in the top left corner.
"Let
me just refresh your memory. The Special Client; you know, the one who appears
in the Special Client’s file? Keep your nose clean where he’s
concerned. You know what will happen if you don’t. You don’t?
OK, I’ll spell it out, directly from the relevant clause in the
fine print of the contract you signed."
Wesley
struggled to keep his attention on what Lilah was saying. His
mind was reeling, fighting to remember. He shot a look in Angel’s,
direction but he remained motionless, his face betraying nothing
of his emotions.
"We
may terminate this contract, or any part hereof, for cause in
the event of any default by You, or if You fail to comply with any
contract terms and conditions, or fail to provide Us, upon request,
with adequate assurances of future performance. In the event of
termination for cause, We shall not be liable to You for any debt
or service not accepted, or for the continuing maintenance of any
Arrangement of any kind, be it mythical, magical or economic, made
pursuant to this contract and You shall be liable to Us for any and
all rights and remedies as provided by Brehon Law, including payment
of the Honour Price by means of Progeny’s Blood."
The television
was silenced. Angel, his eyes averted from both Spike’s and
Wesley’s querying gaze, had risen quietly from his chair, hit
the standby switch and returned to his seat. There was a slight
shift in his features. He’d smelt Wesley’s fear and was focussing
his attention on his reaction to Lilah’s voice.
Wesley
had another flash of recall. Progeny’s Blood - Something
about a baby. He died a little more inside. Honour
Price? The memory was snatched away, leaving just the raw
emotions; guilt, shame, failure. He rewound Lilah’s words in his
head. How had it begun? Special client. Wesley didn’t
know anything about any special clients. Brehon Law? What
on earth was Angel thinking of, signing a contract with those terms?
"You
didn’t read the fine print?" he said finally.
"Skimmed
it. How was I to know the all-improved-version Champion would
show up and complicate things?" muttered Angel, waving an arm in
Spike’s direction. "The probability of someone killing the demon’s
son was about a million to one before he re-materialised."
Spike
squared up to Angel, who had risen to his feet. "Hey! Didn’t
ask to be here. Thought I’d done my bit back at the Hellmouth.
Was quite content to stay dead. Wish I had."
"Could
help you out with that."
"Please
don’t start all that nonsense again," warned Wesley. "Look
where it led last time. This isn’t the time for feuding with Spike.
We have a bigger problem to solve. You weren’t the only one to receive
a memo from Eve. Each of us has been reminded of the terms of our employment.
Things are changing, Angel. Departmental staffs are beginning to question
our authority. We have to work quickly to stop whatever’s been set
in motion. Judging by that news item, it’s the Slaughter of the Innocents
all over again. We need to work together if we’re to make any progress."
Angel
reflected for a moment, then stepped away from Spike. "What
do you suggest?"
"I suggest
you ask Gunn to start work studying the contract you signed,
particularly that clause. It needs interpreting. And, when he’s
done with that, he might move on to the ones to which the rest
of us agreed."
"The
contract, right. Good place to start."
"And you might dig out the Special Clients' File."
"Special Clients' File. On it."
Wesley
headed back to his office, calling out as he did so, "I’ll
see what I can find on Brehon Law. And Spike, I’ll need as much
detail as you can give me on your demon."
Spike
decided he’d play nice for a while and was about to follow
him out of the door when Angel’s voice stopped him.
"Wes’s
right. We need to work together on this," he said grudgingly.
"You owe me that much."
"Don’t
owe you a thing," replied Spike. "You’re the one sold his soul
to the devil without putting his reading specs on."
Angel
ignored the gibe. "Yes, you do." His voice was firm, steady,
and free of the hatred he’d expressed earlier.
Spike
turned, considered the change in Angel’s attitude for a moment,
and made his way back to one of the crimson chairs in the centre
of the room. "I’m listening."
"This
Honour Price involves my progeny."
"Oh,
and that would be me I suppose? What do you want me to do? Hand myself
over willingly before we know exactly what’s involved? Bugger that!" Spike
scoffed.
"Will
you never learn to stop interrupting? You’re not the only person
I sired."
"You
mean Dru?"
"Not
Dru. There is another."
Spike
was intrigued, and more than a little hurt; of course it couldn’t
be concern for him or Dru that had Angel so worked up. There had
to be someone else; someone who meant much more to him than either
of them.
"It’s
a long story and I’m not going to bore you with all the details,
but I have a son, a human son."
"That’s
not possible!"
"So everyone
kept telling me at the time. But it’s true, I have a son and
I had to give him up." Angel paused, struggling for control. "It
was the only way I could save him. The contract with Wolfram and
Hart gave him an entirely new identity. No, more than that, a new life
-with a new family. He has no memories of who he really is – who he
was."
"When
did this happen? How?"
"Darla
happened."
"Darla?
Yeah, right!" snorted Spike.
