Written by Tracy Stern
Directed by Regis B. Kimble
Consulting Producer: Marti Noxon – Co-Producer: Skip Schoolnik – Produced by Kelly A. Manners – Executive Producers: Sandy Gallin and Gail Berman – Executive Producers: Fran Rubel Kuzui and Kaz Kuzui – Supervising Producer: Tim Minear – Consulting Producer: Howard Gordon
Last updated on April 5th 2000
Close-ups of Angel’s and Wesley’s faces.
Angel: “Maybe we can make
a break for it.”
Wesley: “Impossible.”
Angel: “Front exit?”
Wesley: “We’d be spotted instantly.”
Angel: “Back door?”
Wesley: “Blocked.”
Angel: “That’s it then – we’re trapped.”
Wesley: “We might try shouting ‘fire.’ (Camera pulls back to reveal
that they are sitting in an almost empty theater) Not technically a crowed
theater.”
Cut to Cordy on stage, wearing an old-fashioned dress.
Cordy: “One day, I might, yes, many years from now – when I’ve lost my
looks a little. Do not laugh.”
Wesley looking at his watch:
“Only another hour.”
Cordy: “I mean, of course a time will come when
Torvald is not – is not – (turns to back of stage) Line!”
Prompter:
“is not as devoted to me”
Wesley: “Perhaps two.”
Cordy:
“What?”
Prompter: “is not as devoted to me”
Cordy: “Right,
right. (turns back around) When Torvald is not as devoted to me (give a
dramatic sob then turns her head back towards the prompter).”
Angel:
“And I thought I knew eternity.”
Credits
Angel and Wesley are walking down the street at night with Cordy between
them.
Cordy: “So? What did you think?”
Angel and Wesley
exchange a look.
Wesley: “Well, your - projection was excellent.”
Angel: “Yeah. I could hear every word and we were way in the
back.”
Cordy: “Okay, so I was loud. But was I any good?”
Wesley: “You – took the role and made it your own.”
Cordy:
“Really? Thanks. Angel, was I good?”
Angel: “I wouldn’t
say it if I didn’t think so.”
Cordy: “Thanks. – You didn’t say
it.”
Angel: “I didn’t?”
Cordy spots something across the street.
Cordy: “I don’t believe it!”
Angel: “Hey, you know, it was a
night in the theater I’ll never forget.”
Cordy: “That’s Oliver Simon!”
Wesley: “Who?”
Cordy: “Only one of the most important talent
managers in this town! I was at a party with him. (To Angel) You were
there!”
Angel: “Right. - He gave me his card.”
Cordy:
“What?! I was working him all night and he gave *you* his card?”
Angel: “He thought I had a quality.”
Cordy: “Look who he’s
with! - Rebecca Lowell.”
Wesley: “Who?”
Cordy:
“Raven! - She played Raven in ‘On Your Own?’ Big hit
television show that was only on for like 9 ½ years? Do either of you even
own a television?”
Wesley: “I..”
Angel: “No.”
Cordy: “It was a seminal show. Canceled by the idiot
network. (Angel sees a car pulling away from the curb) I was going to
picket them but I didn’t have any comfortable shoes...”
Cordy trails off as
Angel walks over the hood of the car parked next to them and pushes Rebecca out
of the way of the oncoming car. Rebecca rolls clear, but Angel hits the
windshield (breaking the glass) then rolls over top of it and down the street to
come to rest in front of another parked car.
Oliver: “Oh, my god,
Rebecca! (Hurries over to her as Rebecca watches Angel get up) Are you
alright darling?”
Wesley and Cordy hurry over to Angel.
Cordy: “Oh
my god! What was she like?”
Rebecca to Angel: “Excuse me – are
you alright?”
Cordy: “Oh, he’s fine. It was such an honor to
save your life, Ms. Lowell.”
Rebecca: “Thank you. (To Angel) I’m
sorry, I didn’t get your name.”
Cordy: “Cordelia Chase. I’m so
glad you weren’t – oh. (motions towards Angel) He doesn’t eve know who you
are.”
Rebecca to Angel: “You don’t know me?”
Oliver: “Sure
he doesn’t. I’m sure he’ll accept a small reward anyway. (Pulls out his
wallet)”
Angel: “No thanks.”
Oliver: “We’re not gonna be
held up here.”
Rebecca: “Oliver, down. He doesn’t know who I
am.”
Cordy: “He’s culturally retarded that way.”
Rebecca holds out
her hand: “I’m Rebecca.”
Angel takes it: “Angel.”
Rebecca: “So – you make a habit of this sort of thing, Angel?”
Cordy: “Oh, it’s only like his purpose in life! Angel is the
Dark Avenger – only not too dark – happy dark! I have a card in here
somewhere.”
Wesley: “Cordelia.”
Cordy: “What?”
