
by Megan
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20]
Summary: What does a pissed off vamp do when he’s dragged to the
Hellmouth when he’d rather be swanning around Europe? Why, he gets inventive in
order to have fun with the Slayer of course.
Rating: I’ll go for R at
this time. Though knowing me, a change is possible.
Disclaimer: These
characters belong to Joss Whedon and Mutant Enemy. I have merely manipulated his
creation to make myself and hopefully you happy. I gain nothing but satisfaction
mentally.
He’d thought it was high bloody time they’d gone somewhere he
wanted to for a change. Prague was a pretty place, filled to the brim with lots
of throats and pumping hearts. Trust Dru to get all finicky and intuitive about
the place. She couldn’t just come straight out and say she didn’t want to go.
No. She had to make a song and dance of it. ‘If we go I’ll die, my Spike.’ It
pissed him off how she’d use that brand of bollocks every time it was his choice
where they went.
And where did they end up? The sodding Hellmouth, of all
places. The one in California—a town that could better pass for a set out of
Hollywood’s tackiest horror stories without any trouble at all. And as luck
would have it, it was inhabited by a Slayer. Spike hadn’t decided if he wanted
to face this one yet, being that he was still stewing in his anger and getting
more pissed by the minute as soon as he felt the strain of family bonds. Felt
the expectation of buckling under to his elders even though he’d been top dog in
his own pen for the past century.
He should have known the moment Dru
started acting battier than usual that something more than her imminent dusting
was up. Trust her to bring them right back to the Poof and his Barbie Girl.
Well, bugger ‘em. He wasn’t budging from his stool till this weaselly
looking human had managed to get him good and sloshed. And maybe not even
then.
“Oi. Barkeep. More blood, more booze. An’ if you got anything by
way of entertainment, pass that along too.”
The little twitchy guy got
twitchier, his eyes darting to the back of the bar and back sideways to his
bleach and leather patron before diving under the bar. Spike could sense what
the little human barkeep was frightened of facing, and to tell the truth, he
wasn’t up for this kind of confrontation yet either. He’d only been on this
Godforsaken cesspit of hell for less than a night. If he could hold out for
another century it would still be too soon to face his past.
The stinky
scent of Angelus was blocking his sinuses pretty quick, and instead of turning
and facing the elder of his once very close clan, he swept out of the bar with a
swish of his leather jacket. Not like the ugly bastard had seen him in a while
and knew exactly how he looked. And it wasn’t like he’d ever cared to be
anything to Spike but a mean selfish son of a bitch. And when you factored Darla
into the equation—as he suddenly had to do when he caught sight of her up
ahead—that description wasn’t so far from the pale.
Well, this little
trip was turning out to be all sorts of fun—for those that actually got a kick
out of the old family reunions. He hated to think what other surprises Dru had
in store for him. He was feeling pretty close to packing up the Desoto and
squealing his way out of there—leaving Dru to fend with good old daddy now that
she’d finally found him. Really didn’t do a bloke’s ego great walloping bags of
good to know the chit you’d spent over a century following and loving had led
you on a wild goose chase in search of her sire.
Well bugger that. He was
sick of being Love’s Bitch. He was sick of being the one who came second, or
third—or if he even rated a thought. He’d known from the week he’d been turned
that as much of a destiny he might have attributed to Dru, Angelus buried deep
between her thighs had altered his perception a little. Still, he’d been a blind
fool, and deliriously happy when Darla had had a turn and turfed the overblown
forehead out of the nest and cackled that he’d failed to fly.
Spike
couldn’t get over the fact that the great Neanderthal could walk—and without
dragging his knuckles on the ground. He never could get why the women fell head
over tit for the big poof. Sure, he had the looks, and girls loved a bit of
mystery, but surely that staid routine got old? Where was the fun? The
excitement? Where was the bloody guts and glory that made unlife worth
living?
Spike couldn’t stand the mystery. The waiting would have driven
him barmy, always needing to jump right into the fray and quench his thirst for
being in it. A part of it. And he didn’t mean the ‘it’ that Dru kept dragging
him into. Still, Angelus had been out on his own for a century by now. Was still
kicking along and seemed to be doing okay, if not actually flourishing. And
whatever the Poof could do, Spike could do better.
Yeah, that’s the
spirit! Spike grinned and decided to follow the tarted up matriarch on her
little wander, almost flinching when they came to the door of a club that had
thumping great crowds of teenyboppers. It was humiliating—even if she was there
for the food. Place was likely to have a bar, though, and he was more inclined
toward the booze than the gullible necks that swam around in his vision. So,
passing through the door, Spike made his way through throngs of hot sweating
bodies and found himself right back where he was recently interrupted. On a
barstool with a bottle of Jack sitting patiently in front of him.
He
couldn’t even be bothered looking around at the free range, more than satisfied
to ignore everything for the night—the blood, his fangs—in favour of the sweet
seduction of his booze. He loved the burn as it flowed down his throat. There
was nothing like it, and over a century of getting his fill hadn’t altered the
thrill at all. It was more than his friend—sometimes the only comfort he could
get while Dru was off sharing it out for all and sundry. Yeah, he might be a
faithful type—even now couldn’t bring himself to cheat in the way she did—but he
was feeling pretty close to done sitting back and watching while she made him
look more and more a fool in their world.
Despite knowing he’d
unwittingly stumbled into a slayer playground, he hadn’t expected to feel the
little buzz through his body indicating that she was here. Behind him somewhere
in the throng. Self-preservation made him swivel suddenly, seeking out the
killer of his kind. He might never have picked her out but for the obvious.
Middle-aged bloke in tweed around a teenage Caligirl—blond, tanned and high with
the bopperish. Yep, Watcher. God they were so bloody predictable.
He
watched them up high on the balcony, watched the old lecher circle behind her,
whisper in her ear and her eyes scanning the mob below her. A quirky finger
point and she’d located her first demon, though Spike could immediately tell it
wasn’t through any sense handed down slayer to slayer. Vamp hearing at it’s best
and he knew it was the clothes that gave the git away, and when the Slayer tore
down the stairs in hot pursuit, Spike felt strangely inclined to
follow.
It was an enlightening travel. Keeping to the shadows, black
duster swishing comfortably around his legs, Spike dogged her every step. That
he was acting all cloak and dagger didn’t bother him a bit, even when he became
aware that he himself was being followed by Darla and her catch of the night. In
fact, it all just added to the excitement and he felt the thrill of the pursuit
for the first time in ages.
He saw two humans escape from a crypt before
the Slayer dived in, marching in on the impulse of Darla and then Luke’s booming
self-important masculinity. Spike almost giggled at the situation and the
over-confident way the idiots had no clue who they were fighting, but he seized
the opportunity of getting near the kiddies, wondering exactly what he was going
to do. Not like he’d had a plan when he’d chased after the Slayer’s scent. With
a bit of luck, things might pan out the better for him without
one.
“Hello there. Didn’t your mother ever tell you it was bad to wander
off with strangers? And in cemeteries too?” he tsked at them, watching with a
reverent fascination as the boy leaked blood from the vein at his throat and the
girl startled and clung tighter to the weaker one. Another stood by them, brave
and sure despite the scared pounding of his heart and Spike could tell that this
one knew the scariness of the night, even if the discovery had been too recent.
He knew and understood more by the way he eyed Spike back, making the blond both
intrigued and disappointed that he couldn’t indulge in a little show and really
bring them out of their safe delusional little world.
“She told us about
scary monsters. We were just too stupid to believe.”
Oh yeah, this one
had guts, and Spike felt oddly impressed. Enough to decide to leave this group
alone, particularly if they belonged in the Slayer’s every day world. And as he
made the decision, Darla and her groupie in the dated togs were back, sniffing
and salivating over the spilt blood.
“Spike, what perfect timing,” Darla
almost growled around her fangs, her gruesome smile ruining the prettiness of
her face.
“How right you are,” he drawled, feeling once again the
irritation and anger that had driven his sullen passage through the country to
this hole of a town, Dru whining all the way by his side. One look sideways at
the alarm the brunette boy was displaying and Spike had his plan—well, somewhat
of one. He was going to liberate this trio from Darla and her boy—deprive old
Batface of his welcome sacrifice into the here and now. Would bloody teach the
lot of them for thinking they could force his hand at everything. With a bit of
luck Dru would cop a bit of a burst over it all, but not before Spike made his
merry way on out of the place.
With a renewed cockiness in his step, he
moved just enough to flank the trio, showing his intent to take Darla’s claim of
a meal on his own terms. “This lot’s off the menu,” he proclaimed confidently,
feeling quite pleased at the easing of the stronger boy’s
heartbeat.
Darla actually shook her head in shock, stepping up to look at
him closely and finding as usual she didn’t like what she saw.
“For
crying out loud, do you have a soul too?”
Well, that came out of the
bloody blue. The concept actually left Spike speechless, and his mouth flapped
open and closed twice before he thought of an answer.
“Too? I thought I
was the only one.” Sodding hell! He suddenly felt like he had no clue what he
was doing, and who ever heard of a vampire with a soul anyway? But it was the
perfect cover, and as he felt the tingle of the Slayer’s approach at his
back—his unprotected back—he felt like it was the solution and a completely
unique way of getting into the Slayer’s good books.
What the hell. He
could think on his feet. He could show that he cared—showing he had soul should
be a piece of cake. For a few days at least. Until he had the Slayer exactly
where he could snack on her.
“There’s vampires with soul’s now? Who ever
saw that coming?” Her perky bewildered voice behind him actually hit something
soft inside him and he thought—without his usual menace—that he’s struck gold on
this idea to whittle away her normal defences.
Spike turned and got his
first good look at her—blonde with green eyes and a slightly panting body,
emphasising the more than cute little package. Oh yeah, getting close to this
one wouldn’t prove much of a hardship at all.
“No one’s ever seen me
coming, Goldielocks.” Feeling himself pumped with more balls than sense, Spike
reached out and took her hand, marvelling for the briefest second the softness
of her skin and the heat of her touch before tugging her behind him and into the
group of her friends.
“On your bike now, luv. You’ve got no chance of
winning here.” Spike watched in amusement; Darla looked confused.
She
took one impulsive step, as if to attack, then grabbed hold of her hungry
companion with the fashion-reject shirt and ran, vamp speed having them out of
sight in minutes.
“Whoa,” Buffy panted, impressed. “You’re much more with
the helpful than creepy stalker guy.”
He didn’t need to fake his amusement. “Creepy stalker guy? And
who’d that be, luv?”
The Slayer shrugged. “Just some random oddball that
followed me into a dark alley and then gave me a mouthful of cryptic before
slinking back into the shadows. He gave me presents, though.”
Her voice
was cute, in that bubblegum way that Spike normally hated but this time
found...well…cute. But not enough to forget the words that had passed those
glossy lips.
Spike cocked a brow, trying and failing to adequately
interpret that twisted explanation, though the modus operandi rang a bell or two
in his subconscious. “An’ this generous soul didn’t cough up with a
name?”
“Nope. But nothing to worry about, right. He’s with the silver
crosses; you’re with the soul and the saving of my friends. I know which Good
Samaritan I’m backing.” And she blushed as her interested look froze upon his
eyes and she quickly found the ground fascinating.
It was the
redhead—obviously light-headed in her shock—that brought the subject back from
the brink of awkwardness. “I know I probably got hit in the head somewhere
tonight, because dreams are kinda vivid in their oogyness, but soul? Can someone
explain that to my woozy brain? And while you’re at it…vampires?”
The
Slayer’s attention was back up from the thoroughly captivating grass and focused
entirely back on him. It made Spike tingle in an unexpected, and yet not
entirely unwanted way.
“Cool.”
It was just one word, but the gooey
smile on the Slayer’s face—the one that indicated that she thought Spike was the
hottest puzzle in the shop—nearly succeeded in making him colder than being dead
had done in the first place. He was a bloody enigma now, and it scared him
silly. Right then, he could do this. He could play this game and come out on
top. Sod having a plan. He was a man—a bleeding master vampire for God’s sake.
He didn’t need a plan to make this work.
“So how’d you get
it?”
Bugger!
Spike felt a little buzzed at her enthusiasm. Her
diminutive body fairly thrummed with excitement, and as catching as it was, it
still didn’t prevent his near panic driven rush for a reason to be the only vamp
in the world with a soul. It wasn’t like he had an example to follow—a real life
story he could duplicate for the few days it would take to finish off his third
slayer. So, he was left to grasp at straws. To conjure up some ridiculous reason
why his demon was caged and intent on doing good.
Typical that his
inspiration would have a blind spot. What other vamp would have thought to fake
a soul in order to play a little game of cat and mouse with the Slayer without
preparing a story? Spike felt a growl rumble low in his chest, cursing the
thoughts and explanations that wouldn’t flow through his brain fast enough to
make sense. There was only one possibility he could think of, and it was so
bloody farfetched he felt like laughing right along with the delivery of his
lies. Except for the classic ‘giving the game away’ part of that
action.
“Right,” he desperately improvised. “Gypsy curse. Was a bad boy
and the buggers stuck me with a soul and made me a good boy again. Veritable
White Hat now.” He preened, hoping his cocky confidence would get him through
this even if the banality of his excuse didn’t stand up.
The redhead
looked at him with such a strong sense of respect that Spike almost felt guilty
for the subterfuge along with his shock. No one had looked at him like that
without being violently encouraged since he’d had to leave Dalton in charge of
the minions, his haste to get Dru where she screamed to go forcing him to leave
the nest without a holiday plan. He’d soon found that sucked all kinds of
balls.
This was…nice. A human looking at him with such faith and belief
that he really didn’t deserve. If it weren’t for Darla and his contrary nature
to do anything the way she wanted, this little kiddy group would have already
been slaughtered. Well, all right, the brave nature of the boy might have
stilled his fangs momentarily too. But really, it was all Darla and Spike’s
juvenile urge to stick it in her eye.
“Man, you really saved our lives.
