new Birthdayverse: Fray

Sep 22, 2006 20:36

Title: Fray
Rating: PG-13
Pairing: Wes/Gunn
Series/Sequel: #17 of the Birthdayverse Realities series. (Part 3 of season 2.)
Summary: Loving people means they can really drive you crazy.


Wes had strewn books all over the table. Gunn ran his hand over one and bent down to read the title of another. Hauntings and exorcism.

”Client?” he asked. It seemed every time they talked now, they got into some fight - disagreement - over Mom. Work seemed a safe topic.

”Trouble in Silverlake,” Wes said, turning a leaf in the book he was reading. ”Most likely a poltergeist. The appointment is for five thirty. Do you want to come?”

”Yeah, sure, might be fun.” He frowned a little. ”Poltergeist? Haven't you already done those?”

”Once or twice, yes.” Wes looked up. ”Why?”

”What's with all the research? You know how to do this.”

”I did say 'most likely' a poltergeist,” Wes pointed out. ”In any case, it never hurts to be prepared. I should probably ask Lockley if she has anything on the location.”

”Yeah, that should work out well.” Neither one of them was on Lockley's good side after that shit Wes pulled with Lindsey McDonald. Gunn could understand her anger, though he wasn't sure why she felt she had to take it out on him too, considering that he'd been in a hospital bed at the time.

”She sounded really afraid,” Wes said, gaze back in one of his books.

”Lockley?” He hadn't thought Frosty the Cop did afraid.

”The client.”

”Oh.” Well, that was more like it. ”It's a girl, huh?”

”Mmm. She's very determined not to let the ghost drive her away - that's quite a good starting point, if it is a poltergeist.”

Gunn grimaced. ”Kind of a dumb starting point, if you ask me. Those things are dangerous, yeah? She'd rather die than move?”

”Well, I've never seen you back out of a fight,” Wes said drily.

”I fight my own battles,” Gunn countered, and for a moment there, he could see a glint in Wes's eyes, the promise of a laughter, and after the laughter some make-up sex, and maybe after that he'd actually manage to talk some sense into the guy.

There was a hard, quick series of knocks on the door. Gunn scowled, but the chance was already passed, and he went to open.

It was Alonna, standing by the rail looking up the stairs when he arrived. ”You guys have mice,” she said.

He shrugged. ”Wouldn't feel like home otherwise. You didn't come to say that, did you?”

”No,” she said, taking her attention off the staircase. ”The guys and I are heading off to talk to some people. There's a demon causing trouble, and we want to know where to find it.”

”You want me to come with?” That surprised him a little, even if he liked the thought. Having him and the gang on the same case could prove awkward.

”No. I want you to hang with Mom while we're doing it.”

He stared at her. ”Come again?”

”She leaves sometimes, heads off while we're busy doing other stuff. Now that we're setting up the apartment and all - you heard about that, yeah?”

Gunn nodded, beginning to worry about where this was going.

”Anyway. I haven't the time to follow her around, so I don't know where she goes. I'd like to.”

”So it's not babysitting,” he said. ”It's spying.”

”If that's what you want to call it.” She shoved her hands in her pockets and leaned back against the railing, watching him closely.

”Maybe she just likes some alone time. Or she's looking up old friends.”

”Maybe,” she agreed. ”But she's acting all shifty about it. I don't think I have much chance to find out why, but she trusts you.”

”That cuts both ways,” he pointed out. He was starting to get riled up. Alonna had always been honest to a fault, and this calculating shit didn't suit her.

She shrugged. ”If you don't want to you don't have to.”

That was the worst part - he did. After all the bitching Alonna had done about Mom, and Wes backing Alonna up, he wanted to find out what Mom was doing. He knew she was all right, but he needed some way of proving it. As much as he hated it, going along with Alonna's suggestion might be his best chance.

Still made him feel like a snake in the grass.

”I'll do it,” he said. ”Just let me have a word with Wes first.”

”Sure thing.”

He slowly went back into the apartment, telling Wes, ”It's Alonna.”

”Mm,” Wes said, giving him a sharp look. ”Trouble?”

”Not exactly. But there's something I gotta do. You can handle the poltergeist, right?”

”Of course.”

”Good.” Gunn hesitated for a moment, and then started to leave.

”Gunn?”

He turned on his heel, wondering if Wes was going to start asking questions, and if so, what the hell he was supposed to answer.

”Will you feed Angel when you get back? That way I can talk to Lockley and buy some supplies, and then go straight to my appointment.”

