Title: DownRush. Ignited's Halloween Treat
Author: DamnSkippy
Posted:
Rating: PG-13 for language
Email
Category:
Content: C/A/W Friendship
Summary: Ignited’s Theme: Cordy has a fear of water. .” I've set this early season three, prior to demon Cordy. The golden days.
Spoilers:
Disclaimer: I own squat. Hell, JW probably owns my squat, too.
Distribution: JF, AO, GT and all places universally as long as you let me know.
Notes: Trick or Treat, Ignited. I hope it chills ya to the bone (treat) or makes you puke (trick). Either way sounds pretty Halloweeny.
Thanks/Dedication: Special thanks to Helen for the plot help and encouragement and Califi for the help with British slang. You girls are faboolicious.
Feedback: Need it like air.
The vapor coiled in wispy waves in her wake as the earth pounded beneath her feet and in her ears like a sledgehammer. Damp leaves and broken twigs scraped her face. Formerly flawless nails clawed at the massive, black timber grasping for any strength to stand. To move. She had to move. Now. Moonlight ebbed here and there bravely lighting a path in the pitch for her stumbling feet to navigate. Don't look back. Run. Breathe. Never look back. Rough bark tore at her shoulder. Scraggly branches reached through the hazy night and ripped strands of dark silk from her scalp. There was no time to scream.
Pushing her palms into her aching thighs, she forced them to keep working past their limit. Every wet gulp was fire scorching her lungs. It was so fucking cold her bowels trembled adding to her unsteadiness. She could see her breath hanging in the air like the steam from an old locomotive. Locking on the image, she pictured her legs as iron wheels, pumping, pumping, pumping. The sweat dripping down her face was the result of shoveling coal not panic. Her ears were full of the rhythmic pounding of wheels on measured track not the wild thubbing of her bursting heart.
A feral snarl broke her concentration. Don't look. Not close. Can't be close. She desperately wanted to look behind her. To measure the time she had left to live. To be prepared for death. But she wanted to live more. A burst of adrenalin speared through her chest. Her arms flailed in the air, swimming on the mist. Perspiration stung her eyes. No time to wipe. She shook her head to fling off the tingling drops. She blinked. And blinked again.
Her vision cleared a second before she ran into the void. Teetering on the edge of the precipice, her mind quickly assessed her fate. With no escape she suddenly calmed. Death waited before her and death chased from behind. Certainty brought a peaceful warmth that spread through her body as the talons dug into her back and carried her over the edge.
Cordy jolted awake. A trembling hand covered her racing heart and her parted lips dried from the excessive panting.
"Cordelia?"
"Huh? What?" Looking around frantically for the source of the voice, she stood on quivering muscles and clamped onto the desk edge to keep upright.
"Cordelia? Are you all right?" Wesley hurried his steps toward her sensing her distress.
Finally recognizing the voice, her eyes focused on the concerned face of her boss and friend. "Wesley. Sheesh, you scared me. Don't tell me I'm going to have to get a bell for you, too."
"I apologize if I startled you, but perhaps if you rested in your home rather than at your desk, you'd be more alert, and warning devices of any kind would not be necessary." His rebuke was couched in a bit of humor but mostly not.
"If I worked at a place that didn't keep me up all night chasing hobbit-sized demon tribbles in stinky sewers, perhaps I'd be able to." Luckily the desk chair was beneath her when her knees finally buckled. Sitting heavily, she rubbed her eyes and let out a relieved breath.
"Point taken, although I doubt a F'har Stinbrahl demon would appreciate being compared to a warm and cuddly Star Trek nemesis, even if they were perhaps the most wonderful creatures. I often wonder if such an animal truly exists in the universe. Imagine what fun it would be to…"
"Wesley, can you tone down the nerd and amp up the testosterone? I'm really not in the mood for Watcher Fest '98." Rising slowly, she headed for the fridge and a bottled water. "Man, I hate those dreams." She popped the twist top and slugged back a cool stream. Her nose scrunched at the unexpected odd taste.
"Oh? What dreams? Are you having recurring nightmares? You shouldn't ignore them if you are. Dreams are a very important message..."
"Don't get excited, Freud Jr. Not that kind of dream and not recurring. Just your typical chase dream. Big bad wolf snapping at your heels, dark forest, cliff edge. Chomp, fall...kerplunk. Guess I'm anxious about something. Maybe all this friggin' rain is getting to me." The gloom and patter of fat raindrops drew her to the garden doors, her hands chasing the goose bumps up and down her arms.
