Irish Eyes, an Angel/Doyle tale by Glacis. Rated NC17 for sex and
rampant violence, or perhaps violence and rampant sex. Shameless, wanton A/U
manipulation of canon. No copyright infringement intended.
This story follows "Matched Pair" and will make more sense
if read after that story. I miss Doyle.
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One of these days something was going to go right. The stars
would be in alignment, her voice would do exactly what she wanted it to do, a
major producer would just happen to be having an iced latte with the casting
director while she performed brilliantly and they would both fall instantly in
love with her, leading directly to the life of fame, fortune and acclaim for
which she was destined.
She just had to nail this stupid fabric softener spiel and the door
would be open.
Cordelia sighed to herself and pushed the door of Angel Investigations
open, wincing as slightly as possible to minimize wrinkling around the eyes.
The sun was ridiculously bright this early in the morning. What she really
needed was a huge mug of coffee and something sinful with cinnamon on it, but
she'd settle for the skim milk Angel kept in the fridge. It wasn't as if he
needed it, after all, and her budget didn't exactly extend to luxuries like,
say, food. But if she tried to say Downy Does It Better a dozen times with her
stomach growling, today would definitely not be her day of discovery.
Rubbing one hand gingerly across sleepy eyes, careful not to put too
much stress on delicate skin, she plodded down the stairs toward the kitchen.
Halfway down the staircase, she froze.
There were noises coming from down there.
Her eyes widened, and her breath caught. The last time there were noises
coming from Angel's bedroom a particularly icky goo-demon of some kind had
tried to slime the entire office out of existence. If it hadn't been for a
convenient party that she simply had to attend, she'd've been sucked into the
clean-up crew, and the whole thing had been just too disgusting for words. Not
to mention the smells. Keeping one hand on the railing, ready to bolt back
upstairs at the first sign of slime but not willing to leave her curiosity
unsatisfied, Cordelia peered around the corner into the shadows of the bedroom.
She squeaked, involuntarily, and muffled it with her hand.
No slime, that she could see, although there did seem to be plenty of
other ... fluids. Along with a lot of energetic activity. Frozen on the fourth
step from the floor, she couldn't have ripped her eyes away from that activity
if her life had depended on it.
Angel had his game face on, and was peering up into Doyle's face, who
had his back to her. And quite a back it was, too. Not a bad ass, either. Great
legs, come to think of it. Doyle was digging his knees into the mattress, every
muscle from his neck to his heels straining, butt flexing as he pumped away. At
Angel. Into Angel. Whose own heels were planted pretty firmly in the mattress,
hands clawing at the sheets, as he howled at the ceiling. The whole bed was
rocking.
For Cordelia, her whole world was rocking.
Angel. And Doyle. Doyle doing Angel. And Angel digging it.
Big-time. They were both sweating, and groaning, and now Doyle was kissing
Angel's neck, or licking it, or biting it, and Cordy was sweating too. Angel's
legs came up and wrapped around Doyle's hips, his feet sliding along the back
of those trembling thighs, curving around the backs of Doyle's knees. Doyle's
hands were moving now, too, reaching down between them, and Cordelia leaned
forward unconsciously, knowing theoretically what he was doing but having an
uncontrollable urge to see it. The stair beneath her foot creaked and
she froze again.
Angel was wailing, now, and Doyle was babbling something Gaelic-sounding
at him, so neither one of them heard it, but the possibility of discovery was
enough to frighten Cordelia backward up the stairs toward the relative safety
of the outer office. Forget the milk, she wasn't that thirsty after all. She
licked dry lips. Well, she was, but no way in hell was she going to go back
down there and get caught up in the floor show again.
She wouldn't want to leave, if she did.
Head full of impossible possibilities and improbable positions, Cordelia
let herself back out into the early morning sunshine and wandered off in the
general direction of her audition. She didn't even notice the frantic looking
demon with the droopy ears making his way toward the office as she was leaving.
She had other things on her mind.
Needless to say, the audition was a bust. She kept drifting off in the
middle of words like touchable, soft, silky, sensuous ... and while the little
whimpers that escaped at odd moments did render the casting director
speechless, it wasn't exactly the kind of speechlessness that had 'she's such a
wonderful actress!' written all over it.