And gypsies. How old are you, anyway? I mean, vampire right? Walking undead. You
must have a story or two to tell. Oh oh,” the brunette suddenly exclaimed,
manners hitting him at full flight while he was steadily climbing the adrenaline
rush that made him as gawky as he always appeared. “My name’s Xander.” And he
thrust a hand out in Spike’s face, overly eager to make the acquaintance of one
who could easily kill him.
The non-existent soul inside Spike cringed.
He’d won this lot over remarkably easily, and while that had been his intention
all along, the way they were treating him—as someone they could possibly like
and be interested in hanging around for his own sake rather than due to the
ferocity of his nature—niggled at something inside that craved that kind of
acceptance.
He gave a brief nod, his voice almost raspy with unaccustomed
emotion as he introduced himself. “The name’s Spike.”
As his cooler hand
clasped the warmth of human flesh, the other boy slumped with a weak smile.
Spike jerked his head at the wounded figure, reminding them of the close call
they’d just avoided.
“I think your boy might need some medical
attention.” They all followed his gaze and blinked, surprised, at the white
pallor of their friend.
“Ohmygod, Jessie. We have to get him to
hospital.” The Slayer raced in to take an arm, her eyes briefly catching Spike’s
before darting away and another blush tinted her cheeks. Spike smirked before
moving in and taking the human—now unconscious—and slung him over his
shoulder.
“Where to?”
And they were off, a strange group of humans
and pseudo-souled vampire internally shaking his head at what was without doubt
the most bizarre couple of hours he’d ever existed through.
The Slayer
kept close to his side, risking shy yet curious glances every couple of steps
even during the seriousness of their flight. While every impulse in his body
told him to toss his burden to the side and jump her, he wasn’t quite decided on
what he wanted to really penetrate her with. It near did his head in that he
even felt a response to those giddy girly looks she was shooting at him, never
having wanted anything from a slayer before but blood and their timely death by
his hands or fangs.
Right, this Spike was soulful. And what the bugger
did that mean anyway? Well, cut to the obvious, don’t let the chit or her mates
see him feeding. That would completely blow his story out of the water. Would
probably do to distance himself a bit from Dru and her gaggle of gooselike
minions for a while too. And why didn’t that thought sit a little less easy with
him? Having a break from his manic sire actually sounded like a blessed relief.
One that he’d almost pay any price for.
“So how long have you had a soul
for anyway?”
Spike could see the curiosity and interest flare to life in
her eyes and almost got lost in the thrill of the sexual heat he was almost
positive she didn’t know she was creating. Still, there was a question in there
somewhere and his mind struggled to grasp it before he mucked the thing up
before it got started.
His pretend soul—came from his Wheeties packet
that very morning. Should have come with a warning. ‘Proceed with Caution or the
Slayer will cut your balls off for lying’.
“Yeah, ‘s been awhile. Back at
the turn of the century.”
He almost laughed as three pairs of eyes
bugged.
“Whoa. You’re like, really old, man. That’s kind of exciting and
stuff. You must know all kinds of things.” The boy who’d introduced himself as
Xander—and what an unbelievably poncy name that was—looked at him in awe and
Spike could feel another flush of pleasure shoot through his body. This being
liked for not having done anything much was kind of addictive.
Spike
almost stumbled at finally recognising the look that these children were
bestowing upon him. They looked at him like he was some kind of hero—even the
Slayer, who was a heroine in her own right. It made him feel dizzy that, without
doing anything but repressing his natural demon reaction to food, he’d managed
to get a degree of respect he’d as yet not achieved amongst his own kin. A faux
soul could do all that—create miracles. It became a struggle for him to remember
that it was all make believe, that more than likely at the end of a few days
he’d be snacking on this lot. An image of their eyes staring at him in betrayal
hit him hard and he could feel a lump rise in his throat. It wasn’t what he
wanted. Didn’t want the naïve redhead looking at him any different to how she
was now, seeing him as something other than the animal he was perpetually
reminded he was by Dru’s insane ramblings.
“I know enough. More than
enough in some cases.”
Before they could quiz him more, before they could
get too far inside his head and begin to pick him apart, the hospital loomed
large. They barely made it through the door before the body was liberated from
his shoulders to a gurney and the Slayer had taken charge, informing the staff
of a rabid dog out in the streets striking indiscriminately at the neck. What
was even funnier—they bought it.
Only on the mouth of Hell.
The
others had gathered in the waiting lounge, spending their time sharing out
vendor machine goodies while they waited news of their pale friend. Spike stood
uncertainly at the entrance, unsure what would be the soulful thing for him to
do now. Retreat quietly and wait for the next opportunity, or go and sit amongst
them and do his best to behave like he was one of the humans. The itch on the
back of his neck decided him and he saw the subtle lightening of the night
through one of the few windows to the outside.
He was about to turn on
his heel, casting one last longing glance at the surprising group he’d
encountered, when he felt her arm at his elbow. The soft crunch of his leather
was almost sensual as her touch lingered and he slowly turned toward her. She
was smiling and it overwhelmed Spike in that second how truly gorgeous she
was.
“I don’t think I told you my name,” she said earnestly, like she
really wanted him to know that she wasn’t just the Slayer.
When she
didn’t continue, Spike smiled, feeling the decided lack of need for his patented
smirk. This was information he wanted, and suddenly not just for the purpose of
psyching her out and killing her. He wanted to know the name that went with the
face as badly as he wanted to stay in that room with a bunch of kids who’d
appreciated him more in thirty minutes than his entire family had in a
century.
“An’ what’s that, pet?”
“Oh,” she startled, realising
that maybe she’d given herself away by the way she’d been intently studying
every gorgeous plane of his face. “Buffy.” Her voice was a husky whisper, her
hand still lightly resting against his forearm and Spike felt the automatic
laugh die abruptly in his throat.
“Beautiful,” he felt compelled to say,
and then he turned and left them behind.
He smelt Angelus while on his way to shelter. Feeling buoyed with
spirit and a half cocked plan, Spike had wandered during the remaining night
while he searched for an acceptable place to sleep. Somewhere that was far
enough away from the caterwauling tripe Dru would no doubt be squealing and the
possible meeting of his family line. Instead, he’d almost tripped over the
stench of Angelus while traipsing around the Hellmouth too close to dawn. Spike
was just thankful the poof kept his distance. He’d had enough daft lessons in
spinning lies for one night.
Truthfully, he still didn’t know how
to go about any reunion with his grandsire. They’d parted at a time when the
foundations of their little foursome were slipping through each of their
control. Angelus had left in the night while the rest were out hunting. Sure,
Darla hadn’t been quiet in her efforts to shame him out of their existence, but
truthfully, Spike hadn’t really believed he would go. At least, not without
Dru.
Kicking Angelus from the pack had hidden Darla’s true
agenda. She’d wanted to bolt and couldn’t be upfront about it, which was pretty
true to form with the former prostitute. She’d never been the type to come out
and be forthright. Underhanded and seductively dishonest, that was the granddame
of their little family.
Without even meaning to, Spike stopped at
the door of a crypt. It wasn’t the ideal place, being so far from the nearest
shade if he needed to make a quick exit while the sun was out, but it would do
in a pinch. He could always go looking for something else the next night, when
he knew the lay of the land a little better. All he really needed was somewhere
that no one would think to look for him. And if he couldn’t escape during the
day, then Dru wouldn’t be able to locate him till he’d managed to think through
what he’d done.
Managed to sort out his thoughts in relation to
the Slayer.
She was perky, and he liked it. Not enough to let her
live, mind. But enough to indulge in some fun. And the kind of fun he could
envision with this Slayer had his mind and body turning in twists. The way she’d
looked at him hadn’t been different to other women over the years—right before
he’d revealed himself and ripped out their throats. That gush of horror mixed
with attraction was an unbelievable high. No, not a different look, just more
unusual for her already knowing what he was—assumed soul or
no.
This time the game had changed. He’d unwittingly set himself
up in an experiment that had provided him with time he’d never utilised before.
Time he’d wasted with the quick kill. Drawing the Slayer out would be fun. It
would be righteous to his vampire code.
It would be what Angelus
had endeavoured to teach him over twenty long years of humiliation. And that
thought alone froze his blood. That and the mental image of the Slayer’s friends
staring at him with hurt for making them trust him when he was nothing but a
cold-blooded killer. That look of horror wasn’t there when he imagined their
deaths; only the hurt that a friend had turned on them. It made him
uncomfortable and Spike was hard pressed to understand why. It’s what he was,
what he did. Trick humans into trusting him before diving in for the kill. He
existed for the blood. He lived through depriving others of the privilege and he
had never felt guilty about it before.
Now he’d crossed paths
with Buffy.
Buffy. He couldn’t even let his brain go down the
path of laughter and sarcasm. He’d read a subtle perfection in her name and he
couldn’t take the fun in its silliness like he would have ordinarily. That she’d
shared it with him—and under the circumstances of hopeful friendship—hit him
deeper than he’d liked. However, it shifted the balance and he suspected this
eagerness of hers for him to know her as a girl was what was causing his sudden
attack of conscience. He had to banish it and get back to normal. He’d kill
someone when he awoke—somewhere out of her view of course. Wouldn’t do to blow
the cover now he’d been received with open arms.
The distant
alarm of pending sunlight made him drowsy and Spike found his way to the top of
a sarcophagus. Letting his coat slip down his arms, he wadded it into a pillow
and shoved it under his head. Arms flexed, he propped them under his skull and
contemplated the ceiling. It was the first time he’d slept alone since Angelus
was around to remind him Dru wasn’t really his. Having her infidelity shoved in
his face over and over had weakened him, yet made him determined to make her
love him. Now it was a century later, and he’d never achieved that goal. And now
the paternal figure of their family was back in range; Spike just knew it would
balls up everything he’d gotten used to over the years.
Weary
blue eyes were shaded by lids determined to close and Spike shut down his
unhappy thoughts, eager to get the rest that would bring him back to the
situation refreshed and hopefully full of plans. Hoped the night would bring him
back to the Big Bad that he seemed to have lost sight of at the appearance of
his fake soul.
And the little blonde that would dust him if she
ever sniffed out the truth.
The thought of her hate suddenly
seemed wrong; painful. He just needed some sleep to get it all back into
perspective. As the last remnants of conscious thought drifted away, Spike knew
he’d wake up with a renewed desire to sink his fangs into the Slayer. He just
needed forty winks and then his world would be back to
rights.
Then he’d be back to being Spike.
~ * ~ *
~ * ~
Her dreams had been filled with the relentless swagger of a
vamp she couldn’t stop thinking about. Buffy blinked sleepily before sinking
back into her pillows and conjuring his image in her mind. His hair was
radioactive, but it kinda suited him in a weird retro fashion. And that
coat—she’d die to have a thing of beauty like that. Except maybe more on the
newer side of the cow. And those eyes—they burned her insides despite being of
an arctic blue. And it didn’t take much imagination to picture the muscular
build hidden under his eclectic wardrobe. He suited black, and he was just too
yummy for words.
Thinking of how obvious she’d been in her
attraction brought a high flush to her cheeks and Buffy groaned aloud. Why did
she find it so difficult to think after the fact? Usually she was so
level-headed around the underworld, but the thought of this one demon with lips
that were full and she just knew could kiss like sin had completely thrown her.
He had a soul, so that made it okay…
Didn’t
it?
Buffy smiled. Of course it did. He was one of them. Fighting
on the side of justice alongside the good guys—and he was as hot as hell. She
couldn’t believe her luck.
“Buffy. Hurry up or you’ll be late for
school.”
Her mother’s voice floated up the stairs with all the
dream shattering effects of a Jumanji stampede and Buffy groaned as she rolled
from her bed. School: the necessary evil. Until two days ago, she’d been all set
to be Normal Girl and do nothing but casually fail her classes like everyone
else in her grade. With the abrupt acceptance of her duty in this new place,
she’d shot that mission all to hell. Now that she’d managed to initiate her
schoolmates to the realities of their nightmares. As well as get one of them
hospitalised. It sure beat attending Jesse’s funeral, though. And now that she
knew these people, refusing to try to keep them safe just seemed petty. And who
could refuse to fight off the forces of evil when she suddenly had the likes of
Spike by her side?
The thought of late night patrols with him by
her side, his coat subtly battering her legs—which meant she’d be walking super
close to him—really made her destiny something exciting for a change. She’d
lived through the downright frightening aspect of it, and now with the prospect
of romance, she could see more pluses than minuses to being a chosen one. Well,
that was settled then. The Slayer was in heavy duty crush mode. Now she could
drive herself crazy wondering if the sexy hot vampire felt even a little of the
same excitement over meeting her.
She could find out when she
dragged him out to patrol with her tonight. If he was all with the soul having,
and being a white hat, then he wouldn’t mind watching her back. It’d be more
than nice to have someone looking out for her for a change. Especially if it
ended up that he was just as happy to watch her front as well. Buffy knew that
she could pass out with delirious satisfaction if she could do some major
watching of him, too.
It was amazing what a bit of Spike
preoccupation could do for her ‘getting to school on time’ skills. Dressing,
trading the usual side-step conversation with her mother at breakfast and
heading off to school had all passed in a peroxide and black leather blur. Not
that she would complain, except for when Giles raised an eyebrow and gave her
the adult look of suspicion.
“See, ordinarily I couldn’t do this.
The talk. About vampires. A talk with vampires in it. But meeting Spike, gave me
a bit of hope, you know? Sure, the other guys were bad, all with the spooky…and
the fangs…and the putting Jesse in hospital, but how freaking romantic to have a
vampire with a soul save us all. I love this guy. You think he’d mind having a
groupie?” Xander looked eagerly at Buffy, hope and excitement making her want to
laugh.
They’d gotten passed the ‘demon’s are a human form
possessed’ discussion and had flown straight into the ‘how is this possible’
conversation regarding the existence of souled vampires.
“I am
certain you were rather lucky this Spike came along when he did. It sounds like
disaster may have occurred without his help. But still, it is surprising that I
haven’t heard of his existence before.” Giles’s posturing left the teens to
shrug noncommittally as they became lost in thought.