”Oh. Yeah. Sure.” He gived Wes a relieved smile and headed out, grabbing his jacket from the hanger.

”So when are you gonna give me a tour of the new headquarters?” he asked Alonna on the way down the stairs..

”Ask Mom to do it,” she said. ”It'll be a good bonding experience. Anyway, we'll be busy.”

”Yeah,” he said. ”You'll call me if things go south, right?”

She stopped to grin at him. ”You don't trust us to handle things on our own?”

”I trust you,” he assured her. ”You know your job, you're good at it. But you'll still call me if things go south.”

She laughed at that. ”Yes, Mom.”

They both flinched at the careless word, and for a moment they stood there staring at each other awkwardly. Then Alonna dug out her cell phone and held it up.

”Will call you,” she said.

”Good. Get in the truck.”

***

Lockley cast one glance at Wes and said, ”Oh no. Not gonna happen.”

”You don't even know why I'm here,” he protested.

”I can take a pretty good guess.” She rose from her chair and started walking away, but he blocked her way.

”There's a girl in Silverlake who has a... an intruder in her apartment.”

”Mm, yes,” Lockley said, nodding wryly. ”And would I be wrong in assuming that looking into this intruder would give me an even better reputation around here? Perhaps you'd even make me an accessory in your little vengeance plans again?”

Wes stared at her, and she met his gaze, her jaw set.

”Very well,” he said at long last. ”I'll just tell my client that the danger to her life is too abnormal to be of any concern to the police department.”

Her eyes flicked away. ”You bastard.”

”This is a serious situation, Lockley.”

”Isn't it always?” She sighed and ran her fingers through her hair, walking back to her desk. ”All right. What is it you want to know?”

”I need some history of her apartment.” He mentioned the address, and Lockley opened a couple of programs on her computer. For a while, they sat in silence while she worked, and then she said. ”Okay, it's in here. Three suicides, and one...” She clicked her way down some text and frowned. ”One heart attack that was investigated as possibly something more.” She looked up at Wes. ”Three suicides in the same apartment? What kind of intruder are we talking about here?”

”Do you really want to know?” he asked.

She looked down on the screen and muttered, ”I really don't.”

”Can you get me more details?”

”Yeah, it'll take a while, but sure.” She printed out the search results and called, ”Davis!”

When the man she'd called came over, she handed him the papers. ”Would you find me the files for these cases, please? They're all in the same location.”

The man looked at the files, his eyebrows raised. ”Absolutely.” Narrowing his eyes, he asked in a mocking tone, ”Is it haunted?”

”Just get me the files, Davis.”

The implications of that short exchange were very disturbing, and Wes scowled at Lockley. ”You told him?”

”I haven't told anyone anything,” Lockley snapped. ”You pick up enough freaky cases, people start talking. This has been a bad day for me, so cut out the third degree, okay?”

Wes lifted his hand in an apologetic gesture. The lines forming around Lockley's mouth as she spoke made him wonder how many bad days there had been lately, and how many more of them she'd be able to take. It occurred to him that no matter how bad things had been sometimes in the Academy, and later in Sunnydale, at least he had never had to face the solitude of being the only one who knew. Surrounded by people who mocked the very idea of ghosts and demons. What a horrifying thought.

”There is one more thing,” he said slowly. ”If you would.”

”What?”

”Lois Gunn. Is there anything on her?”

Lockley's eyebrows flew up, and after a second, she gave a brief snort of laughter. ”In your dreams, Pryce.”

”It's rather important,” he said.

”I bet it is.” Lockley leaned back in her chair. There was a cynical smile on her face, and she looked less tired than before, but Wes couldn't quite appreciate the change. ”Any chance whatsoever that this Lois Gunn isn't related to a certain Charles Gunn?”

Wes sighed. ”His mother.”

”And does he know you're asking about her?”

”Naturally,” Wes said without missing a beat.

”Good. Then you can tell him to come over here and ask for the info himself.”

All right, this wasn't going to work. ”Lockley...”

”Forget it, Pryce. I'm not gonna help you go behind your boyfriend's back to do - whatever it is you want to do. For one thing, he's a better guy than you are.”

”Yes,” Wes agreed willingly. ”He is. That's rather the problem.”

He tried to think of something more to say, some method of persuation, but drew a blank. She was right; this type of investigation was entirely different from working a case, from an ethical perspective. But what on earth was he supposed to do otherwise?

