I
Don't Like Mondays by Rubywisp
Sequel to Flow
A/N: Dedicated to Andrea, Lar and Ravyn, who thought I could do it even
when I didn't. Big thank you to Kassie for the beta.
*
The front door slams shut with a bang that rattles the big picture window in
the living room but does nothing to improve Lindsey's mood. He locks the door,
then tosses his briefcase and suit coat on the kitchen counter on his way to
the refrigerator.
"Excuse me? I think I've misunderstood you," Lindsey says. He better have
misunderstood. There's no fucking way he's going to -
"Come now, Mr. McDonald. We're both adults here. It's not an unheard-of arrangement,"
the older man says smoothly and without embarrassment. As though he hadn't just
told Lindsey that keeping him as a client depended on Lindsey's willingness
to use his mouth for more than just legal work.
Lindsey opens the beer and leans against the counter, wondering how many other
clients he'll lose because he had his fill of bullshit while working for Wolfram
& Hart. He's not playing anybody else's games anymore. If he can't get and keep
clients because he works harder and smarter than everybody else, to hell with
'em.
He finishes the beer slowly, but the anger simmering under his skin hasn't lessened
at all. Stares out the window at the ocean and debates the merits of more beer,
maybe some whiskey. Pissed off and drunk tends to be a bad combination for him,
though, so maybe not.
He decides to go for a swim -- the waves are a little higher than normal for
this time of night, and the rough water seems like a good way to work off the
worst of his frustration. Changes into swimming trunks, grabs a towel and heads
for the back door. The phone catches his attention, and he pauses for a moment,
hand on the doorknob, and contemplates calling Xander.
Xander. All open, friendly, eagerness and a smile so wide Lindsey knows
he'll be able to hear it even over the phone. Could be just what he needs right
about now.
Lindsey rakes one hand through his hair and thinks about how he always seems
to need first, need most -- fast, hard and hungry, till he either scares 'em
off or falls face-first into humiliation. Flashes back to Xander standing in
the parking lot of Caritas the night before last, shaking slightly, his eyes
closed, and Lindsey knows that he's not caught up in it alone this time. It's
a good feeling, and it makes him smile. But he's still pretty wound up and decides
to wait until after his swim to call, when he should be more relaxed. Steps
out onto the porch and pulls the door shut behind him.
He's slammed back against the closed door hard enough to make it creak, his
startled "What the fu-?" cut off by the large hand that's wrapped around his
throat, pinning him to the wood. Lindsey twists and kicks, but all that gets
him is his head smashed into the door a second time. Everything goes black as
sparks rip down his spine, and Lindsey goes limp for a second.
When he can see again, he's not surprised to discover Angel scowling at him.
"Don't move, Lindsey, or I'll crack your head open against the door. The blood
would be a bitch to clean up, let me tell you." Angel cocks his head to one
side, and tightens his grip on Lindsey's throat. "This is a rental, right?"
Lindsey's got a smartass remark or four to share, but it'll have to keep till
he can draw enough breath to talk, so he settles for glaring. He keeps still
while his mind tears along at breakneck speed, trying to find a way out of this
situation, a way out of Angel nailing him to the door with his hand and the
hate in his eyes. Wonders if he's got a chance in hell of making it out alive,
or if Angel meant it when he said he'd kill Lindsey for coming back to L.A.
Of course, he never left, but he doubts that Angel would appreciate the technicality.
Angel loosens his grip on Lindsey's neck just enough to allow him to breathe
uncomfortably. "You gonna cooperate, or do I have to tie you up?"
"Fuck you," Lindsey spits out. Wishes he had that sledgehammer again -- the
beating he'd no doubt get would be more than worth another chance to replace
the smirk on Angel's face with a broken jaw.
"Wrong answer, Linds," Angel mocks in reply.
Lindsey's expecting the impact with the door, but he's unprepared for the sharp
knee to his stomach that follows. White burning nausea ripples through him,
and he thinks it's too bad that he hasn't eaten dinner yet so he could throw
up all over Angel's shoes. "What the fuck do you want?"
Angel leans him up against the wall -- ridiculously carefully, all things considered
-- and takes a step back. "Funny. I was going to ask you the same question."
His mouth is almost smiling, but his eyes are serious and dark. "Don't get any
ideas about ducking inside, Lindsey. I could break your neck before you could
get the door open."
Lindsey rubs his face with both hands and waits for the nausea to subside before
answering. "Fine. I'll just stand here and wait patiently for you to kill me,"
he says with as much sarcasm as he can muster.
Angel somehow manages to roll his eyes without ever actually looking away. "I'm
not going to kill you." He pauses for a moment, brow furrowed. "Not now, anyway."
"Imagine my relief," Lindsey says. "Look, whatever you're here for, just get
on with it already." He starts to move, and Angel's in his face again. Lindsey
motions toward the pair of padded lounge chairs to his left. "Just gonna have
a seat, okay? That all right with you?"
Angel shrugs. "Fine. I'm still faster than you. Don't do anything stupid."
Lindsey settles back in the chair and stretches his legs out in front of him,
lets his left hand hang off the side of the chair where Angel can't see it.