Jesse was
in the hospital still, though he’d be getting out by that afternoon. But
surviving a close call didn’t mean that Buffy could avoid the job of finding out
exactly what last night was about. She’d almost lost three of her new friends in
one night and that reality didn’t sit well with her inherent slayerness and
sense of responsibility. She may hate her life now, may hate her destiny, but if
she could do something to make sure her friends were tucked up safe in bed at
night, then she had a duty she couldn’t ignore.
And in typical
freaky fashion, the conversation turned on its head—pushed away from the
glorification of souled vampires and the romance of it all—to the guessing of
what Buffy was.
Giles stood before them, all heart attack serious
in his regulation tweed. “For as long as there have been vampires, there's been
the Slayer. One girl in all the world, a Chosen One.”
“He likes doing
this part.” Buffy didn’t mean to mock, but it was so easy to do while he glared
at her with lack of humour. With impatience and frustration.
“All right.
The Slayer hunts vampires, Buffy is a slayer, don't tell anyone. Well, I think
that's all the vampire information you need.”
Xander begged to differ.
“Except for one thing. How do you kill them?”
She thought they knew this
part. “You don’t. I do.”
Xander was going to argue, and by doing that, he
did bring up Jesse. They’d been so lucky the previous night. If Spike hadn’t
been there, Buffy had no doubts the blonde vampire with the trashy school girl
look would have dragged her new friends into Hell. If not terrifying them before
their death, then recreating them in the face of evil. Still, it brought back
the focus and what she still had to do.
“This big guy, Luke. He talked
about an offering to the Master. Now, I don't know what or who, but if they
weren't just feeding then Jesse and Willow may have been a planned sacrifice or
something. I'm gonna find where they were going to take them.”
As much as
she liked Willow, Buffy felt like rolling her eyes when the redhead suggested
leaving the situation to the police to resolve. That would go nowhere near
making Sunnydale safer and eradicating whatever this episode of badness was. If
anything, it could make the bad occur faster by supplying whoever with a large
group of useless officers for lunch. So, with minimal pointing out of stupidity,
they moved on, trying to find a clue where to start the search. A lucky thing
Buffy was switched onto the entirely too strange habits of the undead. A little
technology and Buffy was ready and able with a place to start.
That
didn’t mean it made sense.
“There’s nothing here, this is useless.” She
felt useless.
“I think you’re being a bit hard on yourself.” Coming from
a watcher, the words seemed far too forgiving.
“You're the one that told
me that I wasn't prepared enough. Understatement!” It wouldn’t be so bad if
she’d actually been paying attention. Slaying wasn’t just about the fight—and
the death—of the creatures of the night. It was about foiling plots and making
the world safe. Now that she’d decided to live with the inevitable, these were
things Buffy felt she’d have to try honing her skills at. The observation skills
that may keep herself and her friends alive. “I thought I was on top of
everything, and then that monster, Luke, came out of nowhere...” And who said
she was as dumb as Harmony? Light bulbs flashed in her brain and Buffy had her
starting point.
Buffy stood still as she thought over her almost fatal
fight with Luke. Until an exasperated Xander leaped in and jumpstarted her to
consciousness.
“What?”
“He didn't come out of nowhere. He came
from behind me. I was facing the entrance, he came from behind me, and he didn't
follow me out. The access to the tunnels is in the mausoleum! The girl must have
doubled back and escaped through there while we were distracted with Jesse and
Spike! God! I am so mentally challenged!”
Dammit, nobody disagreed with
her. And she was meant to be all accepting that they wanted to jump the
superhero wagon and come seek out the baddies with her? Hell no. Not
likely.
She sliced through all their objections with unintentional
putdowns, leaving Xander feeling inadequate—and that kind of made her giggle on
the inside—and left them with Giles to feel important in the fight against
darkness by researching The Harvest. She’d almost forgotten creepy stalker guy
and his warnings of vague doom.
Which was kinda dumb she soon found when
he snuck up behind her in the crypt.
She could have sworn that there was
no one behind her, but as she rattled the chain on the entrance to the
underground tunnels, he snuck up behind her, his unnecessary breath exhaling on
a note of expectation. First impressions had Buffy seeing him as some weird guy
who stalked her in the shadows. This time she got a better look as he stood in a
more moderately lit area, the sun beating down on the stone building from the
outside. Maybe if she’d never met Spike, she could have considered him
good-looking. Maybe. As it was, Buffy found it hard to think of him as anything
but creepy. In that sleazy way you do when someone sneaks up behind you on an
increasingly regular basis.
“I don’t suppose you’ve got a key on you,”
she asked by way of making conversation. Buffy almost didn’t expect him to
answer, but if he did, being vague was really what she’d counted on. He didn’t
disappoint her.
“They really don’t like me dropping in.”
That
smirk was really off-putting.
“Why not?” If he knew what was down
there—who was down there—then how come he kept his distance? Suddenly the
thought of beating him for less obscure information seemed like a good plan. If
nothing else it would let loose some frustration. Pity she wasn’t allowed to
just go attacking innocent bystanders, even if they did annoy her with their
obscure warnings.
“They really don’t like me.” He smiled.
Weird
much? She didn’t know who this guy was or what his game was, but he was starting
to spook her. Who followed young girls around cemeteries and into crypts to
deliver such inane conversation and without asking her what she was doing?
Better yet, how did he know all this stuff? Buffy could see through his game,
though. He was playing with her, teasing her with half-delivered information and
seeing what she would do with it. He knew the secret plans of these vamps who’d
tried to eat her friends, and yet he hung around on the outside of the
gathering. No, he was way beyond creepy. He was psychotic. She needed to be wary
of this guy and watch that he didn’t attack her. Who knew what to expect from
the crazies of Sunnydale?
“How could that possibly be?” Sarcasm obviously
hadn’t been diverted by the simple calm placating that a wary slayer should have
reverted to. Buffy’s mouth—as usual—was working faster than her brain, still she
felt reasonably safe around him for now. Just.
“I knew you'd figure out
this entryway sooner or later. Actually, I thought it was gonna be a little
sooner.”
He was so smug, and she so did work this out fast. Nobody else
had.
“Sorry you had to wait.” Buffy tried to be patient, but this guy was
ruining her plans. “Okay. Look, if you're gonna be popping up with this Cryptic
Wise Man act on a regular basis, can you at least tell me your name?” She
watched him expectantly, all manner of possibilities running through her head.
He looked like a…Ralph. Or maybe a Derrek.
“Angel.” The name flowed from
his lips with a certainty that Buffy really questioned. As if anyone would name
their baby Angel, knowing that one bright and shiny day that Angel would be a
man.
Still, Spike hadn’t laughed at her name the night before, even
though she could see that he’d initially wanted to. Wasn’t like she hadn’t had
that happen before.
“Angel. It’s a pretty name.” So is, though slightly
inappropriate for a large man with an evil leer and the distinct absence of
wings on his back. Still, talking about names and remembering Spike’s reaction
to hers wasn’t getting the info she needed. She needed to put the puzzle
together, and getting the intel from dark and broody wasn’t doing it for
her.
She turned back to the entrance of the cavern and held her breath.
She really didn’t want to go down there.
“Don’t…go down there.” He spoke
with a small edge of concern in his voice and it stopped Buffy in her
tracks.
“Deal with my going.” He really should not be trying to tell her
how to do her job. And who the hell was he anyway? She had his name but no rank
and serial number.
“You shouldn't be putting yourself at risk. Tonight is
the Harvest. Unless you can prevent it, the Master walks.”
And there he
was again with the cryptic messages and the knowing so much more of what was
going down in this town than she or her watcher did. That so wasn’t
right.
“Well, if this Harvest thing is such a suckfest, why don't you
stop it?”
It really wouldn’t bother her if someone else wanted a go at
stopping the damage-bound monsters of the world from unleashing hell on earth.
It wasn’t like she was a control freak and just had to stop all the bad
guys.
“’Cause I’m afraid.” And the Angel grinned.
Buffy smiled,
even though she couldn’t work out if he was kidding or truly worried. Still, if
he didn’t want to help, and he didn’t want to tell her about this Harvest thing,
then she was probably going to be making a big mistake by diving into a
situation that she had no understanding of. It was just an assumption, but there
could be a whole horde of vamps down there. Until she had more of an idea—or
someone at her back—it would be foolish to take off into the unknown. She was
kinda glad this guy had stopped by to talk to her some more and give her time to
think the plan out a bit better.
“You know what? I think you’re right. I
won’t go down there just yet. I’ll wait till my partner can go with me.” Buffy
stopped and felt an enormous smile consume her face. “He’s got a soul, you
know!”
The Slayer completely missed the look of bafflement that swept
across Angel’s face as she pivoted and almost bounced out of the crypt. She left
him standing in the shadows, a finger pointing at his chest and his mouth
flapping silent words of shock.
“A soul? But I’m the one with a
soul.”
And he stared petulantly at the fading back of Buffy Summers as
she skipped away, confused and frustrated that someone had apparently stolen his
identity. And then another word hit him in the gut.
“Partner?”
She’d tasted unsatisfying.
Spike propped himself against
the stone wall of the alley, looking contemplatively at the stack of refuse
behind the shop, not seeing the body of the girl he’d drained and discarded but
thinking of it nonetheless. He was entirely lost in thought, wondering at the
lack of thrill in the blood, and not seeing the usual poetry of the
kill.
Buffy’s hand on his shoulder had him spinning in his mind and his
non-beating heart almost exploding with adrenaline at being caught.
“Hey.
Whatcha doing?” Her smile was beatific and excited. For him.
Spike looked
dumbfounded, then remembered himself and quickly wiped his mouth in case any
blood had remained on his lip. By the look on her face he assumed she had no
clue what she’d inadvertently caught him at, and it was good if he could keep it
that way. Right, leading her out of the alley was a bleeding brilliant first
step.
“Actually, pet, was looking for you.” The lie popped out of his
mouth without any real thought, but as her face lit up he wondered if maybe he’d
wanted to be and that’s why the freshly tapped blood had lacked the usual
zing.
It was no use. This confusion he felt wasn’t going to have him lose
focus while only around the Slayer. Even with her presence far away from him he
was all muddled up, wondering if he really knew what he was doing. He’d never
questioned himself before, taking it for granted when things occurred to fuck up
his perception. Now, it required contemplation to work out why he was waning in
his determination to kill her. Needed explanation why her smiles made his body
feel light and tingling in preparation for…something.
“I was kinda hoping
you might wanna go on patrol with me?” Buffy was going for subtle-flirty-casual,
but her eagerness made her forget herself. “I have to check out that mausoleum
and try and work out this Harvest thingy. Might be a case of safety in numbers.”
Buffy looked up at him, hope bursting from every tensed muscle of her body.
Her anxiety was a turn on, Spike found, but not in the way he’d been
expecting. She wanted to be around him, and the shock still hadn’t dispersed.
She actually wanted to be around a vampire—him—when he’d put an end to two of
her kind this century. While he’d capitalised on the girlies being all hearts
aflutter for him in clubs and other scenarios as a quick satisfying meal, he’d
never had the opportunity of seeing them as anything but chow. Buffy was more
before she’d even opened her mouth.
For one fascinating instant, Spike
wanted to take time off from being himself. Go with the chit and see what it
would be like to be something other than what he was for a change. What could it
hurt? To take a time out and see how the other half actually lived—when he
wasn’t making sure they got good and dead.
“Nothin’ better to do. Lead
the way, luv.” He could feel the heat of her body as she moved beside him, felt
the fire of her gaze when she thought he couldn’t tell. He felt robbed of all
his sense and hard won identity by the time they drew to a stop outside the same
crypt that had seen the action the previous night.
They hadn’t spoken one
word on the whole trip. Hadn’t needed to as Spike tried to block out the easy
way they were together with the image of a terrified redhead laying in a tangle
of limbs back in the alley. That’s who he was—what he did. He had no real place
for a soulful outlook, even if he was pretending to have one. Which begged the
question, didn’t it. How bloody long was he planning on this pretence of
goodness? How much of himself was he prepared to sacrifice just to get under the
Slayer’s defences?
“Remember Creepy Stalker Guy?”
Buffy pulled
him to a stop outside the stone structure and Spike tilted his head and watched
her. She was so young, so innocent and yet so distracting in an uncomfortably
appealing way. There was something different in her mix—something other than the
rippling power of the universe making her the Slayer. Something that added to
the complexity of her failure or death. Something that threw Spike completely
off his game.
“Yeah. Is he still following you?”
Buffy grimaced,
and then nodded her head. She was standing so close, her body barely a touch
away from his and it made the air around them almost crackle and seem heavy and
tense.
“Um, kinda? Well, if you mean does he pop up behind me wherever I
go, then big with the affirmative. In fact, I was just bringing it up because
I’m expecting him to be behind door number one. Wanted to give you a heads up,
even though I told him I wouldn’t be going down in that vamp nest without my
partner to back me up. He wasn’t interested in the job.” Buffy stopped and her
eyes widened comically as the impact of her words on Spike finally registered.
He looked totally gobsmacked.
“Do you need me to protect you from the Big
Bad?” He should have sneered, really he should have. He’d meant to. Started to.
His lips were obviously broken, or maybe it was just his brain. Every time he
was around her she surprised him and his reactions became
unfamiliar.
“Shyeah. As if. I just thought it’d be kind of nice—“ Her
eyes dropped to the ground, hands and body shifting nervously as she admitted
what she’d hoped. “If maybe you’d watch my back.”
The last time Spike had
been shocked into have eyes that bugged was when he’d walked into the middle of
his first ménage a trois, Angelus pumping into Dru like a racehorse while Darla
rode his back complete with crop. At the mention of her back, all Spike could
suddenly see was sweat slickened skin and his hands aching to touch. The answer
seemed more than obvious.
“’Course, pet. It’s what us souled vamps are
here for.” Such an abomination of words should have choked him to get passed his
throat—yet they were delivered with an ease that Spike couldn’t have thought
possible. This bloody chit certainly kept a bloke on his toes.