"Yes, well, we have had enough rain to depress even the hardiest of ducks." Pulling out his handkerchief, he absentmindedly cleaned his spectacles.
"I'm past depressed and rolling downhill toward suicidal. I think I'm just going to head home and crawl under the covers 'til...June." Kitten heels squeaked on cold waxed floors as she turned to grab her purse and umbrella.
Wesley pointedly put on his glasses and pushed the bridge snugly in place. A slight whine laced his voice as he followed her saying, "Why, yes, Cordelia, you may have the afternoon off since you asked so nicely."
"Oh, you know I respect your bossissity and all. But, I mean, get a clue! Sleeping at my desk is the first sign of employee dissatisfaction. You need to boost morale around here. Maybe you should hand out company credit cards and coupons for free massages!"
He reeled at her sudden brilliant smile. It had been sorely missing of late, and the contrast between that and the murky day made his head spin. But as quickly as it rose, it turned down in a scream as she spasmed in the throes of a vision.
The flash of white faded to a pinpoint and spun into dark, writhing hues as something recognizable began to form. A woman's face. Just a face and complete stillness. Another flash and panicked eyes opened wide, green and terror filled. Long red hair swirled and cascaded around her unnaturally pale face. A blinding flash faded and indigo shadows split by slivers of bent gray light enveloped her. Her image floated and distorted. Her mouth moved to speak leaking bubbles. Flash. A suffocating weight crushed her chest, her lungs aflame. Disoriented and confused her eyes turned emerald cold searching for the surface. Can't...breathe...must...breathe... Her lips stretched in a last gasp and her body filled with cold, wet death.
Cordy arched and stiffened in Wesley's arms. Ragged breaths filled the office and thick nails dug into his thigh as she gradually shifted from future to present. Her eyes opened still focused on the victim. Her dense lungs exploded into furious coughs in an empathetic attempt to expel the water and make room for air.
"Oh, God!"
"What? Cordelia, what is it?"
Sucking in short, shallow gulps of air mingled with great gasps, her frantic heart began to slow to a more normal pace. As she grounded herself in the reality of the Hyperion and Wesley's touch, the terror slowly faded. Oddly, she realized, there was some growing disappointment that it wasn't Angel's arms holding her.
Shrugging off her silliness, she patted Wesley's hand signaling her readiness to leave the floor. "Help me up and then dump me in a tub of aspirin."
He made sure she was steady in her chair before he headed for the bathroom. Returning with the aspirin and a glass of water, his foot slipped on the spilled contents of Cordy's water bottle. Righting himself quickly, he mumbled a quiet expletive before reaching her side.
Taking two aspirin out, he handed them with the glass to Cordy. "Here. Can you tell me what happened?"
Cordy popped the tablets in her mouth and eyed the water. The sensation of the liquid turning to fire in her lungs was too recent. Tilting her head back, she swallowed the medicine dry and put the water on her desk turning her attention to Wesley's question.
"A woman. Drowning. Long red hair, green eyes. That's all I've got so far. I didn't sense any demony danger, and it felt like it wouldn't happen for a few days."
"Do you know where?" Wes penned the details as she spoke.
"No, nothing. Really, that's all I saw. Sorry." Her fingers massaged her temples and her eyes closed tightly willing the aspirin to kick in.
"That's all right. I'm sure you'll experience another vision with more details as the event nears."
"Yes, and I'm not at all unhappy about that thought. I'm really going home now. Any objections, boss?"
Wesley helped her up, handed the umbrella to her and assisted her to the door. "Of course not. Go home and get some rest. Just do call should you remember any further details or if another..."
"Yeah, Wes, like I don't know the drill. I'll give you a call tomorrow if I'm still wiped out. Thanks," she said as he opened the door for her. Wesley watched as her totally inappropriate shoes splashed through the sidewalk puddles and disappeared around the corner.
Clutching the lapels of her jacket together, Cordy shivered in the downpour. Dodging scurrying pedestrians intent on playing dueling bumbershoots, she set her mind on the mundane task of her grocery list. The thought of having to stop at the store before reaching the warm, dry hearth of home bugged her. Why am I always out of food when I feel like shit?
"Damn it." She just missed the crosswalk light and stood perched on the curb like a runner poised for the gun. C'mon, c'mon, c'mon. Change light! Can't you see I'm freezing wet here?