She didn't even bother calling in sick. She just went back home, fell in
bed, and pulled the covers up over her head.
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Angel barely had time to get his trousers zipped before the clatter of
steps started down the stairs toward his living quarters. Running his finger
teasingly down the soft spikes on Doyle's blissed-out face, he grabbed a shirt
and strode from the bedroom, shutting the door firmly behind him. He could hear
the sounds of sluggish movement and grinned briefly to himself. Doyle would
join him as soon as he got enough energy to haul himself out of bed. It had
been a rather intense good morning call.
A demon with wispy hair, droopy ears and fashion sense straight from a
bad episode of the Rockford Files stumbled to a halt at the base of the stairs.
"Sorry for busting in like this, pal, but there was nobody outside, and
the door was open, and I really need help, and they say you can help people,
well, demons, but hey, we're people too, ain't we? And boy, do I need
help."
In more ways than one, Angel thought, eyeing the demon's jacket, then
waved a hand toward the kitchen table. "Like some coffee?"
"Yeah, please, thanks, they're trying to kill me, he's been
following me forever. Nearly killed me twice already, and I was wondering, can
you help? Ow, that's hot!" as the motormouth slopped coffee over his hand
in his attempt to talk and drink at the same time.
Angel settled himself opposite the distraught demon and nodded
soothingly. "Who's trying to kill you?"
"Could be any number of people ... I'm a truth demon, and I was in
Vegas for awhile, and I kinda got on the wrong side of some people you probably
wouldn't wanna get on the wrong side of, but hey, a demon's gotta make a
living, you know? But I'm not really sure. Just this guy, on this motorcycle,
he keeps showing up behind me, and then I get spooked and leave, and whosoever
I'm with ends up deader than a doornail. Willya help me?"
The door to the bedroom quietly clicked shut, and Angel's eyes flickered
to Doyle and back to the frightened demon. Doyle was standing with his back
against the closed door, staring intently at the demon. He was frowning, lines
between his brows, lids half lowered over intense blue eyes.
"Who are ye?" he asked abruptly. The demon spun around in his
chair, almost unbalancing and falling out of it.
"Sheesh! Scare a guy half to death why dontcha?" Doyle just
stared at him. The demon swallowed, looked uncertainly at Angel then back to
Doyle. "Name's Barney. I'm a truth demon-"
"I heard," Doyle cut him off. "What do you expect Angel
to do? Kill this guy for ya?"
The demon turned even paler, a feat Angel would have considered
impossible if he hadn't seen it for himself. Barney was shaking as if he had
palsy, sweating, and his eyes were pleading, going from one to the other of
them as if they were the only hope he had on Earth. "Just stop him! The
guy's a killer! I thought you guys helped!"
Angel hushed him absentmindedly. "We'll help." Rising and
walking swiftly past Barney, patting him once on the shoulder as he walked by,
he gestured toward the office. "You stay here," he directed Barney,
tossing the words over his shoulder as he preceded Doyle up the stairs. Once
they were safely away from those big ears, he reached over and touched the
frown lines along Doyle's brow, smoothing them with a fingertip. "What's
up?"
"I dunno, man," Doyle responded, leaning into the soft touch.
"I just have a really bad feeling about this guy."
"A vision?"
Doyle shook his head. "Nah, nothin' so specific. Or painful."
He nodded, stepping reluctantly away from Doyle. "Stay with him
while I check out this stalker," Angel asked him. "See if the feeling
gets any more ... specific."
Doyle grinned at him. "Watch yersel'. I'll take care o' the
weasel."
Angel grinned back, briefly, then headed for the entrance to the
tunnels. Another day, another psychotic. Things never got boring in LA.
It didn't take long to track the tracker. Whoever the biker was, he was
an amateur. Angel found his way to the cheap hotel room, slipped the lock
easily, then rummaged through the small suitcase of tools. Stakes of various
sizes, a couple bottles of holy water, a few crucifixes, a hand axe, sundry
small spiked weapons -- standard vampire/demon hunting equipment. Mostly old,
someone's hand-me-downs. Looked like a baby slayer wannabe looking to make a
name for himself. Angel sighed. Another innocent in the middle of a war zone.
The babysitting just never ended.