Mention of
the dreaded ‘S’ word brought thoughts to mind he’d tried to keep at arms length
while he’d rested. What it would mean to have a soul—to actually be the vamp she
thought he was. The word itself had been like a trust switch and once thrown, he
didn’t even have to prove himself. Sure, she expected him to turn on his
kind—and being that the majority of those he hung around were a bunch of
wankers, it wasn’t too big an ask. Even the prospect of leaving Drusilla behind
didn’t cut as deep as it might have once. It was funny how much a man cut
himself off and saw the outside world clearer when the woman he’d
loved—convinced himself he’d loved—for the past century mentioned another name
once too often.
Spike had been forced to follow the psychic whim of his
sire as she searched for Angelus. Dru had refused to accept that she wasn’t
loved. Some pretty twisted pixies had whispered lies in her ear, promising that
if she could just find him, he’d want her back. It was nothing but smoke and
mirrors and another example of how shot her poor mind was—again thanks to
Angelus.
But if she was right—if they did find the bastard that had made
a profession of tearing Spike’s world apart time and again by trailing his
stubby hands over Dru and leaving the brunette shaking in lust—then everything
Spike had been would be over. He knew enough—felt the urge deep enough—to
believe that. He knew Angelus was here, residing in this hungry mouth of hell.
He just wondered which one of them would be devoured first.
Now the
Slayer was warning him that the demon Spike most wanted to avoid could be right
behind the door, listening in on their conversation and hearing Spike’s
distinctive accent. She didn’t know it, of course. Couldn’t have a clue about
the family connection between the two master vampires who were playing a
dangerous game of cat and mouse with her. But he was brought into a possible
confrontation a lot quicker than he’d planned. Took some skill to avoid those
that were too close. He knew Dru had already found her way. Of course he’d heard
how The Master was trying to get a leg back up into the real world. As far as he
was concerned, the silly sod deserved his underground tomb and should bloody
well stay there and keep out of the younger generation’s hair. It didn’t
surprise him at all to know that Darla had slinked back to be at the old
codger’s beck and call, and now Dru and Angelus had found their
roots.
Well, not Spike. No bloody way was he getting involved in such a
pissy plan. It would fail. As much as he didn’t know about the Slayer and her
mates, he knew that she’d win. The scent of victory clung to her, and even
though he’d managed to get himself under her wing and her trust in his absent
soul, he didn’t want to be the spy in her ranks.
For one brief moment, he
saw himself more as the lover in her bed. Though he suspected she was too
innocent to allow him that close, he couldn’t stop the sudden phantom thump in
his chest at the hope he could convince her to. As soon as the image of naked
flesh began to make him stare at the reality in front of him, he remembered the
sprawled body of his latest victim. He was standing beside the Slayer now,
wondering at the pleasure the thought of naked Buffy flesh brought him even
while he had another woman’s warm blood thumping through his veins. Suddenly he
felt wrong, and in agonising confusion, Spike stared at the ground.
There
was nothing he could do. If it was his fate to encounter Angelus behind this
door—some kind of cosmic payback for wanting to keep the Slayer’s back—then he’d
accept it. Embrace it for what it was. His penance for not being the right
amount of demon. For letting his own side down while his evil nature battled
with the desire to feel real. Wasn’t like the git wouldn’t expect it. He had
always been saying Spike was never enough. Over a hundred years had proven him
correct. Not enough for Angelus to stay and raise them right. Not enough for Dru
to love him despite the magic she’d seen the night he’d died. Not enough for
Buffy unless he lied about who he really was.
For the first time he
wondered what it would be like: to be the Slayer’s lover—her beloved. To be the
one she trusted above all others, the one who kept her balanced and alive. The
one who fought by her side and kept evil as far from their pinnacle day as he
possibly could. It was a fantasy that proved Spike should be dusted just for
thinking it.
He hadn’t noticed that Buffy had caught his eyes and that
they had begun staring at each other with longing and interest. She barely
blinked as she seemed completely lost. Time passed slowly and Spike could feel
the earth shift them closer together. He could feel the warmth of her body on
the night—could feel it reach out and catch him in its spell. He didn’t want
this, not really, and yet he couldn’t turn his back on it and let her know his
lie. Really didn’t want to see the look on her face when she took that step back
and placed a stake in her empty hand.
“We should probably do this.” Her
voice was husky and it made her sound older than he guessed she was. He wondered
if she was talking about the search, or if she was eager to explore the more
obvious possibilities between them.
Spike nodded, willing to head off on
either one of those options as soon as she let him in on which she’d chosen. As
soon as she dropped her eyes, he knew. Right, they were risking the poofter.
Great.
Spike took a deep breath as he dug into his duster pocket for his
cigs. He lit up with sexual flare, smirking as he heard the escalating heartbeat
of the girl beside him. She seemed awkward as she rushed passed him, brushing
against him like a whisper in the dark, and pushed open the door.
The
interior was black, barely any light from the moon shining inside. Spike
inhaled, then let out the air in a relieved rush. “Whoever’s been stalking you,
pet, he’s not here. Looks like it’s just you and me.” He saw her subtle shiver
and felt himself grinning. He still had it, whatever it was. Just because it
never impacted on Dru didn’t mean he was completely hopeless as a
man.
Sticking as close behind her as he could without touching her, Spike
followed her to a chained gate.
“Looks like they’re not eager to let us
in, luv.” He reached passed her face and gave the gate a bit of a rattle. It may
have emphasised his point, but that wasn’t his motive. Something was happening
to him, and he couldn’t describe it, no matter how much he wanted to. But there
was this compulsion to be near her, to tease the force around her to see if
she’d break and allow him close. Allow him to flow into her skin and break his
own barrier of propriety between soulless vamp and slayer.
He left his
fingers curled through the wire of the gate, his face an inch away from her
cheek. Buffy didn’t move, didn’t breathe from what he could tell. And then,
slowly, her lungs resumed their normal scheduled activity and he marvelled at
the rightness of it. And felt his body react in all sorts of ways as she gently
exhaled and her body drifted closer to his. Felt movement of bits she didn’t
need to be exposed to just yet as he felt the sheen of aroused persperation
raise up on her skin.
Slowly Spike dragged the pads of his fingers over
the wire until he reached the padlock keeping them out. He sucked in a breath of
her, his face turned into the side of hers as she stared straight ahead, and
then yanked the bolt free. The shock of it moved her, and Spike almost collapsed
in giddy excitement as her jump had the side of her breast brush against the
inside arm of his duster. He gulped, and then nudged her forward with his hand
in the small of her back. Her skin scorched him.
And his journey
began.
She obviously belonged in the dark. Spike strutted alongside her,
holding slightly back to watch her progress through the tunnel and finding
himself apprehensive the closer they drew to the Master’s prison. Her stride was
strong, purposeful, but he was a skilled vamp and could sense her fear—even if
the scent hadn’t been as strong.
The waft of terror was strong all along
this underground tunnel. Spike watched her but she didn’t sense everything that
he did. Didn’t know that humans had been led down here, not so long ago, and had
ended abruptly. As strong as she was, he hardly expected her to remain stoic in
the face of death—in those that she’d failed to preserve. He could wait for her
pain—not craving it nearly as much as he had even the previous day.
Their
progress was steady but cautious, and for that Spike was grateful. Each step
brought him closer to a lifestyle he’d been fully a part of until just days ago.
He’d been thoughtless and accepting of the life he drained away alongside his
princess and minions. It was what he was, and as much as this slayer intrigued
him—for reasons other than the fight to the death—he couldn’t imagine being
anything else. Didn’t mean he didn’t wonder at the possibility that he
could.
And it didn’t mean he was in any rush to carry out the plan,
though. Not now he’d felt the static of her presence. But agreeing to
this—actually deciding to keep her safe and fight by her side—challenged a piece
inside of him that he was loathe to admit still existed. Brought him to a place
where he could confront the demons of his kin with a slayer by his side at a
time when he’d not been thinking clearly. It was too dangerous and not part of
the plan.
How would this look? He’d already allowed Darla to announce his
supposed soulfulness to the vampire world. Had she passed the info on to Dru and
the Master? More than likely. The little bitch always liked to be the instigator
of trouble—especially if it got old Spike in deep. Bigger question was how did
he feel about it?
They pulled up just outside the lair—hopefully far
enough away that the vamps within couldn’t sense them. Couldn’t sense that a
slayer and a master vampire were biding time just outside their door.
He
didn’t want to go in there. He could hear Dru’s cackle and knew if he turned up
with Buffy at his side, his sire would expose him for the fraud he was. And he
didn’t want that. Didn’t want Buffy to hear how it had been his plan to knock
her off as he rolled into town. Didn’t know why he wanted her to remain
oblivious to his purpose, other than that he wanted her to keep the peaceful
bliss between them.
Wanted her to believe he had a soul.
The
thought should have made him nauseous, and in an attempt to reattach his balls,
he conjured up the image of his latest victim, the redheaded lass, and suddenly
the sickness intensified. He’d gone after a girl resembling Buffy’s friend, the
one who’d looked at him with hopeful acceptance. Now he could see the exact
shade of their hair and wondered if it had been a subconscious substitute—an
attempt to kill what he really didn’t want to.
Buffy took a step—a hard
determined step toward the hole in the wall. Spike felt himself flood with panic
as he grabbed her arm, held her still and then yanked her back into his chest.
His arm curled around her waist and he felt fire spring along his limbs, his
body tingling inappropriately as she agreed to the contact. Agreed to it and
sank further into his contours. A blast of her thumping heartbeat consumed his
hearing and Spike could do nothing but hold still—very still so as not to make a
decision he wasn’t ready to weather the consequences. Once he’d taken that
defining step, he knew there wouldn’t be an easy escape, and killing the girl
hadn’t completely escaped his game plan yet. Even if the thoughts did leave him
queasy. The act in itself might be the balm required to sooth his
itch.
The smell of her hair almost brought him to his knees and it was
only the warmth of her hand hesitantly covering his at her waist that drove
sense back into him. In a complete turn around, her heat was like a bucket of
icy water and Spike mentally slapped himself up the side of the head. This was
too dangerous, allowing himself to be lost in the sensual promise of her young
flesh in evil’s backyard. It was like making out with the enemy’s daughter while
he lingered at the front door. Romeo and Juliet they weren’t and the quicker he
got his head together, the better they both would fare. Well, maybe not her. Not
once he’d regained his focus and took her to the place he’d always wanted, ever
since he was coerced into this deadbeat town.
Not enough steps away were
his sire and the rest of his family—the ones that hadn’t bolted on him anyway.
In his arms he harboured their enemy. Against all that power, Buffy didn’t stand
a chance—and even though he wanted her dead, he would always be fair. And one
little girl taking on plural master vampires in the name of saving the world was
signing a death warrant. An’ it just wasn’t bloody cricket. Wasn’t fun. No,
until he could take her out on his own terms, he couldn’t let her get herself
slaughtered. Besides, knowing his luck she’d be just what the old bugger needed
to escape his rather lovely underground prison.
Decision made, Spike
squeezed his hand on her waist and pulled her with him as he took a step back.
She resisted his physical message, but then the she turned and took in the
silent force of his expression, and they retraced their steps out of the tunnel.
Spike’s hand never left the contact on her body the whole way—their path silent
yet trembly as they gave in to the strength of their mutual
attraction.
Buffy grasped his cool fingers when they reached the gate,
some blink of fate allowing her to link gently with his. Spike felt the rising
lump in his throat, felt the prickle of something that was not tears at his
eyes. Why her acceptance of him and her interest was having such a damning
effect on him, he didn’t know. But he was failing to control it and he could see
the worlds of disaster opening up right in front of him. Almost as clearly as he
could see her glistening lips as she licked them almost nervously. She looked up
and caught his gaze, Spike almost tripping in his mind at the naïve desire that
was reflected there.
She wanted his kiss—and the knowledge stunned
him.
Spike’s lips tingled in need, though. Wanted with some life of their
own to feel the soft promise of slayer lips—even as Spike himself reeled from
realising the incongruous behaviour of the pair of them. This was wrong—though
if he had a soul then maybe it wasn’t so bad. If he had a soul—which he didn’t.
And he wasn’t likely to get one anytime soon. Yet, her lips beckoned and the
pull was strong. She still held his hand and Spike felt his other move to cup
her cheek, his thumb stroking whisper soft against her skin.
The time for
totally fucking up his life was at hand and Spike started to close in, his face
falling closer as Buffy’s eyes drifted shut. He could feel the warmth of the air
barely between them, his own need to breathe suspended as the desired touch of
their mouths became inevitable—and then the throat clearing that ruined the
moment and alerted Spike to what he should have been able to sense immediately.
Company in the guise of family, and suddenly he was willing to fight to the dust
for this petite girl who was stealing the breath he didn’t need, but felt a
compulsion to cling to.
“Bloody hell, way to ruin the moment,
Peaches.”
The brunette startled, his eyes narrowing on what he hadn’t
even suspected. Living low and in hiding had made him rusty and with the
overwhelming presence of his own sire, he was finding it difficult to use his
vampire gifts the way demon nature intended.
“Spike?” His tone was
disbelieving and Angel took a step closer to look at the girl who’d
inadvertently redirected his path and taken over his heart.
The younger
vampire had strategically positioned himself in front of the slayer—for what
reason Angel could only guess. Spike had a reputation—had earned it on the eve
of his own leaving, and Angel felt the twist in his gut that he might lose this
girl before he’d even made much of an impression.
“Let her go, Spike.”
Voice hard, body tense, Angel waited for the younger to do as he was instructed,
the authority of his familial position being automatic and in no need of
relearning like his other senses.
“Not bloody likely. Not lettin’ you
step in to tear her to bits.”
All three stood still, tense as the wait
stretched. Then Buffy decided she’d had enough.
“Hey, down with the
testosterone.” The other words she’d planned died in her throat as Angel vamped
out in front of her and growled around his fangs.
“Buffy, get away from
him. He’s a vampire and he’ll kill you.”
“Oh what a load of bollocks.
I’ve got no bloody intention of killing her, you pillock.” Spike was just
getting started, finding a wealth of anger and hatred at being abandoned by the
one who—maybe not cared exactly, but who held a duty toward him and Dru yet felt
no hesitation in taking himself off and away to whatever draws a single unlife
held for him. He wanted to twist that head off, see what colour his lumpy dust
would be as it was sprung suddenly upon the air.