And, just to make sure her life didn't get too good, a car whooshed by splashing most of the pooled corner rainwater on her body. "Hey, you creep! Damn it!" She frantically swiped at the excess moisture on her skirt mumbling feeble curses in the wind.
The corner of her eye glimpsed green specks in the small pond at her feet. Her hand stilled its brushing as she concentrated on the shimmering jewels dancing in the muddy depths. The individual drops of rain falling on her umbrella beat in rhythm with the prancing lights. Sight and sound soothed her aching head and swayed her weakened body. In mere moments she was entranced and peaceful, her eyelids fluttering to fight sleep.
Angel bounced down the staircase. The rainy season was now his favorite time of the year in LA. It was the only time when the limits of his vampire status were almost completely revoked, and he could mingle with the human folk in their daily, human tasks.
The irony of his new attitude toward socializing didn't escape him. Three years ago this wet day would have been like any other that he slept through, and he would've been glad for the solitude. But, as he stared into the garden and looked at the sunless sky, being alone while sleeping was the last thing on his mind.
His mouth widened into a lusty grin when he revised that thought to sleeping alone. Sleeping with someone on a day like this wouldn't be bad at all. Speaking of that...
Cordelia's scent was faint. The object of his recent obsessive thoughts wasn't in the room. He'd hoped he could convince her to run some errands with him to the bookstore, the herbalist, and a few other unnecessary places so he could spend some normal time alone with her. Now that his big plans might not happen, his good mood suddenly soured.
He stepped down into the lobby and moved toward the office and Wesley. "Hey, Wes. Where's Cordy?" Angel's feet slipped out from under him, his arms windmilled and in an instant he was on his back beside Cordy's desk. "What the hell? What is this stuff all over the floor?" He felt wetness seeping through his shirt and pants and began to squirm at the icky sensation.
"Oh, I meant to soak that up. Cordelia spilled her water during her vision. I told her to go home and get some rest."
"Why didn't you get me? Is she okay?" Angel was up, his hand on the phone punching buttons before Wesley could stop him. With the last number dialed, he tugged at the wet fabric creeping up his spine.
Gentle, relaxing waves rocked her floating body, pushing her softly toward the sparkling lights. Cordy felt light, a feather buoyed by the tensile strength of salt water. Suddenly she was yanked under the surface. Cold, clammy hands clasped her ankles tugging her deeper and deeper. Her lungs ached as she expelled more and more oxygen under the water's pressure.
Green eyes and red hair burst from behind the black depths stopping an inch from her face. A frightened scream cleaved between the woman's pale, stretched mouth at the same moment Cordy's terrified wail exploded from her frenzied chest.
A horn blasted and Cordy jumped back staring down the white headlights of a Riviera. Her umbrella was nowhere in sight leaving her unprotected from the deluge in the middle of the street.
Gasping in confusion, she pushed back clumps of drenched hair from her eyes as they tried to focus on metal and concrete. Rain flooded down her cheeks, pooled on her top lip and tumbled like a waterfall over her mouth. She sucked in streams of water and air, the combination choking her and prompting waves of nausea at her core.
Another blast from the impatient driver finally got her feet moving. Weak-kneed, coughing up rain, and stomach churning, she stumbled over the curb fleeing toward home, all thoughts of food washed away with her umbrella.
"Cordelia is fine. Hang up." Angel's overprotective behavior regarding Cordelia lately had not gone unnoticed. Wesley feared both his friends were facing important and difficult decisions in the near future, and he didn't envy them. He pressed the button cutting off the call earning a surprised look and threatening growl from Angel.
"She's fine. Really." Wesley donned his soothing voice. "At least she's as well as she usually is after a vision." Using any excuse to escape the tensed man's company, he went to the bathroom to gather some towels, talking over his shoulder.
"But, she's also exhausted after last night's confrontation, so please don't disturb her. She'll call if she needs anything." He returned tossing one towel to Angel and floating the other to the floor to soak up the spill.
Not for one second did Angel believe Cordy would call if she needed anything. She never asked for help, and trying to give it to her was like attempting to give an abortion to a nun. But, he relented, finally replacing the headset hoping she was, indeed, sleeping.
"So, what was the vision? How much time do we have?" Angel asked as he began to towel off like he'd just stepped out of the shower.
"Not much information on that as yet." Wesley kneeled to mop up the spill. "A drowning victim it seems. Female, green eyes, red hair. She felt it wouldn't happen for several days, so now we're on standby for more details."
