TITLE: Sleep of Apples
	AUTHOR: glossolalia
	EMAIL: glossolalia_01@yahoo.ca
	SITE: www.exitseraphim.net/glossings/
	SUMMARY: "I want to sleep for half a second,/a second, a minute, a 
	century,/but I want everyone to know that I am still alive."
	RATING: NC-17
	WARNINGS: Werebestiality and bloodplay.
	DISCLAIMER: I'm not Joss and I don't pretend these are my characters.
	DATE: 07-08-04
	NOTES: Title & summary from Lorca's "Gracela of the Dark Death". For Snow & 
	the Green Bunny.




Nothing stays still. It's hours later now, the sun already starting to fizz 
and sputter just below the horizon, when Angel reaches for Oz. Hours have 
passed, and daylight hums in his sinuses, down the back of his throat, and 
his body screams for sleep and security. His body is meat, strung out and 
more canny than wise, and Angel has been keeping human hours since he 
returned to LA.

But now he's...*here*, not in LA but somewhere, nowhere, anonymous highway 
rest stop. Across from a kid he spoke probably fewer than fifty words to 
before tonight, and his palms still stink of Buffy's skin and her dark 
empty gaze still burns in his own eyes, and this is more than disconcerting.

"Got a van, some blankets -" Oz said a while ago when Angel observed that 
the sun'd be up soon. Oz was looking out the diner window, the fluorescent 
lights picking out the planes in his profile, every hollow mysterious and 
dark. Looked like he was addressing the parking lot, cluttered with 
Peterbilts and cabs and eighteen wheelers.

Oz never completed the offer, but Angel nodded, accepting it, and Oz rose 
from the cracked, sticky table, dropping two dollar bills and a handful of 
change next to the saucer of his half-drunk coffee. Angel followed him out.

"Mi van es su -" Oz said in the parking lot, wrenching open the side door 
and standing aside so Angel could climb in.

Nothing stays still and Oz never finishes a sentence. Everything he's said 
tonight  has been stunted, malformed and hoarse. There are lines around his 
eyes, cobweb-fine, that he's too young to have. He was always thin - Angel 
might never have *spoken* to Oz when they were both back in Sunnydale, but 
he watched, more closely, with better recall, than Rupert or Wesley could 
ever have dreamed of doing, and he saw, knew, observed - but never like 
this, never this thin. Angel remembers Oz, like the rest of them, 
perfectly. Oz was smallboned, sober, calm; his hair color changed faster 
than his facial expressions. Now, his skin is too warm and it's wrapped too 
tightly around his bones, his face stretched taut with more than hunger.

Angel remembers everything. He'd like to be able to forget - forget 
tonight's visit to Buffy, forget a summer spent mourning a girl he'd never 
have again, forget Doyle and Whistler and the rest of them - but he cannot. 
Memory's more a curse than the soul. He remembers another Oz, remembers 
snarling at his fellow best, challenge glinting in both pairs of eyes, 
language below words. The girl bleeding out between them, the scent of her 
- young, frightened, virginal, probably the closest he'd ever get to a nun 
in this modern secular fallen world - swimming around them. Heady currents 
of blood and terror (hers), of hunger and demand (theirs), knitting the 
three of them together.

"Come back," Angel says now and he's tired and sick of waiting, sick of 
mourning, *then* celebrating, sick of nothing staying still. Sick of 
children aging - dying - before their time.

Oz's mouth tightens and his eyes, always-already sleepy-lidded, drop.

"Back with me, I mean," Angel adds, frustration clenching at his throat, 
his fists. "LA."

"Yeah," Oz says and looks directly at Angel. No light back here, but they 
can see each other perfectly. Green-brown-sea-storm eyes. Lined. "Not gonna 
happen."

"You -"

"Thanks, though," Oz says. "Appreciate it."

"You look like hell. You -"

"Need a bath and some soup?" Oz folds one arm behind his head and 
stretches, slowly, carefully. "Some R&R, TLC, that kind of thing?"

His voice, flattened like a newspaper in a downpour, whipped into the 
gutter, bored and distant is just - horribly, perfectly - like Buffy's. 
Several hours ago, Angel was *there*, back in that goddamn house that 
smelled like Spike, and she was wrapped in an ugly blanket, telling him in 
*that* voice that she was fine. Just fine, just very tired.

