Title:
The Sidestep Chronicle – Second Chronicle - You Can’t Always Have What You Want (Part 197)
Author: Katharyn Rosser
Feedback: Constructive criticism is always welcome.
Katharynrosser1@hotmail.co.uk Flames just demonstrate you have a tiny mind.
Spoiler Warning: Pretty limited. The story occurs in an alternate universe as set up in “The Wish” though reference is made to events that occur in both realities. Nothing is referenced that occurs after S5 though. Guess why? Most “spoilers” would be for the first chronicle of this fic rather than the show and if you haven’t read that then much of this will make no sense but you can try and get round it by reading the preface to Part 104 which summarises most of what went before.
Distribution This story was written for Pens. Pens is its home. No archiving off Different Coloured Pens (This applies to all of the Sidestep Chronicle)
Summary: A look at what’s happening in LA at Wolfram & Hart.
Disclaimer: I don’t own any of the copyrights or anything else associated with BTVS. All rights lie with the production company, writers etc, etc. I am making zilch from this series of stories. You know the drill.
Rating: R – a general rating for occasional content. Individual parts might be less than this level.
Couples: Tara and Willow forever – others couples as necessary but nothing unconventional.
Notes: This is a more detailed look at the workings of the law firm and the politics therein and I’m happier with that. I think it’s going to lend a little more depth to who Lilah has become – or been made into – and really show where it is she’s coming from. Oh, and the character Matt and how I wrote him. Let’s not just say it’s not my appreciation of Lilah, but his that’s on the page. In the past some readers thought I really
liked Lilah. I just like the character! How Lilah sees herself, or others see her doesn’t reflect my feelings on her! You’ll see what I mean. In fact Matt is so far to the other end of the scale I thought about rewriting him. It’s not nice – but he’s not a nice guy.
Thanks To: My own special woman Louise who helps me so much with this on top of everything else. Those other friends and family who’ve also helped us overcome everything that was put in my way. Celia and Kerry who shaped this story and continue to do so when I think back to what they told me in the past. Xita for keeping the story hanging around and continuing to give us TKTWATBW.
The Sidestep Chronicle – Second Chronicle
You Can’t Always Have What You Want
By
Katharyn Rosser
The tentative knock wasn’t going to be seen as a good thing. It’d be taken as a sign of weakness and rightly so.
Matt winced even as the echo was sounding in the office beyond, and it didn’t get better on the second rap. No one knocked that softly. If you knocked at all then it had to be a clear – ‘you need to see me now’ knock.
They taught you that here.
His knock had actually said something more like, ‘if you have a moment, any time that suits you in the next five years then I’d appreciate it if I could speak to you. If you like. Maybe. Or I could just go away. Yes, perhaps it’s best you ignore me entirely.’
That was what his knock said.
Justin’s knock wouldn’t have been so wimpy and half-assed.
Justin would already be in there slapping the file down on the desk, telling what needed to be told and then making a polite but firm withdrawal to go and get on with what the firm needed him to be doing.
These things counted.
It was murder at this firm just to get taken on as an associate.
Literally.
And once you were in that superior group… then things got serious.
He’d taken the view that doing a stint as a paralegal for this firm was worth an associateship anywhere else. So had Justin and several others though. So here he was, still trying to bridge the gap from recruitment out of law school to even having a shot an associateship.
There were only so many places to go around.
His feeble knock didn’t mean he was weak though. Neither in demeanour, nor in performance.
He was seriously thinking of having his great rival, Justin, killed. It was an acceptable method of securing a position. There were rumours it was actually
expected nowadays. This was the twenty-first century. The old idea of taking on associates out of law school had been largely dropped by Wolfram and Hart.
Now things got serious a whole lot sooner in your career. And ‘serious’ meant ‘deadly’ around here.
Just so long as you personally made the grade, the firm was perfectly happy to support you in securing your future. If a rival was incompetent enough to let themselves be killed then that was just Darwinism in action.
Survival of the fittest.
Justin had already made that grade – virtually guaranteed to get a slot so the office grapevine was saying. But Matt wasn’t so sure about himself. He knew he still came across as meek and clumsy, something he’d never been in his whole school and college career.
Captain of the football team at every level. Varsity wrestler.
He’d even done a school play once – even though it’d been to show his sensitive side to Kristy Wilson. And it hadn’t sucked. At least
hehadn’t sucked.
At school and college he’d been the all around, clean cut American hero. And he’d had confidence in his intelligence. As had the firm or they wouldn’t have taken him on at all.
He’d never been meek until he’d come here and met
her.