“Spike has a soul. He’s
not going to hurt me.” Her green eyes and happy smile were proof enough that the
option of souled Spike sat pretty with her. She watched Spike and simply
thrummed with confidence in him.
If two thirds of the crypt’s occupants
hadn’t already been dead, then the solid morbid silence might have been more
overwhelming. As it was, the sudden quiet of the two males as they both reeled
in shock would have been more entertaining if Buffy had been aware of the
joke.
Angel recovered first. “W-what?” He was incapable of speech, the
revelation too much for his lazy brain to cope with. It was pure luck that held
him that way until Spike could get his head around the revelation and realise
that all hell would break loose if he allowed the truth to come out now.
Besides, it wasn’t as if Peaches could refute his story. He hadn’t been around
for a hundred years so what would he know? And the existence of a souled vampire
was just so fairytalish that Spike was banking on the fact that Angelus would be
too stunned to argue.
“That’s right. Yours truly’s all souled up,” Spike
smirked, practically daring the Great Almighty Angelus to come up with a plan
even half as creative. He was finding a bit of an upside to the declaration too.
The light that shone from Buffy’s smile almost singed his eyebrows. It caused an
excitement to shoot through Spike’s body that had been missing in his days for a
very long time. This girl liked him, enjoyed being in his presence simply
because . Sure, his strength might have been a tasty bonus, but he could tell
she wanted more from the arrangement than just his muscle. Though he wouldn’t be
impartial to extending that little invitation a little further. Particular body
parts had been a mite neglected of late. Dru had been practising abstinence in
preparation to her big reunion. He’d thought it was for the Master, but now
Spike could picture it easily. Dru, laid out on her back and legs in the air
while Angelus pounded the living shit out of her.
The obscenity of those
thoughts threw him and Spike was suddenly reminded whose presence he was in.
Angelus, the greedy plonker that could never keep his mitts to himself. Well,
not this time. Dru may have been his destiny, but Buffy was—well, did a bloke
have to know these things in advance? She was something and he’d be dust before
he let the evil greasy paws of his grandsire anywhere near the girl.
“Oi,
what are you doing here anyway? Dru’s been expecting you and I’d rather we just
said our piece and act like ships passing in the night—all nice and quiet like.”
Spike very subtly began nudging Buffy to the open door of the crypt, ready to
defend her if he needed to but knowing that she wouldn’t exactly be all
damselly—which he really liked in a woman. Especially this woman. Even Dru still
expected to be protected and act all weak and kittenish—though Spike knew she
was far from it.
They were almost there when the dazed confusion began to
dissipate and Angel took a step to stop them. Not thinking, just reacting, Spike
sent him flying against the wall of the crypt with a thundering punch to the
jaw. The heavier vampire lay slumped on the floor, stunned, and Spike took his
chance. Grabbing Buffy’s arm, he tugged her forward and led her out of one brand
of dark into the lighter pitch of open air.
Spike ran, only mildly
surprised when slayer speed proved just short of a match for his own pace.
Eventually he stopped, pulling her into an alley and watching around the corner
to make sure they weren’t followed. And then the memory of what Angelus had
interrupted started to ache with the deprivation.
“You know that was
creepy stalker guy, don’t you? I don’t think he would have, oomph—”
With
one feather soft kiss, Spike slammed another door shut. He couldn’t possibly
kill a slayer he’d saved from his granpappy.
Not when her lips tasted of
sunshine.
There was dreaminess involved. Much with the dreamy that Buffy
couldn’t wipe off her face, no matter how much she didn’t try.
“You
should have seen it, Will. Sure, Angel wasn’t really much of a threat.” She
paused and contemplated. “At least, I hadn’t thought so till he went all ridgy
and fangy with the vampness. But anyway, where was I?”
“Drooling over the
Spike kissage,” Willow gushed and then giggled. She was so envious of Buffy. The
souled vampire had seemed so very different to what Willow would have expected a
vampire to be like, if she’d ever known they existed. And she didn’t think it
was even because of his soul, though that was a situation that definitely bore
research requirements. And while she was happy her new friend had found love—or
what was turning into the possibility of love—so soon after moving to Sunnydale,
Willow couldn’t help the little pulsing jealousy that made her want to change
places and be the one to have felt that closeness with someone. If she was
honest, she even wished a little that it could have been with Spike.
It
was hard to be too resentful though when she watched Buffy melt at the mere
mention of the vampire.
“It’s so weird, Will. I mean, Angel has sort of
been helping me out, you know, with giving me those cryptic clues about
hellmouth badness, and his eyes looked so sad and he seemed to want to help,
even if he was a little creepy. You’d think HE was the one with the soul, not
Spike.” Buffy snacked thoughtfully on her apple and completely missed the shift
in Willow’s comfort.
The redhead looked alarmed at that. “Do you think
that’s possible? Two vampires with souls?”
“Pshyeah, so not. I mean, come
on, Willow. Don’t tell Spike I said this, but don’t you think the idea of a
vampire with a soul is totally lame? And to have it forced on you because you
don’t have discerning taste in the people menu? Nope, I think it would be much
more romantic to fight against the odds of your nature. To know that you were
reborn into evil and yet fell in love with a beautiful girl and turned your back
on it all, just so you could be with her forever.” Buffy fell neatly back into
the dreamy land she’d been in earlier, her mind’s eye seeing a soulless Spike
riding up on his swift black stead, sweeping her up into his arms and prodding
the beast to gallop them away to safety.
“B-but wouldn’t that be kind of
dangerous? In a Romeo and Juliet kind of way?” Willow asked with a slightly
nervous tickle in her voice.
“Huh?”
A crease deepened between the
redhead’s brows as she thought over the scenario. She could see the romance,
just like Buffy said, but she could also see the danger, not least the
possibility of herself being eaten on the vampire’s journey to redemption. The
vision of Jesse on a gurney, looking too pale mixed with the reality of knowing
how close he could have come to being dead—or worse, turned—kept Willow feeling
a little on the skittish side when it came to considering soulless vampires and
how much control they might even have over their demons. What Buffy thought was
romantic might not even be possible. Those vamps they’d run into the other night
certainly seemed to have nothing on their mind but draining Jesse. And her.
Willow still had nightmares just imagining the reality of becoming lunch—or
well, dinner was probably closer to the mark.
“Can soulless demons
actually have enough free will to choose to be good?” Willow thought it was a
good question, one that she was going to be thinking about the answer to alot.
Not that it was relevant to anything, but she was nothing if not inquisitive and
an overachiever. Still, she didn’t like that look of uncertainty and fear that
clouded the Slayer’s eyes.
“I don’t know, Will. I guess not. They’re
evil, right? So, I guess without a soul they have no reason to feel guilty about
killing innocent people.”
Buffy looked so dejected, so unhappy that
Willow wondered if she even realised that the existence of such an anomaly
didn’t even apply to her.
“Buffy, Spike has a soul, so you don’t need to
worry about it. Makes you wonder, though.” She’d dived into the philosophical
and Willow felt the familiar excitement that came with learning new things and
thinking about worlds of possibilities.
Buffy’s relief at being reminded
that Spike was already restrained and fighting on the good side warmed Willow’s
heart. She would have hated to be the one to make Buffy question
herself—consider the validity and propriety of falling for a vampire, whether he
was bound with a soul or not.
“Wonder about what?” Buffy had jumped from
being worried right into intellectual interest. She nibbled again at her apple
while Willow put her thoughts out on the air, knowing that Buffy’s attention
span might not last. “Is everyone just born with a soul? I mean, do we all have
a soul to lose? And if we do, how do some humans lose it. That could explain why
some humans are beyond evil, right? There’s serial killers, rapists,
Snyder.”
Buffy choked between a laugh and a chunk of apple in her throat.
“Good one, Will. Not so sure we can lose our souls while we’re still human, but
I guess the reverse makes my job a little less clear cut. If humans can go bad
and act evil, what’s to stop vamps from trying to be good? And how can I dust
them knowing they could have potential?”
Willow didn’t even have to
think. A crisis of faith and conscience in her job could get Buffy really really
dead and that was something Willow would prevent at all costs if she could. “If
their snackin’, then you’re slayin’. No time to put labels on them when you have
lives to save. I think it’s safe to assume that most vamps are out to put major
holes in the population. Sure, there might be the odd vamp who wants something
better. Maybe even one who falls for the beautiful girl and turns his whole
existence around for love, but I don’t think you’ll find him in the graveyard,
Buffy.”
Buffy nodded, feeling the expected confidence in Willow’s
conclusions and recognising her need to eradicate evil from the world as
something more than just her duty. It was something she needed. She never wanted
to ever see another person she knew in a hospital bed—not if they were put there
because she was being slack or Miss Avoidy Slayer. And if they ever made it to
the morgue—well, that would only be because she’d gotten there first.
It
was a quiet, contemplative walk back inside.
The library was filled with
new soldiers to the cause. Xander sat at the research table, swapping jokes with
a newly flushed Jesse while Giles flicked through some ancient tome in the
background.
“Ah, yes, Buffy and Willow. I assume lunch was satisfying.”
Giles ducked back into his book, not waiting for an answer to the inane question
and so missed the girl’s conspiratorial amusement.
“Sure, Giles. It was
a veritable feast and we had waiters and hey, even the merry ole Queen of
England pulled up a square of turf to eat with us.” Buffy watched Willow, an
expecting smile tilting her lips and then broadening as Giles betrayed his
preoccupation.
“Really? That’s quite wonderful. Now, about this Angel you
met on patrol last night—”
“So, Jesse, all up and about. How’s all that
blood pumping through your body?” Buffy rushed out, somehow feeling guilty yet
not sure if he knew about what actually happened to him or if Xander had tried
to keep him in the dark so as to not make himself look like a
nutcase.
“It’s the strangest thing, you know? I mean, I leave with this
really hot girl, and wham…in the hospital with a chunk out of my neck. It’s like
some kind of corny Anne Rice novel. If I wasn’t so sure I was hallucinating, I’d
say that gorgeous blonde was a vampire. Freaky I know, but the accident must
have caused me to hit my head or something. Stranger things haven’t happened,
right?” he joked, smiling around the table at his friends as Giles coughed in
the background. It brought Jesse’s attention to the strange group and he leaned
over to Xander, his eyes watching everything warily. “Hey man,” he whispered.
“What’s with the hanging around with the school librarian and making with the
friendly? Did something happen while I was laid up?”
Xander giggled
nervously, checking between the girls and Giles before he abruptly pushed his
chair back with a screech. “You have no idea,” he grinned before leading the way
out of the place. Jesse shrugged at Buffy and Willow and followed.
The
sudden silence echoed in their absence until Giles stepped forward and nervously
approached Buffy with anxiety inspired hand wringing. “I do apologise, Buffy. I
had no idea that it was your intention to not confide everything in this boy. I
just assumed—well, we have all learned it is dangerous to assume, so I will keep
my peace until you advise differently.”
“No biggie. There was no harm
done. Jesse’s got some serious denial in his life, though.” Buffy found it kind
of amusing. She didn’t mind if he knew her secret, but as much as it was Xander
and Willow’s choice to start accepting the darker side of life as real and to
support her, it was their right to decide if their friend should know too. She’d
already been a bad slayer and let the cat out of the bag. She didn’t want
anymore responsibility, though she wondered how smart it was to let him continue
his oblivious life while living on the Hellmouth. Without the knowledge and the
tools to adapt to the danger, he may not live for much longer. She’d managed to
save him once—or rather, Spike had—but she didn’t relish the opportunity of
doing it again. She’d rather he made like a Star Trek guy and live long and
prosper.
It was something she was beginning to accept she could never
do.
“We’ll tell him soon,” Willow confirmed, somehow reading Buffy’s
mind. If not then the frown on her face had extra special revealing
powers.
Buffy nodded, but still there was something niggling at her, and
even though it was daylight, she couldn’t help but feel whatever it was, it was
too late.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Jesse stood and watched the blonde. Last
night he’d gotten lucky and was able to walk by her side right out of there.
Last night he’d looked cool to all those Sunnydale High sceptics that had
expected him to finish school a virgin. He’d held his head high, strolled out
confident and excited. Almost cocky. And then it had ended—he wasn’t quite sure
how. Or rather, he believed he knew how, just thought he had to be insane for it
to be so.
Tonight she was back—but probably couldn’t bear to look his way
again. If what he remembered happening was true—and despite Xander’s weird story
about a pack of wild dogs knocking him over and almost mauling his neck till he
was bled to death, he really believed it was—then he’d shown himself to be a
loser. Whatever purpose she’d chosen him to fulfil, he’d failed. He’d bailed by
knowing a pretty scary girl with superpowers and some bleached blond stranger
that bounced out of nowhere. He’d been saved and the beauty that had smiled his
way, had tasted his blood, wouldn’t want to look at him again.
There was
something locked far away inside that tried to argue that his way of thinking
could very well get him dead, but that seductive thrill he’d felt at having
sharp teeth slice through his soft skin like a heated knife through butter kept
it weak and heading toward silent. She was dangerous. He couldn’t deny it—and
yet that precarious link she held between life and death thrilled him beyond
anything he’d ever been able to grasp.
So it was that he was pulled
forward and across a crowded dance floor to be once again within her grasp,
despite his heart pounding the warning that she didn’t want him—would only kill
him, and without biting him at that.
Her eyes shone when she looked up
and saw him. Recognition made something flare to life—anger at being made to
look foolish, disappointment to find she’d wasted time on the likes of him, or
eagerness to once again sip from his neck—but though he saw it, he could never
put a name to it. He just wasn’t that clued into women, into people, and so
whatever truths he could have discerned from her gaze became something
unreachable for the likes of him.
