Night. A girl is running for her life, terrified of whatever is chasing her. Rounds a corner and runs right into a man. He grabs her, lays a metal tipped finger against her lips. We get a glimpse of fangs. He draws a mark on her cheek, bites and drains her. Camera pans overhead as her lifeless body slips to the ground. There are police sirens in the background. The vampire looks up at the camera, and its Angel in vamp face. We get a close up of his face as he morphs back into human face and we see him gasping for breath. He’s sitting up on his bed fully dressed and clearly wigged.
Cut to Kate driving up to a crime scene in a police car.
Kate: “Where?”
Officer: “Over there detective.”
Kate bends down to look at the victim. It’s the girl from Angel’s
dream. There are bite marks on her neck and a cross has been scratched
on her left cheek.
Kate: “It’s the same guy. This makes three. He’s
just getting started.”
Intro.
Cordy sitting behind her desk in Angel’s office.
Cordy: “I believe in Los Angeles. It’s the city of dreams, a
mystical oasis, built from a dessert. (Gets up and plays with the blinds)
But even sunny blond LA has its trashy dark roots, and you’ve learned that
the hard way, haven’t you? (Walks around her desk and leans over an empty
chair) You’ve taken your problem to the police, they can’t help you, so
you’ve come to us.”
Office door opens to admit Wesley carrying a newspaper and some letters
in his hand.
Wesley: “I think it’s about to speak.”
Cordy straightens up: “Nobody likes a smart-ass, rogue demon
hunter. What do you want, Wesley?”
Wesley comes in: “Just thought I’d pop round so we might compare
battle plans from our respective fronts.”
Cordy: “Oh, I thought you worked alone?”
Wesley: “Well, even a solitary soldier, such as myself, recognizes
that a free exchange of intelligence benefits the common struggle.
- Also, I brought in your mail and newspaper.”
Cordy takes it: “Oh, thanks. So what have you got?”
Wesley: “Got?”
Cordy: “You wanted to compare skinnies on the current ‘evil happenings’.”
Wesley: “Yes. Skinnies. Precisely. -
Uh, right, well... Everything *seems* quiet.”
Cordy: “Okay. Well, - thanks for stopping by.”
Wesley sits down across form Cordy’s desk: “And you? -
How go things on your end of the good fight?”
Cordy: “I’ve been giving the hard sell to an empty chair.
What do you think?”
Wesley: “Quiet all around then. (Cordy looks at the paper
and mail he brought in) Well, I’ll keep myself available. The
situation can only escalate. We made a most effective team, I felt.
Vanquishing that empathy demon in such short order.”
Cordy: “Yeah, well, nobody gauged out my eyes, so I’m happy.”
Wesley: “Yes, most effective. Your cryptic visions, Angel’s
brawn, my *highly* developed powers of deduction rounding out...”
Cordy hands the mail back to him: “This isn’t our mail.”
Wesley: “Sorry?”
Cordy points to one of the letters: “See here? The dentist
office - next door.”
Wesley takes the bundle: “Oh, I see. I didn’t... (Sees
something on the front page of the paper) realize...”
Cordy: “Something wrong? You stopped yammering.”
Wesley takes a deep breath and gets up: “I, ah, I suppose I should
return these items to their proper owner.”
Wesley leaves just as Angel comes out of the elevator, slamming the
grate open, and walks into the office.
Angel: “Who were you talking to?”
Cordy frowns at him: “Nobody. And Wesley. Uhm, so,
you remember that license plate we got on that runaway case?”
Angel pouring himself some coffee: “I remember *you* were going
to follow up on it.”
Cordy: “No go. The BMV is totally stalker-phobic. And wow!
You look half-dead. (Angel looks at her) Which for someone, who’s
completely dead, would be - kind of neat?”
Angel walks over to her desk and holds out a hand: “License plate,
Cordelia.”
Cordy hands him the paper: “Uh, right. I thought maybe
you could have police woman run it for us on the Q.T.?”
Angel: “Kate.”
Cordy: “Are you sure you’re okay? I mean for a guy who’s
200 plus, you’re not usually (points at her eyes) with the bags.”
Angel walks towards the door: “I’ll do this now.”
Cordy stares after him: “Hey...”
Angel looks back, irritated: “Look, I’m fine Cordelia. All right?”
Cordy: “All right.”
Angel walks out the door and right into a patch of sunlight.
Jerks back, hissing with pain and turns back into the office.
Angel: “I’ll take the tunnels.”
Cordy gets up and shuts the office door. Camera pans over to
show Wesley lurking in the foyer, mail still in hand. He looks at
the closed door than sneaks towards the exit.
Cut to the police station. Kate walks in with Angel following
her.