“For god’s sake get in here,” the strong female voice called from inside, setting the hairs on the back of his neck to an upright posture.
She had a way of doing that to him – and he wasn’t sure she even knew she was doing it. In a way he hoped she did. At least that would imply actual awareness of his existence as something other than a microbe she encountered from time to time and did the leg work on her cases.
He opened the door, dropping the file as he did. Fortunately papers didn’t all scatter everywhere. So there was a stroke of luck. Before he bent to pick them he saw her sigh. Which, of course, would’ve made her breasts move so beautifully, and he’d missed it while he was picking the papers up.
Damn it!
“Ahmm… You asked to be updated if any legal matter were progressed,” Matt said trying not to stare at the vision of loveliness when he straightened up.
He’d never been afraid of a woman realising his interest in her until he’d met her either. Usually he’d make it very clear, let them think about it before he started to flirt with them. Saved time if they already knew what they wanted.
But this was no ordinary woman.
“You might’ve noticed, this is a law firm, we progress legal matters all the time,” she told him impatiently “What’s your name anyway?”
She didn’t even know his name.
Great.
Things were just looking better and better for him weren’t they? Just yesterday he’d seen her laughing and joking with
Justin as they shared a sandwich at lunch time.
Shared a sandwich.
He was sure she knew
Justin’s name.
Justin was really good at making himself known, and in a good way. And unlike his rival, Matt had a way of making himself known as a klutz and forgettable at the same time – or so it appeared.
“Matt,” he told her. “Matthew. I mean. Matt if you want to call me that. Or… Perkins.”
“This is a law firm, Matt. We’re always progressing legal matters. It’s what we do. What are you talking about?”
She’d used his name… his shortened name that he preferred. Not Matthew, not Perkins. She’d called him Matt. And the way her lips moved as she said the word… He sighed, and perhaps she misinterpreted it, took it as impatience with
her. As if he’d dare to show that.
“Umm,” he looked at the contents of the paper file, trying to find the next thing to say. He didn’t trouble himself as to why this hadn’t just been flagged on her system and brought to her attention here on her screen. If it had… he wouldn’t have had this chance to see her again, to meet her needs. “Sunnydale. You know, now that I look at the classifications on this file…”
The file could well be stored this way for a reason.
She wasn’t supposed to see it was she?
Now what was he supposed to do?
“Hmm?” she wondered, and he hadn’t missed the flicker of an expression that had crossed her face when he’d mentioned that… what was it? A town? He thought he knew where it was, even though he’d definitely heard of it. It was up north somewhere.
Or south.
‘Not in LA’ was as far as tended to go to classify these piss-ant little places. But he had other things to worry about than where it was.
“Now I think about it, um… I’m not sure I should be passing it to you,” he told her, rushing the words out after his original hesitation and deliberation. How could he have made such an amateurish mistake? Perhaps because he was still an amateur and desperately trying to become a professional.
Like her.
Or at least not to be the ‘new kid.’ The one everyone expected to fail and, at best, get booted out of here.
It was easily explained – he was sure security would understand when he told them how he’d brought this file to her by mistake. It certainly shouldn’t be an
audit issue.
Naturally he’d never considered that anyone at her level would be excluded from any file that even he was allowed to see. Why would she be? He could go his entire career and consider it enormously successful if he didn’t get half as far in the firm as she had. Her monthly salary would probably pay off all his college debts.
Why wouldn’t she be allowed to see a file that he could? It made no sense.
And the less sense it made, the more it suggested it was a
really bad idea to let her have this update to the main file. Someone would be really pissed if that were to happen. But surely it wouldn’t be an audit issue… Surely not…
Oh, who was he kidding? The orientation for this place was always held on an audit day. After they’d showed you where the fire exit and first-aid people were – they showed you the results of an audit.
There’d been blood on the walls – and something that looked like brains and bone on the floor, even though the bodies had been removed.
Audit day always heralded redecoration too.
He was dead. He was fucking dead if he gave her this… unless… Maybe she’d protect him?
“Then you shouldn’t have come here with it, should you?” she asked rhetorically.
Of course he shouldn’t have come here! His desperation to impress her, to look efficient and helpful was going to get him fired.
Or worse.
Probably worse.
Blood on the walls type stuff.
“So tell me,” she instructed and there was no way around such an instruction. No way at all.
He could turn her down and end up dead tonight, and she’d still get to read it.
He could run to his supervising associate and land her in trouble with Ms Morgan as well – and they’d probably both end up dead tonight.