The door burst open behind him, not a surprise since he'd scented the
human several minutes before the Grand Entrance. What could be construed, with
bad lighting, as a menacing figure in black leather faced him from the doorway.
"Don't move," a low baritone voice growled at him. A small but
lethal-looking crossbow was aimed at his center mass.
Of course, the figure was standing much too close, and action was as
fast as thought as Angel grabbed the bow from the gloved hands, snapped a wrist
behind the slender waist and dumped the Vampire Hunter on his belly on the bed.
"Wesley." He should have known. "What are you
doing?" Or trying to do, he refrained from asking.
"I am a rogue demon hunter!"
Of course. Just what Angel would have thought he was. If he didn't
already know he was a wuss, a poser, and a complete waste of genetic material.
"Any luck?"
He could feel the human's blush from three feet away through two layers
of leather.
"Yes!"
No.
"I'm tracking a very dangerous demon! He's already killed several
other demons. He appears to be harvesting organs for some nefarious purpose ...
I say, would you mind taking your knee from the small of my back? I could speak
much more clearly if my face wasn't pressed to the bedcovers."
But then you could speak much more clearly, Angel thought with a touch
of malice, but he did ease up on the pressure. Wesley managed to wriggle onto
his back, then sit as upright as possible with Angel still looming over him.
"He says you're trying to kill him."
Wesley's face brightened. "You've talked to him!"
Self-evident.
"You don't believe me."
"You said you were a demon hunter," Angel reminded him. Wesley
nodded firmly and opened his mouth. Angel spoke before he got the chance to
start babbling again. "What do you do with them when you catch them?"
Wesley's mouth remained open. No sound came out. Angel considered this
an improvement.
"You don't kill them, then?" Reasonable. Calm. Angel eyed
Wesley with some interest. Would he admit it?
"... haven't actually ... caught one yet ..."
Another improvement. Honesty. He tossed the bow back to Wesley, making
sure it was uncocked before he did. Wesley fumbled the catch, blushing again.
"C'mon. And be careful with that thing. You could hurt somebody."
Turning his back to the thoroughly embarrassed ex-Watcher, Angel sighed
and headed back toward the tunnels. Wesley, bumbling around on his turf, as
well as having to put up with Cordelia. Just what he needed to make his life
complete.
Completely miserable.
Thank God for Doyle.
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Barney attempted to be charming. Doyle stared at him.
Barney attempted to mind-fuck him with some yammer about Doyle's deepest
fears and insecurities. Doyle stared through him.
Barney reached for the scotch bottle. Doyle swatted him.
It could have gotten ugly, but The Powers That Be had a case of
inconvenient timing. Giant red-hot pincers pierced Doyle's brain at both
temples, squeezing until his head imploded, all the pain on God's green Earth
poured through his ears, and his body seized up, curling him into a fetal ball
that was the point of intersection for every nasty thing he'd ever dreamt up in
his worst nightmares. The agony went on and on for eons, disassembling his
mind, body and soul, flinging them into the far corners of the universe and
giving the bloody fragments to the Little People to play football with 'em.
Then the vision passed and he was able to breathe again.
Barney was staring at him.
"What the bloody hell's wrong with you?" he snarled, furious
at having been seen in such a state by anyone but Angel or Cordelia.
"Not a thing," Barney answered absently.
Doyle ignored him, arm flailing out for the bottle of scotch, tears
leaking from the corners of his now tightly-clenched eyelids. The worst
hangover times ten wasn't a patch on a vision. Idly, waiting for his brain to
shrink back small enough to fit in his skull again, he picked up a pencil and
doodled the strange image he'd seen in his vision in the margin of the sports
page lying abandoned on the table. He wrote a tiny 'ouch!' next to it, his
black sense of humor coming to the fore.
Vaguely he was aware of a beeping sound that the tiny portion of his
brain not currently concerned with reassembling itself identified as a cell
phone, and Barney whispering gleefully into it. He shook his head, bit off a
few colorful curses before they could leave his tongue at the resultant
mini-explosion of pain, and concentrated on their unwanted client.
Frustratingly, he couldn't hear what was being said.