"Like what?" he asks incredulously. "Throw a chair cushion at you?"
Angel leans against the porch railing between the door and the steps and folds
his arms across his chest. "What do you want with Xander Harris?"
Lindsey just manages to keep his jaw from dropping open. One thousand and one
possible reasons in his mind for Angel to show up and use him for a punching
bag, but this never crossed his mind. "Xander?" Knows he should be way the hell
more articulate than that, but he can't wrap his brain around the idea of Angel
coming here for this.
"What - you're here to warn me away from him? You think he needs to be protected
from me?" Fucking overgrown vampire and his overgrown sense of responsibility.
Lindsey wants to be standing, to be moving, but he forces himself to remain
seated. Slides down a little in the chair, slips his hand further underneath
it, reaching.
"Xander's not a part of whatever game this is that you're playing with me."
Ahhh... not responsibility -- guilt. Should've known.
"You think Xander is about you? I left Wolfram and Hart, remember? Nothing in
my life is about you anymore." Lindsey shifts in the chair one more time, and
he's almost got the damn thing.
"Why don't I believe you?" That fast, Angel's up close and personal, in his
face, and Lindsey freezes. So fucking close...
"Because a couple of moldy prophecies have convinced you that the world fucking
revolves around you? Hell, I don't know." Lindsey swallows against the anger
that's urging him to do something stupid, to move too soon. Lifts his right
hand and shoves Angel away, hard. "Xander's got nothing to do with you. Deal
with it."
Angel lets himself be pushed away and backs up a few steps. "You're trying to
tell me it's just a coincidence?"
"That's exactly what I'm saying." Lindsey reaches while Angel's distracted,
walking the space between the door and the stairs. Finally, he's got it, and
he waits for Angel to make a mistake, to let his guard down for just a moment.
"I don't believe in coincidences." Not enough room to pace on the small porch,
and Angel goes down the steps before turning to face Lindsey again.
That's all the time Lindsey needs to pull the shotgun out from its hiding place
and stand up. He swings the double barrel up, aims it at Angel's face just as
he looks up. Lindsey allows himself a small, cold smirk before he answers the
surprise in Angel's eyes. "Guy like me can't be too careful. Never know when
you might get an unwelcome guest who doesn't understand that he's overstayed
his welcome."
He grins outright at the anger Angel isn't able to hide. "Not to sound too much
like my daddy, but I think it's about time you got your ass off my land, boy."
Angel freezes, but Lindsey can see the wheels in his head spinning as he tries
to talk Lindsey down. "We both know you aren't really going to shoot me. You
have neighbors, and no all-powerful law firm to clean up the mess for -"
The kick of the shotgun blast rocks Lindsey a bit. He likes it. He likes the
pain on Angel's face more.
Angel pulls his bloody hand away from his stomach and blinks. "You shot me."
He looks around, clearly expecting Lindsey's neighbors to come outside to see
what the noise is.
"Nobody's coming."
Angel turns to look at him, eyebrows raised in disbelief, and Lindsey shrugs.
"Kinda figured something like this would happen one day. You, Wolfram and Hart,
any of the dozens of enemies I've made over the years..." Lindsey takes a few
steps toward the end of the porch, keeps the gun aimed at Angel's head. "I'm
just a good ol' boy from down South who misses hunting and shoots blanks at
homemade targets every once in a while. They're used to it, and the pro bono
legal work I hand out around here ensures nobody minds the noise too much."
"You can't kill me with that," Angel reminds him, still holding his stomach.
"Maybe." Lindsey grins. "Always wondered if blowing a vampire's head off worked
the same as decapitation, though." His grin widens when Angel backs up a few
feet. "Wanna find out?"
"This isn't over." But Angel's already leaving, walking around the side of the
house toward the front.
Lindsey stays where he is until he's sure Angel's left. Goes inside, locking
the door carefully now that the barn's open and the horse is gone. Leans the
shotgun against the wall before he collapses onto the couch, and groans when
the back of his bruised head hits the not-quite-soft cushion. He sits up and
buries his face in his hands, rubbing his aching forehead and wishing this day
was over and done. A fucking armpit of a day that's just going from bad to worse,
despite the momentary yet deep satisfaction of shooting Angel in the gut.
The phone rings, and Lindsey's tired enough that the sudden, shrill sound doesn't
even make him jump. Waits for the click of the answering machine picking up...
Leave a message, I'll get back to you.
A too-long pause after the beep, and Lindsey's halfway to the phone, because
he knows.
"Uh, yeah... hi. It's me, Xander." Tension, tiredness and uncertainty all evident
in Xander's voice, and before he can say another word, Lindsey's on the line.
"Xander? I'm here. Hey."
Deep, quick breath that sounds almost like relief and matches Lindsey's own.
"Hey, how've you been?" Lindsey hears the smile like he knew he would, and an
answering one spreads across his own face. Feels the tension uncoiling from
the base of his spine, and he takes another deep breath as he slides down the
wall to sit on the floor, settles in for the conversation.
"Not the best day I've ever had, actually, but it's lookin' up."
.End
Read the sequel Boys'
Night Out