He could hand over the file and then run for the hills – maybe to one of those piss-ant towns outside the city. It might take them a couple of days to find him then, but ultimately the result was the same. He’d certainly never be able to work as a lawyer, even if he stayed alive.
Or he could hand it over, stay… Then try to earn her trust and see if she’d protect him for that loyalty. At the very least the next office audit wasn’t use until September. That was a few months more life than he’d have if he turned her down flat.
Justin would never have gotten in this mess.
But
Justin didn’t have something she wanted.
Insanely the fear was getting to him – the fear and the intoxicating sight of her. It was affecting him in ways that, if she realised, would probably result in consequences of the audit look merciful and pleasant.
He was in her hands as soon as he’d mentioned the word Sunnydale – let alone if gave it to her. In her hands…
Could he deny it if he got the file back from her and replaced it in the records office tonight? If he just told her what she wanted to know?
Could he ask her to let him do that? Would she value his life enough to agree?
What other choice did he have?
“It’s… ah… Legal proceedings on behalf of Miss T Maclay and Miss W Rosenberg, residents of Sunnydale, in the matter of obtaining a formal care order for one Antonia Alessi who is already in their care. It’s… uhm… currently under a temporary order granted by a local judge following the death of her father in a… vampire related incident.” He flicked through the papers, checking there wasn’t anything else.
That was enough… surely?
Hmm, that was where he’d heard of Sunnydale. It’d made the news a few months back and the office had been full of the real story, the vampires in the sewers. Farming humans they said.
Fucking vampires, he hated them.
Someone had cleaned them out and he hadn’t shed any tears over that.
He wondered if he’d already said too much because the way she’d reacted to that first name… It wasn’t a sign of interest. It was… He felt like he was in a lioness’ den and she was feeling hungry. He felt like he did when a vampire came into the office and looked at him.
In orientation they’d said it was an inbuilt mammal’s reaction to the presence of a predator.
“Hmm, I don’t recognise the name, she isn’t a player,” He’d made sure to get know the name of as many ‘players’ as he could – it had seemed the most prudent way of avoiding embarrassing office faux-pas.
In that research he’d certainly run across the names of the two women wanted to get the order for this Antonia. Rumour had it they’d been the one to clean out those sewers.
Just the two of them.
But he was sure there hadn’t been anything about the girl herself.
“Of course she’s not a player – there are
very few players who need a care order,” Lilah chided him.
She had him there.
“The temporary – sorry interim – order was granted to them along with a Mr and Mrs Giles of the same town,” he revealed – pleased nothing in that sentence could make a fool of him. “He’s a librarian and belongs to the Watcher’s Council, she’s a school teacher.” He flicked to the indicated page. “On maternity leave at the moment. Doesn’t seem to be anything special about her apart from genuine Romany lineage.”
And that lineage could be quite powerful – though nothing that would usually concern Wolfram and Hart. To all intents and purposes the teacher was a mundane.
“That’s all very interesting. Thank you.” She smiled at him. Actually
smiled at him. “You can be sure I know how to make the best use of this, Matt,” she said.
All he could hear was his name coming from her mouth again. Those luscious lips. She’d remembered his name… and used it. She even seemed pleased by his work!
On the other hand – this was information she wasn’t supposed to have. Someone had forbidden it to her – and that someone had to be very high up. Someone very powerful. And they’d have their reasons. He'd been the one to ignore the prohibition.
But she’d still used his name and there was time to get the papers back into the system before morning. It wasn’t like
he wasn’t supposed to have them – just her. There was still nothing concrete to tie this update file to her – certainly not via him. Was there?
“Hmm, you might want to check with Mr Manners?” he suggested finding out just who’d placed the prohibition on her with all things to do with Sunnydale. The name of the man who’d probably have his contract terminated for this.
If he found out.
Perhaps if he could talk to her a little, prevent her from misusing the information. Or making it obvious she had it at all…
Putting the update file back wouldn’t be any use if she showed everyone that she knew what’d been in it…
“Oh? Why?” The questions were asked mildly. Just two words… but filled with such danger. He knew he’d made a mistake.
Another mistake.
“He… ahh…” Matt wracked his memory for what he’d been dealing with for Mr Manners. And for the code that had been applied to this file.
Operational Projects Prohibition. That was it. That had implications she should understand.
“He has projects in Sunnydale and you wouldn’t want to – well, you wouldn’t want him to step on your toes if the situations were reversed,” he said, adjusting the phrase to suit the situation and her ego. To make it sound as if she’d just be returning a professional courtesy Mr Manners would extend to her.