He pulled himself up, shakily hanging onto the kitchen table, and
started toward the other demon. He'd gone a whole two steps before Barney swung
around, clobbering him full across the jaw. Doyle went down, taking the chair
and table with him, then a lifetime's worth of pub-fighting instincts caught
him up, and he went with the flow. An uppercut that started at his ankles knocked
Barney on his arse, but the truth demon bounced back up, and a right cross
hammered Doyle right back down to the floor. He felt something hard and wooden
coming down, and rolled desperately to get out of the way.
He didn't make it.
If not for the feeling of impending doom, he'd've not minded blacking
out for a spell. Those visions were a real bitch. As it was, he didn't have a
hell of a lot of choice. The world faded to black as his arms were wrenched
behind him, and that impending doom felt much, much closer.
Then he didn't feel anything at all.
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Wesley didn't say much in the tunnels on the way back to the office. It
was just as well. Angel was a bit perplexed about the ex-Watcher's move to LA,
but half-feared asking. He had a strong notion once Wesley began talking again
he'd never get the man to shut up. Coming up along the back alleyway behind his
office, thankful for the cover from the overhang between the buildings, he
nearly stumbled over a gray mass lying at his back door.
A Goren demon. Dead, or nearly so. Signs of struggle, blood all over his
face, and most distressing of all, a hacked off stub on his forehead where his
horn used to be. Angel winced. That had to've hurt. The Goren was mumbling.
Angel knelt down, trying to hear. Beside him, there was a rustle of leather as
Wesley did the same.
"Bishwot li mat po liowen! Bishwot. Mackilet ne jalemon ...
bishwot, bishwot ... " His breath rattled in his throat. Angel reached out
and gently shut his eyes.
"What did he say?" Wesley asked, more subdued than Angel had
ever seen him.
"I was kinda hoping you could tell me," Angel replied,
carefully examining the corpse before rising to step over it and enter the
building. Behind him, Wesley harrumphed and stepped gingerly to join him.
"Well, some of the words were familiar, but I'd have to do some
brushing up on my Gorenli dialects to be certain." They clattered down the
back stairs and headed along the corridor toward Angel's place. "The one
repeated word, 'bishwot,' is a complex term, which could mean 'be on guard,'
'danger,' or 'perilous.' I think 'jalemon' is something to the effect of
'gatherer' or 'forager' although I don't see how that-"
Angel stopped dead, and Wesley ran into him, effectively cutting off the
stream of words. Before the man could remonstrate, Angel tore down the hall at
full speed, vamping out as he went. He threw himself at the door, reacting
instinctively to the scent of his spawn in pain -- much like the spike of scent
Doyle threw when he had a vision, but more intense, with fear and anger mixed
in with the pain. The door flew open and he raced inside, snarling, eyes
sweeping from side to side.
The kitchen was a shambles. The table and chairs were splintered, the refrigerator
was shifted sideways, the lamp was lying on its side, broken, the shade flung
across the room from it. Whoever had taken Doyle had had to fight to get him.
Unfortunately, it was a fight Doyle had lost.
A harsh panting in the doorway behind him reminded him of Wesley's
presence. For an instant, pure rage nearly made him turn on the man and rip his
head off. If it hadn't been for Wesley, Angel would have been there when the
attack occurred, and Doyle would have had protection. God only knew who the
attackers were. Or where Barney had gotten to, or if they'd gotten him too.
A tiny, fearful whimper brought him back to himself, and he looked down
to see Wesley cringing in the corner by the door. Angel willed himself to relax
back into human form, and reached a hand down to haul Wesley to his feet. The
poor man looked terrified. Not that it was much of a stretch for Wesley.
"What on earth-"
The screech from the doorway brought him around to see Cordelia staring
at the wreckage of the kitchen. Her hands were on her hips and her eyes were
huge. Angel took a deep breath. He really didn't have time for this, not with
Doyle missing.
"What happened? Where's Doyle? What's going on? Have you been
fighting? Didn't look like there was too much to fight about this morning, I
can't believe even you could mess up a relationship that fast, Angel."
He knew his mouth had dropped open and his eyes were bulging, but he
couldn't seem to get a word out. It was just as well, really, because she swept
right on, and he wouldn't have been able to get a word in edgewise even if he had
been able to get one out.