She has an excuse, at least. Resurrection will change a person, and he 
shouldn't know that *quite* as well as he does. But Oz. Oz is just a kid he 
used to know, who floated past his table in a shitty truckstop diner 
looking like a ghost of himself, his hair longer and spun into strange, 
thin little braids, clacking with beads, beautiful in that haunted, doomed 
way of too many people Angel has known. William, Dru, every fucking nun he 
ever ate except for that obese Mother Superior Darla dared him to kill, 
Lawson, Doyle. Thin and haunted and big-eyed. Buffy. Always Buffy.

He wants to slap Oz now, grab those narrow frangible shoulders in his hands 
and shake the life back into him.

"I'm not her," Oz says, rolling his neck and shoulders, and when Angel 
glances over, startled, Oz actually smiles at him. Not a natural smile, but 
full of effort and determination: a skull's smile, lipless and grotesque. 
"Not nearly as pretty, for one thing."

Anger tastes just like sunlight, citrus and inviting and deadly, and Angel 
swallows hard. "Oz -"

The boy's still smiling, and when Angel blinks, repeats his name, Oz's head 
drops. His hands, grasped in his lap, open, palms-up. Paper flowers, pink 
and white. He has beads, dark wood ones, wrapped around one wrist and 
looped over the middle finger. "Sorry."

This is when Angel reaches for him.

Three months in a monastery, one back in LA, an evening in Sunnydale. 
Nothing stays still, not bodies, certainly not souls, but this boy does. Oz 
does not move save to raise his head.

Bodies are meat, meat in motion, but eyes are light and rosaries and the 
burnt edges of prayer.

Angel should ask where Oz has been, what he's done, why he's still on the 
road, but he can't, not now. The time for that was earlier, when Oz slid 
into his booth and shook his hand and asked, like they'd been separated for 
a few weeks, *What's kicking?* And Angel answered him, told him more - 
monks and demons, death and love, CordyWesGunnFred, and Buffy, always Buffy 
- than he meant to. Than he thought possible. Oz listened, running one 
blunt-bitten-nail finger around the rim of his cold coffee, and nodded, and 
listened, and he was quiet.

Angel knows quiet. Monastery, hell, two decades in alleys. Oz is something 
else, ghost and potential, listening and, now, looking at him, not moving 
as Angel cups his face in his hands and pulls him closer.

"Not sorry," Angel says and he's got Oz almost in his lap. Light as 
anything, just hollow bones and tight skin, slightly sour hair and clacking 
beads.

*

He's not sorry. Or, Oz *is* sorry, but he wasn't lying. He's not her, not 
what Angel's trying to find. Kneeling here, his face between Angel's hands, 
looking at Angel looking at him, Oz isn't sorry for what he said. He's not 
Buffy, dead or alive, and though he's glad she's alive again (but how? 
why?), he doesn't know what else to say.

Angel's looking him over, scanning and tracking Oz, his eyes black and wet 
and rapid. He grinds his teeth - Oz can see the hinges of his jaw working - 
and digs his fingertips into Oz's hair. The sensation flashes and spreads 
like sheet lightning over Oz's scalp, down his back, envelops him.

He keeps himself motionless. Angel's thumbs dig into Oz's cheeks, mashing 
skin against teeth, and then memory breaks. Descends like a curtain: 
Leather-coated Angel, warning Oz away from his kill; Angel seated, turning 
the ring in his hands, telling him to go. Farewells and warnings.

Other moments, other sheets of time suspended like this one, LCD-bright and 
hard.

Angel's thumbs probe the corners of Oz's mouth, part his lips. Not 
farewell, but entrance. Introduction. Oz falls like a ribbon, head back, 
chest against Angel's. Throat bared.

The van ceiling is a web of metal, wrapped in audio cords and a few strands 
of unlit Christmas lights, and it tilts, descends, over Oz. Against him, 
Angel's solid and cool, rock or plaster, unmovable.

"She was gone," he'd said back in the diner, "and now she's back and 
nothing ever -"

"Stays still?" Oz asked.

Angel nodded.