Rebecca
seeing press and cameras: “Oh god. Who called ET?”
Wesley:
“Emma Thompson?”
Cordy: “Entertainment Tonight, doofus.”
Oliver: “They’re here for the party.”
Rebecca: “Oliver?”
Oliver: “This will be all over the tabs come morning, Bec. We
might as well just put our own spin on it first, right?”
Rebecca:
“Look, I’d like to apologize... (looks around, but Angel is gone)”
Cordy: “Oh, he does that. Here is our card. If you ever
need rescuing, or want to pal around or something – call us! (Wesley grabs a
hold of her arms and drags her off) Let go!”
Wesley: “Come along.”
Rebecca looks around and catches a glimpse of Angel as he disappears around
the corner of the next street.
Cut to the office, day. Angel is standing by the open file cabinet as
Cordy comes in carrying a newspaper.
Cordy: “I made the papers.
Last night is all over the front-page of the Calendar section!”
Wesley: “Really. There was a reviewer form the Times at your
play?”
Cordy: “What? No! Like a reviewer needs to see some
hundred-year-old play! The thing with Rebecca Lowell – I’m in the
picture.”
Wesley: “Where?”
Cordy: “Right there.”
Wesley: “Where?”
Cordy: “Right there! Next to
Rebecca. That’s my elbow.”
Angel: “Guys. Can we just
forget about Rebecca Lowell? I mean, we ran into an actor. It’s
Hollywood. It happens. (Looks over Wesley’s shoulder at the paper) We have
a nice photo of Cordelia’s – elbow and an article about me saving a
TV-star. (Walks towards his office) Just because the papers want to make
it...”
Wesley: “There is no mention of you.”
Angel comes back to
look at the paper: “What?”
Wesley: “Nothing.”
Angel:
“Oh. – Well, - that’s good, right? I mean this whole high-profile
thing really isn’t our deal anyway.”
Cordy: “What are you talking
about? First off, Rebecca Lowell hasn’t had a series since ‘On Your Own’
was canceled, and that was almost a season and a half ago!”
Wesley:
“And they say there are no seasons in Los Angeles.”
Cordy: “We have to
use this now before she’s just another E! True Hollywood Story! When word
gets out that you’re protector to the stars, they’re going to be lining up at
the door!”
Rebecca walks in with tow bodyguards: “Glad I beat the
crowd then.”
Cordy: “Oh, my god. No! (turns around to face
Rebecca) I didn’t mean – uhm – coffee? Tea? We don’t have
anything good here – uh, but our (motions at Wesley) intern would be happy to
get you something, Ms. Lowell.”
Rebecca to Angel: “Can we talk?”
Angel: “Sure. Right in here.”
Rebecca to the
bodyguards: “Stay.”
Angel to Cordy: “Stay.”
Inside Angel’s back office Rebecca takes in the closed blinds.
Rebecca: “You’re not fond of sunshine.”
Angel: “I’m a night
person.”
Rebecca: “Me too. - It uh – makes it easier to hide.”
Angel: “Seems like you’re in the wrong business if you want to hide.”
Rebecca: “So – you never really saw even one single episode of ‘On
Your Own.’”
Angel: “No.”
Rebecca: “Huh. – Well, stop
by. I’ll give you a private screening of the episode I - didn’t win the
Emmy for.”
Angel moves to put his desk between them: “Thanks for the
invitation but - um...”
Rebecca: “Look. I’ve been famous since I
was 14. It’s - refreshing to meet someone who doesn’t care.”
Angel
sits down: “Seems like you’re surrounded by people who care about you.”
Rebecca: “They work for me. They’re paid to care.”
Angel: “So. How can I help you?”
Rebecca puts some letters
on the table in front of him: “I have a - stack of these at home.
All the same – written in blood. He also has my private telephone number.”
(Angel looks at the letter: Rebecca – I will make you love me. You
will see me but I won’t speak to you unless you SEE ME. There is no OTHER
WAY!! We will be together – it will be SOON. I will be-)
Rebecca: “Scary calls in the middle of the night. Most of my
devoted fans are harmless but these...”
Angel: “It’s not blood.”
Rebecca: “Are you sure?”
Angel: “Have you tried the police?”
Rebecca: “Oliver has been after me to but - then I’d just be
hand-feeding the story to the Enquirer. No, thanks.”
Angel: “How
do you know I won’t do the same?”
Rebecca: “I don’t. But I do
know that you came out of nowhere and saved my life last night. I know
that you didn’t ask for anything in return. And I know – I feel safer in
this office than I do in my own home. - I’m up for a new
series. One of those make-or-break gigs for Rebecca’s career part two. - I
need – peace of mind.”
Angel: “The car that ran you down was a green,
freshly painted ’76 Chevy Nova. I caught the plates, ran the vehicle
ID. It was stolen. (Hands Rebecca the paper with the information) And I’m
sorry, but – I can’t take your case.”