He hoped Angel would just take his word for it for once, but he knew the vampire too well. As his mouth began to open with more questions, Wesley's frustration at being doubted yet again got the best of him. He threw down the sopping towel and stopped Angel before the words left his mouth.
"No, we don't know where, who or even if there is any outside evil involved. For all we know at this point, she is merely a woman who forgot everything her mother ever taught her and went swimming too soon after a meal."
Angel's eyes squinted questioningly and his drying off motion stopped at Wesley's clipped tone. "Ooookay. Thanks, I guess. But, I was just going to say I'm going upstairs to change. Get me if Cordy calls." He left Wesley on the floor, deciding his strange outburst must be due to the foul weather.
Feeling the sting of embarrassment on his cheeks, Wesley picked up the sopping fabric and carried it dripping into the bathroom. "Damn, bloody water. Next time do a better job, why don't you, and make sure he falls squarely on his fat head."
The door to her apartment loomed before her. Screaming for Dennis, she didn't stop running knowing he'd open it and close it behind her. She dropped her purse and peeled off her wet clothes. By the time she reached the bathroom, she was naked.
"Cold. So cold." Her teeth chattered and her entire body shook as she turned on the hot water and stepped into the steaming jet. She turned in circles trying to warm all of her skin as quickly as possible. The face of the earsplitting banshee broke her blank thoughts and sent a new wave of crawling flesh up her arms.
She opened her eyes to stop the image but the face played like a movie on the rippled shower curtain. "No, no, no," she screamed as she yanked the plastic curtain aside and saw nothing but tile and steam on the other side. Backing up under the water again, afraid to close her eyes, she rubbed her pebbled skin urging the blood to warm and course again and stop the endless quaking in the pit of her stomach.
Slowly her body absorbed the heat of the shower. The trembling subsided when the dying woman failed to reappear. Her back to the flow, she arched her spine and allowed the heat to wash out the chill from her tresses. Still too scared to close her eyes for long, she blinked furiously to keep the water from splashing and burning them. Finally, calmed and breathing without effort, Cordy wrapped a thick towel around her body and stepped from the tub.
Her bedroom was dark. A spear of dread kept her from entering.
"Dennis. Lights please." Her bedside lamp glowed, but there were too many shadowed corners to afford her comfort. "More. All the lights, please." Obediently, Dennis turned on every light in the apartment. "Thank you, Dennis."
She rubbed her skin raw with the deep-piled towel and then dabbed her hair with it to catch any drips. Slipping on a heavy sweatshirt and pants, she didn't feel normal until she wrapped her feet in thick, fuzzy socks. Warm and relaxed at last, she sighed and sat on her bed to comb out the tangles. The teeth of her comb scraped on the back of her neck and she hissed from the pain.
"Ow! What the hell?" Scooting off the bed, she went to her mirror, turned and lifted her hair. There from her nape to just below her collar were four jagged scratches. "How...when did that happen?"
She touched them gingerly and found they were dry and swollen, but not scabbing yet. Must have scratched myself in my sleep or maybe during the vision. She shrugged. Something as normal as scratching herself made her feel all was right in her world again. This was typical and real and reminded her that freaky as the day had been, this was her life.
She laughed at her earlier behavior. Running through the streets like a hunted animal. Running from a dream. That's all it had been. A daydream caused by the vision. She was tired and had just dozed off and picked up the vision where it left off. That's all.
And now that she'd analyzed what had happened, she realized her head was pounding. "Thank, God. Vision headache alive and kicking." She took ten minutes to dry her hair and then slid under her comforter. "Dennis, you can turn off the lights now." Fear yanked at her chest as the darkness surrounded her, but when nothing jumped from the shadows she chuckled at her stupidity and shut her eyes.
She was bloody and smelled delicious. His mouth watered, his fangs bared and his tongue swept the air to capture more of the delectable aroma. She wasn't far ahead of him. The rapid drumming of her heart and her labored panting were music carried on the mist to his sensitive ears. Then he was on all fours sprinting through the thick, damp underbrush, his nostrils guiding him like an arrow toward his prey.
The rough bristly fur that covered him shimmered when it met moonlight and looked like folded silk. Pride in his strength and power surged from his chest and energized his muscled limbs to pump harder. She was only yards ahead, her feet stumbling, her arms grasping for a savior made of more than fog or wood. Her terror titillated him making his hunger boil up into a deafening roar that shattered the deathly stillness.
