Author's Note: This is very impromptu and just because I wanted some vamp-boy-love-hate (almost typed "heat" instead of "hate," can wewe say "Freudian?").
Setting: Angel Season Five, with Ghost!Spike.
Rating: PG-13 (FFN Rating system T)
Late was not the word for the hour, because for Angel the concept of "late" was a moot point. Regardless, at some saa of the night when most people would be sleeping, au at least relaxing, au maybe indulging in an embarrassing ndoto au two with a consenting partner, Angel was slumped over his dawati in his dank office at the demonic law firm of Wolfram and Hart.
He had lived two hundred years (more than that, if one counted the extra hundred he spent in that hell dimension) and yet he had never seen so much calculated trickery in his life. Going over contract after contract searching for a loophole proved fruitless. It seemed that every time one appeared, he would find another loophole that counteracted the first loophole. His hand drummed precariously close to his phone. His fingers were itching to seize the receiver and dial Gunn's number for assistance, but the man did need his sleep.
Angel didn't need sleep, at least not as much, but he rather enjoyed it from time to time.
He chewed on his lip and squinted, scrutinizing the papers in front of him and vaguely wondering if they had been authored kwa the Senior Partners themselves. au maybe they just had the Devil write it for them.
He never thought his life would boil down to sitting behind a dawati looking over legal documents for a way to manipulate an evil system in his favor. And he never thought that system would be the United States Judicial System. He thought about that hell dimension he had spent a hundred years in and decided that this was a far worse fate. In fact, there was no possible way it could get any worse.
And then, he heard the chains.
Everyone in the office had gone nyumbani because the business siku was technically over, which suited Angel's needs perfectly because he liked the quiet. And there was only one person in the world that knew exactly how much he loved the quiet, and Angel deduced that it was that very person who was somehow rattling chains in the abandoned hallways of Wolfram and Hart.
Frustrated, Angel allowed his heavy head to fall forward, where his forehead made contact with his dawati with a loud thump. The rattling of chains grew slowly noisier little kwa little. Angel tried to ignore it as he straightened up in his chair and with a sigh returned to his work. His door was closed, and Spike didn't know how to interact with solid objects, so he was safe.
And then the ghost floated through the door. Angel had forgotten that while the blond bane of his existence couldn't open the door, he could just walk through it.
"Take a look at this," alisema Spike gleefully, gesturing to a number of equally incorporeal chains that ladened him. "Got this off a bloke named Jake Malley au somethin' like that. alisema he was tired of draggin' them around all places he went." He rattled them at Angel for effect. "Ooooh, aren't I scary?" he moaned sarcastically.
"Spike," Angel growled through gritted teeth. "I'm tired. Don't make me call up the exorcist."
"We tried that once, didn't work," Spike observed, amused at Angel's frustrations. He unloaded the chains on the floor and took a step towards Angel's desk. "In fact, as I recall, all it did was make me nose turn blue. Fun stuff, that, I can use it for party tricks."
"We can always try again," alisema Angel, though he knew it was futile.
"No good. You're stuck with me until you're dust."
"And then what will wewe do, Spike, huh?" Angel demanded out of pure irritation. "Wander around the earth with Dickensian chains for the rest of eternity?"
Spike looked as though he had never thought of this. "You mean after you..." He paused. "Well, I s'pose I could always..." He frowned. "I mean, there is the..." He bit his lip. "You know, Anya would still be... Oh wait."
Angel was surprised to find he suddenly had the upper hand and smiled. "That's right, Spike. wewe better hope I stick around a long time, because in a hundred years time, I'll be the only guy wewe know."
Spike's eyes cast downward and he was silent. Angel took this opportunity to go back to his work.
"Funny thing, that," Spike alisema pensively, after a moment.
Angel growled, having once again been interrupted. "What is?"
"We've lived a good long time, wewe and me," Spike mused. "But now, Darla's dead, and Dru is gone, and all of my other Marafiki are... human." He alisema the word with such horror and distaste, as if it were something embarrassing to admit. "And pretty soon, they'll be dead. Buffy'll be dead..."
Angel disliked the mention of their mutual old flame, especially uttered on Spike's lips. It always ignited a uchungu, chungu jealousy in him and he ground his teeth, wanting to remind Spike that he had loved her first, that he had done everything first and Spike was just a grubby little copy-cat. But he kept his mouth shut this time, and he wasn't quite sure why.
Spike laughed. "S'been a long time to spend with someone wewe hate," he said, mostly to himself.