And what toes they’d be. Shown off beautifully by those oh-so-expensive ‘fuck me’ shoes she usually wore but he couldn’t see at the moment. She could walk all over him in shoes like that.
God… what was she doing to him? Ever since he’d seen her he’d been a klutz. A meek, eager to please paralegal instead of an up and coming potential associate. She was going to get him killed… and she’d only just found out his name.
She held out her hand and he walked over to her desk, passing it to her. Praying he’d get it back in time and then not even caring as her fingers touched his. It was like an electric shock ran through him when their skin touched.
Right from the tips of his fingers to the tip of something else… and Oh My God it was stirring.
He didn’t even have the wherewithal to think about how the touch clearly hadn’t done a thing for her… It was all one way traffic.
Lilah flicked through the update file, pausing occasionally to pay more attention to some part of it. Why’d he been so helpful to pull together the background information that came with the update?
He’d probably given her even more that she shouldn’t have been told.
“Indeed, we wouldn’t want anyone stepping on toes.” She held up a large photo of the young dark-haired girl who was the subject of the court appeal. “Bring me everything we can get on this girl. And any of her relatives. Alive or dead.”
“Yes,” he said without thinking. “Of course.”
What else could he say? He’s suggested that she speak to Mr Manners and that was his choice. He’d be dead by dawn if he said ‘no’ to her as well.
“Bring me what we already have available now,” she said looking at the picture carefully. “But then put out a request for everything else you can get your hands on. But do it in your name.”
In his name?
No one was even going to find the body…
And obscenely the idea of serving her, making himself invaluable, only caused him to stir more. Obeying her was the only way he could save his own life, probably, but it’d keep him closer to her too.
To be useful, efficient… her conduit to things she wanted to know…
For whatever period of his life he had left, he had something on her. He had leverage and he hardly dared wonder where that might take him. As long as he was more useful working for her than in pieces…
“May I ask why?” he asked. Then he realised that he really didn’t want that to sound like another challenge to her authority. “I mean… I’m here to learn and you’d certainly get more information in your own name…”
Lilah didn’t need him for this. She could just run a search… couldn’t she? She knew how the system worked and how to get around it – she’d done his job not so many years ago. She’d been new once too. She must’ve known the fear he knew now.
“You can ask,” she said.
Which, of course, meant ‘don’t.’
She turned in her chair and all he could see was the long expanse of her legs from those fuck-me shoes he’d suspected she’d be wearing up to the hem of her skirt knee length, riding higher than that when she was sat down.
How was he supposed to focus with that kind of distraction?
Perhaps a more pertinent question was how was he supposed to focus on work?
Did she even know what she was doing to him? He’d never been this way around girls before. But there wasn’t anything girlish about her. Not like the girls at college, or anyone he’d dated before he started here. She was perhaps the first
woman he’d wanted in his life.
And she was going to get him killed without even knowing.
His body knew it that she could be fatal, and it didn’t care. Did she know though? Wouldn’t she suspect?
“I don’t want to cause offence,” Matt tried to explain, shifting awkwardly and holding the file envelope in position to hide what was happening to him. “It’s just that I did some work for Mr Manners and I know… I mean I remember now where I saw that security code… You’re not supposed to…”
“Get involved in Sunnydale?” she suggested, smiling gently at him.
He nodded, feeling like the inexperienced child she was treating him as.
Naïve. That must be how she saw him, and perhaps she wasn’t wrong.
“You want to learn?” she asked mildly, too mildly for it to be anything but an act.
“Yes,” he assured her. He wanted to learn and, maybe, to put his body under the point of those heels she wore. Learning would do for now – she couldn’t even remember his name at the moment. Learning would do – at least it’d be around her.
“Do you want to know how to please me?” she asked, glancing at the file envelope he was holding to cover the bulge in his pants.
Of course she knew what she did to him. She was a woman – that was the whole point.
A few months of life… working with her. And in his dreams perhaps more. Better than letting her end it now. It’d only take a call to have him terminated – because she wouldn’t do it herself. Why dirty her hands with something so trivial?
“Yes,” he said again.
“Then you need to know when to shut up Matt – it’s the best place to start,” she said. “Now, go and do what I asked you to do. Or – if you want – go and see Mr Manners and tell him all about this conversation. I’m sure he’ll appreciate your candour.”
He didn’t have to hesitate. “I’ll get right on with it – I mean what you asked for.”
How much of it was fear and how much was his desire to please her he wouldn’t ever be able to figure out. But… he’d do it for her anyway. When it came to Ms Morgan fear and desire were very much the same thing – and seemed to have the same effect on him.