Her smile was enticing, cheeky as a
perfectly manicured set of nails came out to lightly scratch down his
neck—scraping while she stared in fascination at the bandage that covered her
bite. Suddenly he felt aflame, didn’t want the cover as the puncture marks
flared to life and sought contact with their creator. The heat grew bolder,
sharper and became so piercingly deep that he almost lost his breath. Sweat
broke out on his skin as her hand wandered down over his chest. Last night had
been all about appearances. Tonight was all about the pain, and he felt
disturbed for craving more. Her hand caught at his and her fingers twined around
his stiff digits, the tug on his hand a little more brutal than he would have
expected from such a girl if he hadn’t known what she was.
It was wrong,
he knew that, yet as she led him to the door, pausing to lick purposefully,
seductively on the unmarked side of his neck, he couldn’t recall anything else
feeling so right.
And so he was drawn out and back into the
night.
Darla was changing her plan. As soon as the boy had entered the
building, as soon as she felt his stare on her body, she knew that an
opportunity had been too ripely offered to be refused.
He didn’t even
have to be pursued, his eyes settling on her and making quick work across the
room to be once again in front of her. His gaze was riveted on her legs and she
grinned. The short skirt got them every time. Her lips formed a smile of
satisfaction and the promising venture made her happy. Things were looking up,
and if she played her hand as lightly as possible, she could use this one to all
sorts of gain.
“Hey,” Jesse greeted, trying for casual as he leaned
against a pillar. Bodies were sweating from dancing fun all around him, the
music pounding a rhythm so hard and loud he could barely concentrate, and yet
his heart thumping in fascinated terror played louder than it all. His adopted
cool slipped a fraction as amber flickered in her eyes and he stood spellbound
waiting. She didn’t keep him long, her hand curling around his and dragging him
behind her into the dark that surrounded the club.
Her fingers were cold.
He remembered it from the night before, but now he knew the cause. His heart
seemed to jump a few beats before attempting to jam them back in between and
making him almost faint with understanding. And against it all, his dick
twitched. When had he ever cared about living? It was a given when he woke that
each day he would draw breath and just be. This night had caused him to choose,
and he wavered between desire and sense, his masculinity and need winning
out.
It was a compulsion, though. This craving to be with her, to let her
do to him whatever she was made for; turned for. He felt like she was there for
him and him alone—to make him into something special. To teach him ways that had
been denied to him by being sixteen and a loser. By being friends with nerds and
geeks.
Darla turned to look at him, walking backwards while she still
held his hand to guide. She was grinning, her smile sly and knowing. The tinkle
of her voice was so girlish, so sexy and addictive. “I lost you last night. Not
letting you get away again.”
In his head it was the death knell and he
felt the zip of tragedy all the way to his toes. His body was numb, his eyes
scared but sure, and his hand began squeezing hers in acceptance.
“No
chance of that,” he told her, his voice only a little shaky. “I don’t plan on
going anywhere that you aren’t.”
And then she kissed him, a brush of the
lips so soft he thought he was dreaming and his frightening introduction to
creatures of the night really had been in his hallucinations.
A flash of
the yellow eyes and fangs was all it took for him to believe.
~ * ~ * ~ *
~
He was drunk. Fall-off-your-barstool pissed as a parrot, and giggling
like one too. Spike kept tapping the bar, growling at any barkeep that refused
to refill his glass for free. Waiting for something to kick him in the arse and
shove him back into the dark cave of his former life before he woke up and
realised the monumental cock up he’d caused by simply opening his mouth. It
seemed bullshit always flowed with a rapid current. Always with the bloody foot
insertion. After a century he’d thought he’d grown out of the habit. He was
proven wrong far too often.
A sharp sting at the base of his neck told
him she’d arrived and his head hit the bar with a beer nut shattering accuracy.
He groaned, the alcohol fuzzing his brain nowhere near enough for him to ignore
that he was caught. He’d bloody kissed her, let his lips touch hers and know the
sweetness of her innocence. He was completely buggered and he knew it. But that
didn’t have to mean he liked it.
He was almost tempted to go outside,
lead her out by the nose, and off some poor sod right in bloody front of her. If
that didn’t get the trouble fixed, nothing could. Several things prevented that
course of action, though. One, he’d bleeding well die admitting it out loud,
but…he liked kissing her. She didn’t have too much experience, and that naivety
alone made him drown in her. She treated him as special. Girls don’t go kissing
blokes just for the hell of it. Not as a rule. Nor do the blokes kiss them back
when they don’t care.
He cared. And wasn’t that the rub. She’d ripped the
evilness right out of his body and left him flapping around all
soulfulwithoutasoul, trashing his existence and all the comfort of a lifestyle
he’d known for a hundred years—and he cared. It was almost too much for him to
handle—driving him to drink rather than the next sunrise. But it wasn’t
all.
Angelus. His presence around the girl spoke of badness that Spike
wasn’t so comfortable with. He knew how the guy operated, and though he still
hadn’t worked out exactly what the drama queen was doing getting so close to a
potential stake to the heart, his being around was enough to make Spike falter.
He couldn’t let Buffy succumb to the sleazy charm of his elder. He couldn’t let
Angelus win—whatever the prize was he sought. The pompous arse had taken
everything from Spike at one time or another. He’d zeroed in on what was
precious and he seized it with a malicious grin. Every. Fucking. Time. Well, no
more. The Slayer would need Spike by her side, at her back and anywhere else he
deemed necessary to protect her. He just couldn’t help the panic that need
instilled.
She was at his shoulder before he could swallow another shot.
That annoyed him. Spike felt desperate to be wasted, having much faith in his
ability to make sense of his world when he was three sheets to the wind. Her
hand on his back as she fell into the barstool beside him and he was stone cold
sober. Well, that tore it. He’d have to give her a piece of his mind. He’d have
to assert his position and put her in her pl—
He couldn’t think when she
was kissing him. Silky soft lips brushed his in a tenderness of affection he’d
never really experienced before. A small hand seemed to tangle with his, Spike
spinning in his chair to better face her and allowing him to tug her closer. And
then the hesitant point of her tongue slipped passed his lips and Spike felt the
heat explode through his body like scorching magma.
She never got so
close as to touch his body. The need to have that contact was akin to maddening,
Spike’s body buzzing in desperation. Though he could scent her unease and he
held himself back as much as an experienced soulless demon could. This soul
thing was becoming ridiculous, knowing beyond doubt that this mess would never
have been created if he hadn’t been inspired to spin webs of
deceit.
Pushing him to his limits, Spike almost groaned when she stepped
back, though the happy smile on her face left him stunned.
“Hey,” she
greeted, and Spike focused uneasily on the luscious green of her eyes and the
healthy warmth of her skin.
What the fuck was he doing? Kissing the
Slayer? Wanting more than her young body should be giving? He was out of his
bleeding mind, make no mistake. Which completely explained why his hand lifted
and brushed a stray hair off her face.
“Hey yourself,” he agreed huskily,
wanting to badly get back into either the kissing or the drinking, He’d be
buggered if he knew at this stage which he wanted more.
Buffy looked at
their hands still clasped together and felt giddiness wash over her. The music
was pumping, life thrummed through the building, and she was with a really
gorgeous vamp. One that she was falling hard for. It was a night made for fun
and her friends were eager to see him again. Wanting to hear his side of the
story in regards to Angel and going down to The Master’s mystical prison. But
first, she needed time for her—for them—and did her best to peel him from his
stool and lead him out to the dance floor.
He looked confused once they
stood in the centre of the throng of sweating dancing teens, almost as if he
hadn’t noticed her making him walk away from the bar. But once she’d wrapped her
arms around his neck, placed her head against his non-vibrating chest, he melted
into her and let the music envelop them. She was an addictive and persuasive
bint and Spike was finding once his hands were on her, he couldn’t let her
go.
He couldn’t have buggered things up more if he’d tried.
~ * ~
* ~ * ~
He’d woken up in her bed, her naked body curled around strangled
sheets with her back to him. She was pristine but he was covered in bite marks
and blood. His stare focused on the ceiling, admiring the brave experiment of a
darker canvas against the relief of paler walls. It was nice. Sort of
calming.
And then his lungs forced him to breathe.
Jesse couldn’t
work out if he was disappointed, though that would be pretty selfish considering
all that he’d gained throughout the night. Or more accurately, what he’d lost.
Blood wasn’t even the half of it—not if his own birthday suit and sticky cock
was to tally up. He was too exhausted to smile—too shattered to decide if he
wanted to smile. All he could tell right now was that he had left that loser
club of geeky virgins and that he wasn’t dead.
Oh, and that vampires, and
possibly other creatures that go bump in the night, were totally freakin’
real.
Darla moaned and rolled onto her back, giving him a luscious view
of her breasts. He felt crippled in hunger, realising too late that now he’d
tasted her—that she’d taken blood from him—he needed much more to satisfy his
urges.
Her greeting wasn’t all it could be.
“Oh, it’s you.” Her
cold calculating eyes fell to the stir of his cock, licking her lips as she
moved to straddle him. He felt more afraid as she slipped his stiffness into her
body than he had when she’d vamped and struck at his neck. The bite had quenched
some thirst he had to be drunk. To renew that link that was created the first
time she’d sipped from him. Her eagerness to taste him wasn’t as desperate as he
wished, but when he was in the throes of ecstasy with his blood leaking away
from his neck, he didn’t much care, as long as she didn’t stop. As long as she
fed his new addiction and allowed him sanity through provision.
He’d
never felt anything so moist and tight around his cock before. Not even when
he’d tried the age old apple pie routine. Nothing could match this sensation and
Jesse rejoiced in his courage. Without it he may have been cast aside and never
brought back here. Never felt the joy of being screwed within an inch of his
life while she snuck blood from naughtier places.
All up, though, she was
fearsome. She growled at him for pumping too slow, her claws slashed at him for
coming too fast. And she bit him for just not knowing.
She terrified him
and made him shake. But every little dig, every little cut told him his choice
had been wise. Told him he’d found life by risking becoming dead.
And
Darla just smiled.
It was wrong. No matter which way he twisted around the events
that had dumped him on his ass, he couldn’t make it look anything but horribly
hideously wrong. But then, any occasion that had Spike dragging around its edges
was enough to tip it toward bad right from the start.
He didn’t have a
clue what had happened. One minute he was paving his way into the Slayer’s
life—into Buffy’s life—looking eagerly down the track of his redemption, when
along came Spike with a cock and bull story that just happened to be his own
existence. Well, as confused as he was, Angel had had enough. It wasn’t fair—he
was the one with the soul. He was the one who had allowed himself to fall so low
through his certainty of damnation and guilt. Why did Spike get to walk in and
claim everything Angel had been moving toward, all with a smile on his face and
a fake soul in his flashy corpse?
Well, it stopped now. Stopped before
the bleached pain-in-the-ass managed to snack on Buffy and bring an apocalypse
down about their heads. As if there wasn’t enough to be worried about with The
Master trying to retrieve power and importance, now Spike had to come and
complicate things even more. And again, Buffy. How had he managed to get to her,
anyway?
He frowned, his brain tossing around the animosity and irritation
he felt toward his grandchilde, focusing on how perplexed and frustrated he was
that his plan had been interfered with. He had no choice but to get back on
track, to reclaim his story from Spike and then spit in the ingrate’s
dust.
He was at a loss how to do it. Buffy was obviously already half
enamoured with the hyperactive idiot. It wasn’t like Angel was so blind he
missed the dismissive glance she’d sent his way as she was half dragged out of
the crypt. He’d built up the legend of this Slayer in his head so high that to
see her gullible and trusting of a soulless vampire was a little too much for
him to cope with. He didn’t quite know how to protect her from the mess she’d
gotten herself into. His only real option was to expose Spike for the lying,
despicable fraud he was.
Angel wouldn’t even consider the possibility
that Spike could have a soul. He’d struggled with the pain and anguish being
forced into a conscience entailed, and he’d spent a hundred years paying the
price of a century and a half of evil depravity. He was unique and no way was
Spike going to come along and steal his truth, his life, and his girl.
No
way in hell.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
It was the fifth day in a row that
Jesse had turned up all but stoned. His skin was a waxen shade of sick, he
shook, and his eyes were twitchy and unfocused. He’d become almost completely
uncommunicative—even catatonic on occasions—and Willow, Xander and Buffy were
just about freaked right out of their minds.
Xander tried to draw him
out with jokes, failing miserably when the smiles Jesse rewarded them with were
sly and sinister. Willow’s attempts were with books, and his monosyllabic
responses were enough to almost drive her round the bend. Buffy tried activity,
hoping that if he came running with her, he’d either pick up the pace or
collapse at her feet, thus making medical intervention necessary. He never
showed up.
The big secret was still very much that: a big secret. Xander
was jittery every time it looked like he needed to say something about the evil
predators of the night, but chickened out before the words could escape his
throat. The three teens shared worried looks, wondering why Jesse now turned to
life altering drugs when he’d just survived an experience many didn’t get to
come back from. Buffy tried to stay out of much of it, sitting and doing little
more than adding her silent worries about the mental state of her new friend to
the pot. They were at a loss of what to do, his paleness and decreasing health
frightening Willow into finally reporting it to Giles during one of their secret
Jesseless meetings.
“He’s pale and unresponsive, you say? Perhaps he is
iron deficient after the attack and it has kept his energy reserves low. Also,
it is possible that such a brush with death, no matter how confusing the actual
brush might have been, would do something by way of frightening the poor boy
into questioning his mortality.”
Buffy considered. The first thing she
had done when she noticed his pallor was check his neck. Other than the healing
first bite, there was nothing there to indicate that he’d been the victim once
more of an unexplainable attack. So, lack of iron could work. He had lost a lot
of blood so it really was possible.
It was his lack of friendly banter
and Xander-like sucky humour that really told her there was something
wrong.
“Even if he’s just tired, he wouldn’t have a complete personality
change. And he watches us. When he thinks we won’t notice, he stares at each of
us.” Buffy stopped and shuddered, wrapping her arms around her suddenly cold
self. “It’s kinda like he’s taking notes.”
Giles dismissed their concerns
with little interest, much preferring to go on to discuss any leads Buffy may
have retrieved in regards the Master and his possible plans for escaping the
Hellmouth.