Kate: “You know I’m not supposed to release that kind of information
to a civilian, Angel.”
Angel: “I know.”
Kate: “If it were anyone else...”
Angel: “I appreciate it, Kate.”
Kate sits down at her desk: “I know you do. So I don’t mind.
I’ll run it myself, have it for you by morning.”
Angel: “No rush. Late afternoon, evening will be fine,
actually.”
Kate: “To be honest, I won’t mind getting my head out of this
case. Even for a minute.”
Angel: “Tough one?”
Kate looks down at a picture of an older man: “The first victim,
Reggie Sparks, volunteered as a crossing-guard. (Pulls over another
photo as Angel walks around to look over her shoulder) Jinny Markem, she
just started the tenth grade, and Jessica Halpren, 25, worked as a waitress.
(Looks up at Angel) And do you know what they all have in common?
- What he did to them. That’s all.”
Angel: “That’s not all. They have you.”
Officer hands a folder to Kate: “Here are the crime scene photos
you wanted.”
Kate: “Thanks. (Opens the folder to look at the photos)
Look, why don’t you stop by tomorrow? By then I’ll have invaded a
citizen’s right to privacy for you, and you can... (Looks up at Angel,
who’s staring at the photos. Flash to the scene from his dream.)
Yeah, it’s pretty grim, isn’t it? I’ve spent the last 48 hours putting
together a suspect profile, and believe me, being inside this guy’s head
hasn’t been a whole lot of fun. - The tabloids are calling him ‘the pope’.
Probably thinks he’s doing God’s work.”
Angel still staring: “No. Just the opposite. This
is about mocking God. (Sees her looking at him) That’s my guess.”
Officer to Kate: “Detective? They’re ready for you now.”
Kate: “Yeah, okay. Looks like it’s show... (She looks back
at Angel and sees that he is halfway out of the office already) ...time.”
Cut to the police briefing.
Kate: “Our suspect will be a white male. To the observer
he will not seem a monster. His victims put up little or no struggle,
so it’s likely that he is charming, attractive, (blends into footage of
Angel walking down a crowded street at night) but at his core he is a loner.
Possibly a dual personality, who once the crime has been committed, retains
no memory of the act. (Blend back to Kate giving the briefing)
He will not view his victims as subhuman, rather it’s himself that he views
as something other than human, more than human, a superior species.
(Blend to Angel) Stalking his prey, getting to know them. (Back to
Kate) It’s unlikely that he’ll be married though he may have recently
come off a long-term relationship that ended badly. We look for a
precipitating event in cases such as this, and a painful breakup is always
at the top of the list. (Blend back to Angel. He spots a blonde
talking to some friends, her back to him) Prior to failing this relationship
may have marked an inactive period in our suspects life. He would
have regarded it as a lifeline, his salvation, (The blonde turns and it’s
not Buffy. Angel walks on.) but once ended, it resulted in his recidivism.
- What is not in question is his experience. He’s been doing
this for a very long time, (blend back to Kate) and he will do it again.”
Cut to Cordy getting ready to leave the office. She opens the
door and Wesley is just outside. They both gasp.
Cordy: “Jeez, Wesley! Hover much?”
Wesley comes in and closes the door: “Where is he? Where
is Angel?”
Cordy: “Not here. (Sees the stake in Wesley’s hand) What
is that?”
Wesley: “Just what it looks like.”
Cordy: “Kind of rude coming into a vampire’s place of business
with one of those things, don’t you think? Could be misinterpreted?”
Wesley puts down his bag and pulls out a newspaper clipping:
“You recall earlier this morning that mix-up with the dentists mail and
newspaper? (Shows her the clipping) That’s when I saw this.”
Cordy looks at it: “Oh, my God! You cut up Dr. Folger’s
newspaper? You’re going to get us kicked out of this building.”
Wesley: “What? No, Cordelia, the clipping!”
Cordy takes it: “Third body found in alley. So? Not
exactly front-page news.”
Wesley: “Actually that is the front-page, but still, note the
modus operandi? The mutilation of the corpse with a religious icon?”
Cordy: “I’m against it?”
Wesley sighs and takes the clipping back: “I think you better
sit down. (Cordy goes to sit on the couch with a big sigh)
While executing my duties as Watcher in Sunnydale, (pulls a folder out
of his bag) I did extensive research. Specifically on Angel, given
his uncomfortable proximity to the Slayer.”
Cordy: “He looked pretty comfortable to me.”
Wesley shows her the folder: “When I saw this story today it
rang chillingly familiar. So I reacquainted myself with certain facts,
confirming, I’m sorry to say, my grim suspicions. In the late 1700s
it was Angelus’ custom to ‘sign’ his victims by carving a Christian cross
into their left cheek. (Cordy flips through the folder) He
liked to let people know he’d been there.”