“And while you’re about it, bring me everything you can find on the current projects in Sunnydale,” she instructed. “At least the details you have access to. We do want to protect my toes don’t we?” She re-crossed her legs, pointing her foot at him, as she made the joke and he wondered – for a moment – how far she’d go to get what she wanted from him.
Further than she was doing now and not as far as he’d like her to, he was sure.
“If you have any problems come back to me, and I’ll show you ways around the system,” she offered, still looking at the file picture of that young girl. What was so special about her to make her worthy of all this?
And what was so special about Sunnydale for Ms Morgan? Why would she be locked out of it?
“Thank you,” he managed, moving awkwardly away to hide his bulge. Did she understand that she could do anything she wanted to him?
Probably.
She certainly knew she could use her sexuality against him, just look at her… all skirts and legs and perfectly respectable – if slightly revealing - businesswear. She was tantalising him and controlling him in one outfit.
And the thing was he really didn’t care.
-----------------------
Lilah tapped her Mont Blanc pen on the leather bound organiser, thinking on what had just happened.
No one else knew, but the organiser had been bound in the skin of her first rival here at the firm. Even before that weakling Lindsay. A poor unfortunate young woman called…
What had she been called?
Jane?
Julie?
Something that began with ‘J’ anyway.
If you looked carefully you could still see the dolphin tattoo that’d once been at the small of her the woman’s back. And below it a letter ‘J.’
Today behaviour like that wouldn’t raise an eyelid, such an object lesson might almost be expected, but back then – if she’d been shown to be that ruthless the other associates would’ve united against her and that would’ve been that. No more Lilah Morgan.
Maybe it was a stylised ‘L’ though, she mused as she looked at it – really looked at it – for the first time in years.
It was one of the many things she’d forgotten over time. Once she’d worried about those gaps in her memory – but they’d told her it wasn’t anything she should concern herself with. It was long gone; Jane/Julie wasn’t coming back. Even if her name had been Lucy, it didn’t change how dead she was.
Lilah was much more concerned about what they weren’t telling her today than what she’d forgotten about the past.
Special Projects were a law unto themselves, much as she’d argued against it since her promotion. But Holland was too entrenched; his powerbase and supporters too widespread to move directly to curtail that power and get access to what she needed.
Sunnydale.
She didn’t give a damn about that half-baked excuse for a town. Not even about the Hellmouth that sat at the heart of it – supposedly where Special Projects’ interest lay. All she cared about was it being where Tara Maclay still lived.
‘Lived’ being the root of the problem.
Actually she was more interested in Tara Maclay alive. She couldn’t take everything Tara valued away from her unless she was alive. Pain didn’t register unless there was still a beating heart.
Or if Tara killed herself trying to keep those painful events from happening. Fine…
Perhaps she’d even get a new organiser out of it. Or at least the binding. She didn’t think Tara Maclay would have a tattoo to mar the effect. But she’d been wrong before.
Why she hated Tara Maclay, Lilah wasn’t exactly sure anymore. It was another of those things she’d lost, but this was one memory she certainly wanted back. When the hatred was so powerful she had to know why.
She’d had the files searched. Every record her clearance would give her access to. Every record her staff could get access to.
And everything had been removed. It wasn’t even on the computers. Holland had the paper records somewhere, locked away and inaccessible outside of the main archives.
So it’d struck her.
New information couldn’t be taken away immediately and hidden by her former mentor. New information had to be processed and passed through the levels and then Holland would get a hold of it. Only then could he do anything about keeping it from her.
All she had to do was intercept any incoming news linked to certain flagged names, words and phrases…
Matt had been the perfect person for that opportunity and he’d come through for her tonight. Not only that, he’d been dim enough to carry on even after he’d realised his mistake.
Dim or devoted?
Oh, she knew what he really wanted.
He wanted her. In his head he had some kind of fantasy that he was probably off playing out in the restroom right now. She wasn’t at all unaware of his attraction to her. Actually she was pleased with it. It never hurt to have leverage, and sexual attraction was the oldest leverage in the book.
Matt was inexperienced – and male – enough to fall for it too.
He was disposable enough to utilise until his employment was terminated.
And he was potentially devoted enough – if she strung him along – to be personally loyal to her when the time came for someone to take the fall.
He might even resist some mild interrogation thinking he was earning her respect. And would they really bother with a full TP mind-probe audit for him? He was barely worth more pain than the head of building security knew how to inflict.
Finally, if somehow Matt survived this – if somehow he prospered, then it was always useful to cultivate allies.