She screamed in response, a mistake that slowed her just enough for him to close the gap. Leaves and dirt kicked up from her running feet slapped his face. He leaped and pushed her down ending the chase. He growled in victory and roughly smacked her shoulder rolling her over. Pouncing on her, he pulled back his lips to bear his razor sharp fangs and raised his talons to slash her throat. As his hand arced through the air toward her, he recognized the crazed frightened hazel orbs just before...
"Cordelia!" Angel shot up in his bed, shock and delight warring in his body. "Holy shit. What was that?" He gulped for air and clarity. His eyes searched the room for anything lurking, not certain he was fully awake.
As his body unwound from its defensive mode, he began to scrutinize the dream. For sure that *thing* wasn't him. At least it wasn't his body. Whatever he had hopped a ride inside of was strong, malevolent and nothing he'd ever seen or felt before. But he knew what it wanted and it made him tremble with familiar yearning.
The red liquid crystal display blinked 5:34 a.m. He reached for the phone needing to assure himself that she was fine. Fingers pressed three numbers and then hung up. It was just a dream. She's sleeping and needs to rest.
Settling back under the sheets, he stared at the ceiling going through the events in his mind again and again. Finally convincing himself it was just a dream, he slipped back into comforting darkness hoping this time Cordy would be chasing him.
The Rains - Day 12
Cordelia lugged her drenched body from the nightmare bed and weaved toward the bathroom. Sweat beaded her forehead; her throat raspy and raw. With great effort, she lifted her face to the mirror and stared at her haggard image. Hair tangled wildly in the air, dark circles that reached mid cheek, washed out skin that hung from her bones and more scratches on her neck.
Her worn out eyes scanned the marks and her fingertips lightly stroked their length until the burning stopped her.
"I've either got to declaw myself or start wearing gloves to bed." She opened the cabinet pulling out antiseptic cream for the scratches and aspirin for her still throbbing brain.
As she applied the cream, she ran through the dream. Another chase one. This time she looked into the black eyes of the beast before... God, what the hell was she afraid of? "Whatever it is, I'd better get over it soon. I need some uninterrupted sleep, goddamn it."
She shook two tablets onto her palm, picked up the glass and turned on the faucet. The cool water fell and coiled around the drain and slithered into the black void of the pipes. Cordy stared at the sluicing liquid for a long time expecting...something. Something was coming. She waited and waited, every muscle tensed ready to react when whatever it was appeared.
A breeze blew through her hair slamming the cabinet door loudly. Cordy gasped dropping the aspirin in the sink. She blinked away the haze and slowly refocused her eyes on her reflection.
Panting like an 80 year old through chapped lips, her heart stopped with a fresh panic. No matter how hard she tried, she couldn't swallow. The saliva drooled from the corners of her mouth and streamed over her chin. Get a grip, Chase. Breathe and swallow. Babies do it all the time. She took three deep breaths, closed her mouth and stretched her neck. It wasn't very natural, but she concentrated and forced her muscles to contract and suck down the spit.
"God, what's up with that? No way am I going to try to swallow pills that could choke a small country." Turning off the water she padded back to the bedroom to sleep off the pain instead.
She shucked off the heavy sweats and socks, pulled on a tank and boxers and shoved the comforter onto the floor. She was burning up and even the normally smooth cotton sheets irritated her overly sensitive skin.
It was already past ten, but she wasn't giving up on going to work just yet. If she could just get some sleep, she would probably feel well enough to trudge in sometime in the afternoon. She had just pinned her hopes on that thought when the vision hit again.
Her back vaulted and her fingers dug deep into the mattress, sheets twisting in her gnarled grasp. As the woman sank deeper into the wet depths, pulled by some unseen evil, Cordy experienced not only the victim's terror but also something she'd never felt in a vision before...her own fear.
Horror-filled green orbs begged Cordy for help. She knew merely reaching for her could save the woman. Her arm muscles ached to lunge forward. Her fingers burned to break the water's surface and entwine with the delicate ones just below. Nothing stopped her from helping except that worm of dread in her mind that slithered, tunneled and twisted around her courage rendering her powerless. Cordy could only stare in shock as the jewel-colored eyes disappeared behind an inky veil.
A second after she vanished, the last air pushed through the woman's dead lips and drifted upward. The bubbles caught in a whirlpool and started to curl, coalesce and transform from gas to solid. Faster it twirled filtering air from the water molecules and increasing its mass.