Cordy hands the folder back to him: “Okay, you get to leave now.
- You’re not gonna come in here and accuse Angel like this.”
Wesley: “Cordelia.”
Cordy gets up: “No! I don’t care how many files you have
on all the horrible things he did back in the powdered wig days!
- He is good now. And he’s my friend. And nothing you
or anyone else can say will make me turn on a friend!”
Angel: “Cordelia. (Wesley spins around) He’s right.”
Cordy to Wesley: “You’ll stake him and I’ll cut his head off.”
Angel walks forward and Wesley threatens him with a cross: “Come
no closer!”
Angel turns his head away from the cross: “I’m not going to hurt
you.”
Cordy: “Oh, is that what you told Miss ‘third body found in alley’?”
Wesley: “Why should we believe a word you say?”
Angel laughs, grabs Wesley’s arm and spins him around to grab him by
the neck: “Because this is how fast I could take you if I wanted
to.”
Wesley: “All right. We’re listening.”
Angel pushes him away.
Angel: “I have no memory of doing any of these things.”
Cordy: “Not exactly the confidence inspiring denial I was looking
for.”
Angel goes to sit on the edge of the desk: “I’ve been having
dreams.”
Wesley: “Dreams?”
Angel: “Killing dreams. Always the same. (Swallows) I-I
stalk them, toy with them, mark them while they are still alive.
And before they can die from their fear, I feed on them.”
Cordy: “Okay. So you’ve been having nightmares, it doesn’t
mean you...”
Angel: “They’re not nightmares. I’ve enjoyed them.”
Cordy: “Oh.”
Wesley: “And you fear that these may be more than just dreams,
that you are acting them out in some sort of hypnogogic state.”
Cordy: “Hypnowhatic?”
Wesley: “Sleepwalking.”
Cordy: “Vampires can’t sleepwalk. He’d take one step out
of the front door and his p.j.s would burst into flame!”
Wesley: “Unless it were happening in the pre-dawn hours. - Which
is when all these murders took place.”
Angel: “There is only one way to be sure.”
Cut to Wesley and Cordy shackling Angel to his bed.
Wesley to Cordy: “You’ve got to make it tight.”
Cordy huffs: “Like I need instructions from you. - My glamorous
LA life, I get to make the coffee and chain the boss to the bed.
I’ve got to join a union.”
Angel: “Cordelia, I think that’s tight enough.”
Cordy pulls on the chain one more time: “And if it turns out
that we’re back on the liquid lunch, better safe than cocktails!”
Angel sighs.
Wesley: “Well, all we can do now is wait.”
Cordy sighs: “Yeah. And no offense Angel, but maybe you
are committing those horrible crimes just in your dreams, but even so,
I don’t want to stick around for your nocturnal commissions.”
Angel: “I understand.”
Cordy: “Okay. Well, pleasant... ah, I mean, sleep tight.”
Angel: “That’s pretty much a given.”
Cut to a girl dressed in old-fashioned clothes and a white bonnet running
down a cobble street at night. She knocks on a locked door. A guy
grabs her and lays a metal tipped finger on her lips. He marks her
left cheek with a cross, then feeds off her. She falls dead to the
ground. Cut to Angel with shoulder length hair, wearing old-fashioned
clothes, looking down.
Angel: “There now, isn’t that better?”
Cut to Angel waking up with a gasp, still chained to the bed.
Cordelia comes in carrying a newspaper: “Wakie, wakie!”
Wesley gets up from a chair at the foot of Angel’s bed: “We made
it.”
Cordy: “Great news, sport’s fans, there has been another killing.
Well, maybe not so great news for the - you know, dead person, but at least
now we know that Mr. ‘I’m so tortured’ didn’t do it.”
Wesley beds down to undo Angel’s shackles, but stops when Angel says:
“Yes, I did.”
Break
Cut to the past. The Girl’s is laying dead on the ground.
Angel’s looking down: “There now, isn’t that better?”
Blond vampire straightens up: “Better.” Morphs into human face.
Angel: “First kill. Aptly done.”
Penn smiles: “It’s strange. She was my sister.”
Angelus: “And yet you feel nothing.”
Penn: “No, I feel hungry.”
Angelus: “Ah, you do learn very quickly.”
Penn: “My father would disagree.”
Angelus: “Ah, then perhaps it’s time you shared with him just
what a fine student you’ve become.”
Penn: “My father, yes. - They’ll all be sitting down to dinner
now.”