"What's that in the corner? WESLEY? Good lord, what is this, LA is
the reject space for all of Sunnydale's losers? Next thing you know Xander will
be camping out on the doorstep. And what is that smell? When did we get a cat?
'Cause that sure smells like cat pee."
A strangled moan behind him made Angel aware of Wesley's complete
humiliation, and the smell of urine and leather made him wrinkle his nose. It
appeared he'd been even more fierce looking than he'd meant to be when he'd
rounded on Wesley earlier. In an effort to distract Cordy and find out what the
hell had happened to Doyle, Angel headed for the stairs, sweeping her up on his
way.
Over his shoulder, he ordered, "Don't touch anything. There's a
shower and clean clothes in the bedroom to your right." Then he turned to
Cordelia. "I need as much information as you can get out of the computer
on anyone who might come after Doyle, or use him to come after me."
She was deposited at the computer and he was on his way back down the
stairs before she could catch her breath. He smiled grimly to himself. Now, to
find out what had happened to his Doyle. Then find whoever had taken him, and
rip them into very small bloody pieces.
He was sifting through the fragments of wood that used to be his dining
room set when Wesley came hesitantly from the bedroom. In the soft gray pants
and oversized sweatshirt, face buried in a book, he looked about twelve. Angel
felt his anger dissolve. Wesley was another orphan, and Angel had long realized
he had a blind spot for orphans, at least when he had a soul.
Angelus liked to eat them.
Shrugging the thought off, he went back to his search. "How's the
translation coming?" he asked evenly.
"I think I've got something," Wesley answered softly. Neither
of them mentioned the earlier unfortunate loss of control. By both of them.
"What?" Angel prodded. Nothing. A little blood, Doyle's by the
scent, some spilled scotch. A lot of broken bits of wood. A scattered
newspaper. Not a damned thing.
"Well, in context, 'bishwot li mat' means either 'beware of the
danger' or 'beware of the peril,' quite similar really, although not
particularly helpful since it's not specific. '
Ouch. Angel stared at the tiny pencil drawing and the one word, written
in Doyle's distinctive scrawl. "He had a vision."
"Who?" Wesley asked, confused. "The serial killer?"
"Doyle," Angel answered absently, tracing the drawing with his
fingertip.
"Who?" Wesley asked again.
"Does this mean anything to you?" Angel asked, ignoring
Wesley's perpetual confusion, shoving the newspaper with the drawing under
Wesley's nose. Blue eyes behind round glasses nearly crossed trying to focus on
the doodle.
"No," Wesley answered finally.
"What?" Cordelia breezed around Angel, glancing at Wesley,
then glancing back again, an arrested look in her eye. Angel sighed
disgustedly.
"This!" He waved the paper in front of Cordelia. "Doyle
had a vision, before he was kidnapped, and he sketched this out. Does it mean
anything to you?"
Cordy stared at it for a long time. "Looks a little like a tuning
fork that's been run over by a truck. A big tuning fork."
"Modern art?" suggested Wesley. "Perhaps one of the
trophies the serial killer took?"
"Serial killer?" Cordelia's voice rose an octave in five
syllables.
"Art," Angel wondered aloud. "Maybe ... Cordy, any luck
with the computer?"
She shrugged, mouth twisting into a frown. "Not really. We haven't
really been here long enough to have that many enemies. Except those
sleazy lawyers that guy who tried to eat me was tied up with."
Angel stared at her for a long moment, mind racing. "That's it.
Cordelia, you're brilliant."
She stared after him, a dumbfounded look on her face, as he ran up the
stairs to the computer. They caught up with him there as he was searching down
every connection he could find between the firm of Wolfram and Hart and modern
art acquisitions. Three quarters of the way through his search results, he hit
pay dirt.
"The Montecito Hotel on the west side. That sculpture was purchased
at auction last November and displayed in the grand ballroom at the hotel.
Wolfram and Hart was the firm representing the buyer, who was anonymous. That's
what he saw. That's where we're going!"
Cordy grabbed the goody bag, and Angel started stuffing weapons into it.
Wesley hovered uncertainly on the perimeter of the activity. Before Angel could
say it, Cordelia beat him to it.
"Put your boots on, Wes! We're going to war!"