His job, he supposed. He drew his chair closer to Kate's computer screen. ”So, what years were those suicides?”

***

”Hallway,” Lois said, pointing down the same. ”Bathroom. Closets. Kitchen. More closets. Bedroom, balcony, another hallway, more closets, livingroom, second bedroom. Pretty impractical setup, but it's a lot better than the basement.”

Gunn opened the bathroom door and peeked inside. Small, but well-kept. The kitchen was much the same. ”It's better than my place,” he said. ”Especially with no rent.”

”They're risking their lives daily,” Lois said. ”Sounds like rent to me.”

She had a point. After all, what was the difference between chasing demons for money to save the rent, and chasing them for the rent itself?

They walked together through the rooms, Gunn checking them out. As Lois had said, way too much space wasted on hallways and such. At least the closets might service for weapons - or maybe you could remove them completely, if the landlord allowed it.

”It'll be hard to fit everyone in,” Lois said. ”The apartment's big enough, but the rooms are small.”

”You could make bunk beds,” Gunn suggested.

She pushed a mattress away with her foot. ”Would you help out?”

He shrugged, uncomfortable. ”If they'd let me. I'm still kind of lying low.”

”I noticed.” She sat down on a box - and shit, he hadn't even known that the gang owned enough things to need moving boxes, but he guessed it was weapons - and looked up at him. ”Is it worth it?”

Hell yeah, he wanted to say, but the words stuck in his throat. His sister was off looking for dangerous demons and had specifically asked him not to come. His former team got all shifty-eyed when he was around. Sure, he could do his battles through the agency, get paid for it too which he never had before, but to say he had no regrets?

”It's not like I can go back,” he said.

She picked at the edge of the box flap, a line forming between her eyebrows. ”I don't want you to feel that you don't have any options.”

That was so crazy he had to laugh. ”Mom, I never had any options.”

”Well, you should have some!” Her voice got shrill.”God, Charlie, you're so content.”

”That's an insult, now?” he asked, amused even though her reaction startled him.

”If you're staying with him because you think you have nowhere else to go...”

”I'm staying with him because I want to,” he said, fighting the impulse to raise his voice. ”I'm not wild about the gang finding out like this, but deed's done.”

”Well...” The words came slowly. ”If you ever change your mind, it's never too late, you know. There are people I could talk to.”

Gunn started to make a wry face, but it froze as he really paid attention to what she was saying. ”What people?” He didn't say 'you've been dead' but that was what he meant. What 'people' could she possibly know? Even before she died, she'd been a strip club waitress, for chrissake.

”Well, that would depend, wouldn't it?” she said. ”If you wanted to go back to school, for example...”

He laughed at that, a spontaneous snort of laughter that came from relief.”That's what you've been doing with your time? Educating yourself?”

”We're not talking about me,” she said but there was a shadow of a smile on her lips and even though she turned her face away he could see the eyeroll.

”Shit,” he said, feeling all light-headed. ”And we thought... well, Alonna thought... Actually, I don't know what she thought.”

”She's a suspicious young girl,” Lois said, still smiling.

”She's had good reason to be.” He watched his mother, trying to think of her from this new angle. You had to hand it to her, it was pretty strong to come back from the dead and not only deal with life, but try to make a better one than before. ”So you're at community college or something? What do you tell them? Is that where you go all the time?”

”Half of the time, I don't go anywhere in particular,” she protested. ”I just walk around. Find some nice places to hang.”

”What kind of places?”

She grinned. ”I could show you.”

***

Her places weren't quite the kind of fun he would have chosen, but they were sunny and cheap, which were two very good points in their favor. There was a corner of a beach, a lawn in a park, and three stores she declared perfect for window shopping.

It was somewhere around the third store that he hinted it was all getting a bit too chick-y for his tastes. She laughed and asked, ”It's a bit early, but... would cheap beer be more suitable?”

”Now you're talking!”

”Come on, then. It's only about twenty minutes away.”

They reached the bar - not a bad place considering its prices - and had just ordered their beers when Gunn's cell went off. It was Alonna, sounding so casual he got suspicious.

”You guys finished bonding yet?” she asked.

”We were just about to have a beer.”

”Oh. Yeah, okay, you can do that.”

His eyebrows flew up. ”Thanks for your permission.”

She sighed. ”That's not what I meant.”

Finding out what she did mean took a while. Lois was halfway through her beer when Alonna finally admitted that they'd been attacked by vampires, and that maybe it was a good idea for Gunn to come along for the demon hunt after all.