Angelus: “A feast. Excellent. When they invite you
in, savor it, Penn. You’ll not recapture the moment. Family
blood is always the sweetest.”
Cut to Penn looking at the latest newspaper article. He has a short goat-tee, short hair, styled somewhat like Angel’s, and is wearing glasses. Newspaper clippings are stuck on one wall. He adds the new clipping.
Cut to Angel’s apartment. Angel goes to sit down on a chair.
Angel: “I taught him well.”
Cordy: “A real psycho-wan-kenobi.”
Wesley: “200 years practice. I imagine he has it down by
now.”
Cordy: “No lie. Gallagher’s changed his act more often
than this dude has in the last two centuries. Why do you think he’s
still doing the same old schtick?”
Wesley: “Well, I mean, it’s a classic, isn’t it? (Smiles) Every
time he smashes that watermelon with a sledgehammer I just...”
Angel and Cordy look at him.
Angel: “I don’t know why.”
Wesley: “You don’t suppose it’s his way of trying to draw you
out? That he knows you’re here. That might explain the dreams.”
Angel: “No. I used to have a connection with those I sired.
It just means he’s close, that’s all.”
Cordy: “Neat. We can’t find him and the cops stand absolutely
zero chance of stopping him.”
Angel gets up to leave: “Kate.”
Wesley: “What are you doing?”
Angel: “She doesn’t know what she’s dealing with, what she’s
up against.”
Wesley: “And you’re not going to tell her. - Think
about it. You can’t walk into a police precinct with intimate knowledge
about these murders and claim a 200 year-old Puritan is responsible. -
You’d be locked up faster than Lady Hamilton’s virtue! (Looks over
at Cordy) My apologies.”
Cordy: “That’s okay. I-I don’t know what that meant.”
Angel: “She’s a good cop. She has resources we don’t.
Eventually she *will* find him.”
Cordy: “Bad for her then.”
Angel after a beat: “Or good for us.”
Cut to Angel walking into the police station playing with a piece of
paper in his hands.
Kate sees him: “Hey. I have the info on your license plate.
(He swallows and looks around) Angel, are you okay? Not that the
‘brooding man of mystery’ thing isn’t working for you. I mean it
is. A lot.”
Angel: “Can we talk somewhere in private?”
Kate: “Sure, of course.”
She leads him into the briefing room.
Kate: “What is it?”
Angel: “Ah... (Closes the door and goes to look at the crime
photos pinned on a cork board) How’s the investigation?”
Kate: “It’s nowhere. (Pulls out her necklace and plays
with the cross on it) Some of your more inconsiderate serial killers
often fail to leave us any clues. (Angel stares at the pictures)
Angel?”
Angel looks from picture to picture, matching them up to flashes of
Penn’s dead family.
Angel: “He’s reliving it.”
Kate: “What’s going on?”
Angel turns around and sees the cross held between her fingers.
Angel: “It’s complicated.”
Kate: “So make it simple.”
Angel: “Kate, do you trust me?”
Kate: “You know I do.”
Angel unfolds the paper in his hands and pins the drawing of a face
to the corkboard.
Angel: “Trust me when I tell you - this is the man you’re looking
for.”
Kate: “Where did you get that? How could you possibly...”
Angel: “Do you trust me?”
Kate: “I don’t understand. Are you protecting a source?
(Angel just looks at her) Yes, I trust you.”
Angel: “His next victim will be a white male, adolescent.
He’ll take him off the streets in a low rent neighborhood. Probably
near a bar or liquor store and he’ll kill him just like he did these others.
Unless you use every resource this department has to make sure he is not
successful this time.”
Cut to Angel walking through the police garage to his car. Wesley
is sitting in the passenger seat.
Wesley looks at his watch: “So, I take it you told her everything.”
Angel: “Just enough to get her killed.”
Wesley: “Well, we’ll just have to see that doesn’t happen.”
Angel: “Exactly. (Hands him a police scanner) Once you hook this
up, she finds something, we’ll know about it.”
Wesley: “Where did you get the police radio?”
Angel: “Police car.”
Wesley: “Oh dear!”
Cut to Kate briefing her officers with the help of a city map.
Kate: “ So lets set up patrols here and here. Anything
matching the profile gets reported.”
Cut to a young kid accosting people in front of a liquor store.
Kid: “Excuse me, Sir, could you buy me some beer. I left
my I.D at home and I can’t... (Man ignores him and enters the store) Wipe.”
Sees a woman heading towards the store: “Ma’am, ma’am, could
you possibly pick me up some beer? It’s for my mother, she needs...”
Woman ignores him, and the kid turns away frustrated to spot a guy
watching him: “Hey dude, are you old enough to buy beer?”