"You've become oddly nostalgic," Angel ametoa maoni snidely.
"I'm musing here," alisema Spike, almost defensively.
"I Muse too, but I do it silently," Angel retorted.
"You muse? Yeah, I've seen wewe 'muse,' except most of us would just call that moping. wewe broody depressive sod, is there anyone who doesn't want to kill themselves when they listen to wewe gripe about how bad wewe got it?"
"And you're not griping?" Angel returned. "You're talking about how wewe don't have any friends... And you're sad about that fact! Hell, I remember in the nineteenth century, wewe bragged about eating all of your friends."
"I have a soul now, in case wewe haven't heard," Spike said.
"And somehow that gives wewe license to--"
"It gives you license to do a whole number of things! See, wewe know what you're problem is, Angel, wewe just were never very good at sharing, were you?"
"Sharing? With you? Why should I share with you--"
"Take Buffy, for example," Spike began. "See, I would have been perfectly happy to--" He seemed to just become aware of what he was saying and shut his mouth tightly.
"To what, Spike? To share her?" Angel growled.
Spike's lips twitched into a mischievous smile that Angel wished he could slap off the ghost's face. "Well, wewe have to admit, it would have been interesting."
Angel exhaled sharply through his nose, misunderstanding Spike's intentions. "You're lucky you're incorporeal au else wewe would be out the window kwa now."
"Lucky am I?" Spike exclaimed. "That I can't seem to exist in any world completely? That I can't smell, taste au touch anything?" He was walking towards the dawati now, until he stood just before it, au floated rather, as the floor wasn't actually baring his weight. "You think I'm lucky? Well, Mr. Big Shot CEO, would wewe like to switch places with me because you're the one that Buffy--" He stopped himself again.
Angel looked up, but this time his expression was not a negative one. "Buffy what?"
"Oh sod it, never mind," Spike mumbled, folding his arms.
Angel pushed his chair back and tried to look Spike in the eye, but the ghost avoided him. He walked around the dawati and sized up a sulking Spike. Spike pouted, but Angel noted that it was exaggerated to make the whole thing seem like an act.
"She alisema she loved me, wewe know," he said, as if in his own defense.
"I loved wewe first," alisema Angel, thoughtlessly.
Spike looked baffled and slightly disturbed. "Did I just hear wewe right?"
Angel blinked. "Her. Her, I loved her first. The... Buffy."
Spike bit his lip. "Yeah. wewe did everything first." He smiled, sadly but proudly. "Well, I died first. Beat wewe to that, didn't I?"
"Well, technically--"
"I became all ghost-y first. That's somethin', isn't it?" Spike interrupted.
Angel couldn't help it. The ghost was so pitiful, it made him laugh. He also realized that Spike's misfortune gave him the most genuine chuckle he'd had in a very long time. "You really can't touch anything, can you?"
"I can if I try," alisema Spike, again on the defensive. "If I concentrate very hard and if I think about it, I can even... smell... things. Like you, for instance. wewe always did reek like a dead cat."
A memory struck Angel at that moment. "Do wewe remember Saragossa?"
Spike cocked an eyebrow. "1894. wewe mean that night the girls were out."
Angel snorted. "You remember it better than I do. Was it 1894?"
Spike took a step backwards, warily. "Why do wewe bring that up now?"
If Angel's blood still ran through his veins, he might have felt himself blush at that moment. "I'm not sure," he confessed.
"I remember," Spike began with a sly smirk, "the Royal London Hotel. wewe wanted to know if wewe were a deviant because wewe liked me."
"I never alisema that--"
"But wewe meant it," Spike alisema teasingly, in a sing-song voice. "You really are a fairy, aren't you?"
"Spike--" Angel made a songesha to hit the ghost, but his hand went right through him. Spike's smile faded as he saw Angel's expression grow puzzled.
"What? Am I cold? Tingly?"
"No..." Angel said, curiously. "It's... nothing. Like air. wewe might as well not be there at all."
Spike nodded. "Huh. I get that a lot."
Slowly, Angel raised his hand, his palm flat as if pressing against an invisible wall. Confused at first, Spike followed his lead and raised his hand, positioning it right in front of Angel's. He wrinkled his brow, staring at Angel's palm, and then pushed forward.
It was like a shock to Angel, pure electricity that knocked into his palm, and yet it was surprisingly warm. The contact lasted for about three sekunde before Spike pushed too hard and his hand went through Angel's and he stumbled forward, his whole body falling right through the older vampire's as if he was nothing at all.