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Doyle had lived through many unpleasant situations in his relatively
young life. Discovering in his early twenties that half of him was a spiky,
green demonic being with glowing red eyes had been a kick in the shorts. Losing
his entire way of life hadn't been all that great. Nearly getting his brains
eaten by his ex-wife's future husband wasn't a real highlight, although the
subsequent broken engagement had been a nice surprise. And the visions The
Powers That Be had gifted him with in payment for letting down his kinfolk
certainly couldn't be considered a prize. Getting sparked to a crisp by a bunch
of mad Nazi purebred demons hadn't been great fun, but the unexpected side
effect of landing in Angel's bed had made the sunburn much easier to bear.
This, on the other hand, was not his idea of a good time.
Barney hadn't been running from the man killing the demons -- he'd been
the one killing the demons. Trophy hunting, gathering totems from each demon,
whichever portion of their bodies held the seat of their particular power. A
Botlean demon's tongue, a Larot demon's hands, a Goren demon's horn. All for
the purpose of making a fortune.
At auction. And he was the prize, well, prize. Something about a Seer's
Eyes. One more thing to thank The Powers That Be for, if he wanted to push his
nonexistent luck. There'd been a bloody bidding war, of all things, and he'd
lost. Now Barney was clucking like a bleedin' hen at him and hovering over him
with a pair of what looked like giant tongs.
Sharpened giant tongs.
"Ah, now, ye don't want to be doin' that, now," he tried to
reason with the unreasonable. "What good are eyeballs without the body to
go along wit' 'em, eh? Not much use to have a bag of water with a cornea
attached -- it's the brain that makes it worth the takin'!" Alright, so he
was desperate. It wouldn't be the first time someone had tried to take his
brain. At least it wouldn't be with shrimp forks this time.
"Shut up, Seer," Barney sneered at him. It sat oddly with his
badly cut orange plaid sports jacket. Damnit, a man that stupidly dressed just
shouldn't be a serious villain. There was something unnatural about it.
"Get on with it," a nasal bitch in a too-tight miniskirt and
blazer ordered. "We haven't got all night."
"And why wouldn't we have, then?" Doyle asked brightly. "Got a
prior engagement? If you're in such a rush, surely this can wait. I'm not going
anywhere, after all, am I?" Behind him, unseen by his captors, his fingers
worked feverishly at the knots on the ropes binding his hands. The strands gave
just as a commotion at the door distracted everyone in the room.
Angel.
God bless 'im.
Bursting through the doors like the Angel of Death, full vampire face,
fingers like talons and fangs flashing. Doyle had never seen such a beautiful
sight.
Flanking the light of his life was Cordelia, staking, ducking,
squealing, panting. She was lovely. Another man, a stranger to him, fought as
well, awkwardly but with enthusiasm. Doyle recognized Angel's track suit on the
man, and felt an unexpected, unwelcome surge of jealousy. The rush of
adrenaline added to his already heightened urgency to escape, and he drove both
fists directly forward just as Barney turned back to him, ready to pluck his
eyes from his head.
Instead, he walked right into Doyle's double-fisted pile driver directly
to his goolies. Barney was out for the rest of the fight, if not the rest of
the decade. Angel was busily tearing the room to pieces, his helpers hot on his
heels. Doyle managed to get his feet untied just as the bitch in the suit was
escaping past him, cell phone clamped to her head. He took great pleasure in
thrusting a foot between her ankles. She twisted as she fell, and he wasn't heartbroken
to hear her neck snap as she landed.
Barney was writhing purposefully toward the door, and Doyle wasn't about
to let him get away with it. Grabbing the Goren horn up, he drove it directly
between Barney's shoulder blades. The sucking sound as the bastard's soul was
torn from his body made Doyle feel much better about the events of the evening.
Kicking at the pile of ash that was all that remained of his kidnapper, Doyle
grinned ferally. A strong hand caught his arm and swung him around, and he managed
to pull his swing. Damn good thing, too. He'd have really been pissed off if
he'd accidentally staked his lover.
Angel's mouth covering his was the best thing he'd ever known. The world
went away, and all there was left was strong arms holding him, a sturdy back
under his hands, and the sure knowledge that breathing was vastly over-rated.