Cordy yells through the closed
door: “Are you insane?” then quickly turns away pretending to sneeze.
Rebecca: “I don’t understand.”
Angel: “Give that information
to your people. They’ll find the guy. You don’t need me.”
Cut to Angel still sitting behind his desk, Wesley leaning in the door and
Cordy pacing the floor.
Cordy: “My first big connection to Hollywood
and you practically throw her out of the office. Haven’t you ever heard of
networking?”
Wesley: “Cordelia.”
Cordy: “No! He can
fight off Donkey-Demons, who rip peoples - guts out, but he can’t help one
defenseless actress from a psycho? (To Angel) What is your thing?”
Wesley: “He likes her. He’s afraid of getting close.”
Cordy
to Wesley: “Cause of his curse? (To Angel) You’d have to get awfully
close to her for that to kick in. And in the mean time you could be
helping me.”
Wesley: “The person who needs help here – is Ms Lowell.”
Cordy: “Right. He could be helping us both! (To
Angel) Think of the Karma!”
Wesley leans on Angel’s desk: “This
may not be the right case for you. Maybe we can find somebody else to help
her.”
Cordy puts a hand to her forehead and hunches over: “Oh
no! Not now! God! What’s this I see in my vision?
Oh. It’s a figure – a woman. It’s Rebecca. She’s in
danger. Teeerrible danger. (The guys are not impressed and Cordy gives up
her act) Great! Just – great. Because Mr. Distance has
intimacy issues, I lose my brush with fame!”
Angel: “Oh, jeez.
Cordelia, she is just a person.”
Cordy: “Spoke like a true
non-person! - Just knowing a star makes your life better. I’d
do anything to live in her world!”
Cut to Rebecca lying on a lounger beside a pool.
Girl: “They make
this incision behind the jaw and under both eyes and suction out the fat.
You have to be proactive with deterioration.”
Rebecca: “Right.”
Girl: “Christiana had it done at 24.”
Blend into the pool at night. Pull in on the house behind it.
Rebecca is giving a fabulous Hollywood party. One scene blends into the
next with less and less people until Rebecca is the only one left. She
walks up the stairs, then hears a noise and comes back down. A figure
crashes through a glass door. It’s Angel. He charges past her to
kick a guy in a black ski mask coming up behind her. They exchange a few
blows then the guy pulls a shelving unit down on top of Angel and runs out
through the broken door.
Angel crawls out from under the shelf and gets
up. Rebecca runs over to him.
Rebecca: “Are you...”
Her eyes
go past him to the huge mirror behind her sofa. She is alone in the
reflection. Angel sees the mirror. They look at each other, then
there is a banging on the door.
Bodyguard through door: “Ms. Lowell,
are you alright in there? I’m gonna call the police.”
Rebecca looks
towards the door, when she looks back, Angel is gone.
Rebecca: “Yes, Oliver, I am sure. I’d rather be alone tonight.”
Oliver: “Alone though? After all this? Don’t you at least
want someone in the house?”
Rebecca: “Half the LAPD is camped out on
my front lawn. He won’t be back tonight.”
Oliver: “All
right. I should probably go deal with the press.”
Rebecca: “You
do that Oliver.”
Oliver pulls her into a hug: “I love you kiddo.
(Steps back) You know that.”
Rebecca: “I know.”
Cut to Rebecca locking the door after Oliver and the last of the police have
left.
Rebecca: “I know you’re still here.”
Angel slowly comes out
of hiding: “I’m not what you think.”
Rebecca: “You’re not?
Because – no reflection, - dark, private office, instantly knowing those letters
weren’t written in blood, I guess what I would think is - vampire.”
Angel: “Then again...”
Rebecca: “Which is impossible.
Bela Lugosi, Gary Oldman, they’re vampires.”
Angel: “Frank Langella
was the only performance I believed but...”
Rebecca: “This is
real. - You’re real. – Do you drink blood?”
Angel:
“Yeah. But not people.”
Rebecca: “You’re not a killer.”
Angel: “I gave that up.”
Rebecca: “Well, there is a support
group for everything in this town, I guess.”
Angel: “It’s a long
story.”
Rebecca: “How long? - A hundred years?”
Angel: “Two – hundred, and some change.”
Rebecca: “200 years
– but you look... If I touch you, will you be cold? (She reaches out a hand to
touch Angel’s cheek) I’ve felt colder.”
Angel: “You’re really
not afraid.”
Rebecca: “No.”
Angel: “Most people who saw what
you saw...”
Rebecca: “I’m not most people. - I lied to
Oliver. I don’t - really want to be alone tonight.”
Cut to Wesley sitting behind a desk in the office, day.
Cordy: “He
took the case?”