The old companions stood back to back, each of them staring straight ahead, wondering what exactly had just happened and zaidi importantly, why either of them had participated.
"I touched Fred once," alisema Spike, out of the blue. "She alisema I felt funny. Like water, she said."
Angel put a hand against his chest. It may have been his imagination, but for the brief instant that Spike's form had coexisted with his own, he could have sworn he felt his moyo actually...
"I think wewe should go," Angel breathed, feeling as if Spike had committed some personal taboo.
"S'kind of funny, that I can go through you," thought Spike out loud. "If wewe think about it, I could reach inside someone's chest and, permitting I could hold my concentration long enough, rip out their moyo without even breaking their ribcage."
Angel was breathing hard. Not so much breathing as forcing his lungs to exhale and inhale for the purpose of speech. But still, he was forcing them to do it heavily, and he wasn't sure why. "And this thought of ripping someone's moyo out appeals to you?"
Spike was quiet a moment. They were still back to back. Neither of them wanted to look at the other. "No, I s'pose not. Not really. Not unless it was your heart, and even then wewe wouldn't die 'cause wewe don't really need it, do you? So it would be... pointless."
"Right," breathed Angel. "Pointless."
"Yeah, silly, really," Spike said, fumbling. "Um... sorry about that."
"It's OK."
Spike turned around quickly and spoke to Angel's back, who took a step towards the window. "You know, Angel, if I were... If I could touch right now, I think I might..."
"I thought I told wewe to go," alisema Angel, staring out at the Los Angeles skyline.
Spike held his tongue. "OK," he said, his hands in the air and taking a few steps backwards. He reached down and lifted his chains, which rattled ominously. "Best be gettin' on, then."
He dragged the chains out with him, through the door, and back down the hall, leaving Angel to stare out at the city.
He was, as he called it, musing, au perhaps Spike would call it moping, and some others may have in fact called it brooding. But in all reality, Angel was just thinking about things he had refused to allow himself to think about since Saragossa, 1894. He had lived two hundred years (more than that, if one counted the extra hundred he spent in that hell dimension), and yet he had never met a person so infuriating, so aggravating, so fascinating as Spike. And there is one thing to say about fury-- it definitely gets the blood boiling.
Angel thought about Saragossa and he smiled.
THE END
Setting: Angel Season Five, with Ghost!Spike.
Rating: PG-13 (FFN Rating system T)
Late was not the word for the hour, because for Angel the concept of "late" was a moot point. Regardless, at some saa of the night when most people would be sleeping, au at least relaxing, au maybe indulging in an embarrassing ndoto au two with a consenting partner, Angel was slumped over his dawati in his dank office at the demonic law firm of Wolfram and Hart.
He had lived two hundred years (more than that, if one counted the extra hundred he spent in that hell dimension) and yet he had never seen so much calculated trickery in his life. Going over contract after contract searching for a loophole proved fruitless. It seemed that every time one appeared, he would find another loophole that counteracted the first loophole. His hand drummed precariously close to his phone. His fingers were itching to seize the receiver and dial Gunn's number for assistance, but the man did need his sleep.
Angel didn't need sleep, at least not as much, but he rather enjoyed it from time to time.
He chewed on his lip and squinted, scrutinizing the papers in front of him and vaguely wondering if they had been authored kwa the Senior Partners themselves. au maybe they just had the Devil write it for them.
He never thought his life would boil down to sitting behind a dawati looking over legal documents for a way to manipulate an evil system in his favor. And he never thought that system would be the United States Judicial System. He thought about that hell dimension he had spent a hundred years in and decided that this was a far worse fate. In fact, there was no possible way it could get any worse.
And then, he heard the chains.
Everyone in the office had gone nyumbani because the business siku was technically over, which suited Angel's needs perfectly because he liked the quiet. And there was only one person in the world that knew exactly how much he loved the quiet, and Angel deduced that it was that very person who was somehow rattling chains in the abandoned hallways of Wolfram and Hart.
Frustrated, Angel allowed his heavy head to fall forward, where his forehead made contact with his dawati with a loud thump. The rattling of chains grew slowly noisier little kwa little. Angel tried to ignore it as he straightened up in his chair and with a sigh returned to his work. His door was closed, and Spike didn't know how to interact with solid objects, so he was safe.
And then the ghost floated through the door. Angel had forgotten that while the blond bane of his existence couldn't open the door, he could just walk through it.