No, of course not, Oz wanted to say then. Something about rivers, and 
constant currents, change as the only immanence, but he didn't. Not then, 
not now, because outright statements are too asphalt-heavy, because they 
close off and bunker you away from all that change, because they'd be a lie 
in the face of their own truth. Because Angel peered at him across the 
table, grieving and confused, desperation locked so far down inside him 
that he probably didn't even recognize it for what it was. Because Oz hates 
words.

Oz wraps his arm around Angel's neck, hand in his hair and pushes Angel's 
face against his throat. Memory is motionless and hard, but living takes time.

"No," Angel says, loud and hard, lips on Oz's jugular. "No, can't -"

Oz slides down, straddling Angel's lap, fingers working small slow circles 
over Angel's scalp.

"Don't kill me," Oz says softly. Angel is frowning, brows heavy and mouth 
twisted in an agony of thought. "Not what I'm saying. Just -"

His dick is heavy and aching, his mouth puckered from sour coffee and 
highway dust, so when Oz kisses Angel, abandoning words, it's almost too 
much. Been too long - three weeks since that girl in Bellingham, and she 
didn't kiss like this, didn't taste like broken daffodils and rose-hips and 
wet peat, didn't squeeze his skull like an underripe melon and moan into 
his mouth, didn't chew at his tongue like a mealy apple.

"Just what?" Angel mutters, teeth on Oz's ear.

Oz is vibrating, scalp to toes, hunger lighting every dry point along the 
network of his nerves so they're crackling and popping like driftwood on a 
bonfire. Dry, catching fast, going up. One kiss and he's half-gone.

"Just, just this -" Oz gets out, kissing Angel's chin, down the side of his 
neck, his mouth seeking out the pulse point. But it's empty, of course, 
still, hollow, frustrating, and then Angel palms his ass, hauls Oz down and 
closer, grinding their crotches together. Everything goes black and silver.

Chrome and shadow.

Terrified, hunger streaming fast through his veins, Oz tries to twist away. 
Pull away, find a corner, hold himself and fight to recall his mantras, 
battle back to calm. To safety and color.

"I - no -" He's still twisting and Angel won't let him go, crushing embrace 
that Oz flails inside, and on one desperate writhe, Angel's teeth graze 
Oz's arm and blood wells.

Impossible moment, another endless and flat. Oz's nostrils flare and his 
gut knots and yawns and Angel starts to lick, then suckles, at the scrape 
and it's too late.

"Ange -" Words to yowl, stuttered and silver. Angel pushes him back, 
tearing Oz's clothes away half a moment before the pelt, and the blood is 
singing, calling, on Angel's mouth and the change is ripping through Oz, 
splitting skin and gnashing fangs and Angel holds him down.

Angel's eyes are wide and bright. "Oz?"

Oz shifts inside the wolf's body, smaller and more scared than it could 
ever be, and makes the wolf go still. Looks back at Angel.

"Oz?"

*Yes,* Oz wants to say, but his voice and mind are not his own. All he can 
do is raise the bleeding foreleg, push the blood back against Angel's 
mouth, and hope that Angel understands.

"God, Oz -" he says later, brass-bright eyes gleaming under the feline 
brow. The wolf whines, nips at Angel's hand, then flips over. On all fours 
now, needs to run, feed, chase and howl.

But Angel is bigger, stronger than the wolf, and he flattens it, arm around 
its torso, hand grazing its thick cock, and this isn't food-hunger.

Blue-lightning pulses through the wolf, burns Oz up, and it pushes back, 
squirming and dropping its head to its paws. Whines, assumes the position.

Angel's other arm wraps around its neck, hard enough to break the whine to 
a wheeze, and while food-hunger is thick and determined, this is bright and 
fast, needy, and there are teeth in the wolf's shoulder, holding it down, 
as Angel breaches its hole. New blood, moonlit and sharp, a pulse before 
the pain. Arm in its mouth now, stopping up the howl of protest, and 
rocking-thrusting-pushing in and in and *deeper* until hidden water springs 
out in the wolf's mind, shining and clear as rain, and it rocks back, 
desperate for more.