Wesley: “Yes. He phoned early this
morning. We’re to follow up on the stolen vehicle.”
Cordy: “What
made him change his mind?”
Wesley: “Apparently he didn’t. He was
quietly keeping tabs on her all along.”
Cordy: “And he called you
early this morning?”
Wesley: “Yes. Uh, isn’t this what you were
lobbying for?”
Cordy: “How early? Did he spend the night?”
Wesley: “One assumes.”
Cordy: “Oh, great. He spent the
night with the fantasy of millions. - All alone, ‘protecting’ her.”
Wesley: “You’re worried about the curse. (Cordy huffs) I
wouldn’t be.”
Cordy: “Hey, you weren’t around the last time Angel went
mental. I, on the other hand, was on the first wave of the clean-up
crew. - He knows perfect happiness, he goes evil. So don’t
tell me not to worry.”
Wesley: “Angel’s moment of true happiness
occurred because he was with Buffy. You realize how rare that is – true
happiness? - And what are the odds he’s find that with an actress.”
Cordy: “What’s that supposed to mean?”
Wesley: “I was – I
meant TV-actress.”
Cordy: “Save it. Angel spent the night at
Rebecca’s. I owe it to that poor girl - to see if he wound up chowing down
on my one link to fame.”
Cut to Angel walking down the stairs in Rebecca’s house, as there is a knock
on the door.
Angel: “Cordelia, - you’re here – and you brought a
cross.”
Cordy carefully staying in the sun shining in through the
door: “Along with three double half-caf, non-fat, skinny lattes.”
Angel: “And a cross.”
Cordy: “Well, judging by the outfit, I
guess it’s safe to come in. Evil Angel never would have worn those pants.
- Where is Rebecca?”
Angel: “She had a lunch to go to.”
Cordy: “Lunch? It’s still noon. Shouldn’t that be more of
a brunch for her?”
Angel: “Well, actually she was up before dawn,
working out.”
Cordy: “So she went to lunch and just left you here to
rummage through her things?”
Angel: “No, I - told her that I was a
vampire, and that daytime patio dining was out.”
Cordy: “Did you just
make a joke?”
Angel: “I really told her.”
Cordy: “Wow.
So do you think she’d still set me up with her manager?”
Cut to Rebecca meeting Oliver at a restaurant table.
Oliver: “You
look terrific.”
Rebecca: “They canceled, didn’t they?”
Oliver: “Not canceled – postponed. That’s all. Scheduling
conflicts – it’s nothing.”
Rebecca: “Oliver you said I had this part.”
Oliver: “Yes. They want you to come into their offices and
read.”
Rebecca: “Read?”
Cut to Rebecca’s house.
Rebecca: “Do you know how long it’s been
since I’ve had to read for anything? Season and a half off the air, and
suddenly - I’m nobody again.”
Angel picks up some tabloids: “Not
according to these.”
Rebecca: “According to those, I’ve slept with
Ernest Borgnine, and I’m bulimic.”
Angel: “I hear Borgnine is a very
skilled lover.”
Rebecca: “Listen to me. Poor little rich girl.”
Angel: “We all got problems.”
Rebecca: “Yeah, well, right
now my problem involves getting this fright-night guy off my back long enough to
win this part. I’ve been so distracted lately I haven’t had enough time to
play the game. And now I’m afraid I’m losing.”
Rebecca goes to answer
a knock on the door while Angel looks at the tabloid.
Maid: “Here you
are, Ms. Lowell.”
Rebecca: “Thanks Maria. (Accepts a garment bag
and closes the door) You’re what? – a 44 long?”
Angel: “Why”
Rebecca: “I’ve got a premier tonight. (Holds out the garment
bag) Can’t go without my bodyguard, can I?”
Cut to Angel getting out of the limousine as cameras snap and the crowd yells
‘Raven.’ He turns and helps Rebecca out as the crowd breaks into applause.
Angel scans the crowd as Rebecca smiles for the cameras.
Rebecca:
“Raven. They think that I’m the character I play.”
As they walk up the
red carpet, the camera shows a guy among the spectators with a gun stuck in the
waistband of his black suit.
Cut to Angel pushing open a door into an alley for Rebecca.
Angel:
“They’re showing the movie in the alleyway.”
Rebecca: “Oh, no. I
just come to these things for the photo-op. My driver knows to meet me out
back. God, if I had to sit through everyone of these, I’m sure boredom
would kill me.”
Angel sees the man from the crowd on the landing of stairs
going up between the buildings above them pulling out his gun and pushes Rebecca
to the side.
Angel: “Rebecca.”
Angel jumps straight up onto the
landing and grabs the guys gun hand, while he’s firing his gun at Rebecca.
Angel: “Rebecca, get down!”