"Take a look at this," alisema Spike gleefully, gesturing to a number of equally incorporeal chains that ladened him. "Got this off a bloke named Jake Malley au somethin' like that. alisema he was tired of draggin' them around all places he went." He rattled them at Angel for effect. "Ooooh, aren't I scary?" he moaned sarcastically.
"Spike," Angel growled through gritted teeth. "I'm tired. Don't make me call up the exorcist."
"We tried that once, didn't work," Spike observed, amused at Angel's frustrations. He unloaded the chains on the floor and took a step towards Angel's desk. "In fact, as I recall, all it did was make me nose turn blue. Fun stuff, that, I can use it for party tricks."
"We can always try again," alisema Angel, though he knew it was futile.
"No good. You're stuck with me until you're dust."
"And then what will wewe do, Spike, huh?" Angel demanded out of pure irritation. "Wander around the earth with Dickensian chains for the rest of eternity?"
Spike looked as though he had never thought of this. "You mean after you..." He paused. "Well, I s'pose I could always..." He frowned. "I mean, there is the..." He bit his lip. "You know, Anya would still be... Oh wait."
Angel was surprised to find he suddenly had the upper hand and smiled. "That's right, Spike. wewe better hope I stick around a long time, because in a hundred years time, I'll be the only guy wewe know."
Spike's eyes cast downward and he was silent. Angel took this opportunity to go back to his work.
"Funny thing, that," Spike alisema pensively, after a moment.
Angel growled, having once again been interrupted. "What is?"
"We've lived a good long time, wewe and me," Spike mused. "But now, Darla's dead, and Dru is gone, and all of my other Marafiki are... human." He alisema the word with such horror and distaste, as if it were something embarrassing to admit. "And pretty soon, they'll be dead. Buffy'll be dead..."
Angel disliked the mention of their mutual old flame, especially uttered on Spike's lips. It always ignited a uchungu, chungu jealousy in him and he ground his teeth, wanting to remind Spike that he had loved her first, that he had done everything first and Spike was just a grubby little copy-cat. But he kept his mouth shut this time, and he wasn't quite sure why.
Spike laughed. "S'been a long time to spend with someone wewe hate," he said, mostly to himself.
"You've become oddly nostalgic," Angel ametoa maoni snidely.
"I'm musing here," alisema Spike, almost defensively.
"I Muse too, but I do it silently," Angel retorted.
"You muse? Yeah, I've seen wewe 'muse,' except most of us would just call that moping. wewe broody depressive sod, is there anyone who doesn't want to kill themselves when they listen to wewe gripe about how bad wewe got it?"
"And you're not griping?" Angel returned. "You're talking about how wewe don't have any friends... And you're sad about that fact! Hell, I remember in the nineteenth century, wewe bragged about eating all of your friends."
"I have a soul now, in case wewe haven't heard," Spike said.
"And somehow that gives wewe license to--"
"It gives you license to do a whole number of things! See, wewe know what you're problem is, Angel, wewe just were never very good at sharing, were you?"
"Sharing? With you? Why should I share with you--"
"Take Buffy, for example," Spike began. "See, I would have been perfectly happy to--" He seemed to just become aware of what he was saying and shut his mouth tightly.
"To what, Spike? To share her?" Angel growled.
Spike's lips twitched into a mischievous smile that Angel wished he could slap off the ghost's face. "Well, wewe have to admit, it would have been interesting."
Angel exhaled sharply through his nose, misunderstanding Spike's intentions. "You're lucky you're incorporeal au else wewe would be out the window kwa now."
"Lucky am I?" Spike exclaimed. "That I can't seem to exist in any world completely? That I can't smell, taste au touch anything?" He was walking towards the dawati now, until he stood just before it, au floated rather, as the floor wasn't actually baring his weight. "You think I'm lucky? Well, Mr. Big Shot CEO, would wewe like to switch places with me because you're the one that Buffy--" He stopped himself again.
Angel looked up, but this time his expression was not a negative one. "Buffy what?"
"Oh sod it, never mind," Spike mumbled, folding his arms.
Angel pushed his chair back and tried to look Spike in the eye, but the ghost avoided him. He walked around the dawati and sized up a sulking Spike. Spike pouted, but Angel noted that it was exaggerated to make the whole thing seem like an act.
"She alisema she loved me, wewe know," he said, as if in his own defense.
"I loved wewe first," alisema Angel, thoughtlessly.
Spike looked baffled and slightly disturbed. "Did I just hear wewe right?"