Penn smiles at him.
Cut to a cop car pulling up. They have a copy of Angel’s drawing and watch as Penn leads the kid away.
Cut to Penn and the kid walking down a deserted street.
Kid: “Are you sure about this man? I don’t think there
is any discount liquor store over here.”
Penn: “You know you remind me of a brother I once had.”
Kid: “Yeah, whatever. I think we’re going nowhere here.”
Penn: “Good point.”
Kid turns around and Penn, in vamp face grabs and bites him, just as
a bunch of police cars are closing in from all sides. Penn looks
up, blood on his mouth.
Officer: “You! Right there, hold it!”
Penn drops the kid, runs and jumps through the boarded up second story
window into a warehouse, while the cop stares in disbelief.
Cut to Angel’s car.
Police scanner: “All units. Backup requested at 3336 Channel
Avenue. Use caution. Multiple homicide suspect believed to be on
the location.”
They pull up to the scene.
Officer talking to Kate: “Search teams are on their way now.
He went in through there. We’ve sealed the exits. The place
is big, but we’ll find him.”
The kid is being wheeled away on a stretcher, shaken but alive.
Kate pulls her gun: “I’m going in.”
Angel spots a drain pipe on the side of the building and backs up to
park the car. He and Wesley get out.
Angel: “Meet you back here.”
He takes a hold of the pipe and scales up it as if it were nothing.
Cut to the inside of the warehouse. Kate is slowly walking up
some stairs, enters a big room. She hears footsteps and aims her
gun at Penn who is coming down some wooden steps.
Kate: “Don’t move! – Do not move, I will fire!”
Penn keeps walking and she shoots him three times in the chest.
He falls to land motionless at the bottom of the stairs. Kate slowly
walks over to him, her gun trained on his chest, and reaches down one hand
to check for a pulse. When she doesn’t find one she holsters her
gun and takes out her radio to report in.
Penn reaches up and grabs her by the front of her shirt.
Penn: “Ouch.”
He throws her across the room. She tries to pick herself up as
he slowly saunters towards her. Suddenly a figure drops through the
floor above to land between them in a cloud of dust. Angel briefly
looks to make sure Kate is all right then turns to face Penn.
Penn: “Angelus? (Laughs) Angelus! (Claps him
on the arms) My God! It’s been a life time!”
Angel: “At least.”
Penn: “We were to meet in Italy, remember?”
Angel: “I remember.”
Penn smiling: “Well, I waited. (Kate crawls towards her
radio) Hell, I waited until the 19th century. What happened?”
Angel: “Got held up in Romania.”
Penn: “Romania. What’s in Romania?”
Angel: “Gypsies.”
Kate quietly to the radio: “Request assistance. Full tactical
units. Second floor, southwest corner.”
Penn claps Angel on the shoulder and motions towards Kate: “Hmm.
Join me for a drink.”
Angel: “That’s not why I’m here.”
Kate to radio: “Request assistance, suspect sighted...”
Penn: “Yeah, why are you here?”
Angel morphs into vamp face as Kate stares in disbelief: “To
kill you.”
They fight, both in vamp face, and it is one doozy of a fight.
Kate scoots back against the wall while they throw each other around, watching
speechless. Angel throws Penn through a plaster wall and turns to
yell at Kate: “Go, Kate! Get out of here! - Kate, go!”
Penn comes shooting back through the hole and tackles Angel.
Both roll quickly back to their feet.
Penn: “You know its name? Angelus, what happened to you?”
Angel swings at Penn, but he ducks, grabs Angel’s arm and twists it
behind his back.
Angel: “People change.”
Penn: “We’re not people!”
Penn throws Angel into Kate, who has her gun aimed at them. By
the time Angel gets back up, Penn has disappeared. Kate stares up
at his vamp face.
Radio: “Lockley. Lockley, where are you?”
Cut to later. Angel is back in human face. There are officers
combing the warehouse.
Kate: “I shot him three times. I know I did. And
he got up. (Angel steps towards her and she pulls her gun and aims it point
blank at his chest) If I pull this trigger, are you going to get up, too?
(Angel just looks at her) What are you?”
Angel: “You already know the answer, Kate. (She slowly
puts her gun down and Angel walks past her) Details have been left out
of the press reports. Something you held back. Isn’t that right?”
Kate: “What do you know about it?”
Angel: “Puncture wounds. The victims have all been drained
of their blood, haven’t they?”
Kate: “And should I trust you more, or less because you happen
to know that?”
Angel: “You’re not going to stop him, Kate, not like this.”
Kate: “What do you mean?”
Angel: “It’s going to take direct sunlight, decapitation, - or
a stake through the heart.”