He gripped the cell phone hard, trying to keep down the feeling of triumph. ”And what are the others saying about this idea of yours?”

”They're on board,” she said. ”And it wasn't my idea - it was Rondell's.”

His grip around the cell became even harder. ”Yeah?”

”Yeah.”

There was only one thing he could think of that would accomplish something like that, and it made him enjoy the moment a lot less: ”Are you guys okay?”

The pause following was short, but not short enough for him to think he had imagined it. ”Sure. All in one piece.”

”I'll be right over,” he said, hanging up. His beer was still untouched, and he pushed it over to his mom. ”You want this? I gotta go.”

”Well aren't you the gentleman,” she said, but she wrapped her fingers around the glass and smiled a little. ”Was that your boyfriend calling?”

”Alonna,” he said. Should he tell her what was going on? But it might only make her worried for no good reason. ”We've got some work to do. You'll be okay, right?”

”I'm old enough to take care of myself,” she said mildly, and then added, lifting the glass, ”Anyway, I can always bribe someone to join me.”

”Don't,” he said. ”You won't know where they've been.”

It was a joke, sure, but a warning too. He could only hope that she'd listen to it, as he headed out and back to the new headquarters.

Alonna had told the truth, mostly. None of the crew were very seriously injured, just beaten up. Alonna's face was so puffed up and bloody that it made him wince, but there were no deep cuts, just scrapes and bruises.

”You got anything from the guy?” he asked her, avoiding to touch her face or ask if she was okay. She wouldn't thank him for it.

She shook her head. ”He split when the vamps showed.”

”So what's the plan now?”

”Basically? Going around the neighborhood looking for trouble.” She stepped up to one of the boxes, pulling out a big axe.

”Okay, classic,” he said, noticing that she limped a little. He really hoped that wouldn't stop her from handling trouble when she found it.

”You bet.” She tossed him the axe. ”And since you're the only one who hasn't been fighting vamps, you're our main muscle.”

***

Ms. Guest, the client, was clearly a strong and resourceful young woman, but even so Wes could feel her tense up as they entered her apartment. She had good reason, too. They had only just stepped inside when the coatrack lunged at them, and as ridiculous as Wes felt fighting it, he couldn't deny that it was a fairly formidable weapon, as blunt objects go.

”What am I supposed to do?” Ms. Guest asked once the coatrack was docile once again. ”We'll never get the spell done in this mess.”

”Don't think like that!” he snapped at her. He'd taken a heavy hit on his bad shoulder, and the last thing he wanted was for this to drag on for hours. ”You need to focus on getting this ghost out. This is your apartment, not hers.”

”Well, it kind of is hers,” Ms. Guest started.

”Not anymore. Now, let me see some anger!”

She set her jaw and nodded, but it took the better part of an hour and all her chinaware in pieces before she had definitely moved from more scared to more pissed off. Meanwhile, Wes continued to set up the spell, having to do certain parts over and over as the ghost interrupted.

He had to hand it to her, though - once she got angry, she got very angry. When the ritual was finished and she yelled at the ghost to ”get the hell out!” her voice was so loud and shrill that Wes's ears started ringing. But it worked; the whole place got quiet. Fabulous.

”Congratulations,” he said, grinning like mad.

”Thanks,” she said, returning the smile. ”For, you know, all of it. So, what do I owe you?”

”Let me get my calculator,” he said. He only turned the other way for a moment, but when he looked back, her eyes... Seeing her white eyes, he hurried to stuff the calculator into his pocket and grab the cross around his neck. This was impossible. They had defeated the ghost, he was certain of it! So what on earth was going on - and what was he supposed to do about it?

What he did do about it was stand frozen as Ms. Guest tore down the wall and revealed the skeleton inside.

There was a lesson to be learned from this, he determined as he returned home. One must always prepare for all eventualities. Sure, the second ghost had proven harmless, but he had not even considered the possibility of two ghosts in the first place. That was unforgivable, considering the number of deaths in the apartment, and the son's disappearance - all of which he had known about.

She'd been very gracious about it, but he had given her a ten percent discount just to deafen his guilty conscience.

He felt tired and beat up as he stepped into his own apartment, dropping his keys on a chair by the door. His missing arm was hurting like hell, and during one of the ghost's attacks a large pot had cracked his cheek. All he wanted to do was take an aspirin, lie down, and forget about the paranormal for a few hours.