There were none. “Sorry, Giles. Every vamp we come across is
much more into the fighty and fangy than the talky. But next time I’ll let one
get extra special close just so I can try and get him to tell me something The
Master would dust him for as soon as he got home.” Her sarcasm was obviously
lost on the Watcher as he mumbled about time and the lack of it remaining to
sort it all out.
The frustration Giles felt was obvious as he twisted his
glasses and shelved a book. “I can’t abide all this waiting. Something
disastrous is about to happen and we have absolutely no idea what it could
be.”
“I might be able to help you with that.”
The man was a
stranger to most, so his unexpected entrance made three of the library’s
occupants gasp. He stood in the back of the room, lurking in the shadows of the
stacks as he had the undivided attention of four sets of eyes. They stared
transfixed…
Until Buffy rolled hers eyes and huffily introduced him.
“What are you doing here, Angel?” Her voice betrayed boredom, her expression too
relaxed for a slayer around a vampire. Yet he took it as a good sign, believing
she thought him safe and not the vicious monster Spike had treated him as inside
the mausoleum. It was just more proof that the moron was going to go down, as
soon as Angel managed to clear up the misunderstandings.
Still, it was a
formidable audience. He cleared his throat and slowly made his way down the
stairs, a book jammed under one arm. “I came to warn you.” He brandished the
ancient title with a flourish to Giles. “The Pergumum Codex. I thought it might
be useful.”
The researcher in Giles rejoiced at such a treasure, his
hands smoothing the cover down respectfully. “Wherever did you get this? I
thought it lost for good as it was last seen in the fifteenth century.” The
Watcher didn’t even look up, allowing his hands to touch such essential and old
information before his eyes could unravel the truth of the tales.
“Who
cares where he got it, Giles? The issue right now is, why is there a vampire in
our school trying to help me. I was kinda under the impression the handy dandy
slayer’s guide was all about the killing of the evil undead. Spike, I can
understand the not dusting, what with the soul and all. But you, you’re another
story.”
Giles grew white with alarm, taking an urgent step closer to
Buffy as the truth of their interloper was revealed. He rather thought she could
have dropped that little gem a bit sooner.
A squeak of impatience was
intriguing to them all, however, as the one called Angel almost stomped his foot
before sitting dejectedly in a chair at the research table.
“Look, you’ve
got it all wrong. I have no idea how Spike made you fall for it, but you’ve got
the wrong souled vampire. As in, I am, he’s not.”
Buffy laughed, the
sound happy and carefree before seguing seamlessly into pissed off.
“You
don’t get to go around telling lies about my boyfriend.” She ignored the gasps
of surprise around her. Just because she hadn’t told Spike she thought he was
her boyfriend, didn’t make it any less so. There had been kissage, and
hand-holding. It put them on a step above friends and Buffy was more than happy
to call it as she wanted it.
“I’m not lying—”
“Shut up. You say
you have a soul, and sure, you’ve been kind of helpful in a really not kind of
way. You may have given me the hints, but it’s Spike that’s been by my side with
the actual action behind the information. He’s the one that’s been watching my
back and helping me with the hands on fighting. So, how can you seriously sit
there and tell me he hasn’t got a soul?”
A flash of her conversation with
Willow made Buffy stop—though to all it appeared she was finished anyway. While
Angel sat spluttering, Buffy became lost in thought. How could she prove either
way if one of them was lying? She really didn’t think Spike was. He’d been
around her for long enough now for her to have known if he had some sinister
motivation for getting close to her. And if he did have some kind of plan—how
did he intend to carry it out while he was kissing and dancing with
her?
“Spike is nothing but a vicious murdering monster. He has no soul.
He’s been killing as recently as last week—” he stalled at Buffy’s look of
thunder, his own certainty dwindling a little without concrete proof. “—I’m
willing to bet,” he fudged, standing back up and straightening until his height
had Buffy dwarfed.
She wasn’t having any of his intimidation tactics.
She kicked him hard in the knee and smirked at his look of agony before pushing
his now slumped form back into his chair.
“I’ve seen Spike drink blood
from a cup. If he was feeding I’d know. So good try, but no
biscuit.”
Giles, Willow and Xander looked at her askance. Buffy shrugged
before explaining; “I heard it on a show once. It sounded much cooler when
someone else said it though.”
“Look, I know you don’t want to hear it,
but Spike is dangerous. If you don’t start working that out soon you’ll be
dead.” Angel cringed at the look of black fury that passed over and settled on
Buffy’s face, realising that standing back up might have been a bit presumptuous
on his part and quickly slumping back into the chair.
“Okay,” she said at
last, said through gritted teeth and an urge for decapitation. “Just say what
you’re telling us is true and Spike doesn’t have a soul. Why would he be doing
this? Why would he be working with me to fight evil and The Master?”
The
obvious answer was just on the tip of his tongue, but Angel felt the possibility
of a pop to his nose could be very high if he dared suggest Spike was planning
to kill her. And then the reality of it struck him. Spike didn’t do plans—not
well at any rate. Spike screwed them up on a fairly predictable basis. So if
he’d entered this lie with the purpose to off the Slayer, he would have broken
down now and attacked her. The alternative possibilities made Angel feel
nauseous so he ignored them as best he could.
“I don’t know.” He couldn’t
do or say anything more to stop him looking as stupid as he already did. “I just
know he is a soulless demon and if you aren’t careful something bad will
happen.”
Buffy seemed satisfied with his answer, her rigid stance
relaxing slightly as she turned her back on him and looked at her friends. Some
kind of decision was reached and she turned back to their unwelcome visitor,
studying him with the same degree of seriousness she often contemplated the
demon goo on her designer shoes. “Look, I promise I won’t take any risks. I’ll
stay on guard around him, but in my honest opinion, you’re wrong. And from where
I’m standing, actions speak louder than words, and Spike’s actions so far shout
so loud he’s made me deaf. Think about it.”
And she stared at him so
hard that he felt uncomfortable and left.
“It’s been so cold, Spike. Princess was
worried. Why have you been hiding in the sun?” Her voice tinkled inside the
crypt he’d made home, sharp eyes assessing shrewdly the benefits of his seeming
defection from both his family and his partner. Nothing of what she saw made
sense and instead of instigating a petulant tantrum, Dru dissolved into insecure
whimpers and fell seamlessly to the floor.
Looking up, insanity nudged a
smile to her lips as the tears made her cheeks glisten in the muted moonlight.
“You’ve seen the light, my love.” And she giggled, losing the sense of herself
as she ghosted the sign of faith against the cross of her torso. “It’s just so
funny. Daddy’s laughing at you. My Spike lies, but Daddy has the real prize.
Naughty Slayer doesn’t believe. Her time will come.”
He’d spent a good
decade thinking about why he’d been saddled with Dru. What bloody great crime
against the world and creation he’d carried out to have met her in that dark
alley so long ago. Surely it couldn’t be that he’d pissed off the Big Guy for
being so pathetic a wanker as to strive to be a poet. Of course, he’d actually
known he was pretty bad at it. Awful in fact. Didn’t make it a crime against
humanity—just one against good taste. Those that chose to mock and drown him in
cruelty were far more deserving of punishment—and that’s when he’d found he’d
answered one question. Maybe becoming the undead was its own reward. He’d had to
think so or become as mad as Dru.
When he’d first seen her, he hadn’t
recognised her darkness for what it was. Even now, Dru didn’t look like the
great evil he knew her to be. Didn’t appear to be the one who whispered truths
as she tore with force at a bloke’s devotion and love. She’d suck a man dry, all
while having him so oblivious to her true nature that when the shock of it
came—when the great rising terror of a manipulating Angelus came and usurped his
destiny—it left him seething and tired.
And ultimately, that’s what he
was now. He saw her histrionics on his crypt floor, listened to her confused
ramblings with so little care that it left him shocked and reeling. But so very
very tired.
His time with Dru was long gone. He realised that now. With
Angelus in town, it was an opportunity that he’d refused to consider—not while
he’d thought the death of the Slayer was his next goal to achieve. How royally
that plan fucked him over should really have come as no surprise. He was getting
used to being fucked over by ideas far too grand for execution. And Buffy was a
very pretty shaped spanner to throw into his mess of a works. He was beginning
to think that if he couldn’t kill her, he had nothing left but to love
her.
His eyes fell on Dru once more, panicking a little as her green eyes
watered and settled upon him sadly.
“You promised me you’d kill her,
Spike. Why can’t you kill her?”
Her expectations infuriated him. For
over a hundred years she’d been forcing him to live for her, keeping him at her
beck and bloody call, and one look at a blonde beauty had him scattering his
devotions. He felt like he’d grown more than a measure since crossing over into
Hellmouth territory. Like he’d grown beyond Dru and the life he’d led since his
turning. Like he needed more and meeting Buffy showed him a way of having
it.
Looking at Dru hurt now. She would always need something he didn’t
have—something she’d found to limitless depths in the wanker that, no matter how
many years went by, he could never thoroughly leave behind. Cruelty—something
the trace of William within him couldn’t bear yet the one thing Angelus had in
abundance. Thrived upon. And here, in this godforsaken mouth of Hell, she could
have it to her heart’s content. He’d be relieved to never have them around him
again.
That’s what he’d found in this most unlikely place—what he’d found
in the acceptance in Buffy’s eyes, as much as he tried to reject and ignore it.
A chance to start over. He just didn’t know if he had the courage to take it.
Saying yes to Buffy might put him on a new path—but it was a real wrench to let
go of everything he’d had. As lacking as he may suddenly find that to
be.
“You should know why, pet. Always could read me better than I could
myself.” He chanced a look and sure enough she was tearful, yet not choked with
grief. Dru wasn’t one to rally behind the laws of being Sire. She was too barmy
to even know there were any. So letting Spike go was relatively easy—losing him
from the throb of evil seemed to cut much deeper.
Her eyes glittered with
anger, the tears evaporating before he’d barely had time to register their
existence.
“Princess doesn’t like when one of the party leaves before
he’s been excused.”
And wasn’t that the rub. He hadn’t asked if he could
leave her, had made the decision without her input after leaving her for a week
at the mercy of Darla and The Great Ponce himself. Not that he guessed there’d
been much mercy—not if the healing lashes on her neck and arms were a true
indication. She didn’t seem resentful of his actions, though. More irritated
that he hadn’t sought the ancient out alongside her. Well, too bloody bad. He’d
brought her here on her demand. If she didn’t like that she’d lost him for good,
it was her own bleeding fault.
“Sorry, Dru. But just this once you forgot
to serve the bloody tea. Now I think it’s time you got back to mum, pet. She’ll
be wondering where you got off to.”
She hissed at him. Him, who’d been by
her side since he’d been enslaved to her mystery. “You’ve lost yourself,
William. Telling lies to the Slayer, making her believe in you. What will Daddy
think when he finds out you’ve tampered with the Gypsy vengeance and started to
wear his face?”
There was no doubt the first part of her speech had him
cringing—he just knew claiming to have a soul would bugger things up good and
proper. But he was on an out-of-control spin now, needing to cling to the excuse
that kept him by Buffy’s side. The deprivation of her favour would hurt more
than he’d ever thought possible in regards to a slayer—in regards to his
food.
“Yeah, I lied. What of it?” His stubborn stance was blown all to
hell as his door was kicked forcefully off its hinges and laid to rest halfway
to the back wall.
A vision of slayer betrayal stood in the moonlit
opening, tears coursing down her cheeks and deep breaths struggling to make it
into her lungs. Spike registered the twist in his gut as pain, just as his whole
world was thrown into chaos.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
She really didn’t want
to think about what Angel had told them, but Buffy couldn’t tear the doubt from
her mind. Not when it was her life that could be affected. The lives of her
friends. But no matter which way she turned it around, Spike had given her no
reason to have doubts. No reason to trust this Angel guy over him. There was no
test that she could administer to measure the existence of a soul. All she had
to judge was the word of a slimy guy and the deeds of both.
So far, Spike
was so far in front he was lapping the other.
Thinking of Spike made her
smile. Since that night she’d found him at the Bronze, they’d spent every night
together patrolling. Being near him made her senses almost explode on overload
and her craving for him was increasing with every glance he sent her way. She
was more than a little attracted to him—it would surprise her to find someone
who wasn’t—but if she were really truthful, she could admit that what she was
feeling about him had an intensity that left her starry-eyed and breathless.
She’d passed the crush stage, learned as much about him as she could while he
was as tight-lipped about his past as he could be—not that it had bothered her
at the time. She’d felt the gentleness of his embrace when he comforted her
after nearly being taken down by a pack of vamps—the Master’s lackeys eager to
take her to him. She’d felt the cool sensation against her buzzing palm, her
skin so sensitised she was almost bouncing along at his side. And she’d felt his
kisses—so molten with natural magic that Buffy wasn’t so with the remembering of
her own name. So yes, she’d drifted through the stages of romantic interest
until she’d stumbled awkwardly into love, and she was so blessed by it that she
couldn’t tear the smile from her lips.
She had no clue if he felt the
same, though the looks of longing when they pulled away from each other made her
heart beat harder for the hope that he did. He never talked about his feelings,
didn’t press her to share her own, but each time he brushed his fist against her
arm in a move so tender it nearly made her drool, she knew. Knew herself if not
him. Knew that if she lost Spike to the lies Angel insisted he was telling, it
would surpass hurt. It wasn’t something she wanted to think about—even if it did
compromise the life of her friends and family. Even if it endangered her
own.
Giles had argued that the stupid prophecy book was such a great gift
to them that she should believe Angel’s motives for wanting to help. Should
accept he was ensouled and be willing to listen to his story. Only problem was,
she already believed he had a soul. She’d looked up the history of Angelus—well,
honestly, she’d only read a paragraph or two before her stomach objected to
more. What the account had told her was that Angelus had not been the one giving
her hints about badness around the Hellmouth. In his own mysterious way, he’d
been trying to help. Not terribly efficiently, but she guessed it must be kind
of hard to try and slip into a world of humans if you were feeling guilt for
destroying so many of them.
That thought stopped Buffy cold, and a sudden
chill of foreboding spread through her body right as she came to a stop at the
door of Spike’s crypt. It was propped open slightly, a sliver of air existing
between the door and its frame. Enough to warn her of another presence as she
was about to enter and make out with her hot new boyfriend.