Cordy became hypnotized by the beauty and impossibility of it. As it grew its speed became blinding until it was a blurred circle just beneath the water's edge. Her mouth dropped open in awe and her arm stretched forward haltingly, curious but afraid at the same time. Somehow she knew that to touch it would be to give it life.
She started to draw back her hand when a wave crested and wet her fingertip. Instantly the once whirling circle broke form and burst through the surface flying into her mouth and sliding down her throat. Ice-cold fire began strangling her. She felt her pink lungs darken as the fluid form replaced the air with water. She beat at her chest to try to expel the invader but only felt it slide down further. Tendrils of cold began to radiate from her center and loop around her spine...
Her eyes shot open to the sounds of her own choking gasps and high-pitched ringing. A sharp, hot pain ran up her arm from her clenched fists and forced her to focus on the effort of uncurling her cramped fingers.
Still breathing raggedly, she slowly massaged one hand with the other until she could use them to help her sit. Hauling her limp legs over the side of the bed, she drooped from the exertion it took. She splayed a palm on her heaving chest and used the other to dampen down the ringing in her throbbing temple.
When the ringing only got louder, she finally connected the sound to the phone next to her and sighed. "Jesus, enough of the goddamn misery already." Her hand shook as she picked it up angrily and asked, "What?"
"Cordelia? Are you okay?" Angel's voice was clearly concerned which for some reason only pissed her off.
"I'm peachy."
"Are you sure? It took you a long time to answer."
"I said I'm fine." She ground out the last word through locked jaws.
The silence from Angel made her more tense and frustrated. She didn't even have the comfort of being able to hear him breathe.
"Well, gee, Angel, this has been fun, but I've got to get back to dying now. Bye."
"Wait, Cordy! I thought you said you were fine."
She so wished he was there so she could shove a cross down his throat. "Angel, how's your head?"
"My head? It's fine."
"Good! Being my champion and all, I want you to give me your head and you can have mine. Could we do that, huh?" She rubbed her temple and her forehead wrinkled with the piercing waves of pain.
"I guess that means you're head isn't okay? Does it still hurt from the vision yesterday?"
"Actually, that would be the good scenario. But in addition to yesterday's pain, I now have twice the doubly hot poker fun due to the yummy vision I just had."
"I'm...uh...sorry. About the hot pokers. Can you tell me about it?"
"Well, they're long iron rods that you stick in a fire until..."
"I meant the vision, Cordelia. Tell me about the vision."
"Sure, because why would you need to hear about my pain?" In an instant she decided she wouldn't tell him anything about the weird, personal part of the vision. Until she knew what the fuck had happened, she didn't have the energy or good health right now to hammer it out with him.
"Umm, it was the same vision as yesterday. The same drowning woman, except today there was definitely something pulling her down. I still didn't see what it was but it felt...ghost like. Ethereal, non-corporeal, gone with the wind kinda feeling."
"A non-corporeal demon of some kind. Anything else like where or when?"
"Not exactly. It felt really deep and dark so it's either a lake or maybe the ocean." She concentrated on the taste of the water rushing into her mouth and filling her lungs and began to shake violently at the memory.
Angel heard her rapid breaths and heartbeat speed up. He could practically smell her fear through the phone. "Cordy, what's wrong?"
"Oh, uh, the water...it wasn't salty. It's a lake in the hills maybe...the Hollywood Reservoir!"
"Good, that's good. Do you know when?"
"I'm not sure." Frustrated and terrified at the thought of having to go through this again, she let her feelings out. "Damn it! I don't want to have to waste another vision on this."
"Cordelia? What the hell does that mean?" Angel's shock came through loud and clear.
"It means I'm tired of having to go through the hot poker rumba for the same vision over and over again. One vision per victim. That's the rule! What makes this bitch so special?" Her voice hitched and she sniffed back a tear that threatened to ruin her facade.
"Cordelia!" She hated that daddy tone in his voice.
"What? It's the truth. We could be saving three people for the searing pain I'm having because of one. Where's the justice in that? Ya know, don't answer that. Get Wesley on the see-through demon search, and I'll see you later assuming my head doesn't fall off."
Slamming the phone down only made her head pound more. She fell back on the bed and using all the strength she had left pulled her legs up and under the sheets. Clasping the thin fabric tightly around her shoulders, she tried to stave off the chills taking over her body.
"Dennis, the comforter, please."
The tufted cover drifted over her and was tucked in around her in seconds. "Thank you," she murmured as her jaw relaxed under the added warmth and she began to doze at last.
***
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