Angel knock the guys hand down on the
railing, making him drop his gun. During the ensuing fight they roll down
the stairs together. After a few more hits, Angel knocks the other guy
out, then hurries over to pull Rebecca into his arms.
Angel: “It’s
okay. I’m here. Shh. Shh.”
Cut to the police taking Angel’s statement.
Officer: “I just want
to go over your statement one more time, sir. You arrived here...”
Oliver comes up to Rebecca: “Rebecca, not again. Are you
alright? I came as soon as I heard.”
Rebecca: “And when was that
exactly?”
Oliver: “What do you mean?”
Rebecca: “I know the
stalker. I’ve seen him.”
Oliver: “At your house.”
Rebecca: “Mmm. He’s a stuntman. You used to represent
him.”
Oliver: “Oh, I – I didn’t get a good look.”
Rebecca:
“Oh, come on, Oliver. My private phone number, how to get into my house,
that I skip the movie at a premier – only you know all that.”
Oliver:
“I never would have let you get hurt, you must believe that. - I
thought the publicity might help you get the series. I did it out of
love.”
Rebecca: “I don’t - pay you to love me.”
Oliver:
“No. That you get for free.”
Rebecca: “I didn’t get the part,
did I?”
Oliver: “I was gonna tell you tonight. The network
suddenly feels that you’re too mature for the role. I know it may not seem
that way now, but once we get a little distance between you and Raven...”
Rebecca: “Oliver. The series is in syndication. She’ll
always be there.”
Oliver: “Beck...”
Rebecca: “Looking
younger and better and sweeter than me – forever.”
Oliver: “Sweetie,
your life is not over at 24.”
Rebecca: “I’m not 24. I’m
twenty...”
Oliver: “Shh, shh!”
Rebecca: “Raven is 22.
She will always be 22.”
Oliver: “All right, so she’ll always be
22. She’s not you, and we’re gonna have to face it – that nobody stays
young forever.”
Raven looks over at Angel still talking to the cops.
Angel’s office, day, Angel is sitting behind his desk.
Wesley: “I
thought you might like to know I got the preliminary forensics report from the
theater. The bullets were...”
Angel: “Blanks.”
Wesley:
“No, I’m afraid they were blanks.”
Angel: “The shots never
connected. I went back. There were no holes in the wall, no chipped
paint, nothing.”
Wesley: “Since when does a killer use blanks?”
Angel: “When he’s not a killer. When it’s a fake.”
Wesley: “Ms. Lowell?”
Angel: “I don’t think she knows and I
don’t know how to tell her.”
Wesley: “Well, this is good news, isn’t
it?”
Angel: “Depends on what’s going to bother her more, being
stalked, or not being stalked.”
Wesley: “Actresses.”
Angel:
“Tell me about it.”
Cut to Cordy and Rebecca walking down a street carrying shopping bags.
Rebecca: “Thanks for coming. I’m sure glad that you could find
the time.”
Cordy laughs out loud: “Oh, you were being serious?
Because big, important stars ask me out for lunch and a shopping spree like all
the time – in my dreams! Ha, ha.”
Rebecca: “I’m just an
actress. Like you.”
Cordy: “You’re an actress. I’m someone
who auditions and auditions and...”
Rebecca: “That’s what happens when
you first start out. I’m sure you’re going to make it really big.”
Cordy: “Yee-hee-hee! – Oh, sorry I didn’t mean to squeal like that in
public. Anyway thank you for calling. You must have a ton of friends
you could have asked.”
Rebecca: “Yeah, but - none of them would know
what to buy a 200 year-old vampire as a thank-you gift.”
Cordy: “Oh
god! He’s impossible to buy for. What on earth does he need?
More socks?”
Rebecca: “So, what’s his story anyway? How did he
become what he is.”
Cordy: “Oh, god. You got 8 hours?”
Rebecca: “I got all day.”
Cordy: “Yee-ha-hum! Ah, I
won’t do that again.”
Cut to night, Angel’s Apartment. Angel is about to leave when Rebecca
comes down the stairs.
Angel: “I was just coming to see you.”
Rebecca: “There was no one upstairs. So I just came down.
I hope that’s okay?”
Angel: “Uh, sure. Come on in.”
Rebecca:
“I went shopping with Cordelia to - pick out a thank-you gift for you, but what
do you get the guy who has already seen everything? So I figured what’s
better than Dom? (Holds up a bottle of champagne) You can – I mean, you
do...”
Angel: “I can drink other – liquids, yeah.”
Rebecca:
“Good. - Have you got glasses?”
Angel: “Yeah. Yeah.
Please – sit down.”
Angel goes to open the bottle and get some glasses from
the kitchen, while Rebecca settles down on the sofa, looking around.
Rebecca: “Wow. It’s sort of what you’d expect – and (sees
Angel’s bed) sort of not.”