Kate turns away: “You’re telling me children’s stories.”
Angel: “I’m telling you the truth.”
Kate spins back: “No. I don’t believe you.”
Angel: “I know you don’t. Even after what you saw you won’t
let yourself, which is why you’ll lose.”
Kate: “I’ve heard enough.”
Angel closes his fist around the cross dangling from her necklace and
she gasps at the sound of his flesh sizzling: “No, you haven’t heard
a word, and you won’t. Not now, not yet. (She looks down at the smoke
rising from his fist) Because there are some things in this world you’re
just not ready to face.”
Angel walks off and she stares after him.
Cut to Kate sitting in the briefing room, staring at the picture on
the wall. An officer brings in some old records.
Officer: “Here is everything with that MO dating back as far
as I could find. So, you think this guy is a copy-cat and a history
buff?”
Kate: “Something like that.”
Kate looks at some old newspaper headlines. One of them reads
‘Vampire Killer Strikes Again in Garment District’.
Cut to Cordy getting up from behind her desk.
Cordy: “So, you’ve discovered the seamy underbelly of the candy
coated America, have you? Well, you’ve come to the right place!
Here at Angel Investigations we won’t judge, but we will charge.
Now, if you only tell me how you heard of us.”
Penn: “From the police actually.”
Cordy: “Really?”
Penn: “Yeah. The Detective I spoke with was very enthusiastic.
For the truly human touch, she said, (Gets up from his chair) I should
come to you.”
Cordy: “Oh good. (Frowns as she sees the dark overcoat hanging
over the back of his chair) Is it cold out there?”
Penn: “I’m trying to remember her name. What – what was
it? She is about yea tall, attractive, natural blonde?”
Cordy: “Oh yeah, Kate! Detective Lockley.”
Penn: “Lockley. - Yes, that’s it.”
Cordy: “Yeah, she and Angel are totally tight.”
Penn: “So, she is more than just a professional relationship
then. He cares for her.”
Cordy: “Oh, yeah. More than he knows. But that’s
our Angel, dour, sure, but not afraid to get personally involved in his
work. And you’re totally pumping me for information, aren’t you?”
Penn: “Yeah.”
Cordy: “Oh crap. You’re him. He. The guy.
Apt pupil boy.”
Penn: “You realize you’ll never make it to the exit before I...”
Cordy pulls up the blinds and Penn has to dodge away from the direct
sunlight streaming in: “Go up like a match?”
Angel walks in and sees Penn, but he is separated from him by the swath
of sun shining in through the window.
Penn: “Well. (Laughs) Look who’s back from his ‘up with people’
meeting.”
Angel not looking away from Penn: “Give me a stake.”
Cordy: “It’s like 8 in the morning. - Oh, you mean like (makes
a stabbing motion), okay.”
Cordy leaves to get a stake.
Penn: “What? You don’t drink, so now no one gets to?”
Angel: “I don’t expect you to understand.”
Penn: “Oh, I – I understand. I was a Puritan, remember?”
Angel: “It’s gotta end.”
Penn: “Why? - Because you say so? And how does that work
exactly? You just wake up one morning and decide ‘Okay, now I’m good!’
(Laughs) No, Angelus, it doesn’t end. It never, ever ends. It just
goes on and on.”
Cordy comes back with a stake: “That’s not the only thing that
goes on and on. (Hands the stake to Angel) Here, dust him.”
Angel: “I’m sorry for what I did to you, Penn, for what I turned
you into.”
Penn: “First class killer? An Artist? A bold re-interpreter
of the form?”
Angel: “Try cheesy hack. Look at you. You’ve been
getting back at your father for over 200 years. It’s pathetic and
cliched. Probably got a killer shrine on your wall, huh? News
clippings, magazine articles, maybe a few candles? Oh, you are so prosaic.”
Penn slowly retreats towards the door when it opens and Wesley walks
in not seeing Penn.
Wesley: “Nothing on the streets about a new vampire in town.”
Cordy tries to warn him, but Penn has already grabbed Wesley from behind.
Angel steps forward, but is again stopped by the sunlight streaming in
through the window.
Wesley in a choked voice: “Which is maybe because he’s here –
and has me by the throat.”
Angel: “Let him go!”
Penn: “You’re right Angelus, my work was getting stale.
I appreciate the critique. So look for something new, innovative,
something shockingly original. Just think of the worst possible thing
you can imagine, and I’ll see you there.”
Penn throws Wesley at Angel, grabs his coat, covers his head with it
and runs out.