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Wesley picked himself up off the floor and leaned unsteadily against the
wall. He'd never been in quite such a situation before, and he searched the
debris of the room for Angel, wanting to make sure the vampire hadn't seen him
get ignominiously dumped in the corner early in the fighting. He'd embarrassed
himself quite enough for one day. He finally found Angel in the far corner,
wrapped around a dark-haired fair-skinned man who was kissing him as if he
would never get enough. Wesley cleared his throat. He could feel himself
blushing, from his ankles to his hairline. They looked simply ... ravenous for one
another. Tearing his eyes away, he looked down to see Cordelia, also staring at
the pair, a dreamy look on her face.
"Er, uhm," he stammered, trying to think of something,
anything, to say to her. She turned slowly to look at him. The hazy look in her
eyes gradually cleared, then sharpened into something he hadn't seen since
their fumbling attempts at a kiss back in Sunnydale.
Lust.
He cleared his throat again.
She took his hand, hauled him out the door, and directly to the
elevator. When he cleared his throat a third time with a vaguely interrogative
noise, she held up a room key.
"Barney won't be needing this," she said firmly.
He couldn't form another word the rest of the night.
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Angel wasn't sure how they got home, thankful only that they got there
in one piece without being stopped by the cops for reckless driving.
Happily, it was a short trip.
"You okay?" His voice was deeper than usual. Nearly losing
Doyle did that to him. Shook him up.
"Right as rain," came the soft answer. "You?"
"Great." You're all right. You're in one piece. They didn't
kill you. They didn't maim you. I let you down, wasn't there to protect you,
but you made it, we found you, you're all right. I love you.
All the things he couldn't say, probably never would be able to say, in
one abrupt word. Doyle grinned at him. He'd heard every one of them, Angel
didn't doubt. Doyle always did.
He nearly put the car into the wall of the garage, but he got it parked,
got them into the elevator, got them up to their floor. Got them through the
door, then dropped all pretense of normality and let his hunger break through.
With a sound between a sob and a snarl, he pinned Doyle to the door and dove
in, ripping his shirt open, tearing at his trousers, getting as much skin bare
as fast as he could. Doyle was far from passive, pulling at Angel's sweater,
pushing at his trousers. Both of them had vamped out, and the razor edge of
fangs drew lines of blood along throat, collarbone, breast and shoulder,
burning on their tongues and urging them on.
Doyle's arms were around his neck, Doyle's fangs sunk into his carotid
artery, his tongue lapping at Angel's flesh. Doyle's legs were wrapped around
his waist, and Angel's hands clutched at Doyle's ass, spreading him, impaling
him, owning him as Doyle owned Angel. His thrusts mirrored the long pulls Doyle
was making at his throat, and the world was spinning. Reality was nothing but
this, his blood and Doyle's hunger, his hunger and Doyle's flesh. The pressure
built with the strength of their joining, and Angel's fangs sank into the
opposite side of Doyle's throat, drinking deeply, completing the circle.
The arms around his shoulders tightened, as did the grip on his cock,
and the heat of Doyle's orgasm splashed against his belly as Doyle screamed
against the side of his neck. The sensations washed over him and through him,
shared through their blood and their bodies, and Angel screamed as well as he
came. Blood trickled down between them, mixing with the sweat and the semen,
tying them together. Angel collapsed against Doyle and they slid down to land
together in a crumpled heap on the floor. Doyle shifted as they lay there, and
Angel smiled as the soft spikes rubbed against him.
Later, much later, when they could move without falling over and could
stand to be far enough apart from one another to actually walk, they'd get some
bags of blood and stay in bed for the next three days. But that was for later.
For the moment, they were perfectly content with the floor, and with each
other. Angel petted the spikes running along Doyle's spine and licked lazily at
the trail of blood pooling at his collarbone. There was a vibration against his
neck, and, concentrating, he could hear Doyle crooning the tune of a very old
music hall song.
"Doyle?" he asked muzzily. "Whatcha singing?"
"Ah, nothin' in particular," came the sleepy response.
"Just somethin' me mother used to sing to me when I was a kid."
After listening to a few bars, Angel finally put a name to the song.
When Irish Eyes are Smiling. He drew back far enough to smile down into the
eyes in question, and thanked whatever Deity looked after wayward vampires that
they were still there to smile. "So," he asked whimsically, "how
is your mother?"
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