Angel pouring the champagne: “Well, there
is no coffin.”
Rebecca: “You know, that hadn’t even crossed my mind.”
Angel: “Rebecca – there is something I have to tell you. Your
stalker, he’s not really...”
Rebecca: “Oh, - that. I already
know.”
Angel: “You do?”
Rebecca: “It turns out we share
representation.”
Angel: “Oliver.”
Rebecca: “He set the whole
thing up to - revive my flagging career. Didn’t work. I didn’t get
the part.”
Angel: “I’m sorry.”
Rebecca: “Yeah.”
Angel
hands her one of the glasses of champagne and sits down on the armrest on the
other end of the sofa from her.
Rebecca: “Have you ever (laughs)
oh, this is so dumb. Have you ever - done that thing where you link arms
and sip champagne? It’s sort of a good luck thing.”
Angel moves off
the arm of the sofa and sits beside her and they proceed to do just that.
At the end Rebecca laughs and spills most of her drink on Angel’s shirt.
Angel grins.
Rebecca: “Your shirt! I’m so...”
Angel:
“It’s okay, it’s okay. It’s kind of fun. Cold – but fun. I’ll
– I’ll be right back.”
Angel sets down his glass and goes to change his
shirt. Rebecca takes a pouch of powder out of her purse and dumps it in
Angel’s glass.
Rebecca: “You know the next time I try something so
corny, I promise not to ruin your wardrobe in the process.”
She pours some
more Champagne in Angel’s glass and offers it to him as he comes back wearing a
fresh shirt.
Rebecca: “Lets try this again.”
Angel takes the glass
and sits down next to her.
Rebecca: “A toast – to the end of an ending
and the beginning of a beginning.”
They clink glasses and drink.
Cut to Cordy answering a knock on the door of her apartment.
Cordy:
“Oh, Wesley.”
Wesley: “I got your pages. What’s happening?”
Cordy: “I think I may have done something terrible. - I
went shopping with Rebecca.”
Wesley: “And that was terrible.”
Cordy: “Huh? No! That was fantastic! You know they close
of stores for her? Oh, and lunch at Mirabelle’s. I had the most
to-die-for veal filet with a light truffle marinade, and...”
Wesley:
“Cordelia.”
Cordy: “Sorry. Anyway the whole time Rebecca is real
gabby, asking questions about Angel.”
Wesley: “Well, what sort of
questions?”
Cordy: “Oh, you know, where does Angel hail from, what’s
his favorite color, what kind of after-shave he wears, the exact specific
details on how someone could make themselves into a vampire.”
Wesley:
“Surely you don’t think...”
Cordy: “What? - That she’d try to
maneuver Angel into an exchange of bodily fluids in order to make herself
eternally young and beautiful, thus saving her failing career? Gee, now
that you mention it.”
Cut to Rebecca leaning over a slightly woozy looking Angel twirling his
champagne glass.
Angel: “I used to be, uh, a long time ago. I
hurt a lot of people.”
Rebecca: “I don’t believe that.”
Angel: “No, it’s true. I was bad. Which is why I have to
help people now. I’m trying to atone.”
Rebecca: “Cordelia says
you’ve saved the world.”
Angel: “Couple times I helped. (sighs) But I
almost had it sucked into hell once, too.”
Rebecca: “Still – don’t you
think – after all this time – you deserve some happiness?”
Angel
laughs: “That’s probably not a good idea. Hm. You smell – so
good. (Rebecca is running one hand under his shirt. Angel looks pretty
spaced out) - So warm. – I miss that.”
Rebecca: “You don’t have
to. You can have what you’ve been craving all these long, empty
years. We both can. Forever.”
Angel tries to sit up:
“Woah, woah. What are you saying?”
Rebecca: “You know what I’m
saying. (Exposes her neck to him) Do it. We won’t have to be lonely,
either one of us, ever again.”
Angel: “You’re wrong. You don’t
know what it is you’re asking me to do.”
Rebecca: “Of course I
know. I’m not a fool. There is a price. I understand that.”
Angel gets up: “You couldn’t possibly understand.”
Rebecca gets up
too: “I wasn’t afraid, was I? When I looked into the mirror and you
weren’t there I didn’t scream. I didn’t run. I understood.”
Angel: “No. You weren’t afraid. You looked into that
mirror and all you saw was yourself. That’s all you ever see, Rebecca, and
that’s what really frightens you. This isn’t about the way the studio, the
network, or the fans see you. It’s about how you see yourself. Your
own reflection has been corrupted into something unrecognizable. You think
you want to stay the same? - What you really want is to make it
disappear.”
Rebecca: “You’re supposed to help people. -
Help me.”
Angel: “You want me to help you? (Grabs her and pulls
her into the kitchen) Fine!”
Rebecca: “What are you doing?”