Angel blinked. "Her. Her, I loved her first. The... Buffy."
Spike bit his lip. "Yeah. wewe did everything first." He smiled, sadly but proudly. "Well, I died first. Beat wewe to that, didn't I?"
"Well, technically--"
"I became all ghost-y first. That's somethin', isn't it?" Spike interrupted.
Angel couldn't help it. The ghost was so pitiful, it made him laugh. He also realized that Spike's misfortune gave him the most genuine chuckle he'd had in a very long time. "You really can't touch anything, can you?"
"I can if I try," alisema Spike, again on the defensive. "If I concentrate very hard and if I think about it, I can even... smell... things. Like you, for instance. wewe always did reek like a dead cat."
A memory struck Angel at that moment. "Do wewe remember Saragossa?"
Spike cocked an eyebrow. "1894. wewe mean that night the girls were out."
Angel snorted. "You remember it better than I do. Was it 1894?"
Spike took a step backwards, warily. "Why do wewe bring that up now?"
If Angel's blood still ran through his veins, he might have felt himself blush at that moment. "I'm not sure," he confessed.
"I remember," Spike began with a sly smirk, "the Royal London Hotel. wewe wanted to know if wewe were a deviant because wewe liked me."
"I never alisema that--"
"But wewe meant it," Spike alisema teasingly, in a sing-song voice. "You really are a fairy, aren't you?"
"Spike--" Angel made a songesha to hit the ghost, but his hand went right through him. Spike's smile faded as he saw Angel's expression grow puzzled.
"What? Am I cold? Tingly?"
"No..." Angel said, curiously. "It's... nothing. Like air. wewe might as well not be there at all."
Spike nodded. "Huh. I get that a lot."
Slowly, Angel raised his hand, his palm flat as if pressing against an invisible wall. Confused at first, Spike followed his lead and raised his hand, positioning it right in front of Angel's. He wrinkled his brow, staring at Angel's palm, and then pushed forward.
It was like a shock to Angel, pure electricity that knocked into his palm, and yet it was surprisingly warm. The contact lasted for about three sekunde before Spike pushed too hard and his hand went through Angel's and he stumbled forward, his whole body falling right through the older vampire's as if he was nothing at all.
The old companions stood back to back, each of them staring straight ahead, wondering what exactly had just happened and zaidi importantly, why either of them had participated.
"I touched Fred once," alisema Spike, out of the blue. "She alisema I felt funny. Like water, she said."
Angel put a hand against his chest. It may have been his imagination, but for the brief instant that Spike's form had coexisted with his own, he could have sworn he felt his moyo actually...
"I think wewe should go," Angel breathed, feeling as if Spike had committed some personal taboo.
"S'kind of funny, that I can go through you," thought Spike out loud. "If wewe think about it, I could reach inside someone's chest and, permitting I could hold my concentration long enough, rip out their moyo without even breaking their ribcage."
Angel was breathing hard. Not so much breathing as forcing his lungs to exhale and inhale for the purpose of speech. But still, he was forcing them to do it heavily, and he wasn't sure why. "And this thought of ripping someone's moyo out appeals to you?"
Spike was quiet a moment. They were still back to back. Neither of them wanted to look at the other. "No, I s'pose not. Not really. Not unless it was your heart, and even then wewe wouldn't die 'cause wewe don't really need it, do you? So it would be... pointless."
"Right," breathed Angel. "Pointless."
"Yeah, silly, really," Spike said, fumbling. "Um... sorry about that."
"It's OK."
Spike turned around quickly and spoke to Angel's back, who took a step towards the window. "You know, Angel, if I were... If I could touch right now, I think I might..."
"I thought I told wewe to go," alisema Angel, staring out at the Los Angeles skyline.
Spike held his tongue. "OK," he said, his hands in the air and taking a few steps backwards. He reached down and lifted his chains, which rattled ominously. "Best be gettin' on, then."
He dragged the chains out with him, through the door, and back down the hall, leaving Angel to stare out at the city.
He was, as he called it, musing, au perhaps Spike would call it moping, and some others may have in fact called it brooding. But in all reality, Angel was just thinking about things he had refused to allow himself to think about since Saragossa, 1894. He had lived two hundred years (more than that, if one counted the extra hundred he spent in that hell dimension), and yet he had never met a person so infuriating, so aggravating, so fascinating as Spike. And there is one thing to say about fury-- it definitely gets the blood boiling.
Angel thought about Saragossa and he smiled.
THE END