No, not allies… loyal subordinates.
So what if one day it might even be necessary to sleep with him? She wouldn’t balk at it if it had to be done. She’d already done much more loathsome things for this firm, and even enjoyed them.
On a purely physical level she’d probably enjoy him, but she had a sense his desires ran to things more extreme than she personally favoured. He probably wouldn’t be able to perform without having his fantasies about her fulfilled. He struck her as that type.
It wasn’t like she needed him for the long term. She already had his great rival in her pocket.
“What did you think of that?” she asked as Justin stepped in from the adjoining office.
“I think he wants you,” he summarised, moving to stand behind her. Lilah knew he was looking over her shoulder at the file he had unwillingly left behind.
“Probably,” she said, not making a point of the bulge in Matt’s pants that had confirmed it. “But that’s not what I meant.”
“He’s not too bright,” Justin tried.
“If he was stupid he wouldn’t be here,” Lilah said. “And that’s not what I meant either. Besides, I didn’t think you were interested in his brains.”
Justin said nothing and she knew she’d hit a nerve. Manipulating this one was much simpler and much less nebulous than with Matt, where the desires of the human body were paramount. Justin’s desires lay in the same direction as hers did. Towards men.
So working with him was a mental, rather than a seductive, exercise.
Justin was here with her after hours because he recognised where the future lay. She was the future of this office. Holland Manners, for all his extensive contacts across many offices and clients, was rapidly becoming the past and no one else at their level was even a factor.
Defending Champion Holland Manners vs. the Newcomer Lilah Morgan. Not quite the demon pit fights she so enjoyed watching, but nonetheless enthralling for all.
Justin was looking into the long-term, and all he saw staring back at him was… her.
Smart boy. Handsome too – in a way she’d have preferred over the jock-like qualities of Matt. Shame really.
“What’s in Sunnydale?” he asked as he read the papers from behind her. “Besides one of our oldest clients and an unfortunate dimensional breach?”
She pulled the papers away from the photograph. The picture of Antonia Alessi. She tapped it with her pen. “This girl.”
“Who is she?” he asked. “Is she important?”
“She is to them,” Lilah mused, mostly to herself.
Looking at the pictures of the four guardians, she felt a flicker of emotion – more than a flicker – when she glanced at Tara Maclay’s. Hate was an emotion. “Which is reason enough to see they don’t get what they want.”
Justin didn’t ask questions. He didn’t wonder how that tied into the firm’s business, or where the billing was going to be directed to. He didn’t even ask if the girl could have some value to them.
At least he didn’t wonder those things aloud.
Instead he just asked a very simple question. “What do you want done?”
He’d have them all killed – or at least he’d try to arrange it. She knew it – she’d tested his willingness to go so far. The girl would just be the easiest one. Whoever he could hire would have more difficulty with the witches.
Was it a coincidence that ‘Witches’ and ‘Bitches’ were almost the same word?
But while he would do it, their death wasn’t what she wanted. At least not yet.
“Keep out of Matt’s way, even he’ll suspect something if he finds you sniffing around this too.”
“But I should keep an eye on him?” Justin checked.
She turned to him in her chair, a smile touching her lips. “Don’t you always?”
“You know what I mean.”
Another smile.
“I wonder what you’ll do if one day I have to do…” she gestured to the door where Matt had departed.
“I’m not foolish enough to believe he’d ever want me, Lilah,” he said. “He’s not wired that way.”
The edge of anger in his voice told her it wouldn’t be okay with him though. It was also betrayed by the familiarity he showed in using her given name. She let it go though – for now he had his uses and while Matt would probably have welcomed punishment...
Justin was cut from a different cloth. Matt was desperately trying to prove he even existed to her.
This one though… He wasn’t eager to please – he was efficient, and that was what she needed.
“But you want him all the same?” she asked.
This time he smiled. “Is it wrong to want what we can’t have?” She knew he was still talking about her attempts to seduce him, and she knew that’d never go beyond this office because he understood where the power lay. And once she’d established he was gay she’d given up the chase.
Better for him he was gay and refused her for that reason than simply turn her down.
She didn’t rise to his bait though. Instead she picked up the large picture of the girl with the pretty hair, her eyes flicking to the very familiar image of Tara Maclay that still lay on the desk. “No, wanting what you can’t have is exactly the lever we need to move this mountain.”
“So you do want something done to the girl?”
Lilah knew he’d arrange that too. No matter what it was she asked for. And if she didn’t specify… he’d be creative about it as well as efficient.