Angel opens the fridge and takes out a red-cross blood bag, still clutching
Rebecca’s left arm.
Angel: “It’s a big decision, Rebecca.
Eternity. (Takes the bag and squirts some of the blood into her
mouth) I think you need a taste of what it is you’re really asking for.”
Rebecca is trying not to gag on the blood. Angel backs away, gasping,
staring at the blood-spattered actress in front of him.
Angel: “I’m
sorry, I – ( he drops the packet of blood) What did you do to me?”
Rebecca: “Nothing.”
Angel: “You put something in my drink.”
Rebecca: “I just wanted you to relax a little, Angel. Oh, lower
the defenses a little.”
Angel grabs her: “What was it?!”
Rebecca: “Just a little happy pill. (Angel drops his face on her
shoulder, panting) Oh god. I’m so sorry.”
Angel:
“Everybody is so sorry.”
Rebecca: “I just wanted us both to be happy.”
Angel: “Oh, but I am happy.”
Rebecca: “You are?”
Angel: “Yes.”
We hear a crunch. Rebecca screams and backs
away holding her shoulder were Angel’s face had been. Angel straightens
up, in vamp-face.
Angel: “Perfectly happy.”
Rebecca whispers: “Angel?”
Angel: “Oh, what’s the
matter? Look a little nervous.”
Rebecca: “You, you’re..”
Angel: “Free! (Picks up his drink and drains it) You freed
me. Mmm. (Sticks a finger in the glass and licks the last of it off his
finger) Oh, God. I love this stuff! Wow! (Breaks the glass on
a ceiling beam) Remind me to get the name of your dealer – before I kill you.”
Rebecca: “Kill me?”
Angel twirls the broken glass in his
hand: “In all my years, I’ve never killed a famous person before.
But with no witnesses – who’s gonna believe me? Maybe we can take a
picture. - I know! We do it like we did back in the day. I’ll keep
your head on a stick – as proof.”
Rebecca: “My head on a stick.”
Angel: “Well – okay (throws the glass over his shoulder and listens to
it break) pike.”
Rebecca: “You’re just trying to scare me.”
Angel: “Is it working?”
Rebecca: “No.”
Angel tosses her
across the room and she lands on the stairs to the sewer entrance.
Angel: “How about now.”
Rebecca: “ You’re crazy.”
Angel: “Oh, no. I’m a vampire. (laughs) Boy, you
know, you could stand to drop a few pounds. Hey, I help you with that.”
Rebecca: “This isn’t you.”
Angel: “They always mistake me
for the character I play. They never see the real me!”
Rebecca:
“I’m – I just wanted to...”
Angel: “Be like me? Believe me, I’m
one happy fellow.”
Rebecca runs, but Angel cuts her off.
Angel:
“Tell you what, I’ll torture you for a few unbelievably long hours and then you
can tell me if this is the lifestyle for you. (She runs, he cuts her off)
It’s up to you.”
She runs up the stairs, he grabs her and tosses her back
down. She pulls her self back up and leans on the edge of his table
reaching for a brass candleholder behind her back.
Rebecca: “Whatever
you are going to do – do it. I’m not running anymore.”
Hits him across
the face with the candlestick as hard as she can.
Angel: “Now that I
respect.”
She hits him again and falls back into the chair behind him.
Rebecca drops the candlestick and runs to the elevator.
Angel shakes his
head: “Women.”
Rebecca goes up in the elevator, stops it almost past the office.
Pushes the grate aside and climbs out through the small gap below the
ceiling. A hand reaches to help her and she screams.
Wesley:
“It’s okay!”
Rebecca: “Oh, thank god! - You have to help me.
He’s trying to kill me.”
Cordy: “You slut!”
Rebecca: “Huh?”
Cordy: “You did it with him, didn’t you?”
Wesley:
“Cordelia.”
Rebecca: “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Cordy: “What you did to him.”
Rebecca: “I didn’t do
anything.”
Wesley: “With respect, Ms. Lowell, you must have done
something.”
Rebecca: “Well, I may have given him something to help
loosen him up, and now he’s...”
Cordy: “Loose?”
Rebecca:
“Yeah.”
Wesley: “What did you give him?”
Rebecca: “Does it
matter?”
Cordy: “Well, if he’s all homicidal, I’m thinking YEAH!”
Rebecca: “Doximall.”
Wesley: “Doximall?!”
Cordy:
“Doxi-what?”
Wesley: “Powerful tranquilizer. It induces -
bliss.”
Cordy: “Bliss? As in sheer contentment? Perfect
happiness?!”
Wesley: “It’s synthetic – not true happiness.”
Rebecca: “This is really good stuff.”
Wesley: “He hasn’t
really turned. It’s an illusion – not real.”
Rebecca: “He bit
me.”
Wesley: “Still, we might want to leave the premises for a while –
just until the effects wear off.”