Cut to a bookstore called the “Ancient Eye”. Kate is looking through the shelves. Blend into Angel walking the streets at night. Blend into Penn sitting in his apartment contemplating his next move. Blend to Kate taking notes. We keep changing from one to the other. (Very Batman-like music in the background)
Cut to Kate at home, still taking notes while reading through books.
There is a knock on the door.
Angel: “Hi. Can I come in?”
Kate: “Oh, that’s right. You have to be invited in, don’t
you?”
Angel: “You’ve been doing your homework.”
Kate: “Want to quiz me? I’m just full of fun facts.
For instance, I learned that your friend has been in LA before, did you
know that? Yeah, at least twice. Once in 1929 and again in
1963. Oh and there is something in Boston in 1908. I think
he was there, too.”
Angel: “So you believe me?”
Kate: “Yes, I believe you.”
Angel: “Good, because he is planning something...”
Kate: “Angelus. Isn’t that what he called you? Angelus?
I looked it up. It’s all right there. The demon with the face
of an angel. A particularly brutal bastard by all accounts.
Oh, and no, you can’t come in.”
Angel: “I can’t make up for the past, Kate, I know that.”
Kate: “No you can’t. In fact all of this what’s happening
now, is really because of you. You made him, didn’t you?”
Angel quietly: “Let me help end it, please?”
Kate: “Please. Now there is a word I imagine you heard
quite a lot in your time. Please... no... don’t? Thanks for
the offer, but I don’t *need* your help. I know what to do.
Drive a stake right through the son of a bitch’s heart. And when
that happens I suggest you don’t be there. Because the next time
we meet I’ll do the same to you.” Slams the door in his face.
Cut to Angel’s office. Cordy is looking stuff up on the computer.
Cordy: “Ha, here it is! Los Angeles Globe, 1929. ‘The Regent
Gardens Hotel manager said, that the suspect seemed like a quiet, normal
type. The search is ongoing.’ No kidding. What are we
looking for exactly?”
Angel: “I don’t know yet.”
Wesley reading from an old newspaper book: “In 1963 the police
tracked the killer to a residential hotel called the Clover Wood Apartments.
By the time they made their move, he’d already fled. (He shows them the
picture in the paper) They never caught him.”
Cordy looks from the picture on the computer to the picture in the
book: “It’s the same place. New name and a face lift.
Not the first time that’s happened in this town.”
Angel: “Huh, good old predictable Penn.”
Cut to Angel and Wesley entering Penn’s Hotel room. Wesley jumps
in with a stake in his hand while Angel just walks in.
Wesley: “Oh, I invite you in.”
Angel: “Relax. That’s only for humans. Breaking and
entering another vampire’s lair isn’t a problem.”
Wesley: “Oh. Right.”
Angel looks around: “He’s not here.”
Wesley sighs: “So what then, we wait? Raid the icebox and
try to think of the worst possible thing we can imagine?”
Angel picks up some photos of a school bus from the table: “Stop
imagining.”
Wesley comes over, sees the photos, the bus route traced on a map and
a Parker Middle School Fall Bus schedule laying on the table.
Wesley: “Good Lord. All those school children.”
Angel: “He’s finally changing his act.”
Cut to the briefing room at the precinct.
Kate: “All right, listen up. (Holds up a copy of Angel’s drawing
of Penn) You’ve all received one of these in your briefing packets.
This is the man that we’re looking for. (Holds up two pictures of Angel
taking by the security cameras during Sense and Sensitivity). And
this man is how we’re going to find him. He’s the way to our killer.
His name is Angel and he’s a local private detective. We have reason
to believe that our suspect will make an attempt to contact Angel, possibly
as his next target.”
Detective: “So we are going to stake out Angel’s place?
How many men do you want?”
Kate: “Lots. We’ll be working in rotating teams...”
Penn: “This is a terrible likeness of me. (Kate stares as he
walks into the room) Uh, the mouth, it’s all wrong!”
Two detective jump him, as Kate yells “No!”. Penn throws the
two men across the room as if they were puppets. Kate scrambles to
get a stake out of her purse while we see just how much faster a vampire’s
reactions are than those of regular people. Penn sweeps through the
room easily taking out two cops on his way towards Kate. Kate’s stake
drops useless on the floor as he grabs her and leaves the room using her
as a shield.
Cut to Wesley driving Angel’s car into the underground garage of the
police station. The place is humming with activity.
Wesley: “We’re in.”
Angel throws aside the blanket he was hiding under.
Wesley: “I don’t understand. What about the school children?
Shouldn’t we be...”
A cop slaps his hand on the hood of their car: “Hold it right
there!” Then waves some police cars on to drive past them.
Angel putting aside a yellow blanket: “He’s here.” Gets
out of the car.