She had to admit it was tempting to do have something done but… there were better, more personal ways to get to her target. Ways that would mean Tara Maclay would understand exactly what was happening, and who was doing it to her.
“Absolutely not. You’re not to go anywhere near her. The girl’s mine to deal with. Just make sure you’re aware of where Matt is up to with this. And find me every living relative you can. Up to and including Great-Uncles in Timbuktu. I don’t have much faith in our mutual friend to get that part done. He doesn’t have the contacts.”
He nodded and understood it was his cue to leave, which he did without another word.
And as usual she watched his butt move as he left. Such a shame…
But the other thing with wanting what you couldn’t have – was finding a way to get it. There were still ways to get Justin into her bed.
Just as there were ways to get what she wanted in Sunnydale. Tara Maclay was going to find that out. The girl would just be the start.
She was going to strip away everything.
Tara’s friends, the respect of the people of the town. The girl they wanted to foster…
Her lover.
All of it.
And at every step Tara Maclay was going to know just who was doing that to her. Then, at the end, she’d force the younger woman to reveal to her just
why she found she hated her so much.
---------------
Now this was his town. It was how things had used to be prior to nineteen-ninety two. It was… alive.
After weeks of building his strength and assimilating who he was now – not to mention long conversations with himself in the past and future – he was finally up and able to take in the town properly.
All of it.
When he’d last taken a stroll through the streets things had still been only starting to recover from the domination of the night by vampires – not to mention the population stresses such numbers of predators had caused.
Not precisely what he’d had in mind when he’d been drawing up the plans for Sunnydale over a century ago.
Certainly he’d understood the role of vampires in ensuring that his power could be maintained – a degree of fear and a judicious amount of success in alleviating that threat had always gone a long way to distracting people from the rather larger and more powerful inhabitants of the town. He’d even employed some of them over the years.
It wasn’t just the mystical residents that’d changed. Shortly before he’d died, he’d put a five year plan into place. After an afternoon looking through city records he’d discovered that they’d followed it largely without change. Good for them – good for the town. Sunnydale was what he’d always imagined it to be once again.
A lively community that was a place for people and families.
And nowhere near being ‘hip’ despite the presence of a greater number of young students from the college campus.
Hip was something he’d always sought to avoid. People wanted to live in a place that they could aspire to afford, yet their aspirations were built upon a realisation that what you really wanted was… nostalgia.
The modern became the dated rather quickly.
But the past became nostalgic and stayed that way. At worst you should only need to change the character of a place like this every couple of generations.
People wanted to live in a place that reminded them of the ideal homes they’d seen in their childhood – or these days that probably meant on TV.
The recovery of Sunnydale, like its birth, was the fruit of the tree he’d planted in the first place. Farmers were simple folk and it was how he’d started out his existence. Not much had changed since then– apart from an increased aversion to dirt as he’d come to understand just what nasties were in your average handful of soil.
You planted the seed; you nurtured it and watched it grow. You pulled the weeds and kept the bugs away.
Eventually, one day… you harvested the fruit.
And in the fruit was the next seed.
As he walked down the streets he was passing some people he knew but had no reason to know him.
Even the older people weren’t of an age where they could ever remember the face he saw in the mirror now. He was a young man again, at least in looks. That would pass soon enough though. Over the next weeks and months he’d become what he had been at the point he’d stopped physically aging.
But for now, he was young.
Somehow he couldn’t think of himself as the young man he was – though he’d always been young at heart. It was difficult not to be when you were effectively eternal – or at least were seeking eternity.
A police patrol car passed him by, and after darkness had fallen no less. Once upon a time the chance of bringing the police out in such conditions would have depended on an especially inexperienced officer and a dispatcher with an evil sense of humour.
Today, the people were protected though, and not just by the police.
There were some real heroines hereabouts. His girl Tara was still here, with the young woman she loved.
Oh, he was impressed by Tara. Naturally the records didn’t mention her much, but her touch – and that of her friends – was everywhere in this town when you knew how to look for it.
Not only had she found the courage to remove him from Sunnydale, plunging them all into uncertainty, but she’d stayed here herself. She’d taken on the duty that she’d once been paid for out of the undoubted goodness of her heart.
And she’d made Wolfram and Hart give her the vampire who’d killed him.
He’d known that she’d try something… and there were a few ways of achieving what was popularly regarded as impossible. Not just to bring the dead back to life – even Ethan Rayne could manage that – but to return the departed undead to the living…? Twice or thrice dead? That was even more difficult and costly.
The prophecy had made her success almost inevitable – but there were ways and there were ways of achieving that.