"Look,
I told you it’s a long story. I’ll tell you over a drink."
Angel went to one of his cupboards and pulled out a whiskey bottle
and two glasses. He held the bottle up towards Spike. "Powers?"
Spike
raised an eyebrow. "The wages of sin, mate. Pour away."
* * *
* *
The bottle
was half-empty and the light was totally gone from the sky.
Angel and Spike sat side by side, their glasses freshly replenished.
Wesley had abandoned his attempts at getting Spike to his office
to brief him on the demon. After his third phone call, he’d decided
that if the two vampires were able to spend hours in one another’s
company, talking without attempting to kill one another, it was
probably worth the wait.
"So,
how come we never got to hear about any of this over in Sunnydale?" asked
Spike. "Didn’t you think Buffy had a right to know? Or were you worried
how she might take the news?"
"It was
a difficult time. What with trying to save the world from Jasmine
and the Beast, things were complicated." Angel studied the contents
of his glass. Why did Spike always do this, bring everything back
to his relationship with Buffy?
"They
always are. Doesn’t explain why you didn’t tell her."
"Jesus,
Spike – one-track-mind. Pour my heart out to you and all you
can think about is . . ."
"Had
plenty of opportunity before the snatch happened," Spike insisted. "So
why didn’t you?"
Same
old Spike. Taking any opportunity to bring everything back
to his own obsession. "Just let it go will you?"
Spike
had no intention of dropping the topic. He was on his feet,
pacing, angrily round the room. "What? You afraid she’d stop loving
you? Afraid she’d hate you when you told her you had the one thing
you can never give her?"
Angel’s
glass shattered in his hand. "You don’t understand," he growled.
Spike
came to a halt in front of Angel and glared down at him. "Oh,
I think I do Angel. You wanted to keep them both. You wanted to
go on playing happy families here in L.A., knowing that the love
of your life was fighting the good fight in Sunnydale, still in love
with you."
Angel
slumped back in his seat, the urge to fight draining out of
his fingers with the remaining shards of glass.
"Perhaps
you’re right. Who knows? What’s done is done. Too late now to
undo it. Anyway, there’s no point in telling her now is there? He’s
not mine any more." Angel looked up at Spike and gave him a small
smile. "Neither of them are mine any more."
Neither
of them! Spike’s anger evaporated. He sat down and turned
Angel’s story over in his mind. "Still don’t get it," he said after
a few moments of reflection. "Why’d you do it? Why sell yourself
to Wolfram and Hart?"
"Have
you ever loved anybody so much that you’d do anything to give
them a chance at living a normal life?" Angel glanced at Spike and
understood his glum, silent response immediately. "I love my son
above everything else, Spike. Darla told me he was the only good
thing we ever did together. And she was right."
Spike
was quiet for a second or two, thinking of Buffy. For once
his quippy-muse deserted him. It took a moment for him
to recognise the emotion he felt, unaccustomed as he was to feeling
it, but it was pity; pity for Angel. Now Spike knew the reason
for the earlier breakdown. So where did he fit in any plan Angel
had to save his son again? And what about the others? "But this
mind-wipe thing," he said, voicing his concern. "It’ll turn out badly.
These things always do. Means justifying the end? It’s a slippery
slope."
"I know.
I can handle it." Angel raised his head and looked Spike straight
in the eyes. "They must never know."
Spike
nodded, reluctantly. He’d heard that somewhere before and remembered
how it had ended.
"Are
you going to help me?"
Spike
didn’t need to consider his reply for long. Angel might deserve
all the resentment he’d thrown at him for turning him into a monster,
but he didn’t deserve punishment for turning his son into
the twisted boy he’d become in Holtz’s hands. "I’ll help, Angel.
But only ‘cos it’s you who’s doing the asking this time." Spike’s
expression brightened, " When do I get my own office?"
* * *
* *
The feeble
rays of a winter sun were filtering their way through the blinds.
Spike had left long ago to find Wesley. Angel pressed the pause
button and stopped the video at the place where he’d always stopped
it before Wesley’s accident with the remote, on Connor’s smiling
face. Angel had previously felt only joy, tempered by a sense of loss
at that smile, knowing his son was safely in the bosom of a normal
family. Connor, in his graduation robes, had just delivered his Valedictorian
speech on the platform at Eagle Rock High. He had spoken of a scholarship
that would help fund his studies to further his ambition to work for
the Court of Appeal in The Hague, championing the cause of Human Rights.
Angel didn’t know if he deserved the feeling of pride that welled up
inside when he listened to his son, but for the time being he took comfort
in the knowledge that Connor was safe; he’d accepted a place at Cornell.
So
why do I feel so uneasy about these killings at USC? Angel
turned to his computer and searched for the updated information.
He scanned the list of victims’ names. Connor’s wasn’t among them.
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Chapter 3
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