Cordy: “Well, are you sure they will
wear off?”
Wesley: “Reasonably sure.”
The lights go out.
Wesley whispers: “He’s cut the power. Where is the box?”
Cordy whispering: “The side of the building.”
Wesley
whispering: “He’s gone out through the street.”
Cordy whispers:
“Which means he’s...”
Angel: “Looks like somebody didn’t pay the power
bill. – Cordelia? - I’d lay odds that the phone’s dead, too.
What do you all think, hm? - What happens if there is an emergency?”
Wesley: “Angel, I want you to listen to me. What you’re
experiencing is not genuine. You’ve been fed a drug. It’s simulating
bliss. All that you’re feeling is just chemical suggestion. (Angel
slowly strolls into the dark office) Angel?”
Angel still in
vamp-face: “Name’s Angelus.”
Wesley: “I don’t wish to resort to
drastic measures, but unless you listen, I warn you..”
Angel: “You
warning me? What happened, Wes? - Did you suddenly grow a
pair? Well, that’s it, isn’t it? I mean, that’s the whole root of
your inferiority complex. Well, good news, Wes, old boy! You don’t
really have an inferiority complex. You’re just simply – inferior.”
Angel picks Wesley up and tosses him into a corner, knocking him out.
Cordy: “Wesley, no! (Swallows, turns to Angel) Well, oh,
why don’t you juss-ss..”
Angel mimics: “Juss-s? Line? ‘Of
course a time will come when Torvald is not as devoted to me’. - You were
really, let me tell you, bad.”
Cordy: “Stop it.”
Angel:
“Why? You didn’t. I mean, I’ve been to hell but *that* was so much
worse! (To Rebecca) You had to be there. I mean, there wasn’t a dry
eye in the house, everybody was just laughing so hard. (To Cordy)
Here’s a thought. Maybe you can get Raven here to coach you, then you’d
actually suck!”
Cordy pulls off the top of her water container and threatens
him with it.
Cordy: “Back off!”
Angel laughs: “What are you
going to do? Melt me?”
Cordy: “One more step and you’ll find
out. You think this is just water?”
Angel: “You’re bluffing.”
Cordy: “Am I? You don’t think I wasn’t ready for this, do
you? That I hadn’t prepared for it? Why do you think I have a stake
stashed in my desk – a cross in my bag? I think about this happening -
every single day!”
Angel: “That’s just drinking water.”
Cordy: “Fresh from a mountain spring, delivered right to our door –
then blessed every second Tuesday by Father Mackie, the local parish priest,
while you’re down in the Bat-cave, sleeping through the better part of the
day. - You don’t believe me? - Have some!”
She tosses the water
in his face, Angel groans and turns away. He straightens back up, staring,
not burned.
Cordy: “And the Oscar goes to...”
Wesley charges Angel
with a scream and pushes him into the open elevator shaft. Cordy and
Wesley look down to see that Angel is out cold.
Blend into a close-up of Angel’s face lying on his bed. He wakes with a
slight groan. The camera pulls back to reveal that he is wrapped around
with chains, his arms pinned to his sides. More chains are tying him down
to the bed and his feet to the foot-board. Wesley and Cordy are sitting on
chairs in front of the bed, watching him.
Cordy: “Are you still evil?”
Angel: “Oh, I’m so sorry.”
Cordy: “Can I get another reading
on that line, please?”
Angel: “Rebecca, is she...”
Cordy:
“Gone. Oh, and no, she won’t be keeping you on retainer as her
bodyguard. I think it was the trying to murder her that lost you the gig.”
Angel: “I need to apologize to both of you.”
Wesley: “There
is really no need.”
Cordy: “Uh, hello?”
Wesley: “It was the
drugs, couldn’t be helped. Things were said, it’s true, but - I think it
best if we simply out it behind us (gets up) – move on.”
Angel: “Thank
you.”
Wesley leaving: “You walk a fine line Angel. - I don’t envy
you.”
Angel: “Wesley (Wes looks back at him) nice moves up
there. (Wes smiles a little, then leaves) Cordelia..”
Cordy:
“Okay, here is something I never thought I would say to you: Wesley’s
right. Forget about it.”
Angel: “But I really didn’t mean...”
Cordy: “Oh, yes, you did. And I’d appreciate it if you didn’t
try to weasel out of it. (Gets up) Angelus may not be the most
relaxing company, but at least he’s honest. Shouldn’t I expect the same
from the not-evil version of my friends?”
Angel: “So we’re okay then?”
Cordy: “I’m too big of a person to let something so petty get in the
way of our friendship.”
Angel: “I appreciate that. -
You’re not going to untie me, are you?”
Cordy: “Pfft!”
Cordelia
walks out.
Angel: “Wesley? - Cordelia? - Guys?”
Fade to black.