Mating, fucking: The words don't mean anything, and scraps of Oz laugh at 
himself, at the beast, as it shoves back against Angel and gnaws down on 
Angel's arm. Eating, screwing: Bloodhunger's the same, and ecstasies are 
moo and pain, throbbing and pulsating, Angel's fist rubbing, twisting, 
yanking the wolf's cock more tightly, roughly, than VerucaWillowanyone. 
Light tears through the wolf, breaking wider against pleasure, and it comes 
in a jolting, howling rush.

*

On sore knees, wild blood - balsam and rivers and night - clogging his 
throat and matting the wolf's pelt, Angel fucks and prays. Both, neither, 
sinning with a fellow beast, screwing it limp, pulling its come out in hot, 
thick splatters and pushing his cock deeper, tighter, the hole small and 
bleeding and *open*. And this could be joy. Is joy, rapid and wrong and 
everywhere, the boy's rosary broken in Angel's hand, the wolf's scruff in 
Angel's mouth, and there is nothing else.

Nothing, just this, just animals. No men, only monsters, and the wolf howls 
hoarsely into silence when Angel pulls out, his thighs and arms trembling 
with the effort. His spine spins liquidly and he jerks himself off, into 
the rough pelt, marks and scents and spills out and collapses.

Falls onto, astride, a bony white-skinned boy, whimpering, his body 
streaked with blood and come. Ribbons of it, pink, white, ivory, on his 
arms and ass and shoulder.

He did this. Angel did that, chased joy until the boy broke.

"Oz?" he asks through the mustard-gas guilt swamping him fast. "Oh, God -"

Green eyes, bright as leaves, as Oz struggles to shift onto his side. White 
teeth stained pink, smiling. Smiling in joy, release, as if what Angel just 
did to him was liberation and confirmation both.

Sickened, dizzy with all the familiar regret-recrimination-sorrow, Angel 
flinches when Oz touches his cheek, has to school himself immobile when Oz 
kisses him.

Sick piece of monstrous shit that he is, Angel stirs a little when he 
tastes his own blood in Oz's mouth, on his soft tongue.

"Oz, Christ -" No words, just apology thicker, headier, than any language.

"Not Christ either," Oz says, touching Angel's hair, kissing his cheek, 
like an infant with a new toy, learning with mouth and hands. "Just me."

Angel excels at both doubt and delusion, so for a moment hope catches in 
his chest, sparrow in a line, and beats its wings. "Just this -" he says, 
echoing the boy, and Oz smiles again. Like the kid he used to be, calm and 
certain, soaked with unearthly joy. "You -"

He could hold Oz. Gather that birch-strong frame in his arms, cover and 
protect him, bring home another lost scared child like Fred.

Oz twists away, the pain of the movement tightening his face, and Angel's 
arms are empty, his chest hollow. Familiar, this inevitable fuck-up, 
carving him out stupid and sad.

But Oz turns back, a sleeping bag in his arms, and he shakes it out over 
Angel. Swipes the ruins of his shirt over his cuts, between his legs, then 
settles back next to Angel. Hot, damp little body pressed close to Angel's 
own, boysweat and sexstink clinging to his smooth skin, and he tucks his 
head against Angel's shoulder.

"Rest," Oz says. "Sun's up. Not going anywhere for a while."

*

Bathed in sweat, chilly for all the exertion, Oz does not sleep. His body 
goes heavy, the cramps and ache of the change back and forth throbbing 
dully, contending with the healing cuts and the deep, resonant pain in his 
ass, but he stays awake.

Time's pouring over him, carrying him away as he lies here, Angel sleeping 
against him, his old-young face slack and handsome in the dark. 
Arising-persisting-dissolving, currents that channel and carry and bear 
impermanence away. Oz has hidden in plain sight for so long, clinging 
limpet-like to his own meaninglessness, that now, aching and sore and 
overjoyed, he can only smile. Smile and doze and know that the sun will 
probably set, that they will part when night falls, that stars will prick 
out over his head as he hits the road again.

Persisting, however, is just the underbelly of change. Like pain/pleasure, 
grief/joy, and Oz cradles Angel's head in his arm, urges him to deeper 
sleep, and enjoys.

Apples fall, their skin splits open, and seeds emerge from rotten flesh. 
Take hold of mud and sprout again, and Oz kisses Angel's forehead, tells 
him all that as best he can.

[end]