Gunn's shoes weren't by the door, though. Had he been home at all? Instead of going into their room, Wes checked on Angel.

He was startled to find the vampire lying on the floor instead of the bed, and hurried to kneel down beside him.

”Angel? Are you all right?” he asked, foolishly, he realized, since Angel couldn't answer him. ”Did you fall?”

Not that falling out of the bed would hurt him much - it might even be considered an improvement, considering that it took quite a bit of movement. Unless, of course, there had been a vision or something of the sort, and Angel had been thrashing around the way he did while he was under the curse.

Angel lift his head and sniffed a little in the air. Well, he certainly looked all right - or as all right as he ever was. He lifted his hand and touched Wes's face lightly.

Wes smiled, a smile that quickly vanished as Angel's face morphed into his vampire features and he attacked. The blood, Wes realized as he flung up his arm and tried to prevent those sharp fangs from touching him. Even through a band-aid, Angel would obviously be able to smell it, and he didn't have enough presence of mind to control his hunger.

”Angel, no!” Wes shouted, feeling the fangs scrape at his skin. ”It's me! Don't! No!”

He was convinced that he would die like this, his throat torn out by someone he considered a friend, but somehow his words must have gotten through, because Angel suddenly drew back. More than that, scooted away as if he'd been burned and sat down in a corner of the room, arms wrapped around his knees and rocking back and forth.

Wes slowly got back to his feet. He was aching all over, and he stared at Angel, wanting to reassure him even though he knew that it was a very bad idea. Instead, he walked out into the kitchen and opened a bag of blood, pouring it into a cup. His hand was shaking so badly that he spilled some on the table, but that seemed like a minor issue at the moment.

He returned to Angel and handed him the cup. ”Here you are. Drink this.”

At first, Angel just shook his head violently, but then he grabbed the cup and drank in deep gulps.

Wes leaned back against the wall, thinking. In a way, this was improvement. Angel had performed a physical action - a violent physical action, but still - and he had managed to pull back of his own accord. Which meant that he had recognized Wes as, maybe not Wes, but at least something that shouldn't be eaten. Not to mention that the headshake was remarkably close to communication.

None of that was very comforting at the moment.

He walked down into the livingroom and sat down in front of the television, without even the energy to make it back to bed. Despite his weariness, he didn't fall asleep, just sat there staring at the black screen and trying to sort out his thoughts, without much luck.

He didn't know how long he had been sitting there when he heard a key being turned in the front door, but it was starting to grow dark outside.

Gunn turned on the light as he walked into the livingroom, looking surprised and a bit amused to see Wes there.

”Saving electricity?” he asked.

”Where have you been?” Wes asked levelly.

”Out hunting.”

”Alone?”

Gunn gave him a wide grin. ”No, with the gang. Can you believe it?”

Far too easily, and with dread, but he didn't say that. ”Do you remember what I asked you to do before you left?”

”Yeah, help with the poltergeist, but you were going to do that alone, right?”

”Right.”

”So how did it go?” Gunn asked, still smiling.

”Well enough. I wasn't talking about the poltergeist.”

Gunn looked puzzled, and his smile started to slide away. ”What, then?”

”I seem to recall asking you to feed Angel.”

”Aw, shit!” Gunn exclaimed with a grimace. ”I clean forgot. Sorry.”

”Was your gang's company too riveting?” Wes asked coldly. ”Or your mother's?”

”They're not my gang anymore,” Gunn said. He wasn't smiling at all anymore. ”And I said I was sorry.”

Wes knew he should leave well enough alone, but his mouth just kept speaking anyway. ”If you considered it too inconvenient a task, perhaps you could have let me know.”

”Damn it, Wes, I forgot! What the hell is wrong with you? It's not like it'll kill him to go without a meal!”

Wes rubbed his neck, the sore area near the collarbone, hidden under dark cotton but very visible in his mind. Anger welled up in him, hot, dark, bubbling anger that he had to struggle to keep in check. ”No, I suppose it won't.”

Gunn stared at him, and then muttered ”forget it”, turned on his heel and left, slamming the door hard enough to shake the floor.

Wes closed his eyes and let his head fall back against the sofa.

***

The worst part was that Gunn had been having a pretty good day before Wes pissed all over it. Whatever had crawled up and died in that guy's ass, he didn't know. He tossed his bag into the truck and started the engine, trying to figure out a place to go. Cheap beer sounded even better now than it had in the daytime, and so he steered back towards the bar.