Police scanner: “Dragnet in progress. Suspect is believed
to be in the vicinity of the 12th street station. Secure area.
Use caution.”
Angel runs in between the police cars to a sewer cover that’s partially
open.
Cut to Penn dragging Kate through the sewer tunnels.
Kate: “What are you going to do?”
Penn: “Well, first I thought I’d stop everything and tell you
my plan. Or better yet (throws her against a wall) why don’t I just
show you? (Morphs into his vamp face, saunters up to her, grabs her by
the neck and sniffs her cheek) Ah, smell that fear. (Laughs) Makes
the blood sweeter. You know who taught me that?”
Kate: “I’m not afraid to die.”
Penn: “Oh, I’m not going to kill you. But when I’m finished,
Angel will.”
Angel: “Bus full of school children, Penn? You really thought
I was gonna fall for that?”
Kate reaches into her jacket pocket and pulls out a glass bottle as
Penn’s attention is on Angel.
Penn: “Well, you could have.”
Angel: “Nah, - too original.”
Kate splashes some Holy Water into Penn’s face. He screams and
throws her to the side. The left side of his face is a mass of angry
red burns.
Penn: “Well, you were right about one thing, Angelus. The
last 200 years has been about me sticking it to my father. But I’ve
come to realize something – it’s you! (He jumps up and kicks Angel in the
stomach) You made me! (Kicks him in the face, then double fists him a couple
of times) You taught me! (Angel drops to the floor and Penn jumps on his
back) You approved of me in ways my mortal father never did!
You are my real father, Angelus.”
Angel gets up, holding Penn up above his head: “Fine! (Slams
him into the ground) You’re grounded.”
They fight on (and there are some nifty moves going on) while Kate looks
around for a weapon to use. She picks up a broken board, but Penn
kicks it out of her hand, then hits her in the face. Before he can do more,
Angel pulls him off Kate. They continue fighting, while Kate reclaims
her piece of wood. Penn walks up one wall with Angel holding him
from behind, flips over Angel’s head and lands behind him, holding him
in a double nelson.
Penn: “You forget your own lessons, old teacher: Never give up
the advantage, remember?”
Angel looks at Kate standing in front of them with a long piece of
wood in her hands.
Penn: “Living among them has made you *weak*! (Angel keeps
looking at Kate, not even trying to break free) It sickens me to
think that there was a time where you would have done whatever was necessary.”
We get a close up of Angel’s face, a close up of the tip of the piece
of wood, panning up to Kate’s face, close up of Angel’s eyes, close on
Kate’s face, back on Angel’s eyes. Then we see Kate ram the piece of wood
through Angel’s stomach and up into Penn’s heart. Angel gasps in
pain while Penn turns to dust.
Angel gasping and staring at the half of the board still sticking out
of his stomach: “You missed.”
Kate wide eyed: “No I didn’t.”
She grabs the board and pulls it back out and Angel collapses cradling
his stomach and gasping from the pain. Kate sinks down to the floor
a few feet away from him.
Cut to Angel sitting on the roof of their building looking out over
the lights of the city. Cordy walks up to him wearing a wool poncho
and leans on the embrasure next to him.
Cordy: “If your wondering why this vein on my temple is doing
the cha-cha, it’s because I just had one of those bone-crunching, mind-splitting
vision headaches. (Angel looks at her then back away. Cordy
hands him a piece of paper) New job.”
Angel takes it: “I was just thinking about how much this place
is like where I grew up.”
Cordy looks out on the city: “Right. - Yeah. I could see
that, except for the cars, and the buildings and the, you know, everything
else.”
Angel: “It’s not so different. People moving through their
lives. I wonder if anything ever really changes.”
Cordy: “Sure it does. - They do. (Looks over at him)
You have. - They were just dreams, Angel. They weren’t
even your dreams. They didn’t mean anything.”
Angel: “But I enjoyed it.”
Cordy: “It’d probably be okay if you never mentioned that part
ever again.”
Angel: “It’s still in me, Cordelia.”
Cordy: “Sure it’s in you. We all have *something*.
But it’s not the only thing that’s in you. You’re not him, Angel.
Not anymore. The name I got in my vision, the message didn’t come
for Angelus, it came for you. Angel. And you have to trust
that whoever that The Powers That Be be, - are, - is.. anyway, -
they know the difference.”
Angel: “Yeah.”
Cordy: “People really *do* change.”
Angel: “Yes they do. (Gets off the embrasure and stands
next to Cordy) And sometimes they change back. - If the day
ever comes that I...”
Cordy: “Oh, I’ll kill you dead!”
Angel blinks: “Thanks.”
Cordy turns to go: “What are friends for?”
Angel follows her a half-smile on his face.