To summon a demon capable of carrying out the Shanshu ritual?
Willow Rosenberg… the only woman in living memory to have been returned from a state of vampiric damnation – here with his Tara. In love and together. Doing well at school by all accounts and now they were looking after an orphaned girl too.
Was there no end to their goodness?
He had to say he was enormously proud of them both. His dear wife had never been able to give him children, which was perhaps fortunate in a way, but in Tara he felt he had a daughter. A girl – now a woman – after his own heart. A woman who knew her own heart.
If he’d still been Mayor he’d have commissioned a statue.
Businesses were open that had been shuttered for years in his time. People were in the streets, joking and laughing, after dark… They’d more than justified his faith. And being as they were still here things would just be that much easier now. They had what was needed for the next step – or at least a part of it.
No need to wait for years for the next window – oh no, now he had a much better way to proceed. There was enough power out there now… Perhaps more than Tara and her partner could provide, but overall… There was no need to wait.
Perhaps the one thing he’d have changed… He’d have liked to have been Mayor.
Which raised an interesting point. He wasn’t the Mayor of this town for the first time in over forty years. But he couldn’t be Richard Wilkins the Third either. Everyone knew he’d died.
As his features became more what they had been, it’d be more and more difficult to hide who he was.
For a while he could be his own son, or possibly a nephew once again. He’d done it before, but this would certainly be the last time.
No… he’d age. Better to simply revert to being his own twin brother.
Unlikely perhaps, but was coming back from the dead any more likely? He knew what people would accept and see when offered such stark choices. It’d mean keeping a low profile until he’d resumed his final age but that was hardly an inconvenience.
And it’d only be for a little while.
This time… he was going to meet his goals.
At least he would if Mr Rayne continued the job he’d been commissioned for and secured some very special assistance for them.
----------------------
“So Lilah’s making her move?” Holland asked rhetorically.
His soon-to-be new associate didn’t reply. He knew the difference between a question that had to be answered and one that shouldn’t be.
“I’m impressed you brought this to me,” Holland added. “And a little surprised. I thought you… ah, appreciated working for Lilah.”
“Not as much as she’d like,” Justin assured him.
That was the trouble with rising so far, so fast… Lilah just didn’t understand some things yet. Yes, there were office politics and they could be lethal. But ultimately they were for the good of the firm.
When no one was paying the bills, not even the senior partners, then people started to get nervous. Sex wasn’t the office currency. Nor was loyalty. He didn’t believe for a second that Justin was anymore loyal to him than he was to Lilah.
And that was exactly as it should be. The point was that he was loyal to the
firm.
So Lilah had subverted the weakest of the crop of new graduates, he was astounded that she really thought she could do the same with another one at the same time. And a man of Justin’s credentials at that.
Had she even bothered to read his file? Or had she just seen his… assets and decided to make a play for them? Futile as that was always going to prove for her.
This young man was third generation Wolfram and Hart and that counted for something. He’d been raised knowing exactly what his mother over at the New York office did for a living.
Justin’s mother - now there was a role-model for Lilah, the kind he’d not had the chance to be for her due to her elevation. Something he bitterly regretted.
He felt like he’d let her down – even though the decisions had been taken out of his hands by events.
Like him, Justin also appreciated that the bills had to be paid. Once you started believing that Wolfram and Hart worked for you, it didn’t matter who you were, then you were in trouble. The billing always had to be balanced with the effort put in.
Even Tara Maclay had understood that. That transaction was what had given them this new, supposedly useful, Lilah in the first place.
So while there was a debt there for Tara to pay – supposedly – the true price had been the creation, the sculpting, of Lilah. Those books had been balanced.
Lilah’s problem was that she was started to ignore the billing, and eventually there’d be a reckoning on that.
“What do you want me to do?” Justin asked.
“Do what she told you, but keep me informed.”
“Naturally sir,” Justin said. “Do you want her slowed down?”
“Not for now… this might actually work out to be good timing.” The way things were in Sunnydale; this could fit right into the schedule. It could be extremely convenient for Mr Rayne’s work to ensure that certain parties were distracted. That might be the only thing that would keep the books in order, if she inadvertently helped.
If she’d known what was happening… even she wouldn’t have dared do this. But now he knew, he could control it. “I’ll let you know if that changes,” he added.
Soon it’d be time to take a trip to Sunnydale, he’d intended to go anyway. He had an old client to meet, but now he had another reason.
He looked at the picture of Antonia Alessi as Justin left.
“I’ll be pleased to make your acquaintance young lady.”
**************