It was a lot more crowded than before, and once he'd managed to get the bartender's attention long enough to get a drink, he started looking around for any free spots to sit.

He saw Lois's face by a table and did a double-take, but then smiled. Of course, it made sense that she'd be here. She was the one who'd pointed the place out to him, after all. She'd already had two beers, though, was it really... but what the hell, she could make those decisions for herself.

Coming closer, he saw that she was with someone. Several someones. He could only see the face of one of them - a young redheaded woman - but there was another woman with her back to him, a redhead too, though her hair was darker. And a man.

He frowned. He knew that man, he was sure of it. All he could see was the back of his head, a shoulder and arm dressed in a fancy suit, and gloved hand - no, that was a brace, not a glove. Gunn started making his way faster through the crowd, his beer forgotten in his hand. He bumped into some people in the process, but he didn't care, he just had this growing sensation that this man was not someone he wanted around his mother.

Right before he reached their table, just about the time Lois saw him and lit up, his brain made the connection, and even before the man turned his head, Gunn knew whose face he was about to see.

”Lindsey,” he growled.

Lindsey McDonald offered him a pleasant smile. ”Charles Gunn, speak of the devil.”

”Charlie,” Lois pleaded, rising from her seat.

”You get out of here right now,” he told her, and then to Lindsey: ”And you stay away from my mom!”

”You can't tell me what to do,” Lois shouted in protest. ”Or him, for that matter.”

”I can do a hell of a lot more than that!” He grabbed her wrist, pulling her away. ”Do you have any idea what he's done?”

She yanked her hand out of his grip. ”I know what he's done, I know what you've done, and what that boyfriend of yours has done. And don't you lay hands on me like that, I'm your mother!”

”Now, everyone,” the haughtier of the other women said, sounding so amused Gunn wanted to hit her even though he didn't know who she was. ”I'm sure we can settle this in an amiable fashion.”

”Are you one of them too?” he asked. ”I swear, if one of you lawyers so much as touch her...”

”Lois represents a valuable investment to us,” the woman said. ”I assure you we have no intention of harming her.”

He stared at her, the cogwheels moving in his brain, and then his head snapped around towards Lois. ”Investment, huh? They brought you back. They were the ones who fucking brought you back, and you said you didn't remember.”

She cast her eyes down, looking vaguely ashamed for the first time. ”Charlie...”

”That's not who I am, mom.”

Lindsey put a hand on his arm. ”Listen, Gunn...”

Punching him wasn't a conscious decision. Gunn didn't even know he'd do it until he had. It was definitely the right one, though. The pain in his fist couldn't hide the absolute rightness of making Lindsey's nose bleed.

The next second, Gunn was flying through the air, landing with a thud by the next table. He had no idea what had happened - no one had even touched him.

Lois had apparently figured it out, because she turned to the second woman - the one who'd been quiet so far - and said, ”Don't.”

”I'm just trying to help.”

”I know, but don't.” She asked Gunn, ”Can't we just talk about this like adults?”

”With them?” he scoffed, working to get his legs back under him. ”No way.”

Her jaw set. ”Fine.” She took her purse from the table and marched past them, through the crowd and out the door.

They all watched her leave in silence, and then Gunn stood up, slowly.

”What the hell have you done to my mother?” he asked.

Lindsey nodded towards the door. ”Are you going to follow her?”

”Not until I get some answers.”

”Suit yourself,” Lindsey said with a shrug. ”But if you don't go out there, I will. I'm sure Lilah can answer any questions you might have.”

”Oh, absolutely,” said the woman called Lilah. She still sounded amused, damn her.

”Don't you move,” Gunn growled.

Lindsey cast a glance at the other woman, the one without a name who'd sent Gunn flying without a touch. ”Right. Well, I'd hate to point out the obvious, but LA can be rather dangerous at night, especially for a lonely woman. As we've said, we have some interest in keeping your mother alive. I assume that you do, too?”

As much as Gunn hated admitting it, Lindsey had a point about the streets not being safe. If it had been Alonna, he wouldn't have let that stop him, but his mom had already been killed once - he didn't have much trust in her ability to take care of herself.

He still wanted to beat up those lawyers, but there didn't seem to be much chance of doing that with Miss Spoonbender around, and he sure as hell wasn't going to let Lindsey go out to find Lois.

”God damn it,” he muttered, and left the bar.

birthdayverse, gunn, angel, fic, wesley

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