It was a
woman’s voice—one that she’d never heard before. Belonging to someone she no
doubt had never heard of before. And she knew Spike well, judging by the
intimacy of her tone, the hurt as she accused him of something.
“Yeah, I
lied. What of it?”
Spike’s reluctant admission slammed into her with all
the force of a building collapse and Buffy felt the horror sink down to her
toes. What did he mean he lied? Had he been sneaking around with her behind
someone else’s back? Was Buffy suddenly cast in the role of ‘other woman’ when
she was only sixteen? Oh God, what was he lying about and why was he doing it?
Without knowing what lay behind the claim she was falling apart, the pain
driving into her heart like a lethally sharpened stake
She’d put so much
trust in him—hadn’t even considered he might be lying about any part of himself.
It never even occurred to her to wonder how such a specimen of salty goodness
was available in the first place. She’d just gone with it, decided she wanted
him and went about showing him that he wanted her back. Learning you may have
made a monumental mistake was a little hard to take. Learning it in the presence
of another woman? Intolerable.
Buffy felt sick at the rushing swell of
anger and disappointment that swept away all commonsense as she planted her boot
flat against the door and sent it crashing inward. Spike’s surprise and dread
filtered through her already quaking sense of supposed understanding, yet it was
the malicious glee she caught in the woman’s eyes before she attacked that Buffy
deemed more important. Without thinking, by trusting her heart before her head,
she’d barged into the lair of two vampires. Ordinarily that wouldn’t have been a
problem, her usual confidence in her abilities allowing that most double-act
vamps she came across would be dusty remains before they could share an ounce of
their stupidity. This time, she could sense the power from both of them, Spike’s
almost heightened by his company, and Buffy at last realised her
mistake.
Hands were around her throat and strangling her before Buffy
could even call his name. Darkness beckoned as she tried to kick, tried to claw
her way free. All the while the bitch was cackling like she thought Buffy’s
imminent death was funny and Spike stood shocked to the spot. Buffy saw it and
didn’t adjust her beliefs to the look of horror on his face, the fear that that
reached out and met her own.
Not until Buffy was gasping did the
pressure cease, only to leave her screaming as fangs sunk through tissue and
sucked greedily at her blood. Buffy cried as her foolishness slammed into her
and her mistakes flashed behind her eyes. Then it was over, blood leaking from
her neck and weakness threatening to keep her collapsed on her knees. Partially
in shock, she met furious midnight eyes feeding on terror and shrunk as he
poured all his fear and anger into damaging punches that hit a too responsive
Dru.
The woman Buffy didn’t know—the one she hated and now feared with a
very healthy does of reality—collapsed into a sobbing bundle of olden styled
velvet. Everything about her was blood red—the out of fashion gothic styled
dress, the murder in her eyes, Buffy’s plasma that dripped from her fangs. And
now she acted helpless against Spike’s anger, remaining on the floor as she
rubbed her face and whimpered about duty.
It was too much, Buffy cringing
as Spike dragged the woman into the air, throwing her across his crypt and
rushing back as she slid down the stone. The evil laughter was back, her eyes
stripped of artifice as she maliciously entered the fight. Fists and fangs
slashed through flesh and air, leaving Buffy scared and confused. She stood
slowly, pushing her spirit and determination to support her legs, forcing one
final look to confirm the preoccupation of both vampires as she painfully sidled
out the door.
Spike had not stopped the movement of his kicks and fists
until Dru lay bloodied and whimpering on the floor. He’d never felt such fear,
such gut-clenching terror that he was going to lose the very thing he needed to
keep him alive. Buffy. The image of his former’s fangs hidden within the
Slayer’s throat had been enough to budge him from his catatonia, desperation to
save Buffy—to really watch her back—spurring him to finally force Dru from her.
Dru had taken him over completely during his past, but this encroaching on his
territory—whether to kill or love a slayer was still the debate—it fuelled an
intolerance he wasn’t aware he had. No one could beat him, take away his purpose
and so he had saved the girl. Didn’t want her hurt anymore than he wanted to
come to this hellhole in the first place.
Whatever had Dru worried about
the situation now was not his problem. He’d beaten her into submission for the
first time ever and amidst it all wondered if this was what he should have done
if he’d really wanted her to be his all those long years past. Whatever he could
have done, should have done, was long ago and he had his future now to protect.
It was time he surrender his stranglehold on his evil persona, allow
himself to recognise there was so much more than killing and feeding. No matter
how evil he was, how consumed he was by the demon within, there was always love.
He’d never had it in Dru, but he knew he could with Buffy. Knew that he half did
already.
He would not let her die, and especially not on the end of Dru’s
viciousness.
By the time the violence had stopped, Buffy had long
disappeared into the night.
She’d not quite forced her stumbling steps
to reach home before he caught up with her, seizing her in quivering arms and
kissing apologies into her hair. Buffy wasn’t in any rush to pull away, she
could wait to face the thing that had nearly killed her for a few more minutes
while she filed away the smell and feel of him. It was a pity he could tell she
was crying—even if it was the great body shaking sobs that clued him in.
She clung to the leather of his coat as she delayed delving into a truth
she didn’t want to know. Not really. If she was the other woman, then she’d
deal, because being held tight in his arms felt more right than being wrong.
Felt like something she should fight for rather than give up. But betrayal hurt
much more than she’d expected. She never thought it would be something she’d
have to face this soon in her life.
Within a minute of the embrace, Buffy
realised she was finding it harder to breathe. Having that automatic body
function deprived for the second time so soon after the first, she was beginning
to think she could develop a complex.
“Spike!” she gasped, feeling the
pain in her heart as it spread to her lungs.
Buffy could feel the grit of
sorrow on her face as she ducked her head in an attempt to hide. But one of the
fingers on a hand that she loved so much slipped along her jaw and lifted her
chin, making her see that her eyes weren’t the only ones that
shimmered.
“I’m sorry, Buffy.” And strangely he was. He felt a true
glimpse of what it must be like to have a soul and was ever grateful he didn’t
have one. If this was the kind of pain he’d be stuck with every day for the rest
of his existence, then he didn’t want a bar of it. Sure, he really preferred to
not go through another scene like the last anytime soon, but daily torment he
could do without.
“I heard her, Spike.” A hard edge entered her voice—an
edge that was pure bravado and self-defence. “I heard what she said. That you
lied. What about, Spike? And who were you lying to? Her, or me?” Tears of
frustrated expectation were again sliding down her cheeks, her nose throbbing
and her throat all seized. But this wasn’t something Buffy could allow herself
to avoid. As much as she didn’t really want to know—didn’t want to know about
HER—there was much experience that told her the dangers resulting from ignoring
certainties.
Spike did not look like a man keen on broaching the subject.
He looked over her shoulder, searching hard for something that could alter
perception so he didn’t have to go through this. He’d saved Buffy from Dru’s
bloodlust—saved her from being hurt—and was on the verge of losing her for good.
What did he do then? If he told her the truth, would she still want to know him?
Would she still need his lips to kiss her goodnight or would she wipe at them in
disgust?
He could choose to tell her nothing. Let another lie pass his
lips and come back to bite him on the arse. He didn’t want to lose her, but if
he did, what then? If he told her the monumental lie that had presented him with
the perfect cover to get close enough to kill her and her friends, told her that
he’d fallen hard and changed his desire from one of death to life, would she
still allow him close?
He didn’t think she could. Not as the Slayer.
Maybe Buffy could have forgiven his deceit—if she really loved him. But the
Slayer would have to punish him, and the worst possible way of doing that would
be to withdraw her affections and shut him out of her life. He had no answer to
what he would do then. He hadn’t completed any kind of transformation toward
good, was still reeling from falling for the common enemy of his kind. But he’d
been testing himself, trying to hold back on the killing. Well, bloody hell, not
really, but he’d been thinking about it. And had cut back. Only one a night—and
a quick death, not one as brutal as in his past life. Not one who’d been his
plaything for the night—no more chase and consume. Now it was feeding for the
sake of it, but becoming something he was getting closer to believing was wrong.
Would whatever process he’d begun come to a screeching halt as soon as the
damning words fell from his lips and she discarded him completely?
One
look at the shadows developing beneath her eyes, her skin pale for the loss of
blood, and he knew the choice was not in his hands. Whatever happened after, it
was time now to be honest—to be himself. To be Spike. If she couldn’t be with
him after, well, one step at a time would get him either comfy on the Hellmouth
or completely out of the place.
“Pet, can we go somewhere to talk?” He
still held her hand, even as she looked warily at the two of them entwined
together before squeezing him in what he could only interpret as terrified
clinging.
“We can talk at my place,” she told him quietly, taking two
steps in the direction of her front porch before realising that he wasn’t
moving. She didn’t speak again as she stared at him, hoping the urgency wasn’t
quite showing.
“Not sure I should, Buffy. Think after this you might not
appreciate me having unlimited access to your home.”
He was serious, she
could tell. And it made her stomach feel all tight and flamey, making cold
shivers beat and tickle against her skin.
“Are you having an affair with
me?” Buffy couldn’t hide the vulnerability she felt, her voice cracking with too
much emotion. God, this pain wouldn’t stop, not unless he told her it was a
mistake and that other woman wasn’t his legitimate girlfriend.
Spike
looked shocked at his question, then pensive. “Never thought of it like that,
but in a way, I guess I am.”
Buffy yanked her hand free and backed up
toward her house, pain obvious in every wobble of her lip. “How could you do
that to me? I thought you l—” She slammed a lid on that line, refusing to bring
herself closer to not recovering this blow. If he didn’t know, if he didn’t
suspect…
“I do love you.”
Her face was on fire as she stared at
him stunned, and then the sobs erupted from deep in her throat as she cursed the
weakness of her knees when he was around. He lifted her with grace, and carried
her around to the back of the house and cradled her in his arms while he sat on
the seat in the garden. It was as private as he was going to get—not wanting to
risk her hating that she took him into her house to learn the awful truth about
a monster with her in his heart.
“Buffy, I did lie to you—and you
wouldn’t believe how sorry I am about that—but not about Drusilla. That was more
a slip of the mind I guess. I didn’t not tell you on purpose, I just forgot
about her as soon as I saw you.” Spike grinned nervously, his teeth biting his
bottom lip while a brow quirked higher. “She was a mite upset that I’d left her
for you, I guess, but that’s not what she was getting at, luv.”
Buffy
beat down the panic that threatened to burn her throat with bile. So much
already and he hadn’t even told her the information she’d requested. What lie
had he told? Why, it was looking like the one big fat lie about his hobag
betterbe-ex wasn’t even the start of it. She was no closer to understanding the
cause of her near death experience than she had been before Spike followed her
and promised explanations.
The grief in her expression wasn’t alleviated
even a little with what he’d shared so far and Spike sighed deeply, gathering
strength from the fact that she hadn’t removed herself from his lap or his touch
yet. His arms tightened around her and he looked off passed her shoulder,
gaining distance and courage by not seeing the pain he was sure to inflict
reflected in her eyes.
“I’m a bad, rude man, Buffy. I was dragged to this
place kicking and screaming by my sire—Drusilla, the mad bird you unfortunately
met back at the crypt. She was hellbent on reuniting with the family, convinced
she’d find Angelus and our unlives would go back to being hunky-dory. Never
bloody knew it wasn’t, you know? I didn’t want to come, but I’ve been devoted to
her for over a century and like the whipped fool I am, I gave in and here we
are.” He could feel the pressure against the circle of his arms as Buffy tried
to push away, could feel the increase in her temperature as she fought an
internal battle not to stake him, was his guess. Whatever it was, he was
grateful that she hadn’t yet broken free and he could finish his tale. It wasn’t
going to paint pretty pictures for him, but at least he was telling it and not
some other interfering wanker that didn’t know the full truth.
“It didn’t
seem so bad a move when I found out the Slayer was here guarding the
Hellmouth.”
He very clearly noticed the second she stopped breathing,
hoping that she would begin again as soon as he rushed in with the rest. “Still,
wasn’ in any hurry to seek you out. Had my own decisions to make, my own
thoughts to sort out. When I met you and your mates in the graveyard…it wasn’
intentional, yeah? I wasn’t looking for a fight, not right then. Was following,
just out of interest. When I helped, wasn’t even planning on eating any of your
friends. Then Darla gave me an out, a way to be there and look good as well as
give me an in to you.”
Ah, there it was, the air sucked back into her
lungs and the vibrations of her body increased. It broke something vulnerable
inside that she was crying and he couldn’t stop the need to crush her against
his chest and compound the problem with apologies.
“You were going to
kill me? So Angel was right?” She didn’t act like a chit who just heard her
boyfriend had plotted her death. She didn’t move away as one would if they
feared for their life.
The desperation to never let go was filtering
through him and seizing his fingers, causing bruises where he gripped her hard.
“I’m a monster, Buffy. Killing slayers is what I do. What I’m known
for.”
She gasped in horror. “You’ve killed other Slayers?” And then her
wet forest green eyes accused him with all the sadness he’d never been expected
to react to. While such weakness in a human always made Angelus laugh, to Spike
it reminded him of the moment his mum had caught onto the truth of what he was
telling her, what he wanted to share with her.
“Two.” The admission he
was sure sealed his fate. How could he come back to be anything worth looking at
now that she knew what he was and all he’d done before meeting her.
“Why
haven’t you done it yet?” She searched him deeply, finding something he wasn’t
sure about but feeling relieved it kept him where she was for now. “You’re
soulless; there was nothing in your way. I totally trusted you and fell for you.
You could have killed me eighty times over. Why haven’t you?” The repetition
didn’t quicken his answer and when it came, Buffy both melted and wished she
could take it back and never have to hear it.
“Because I found things in
you and your friends I thought I could never have.” The tense hunch of his
shoulders was enough to herald the world that he was uncomfortable with
revealing such a weakness, and that he really didn’t want to elaborate. Buffy
seemed to settle in his arms, though, and he felt the prickle of
tears.
She stared at him for what seemed like hours, the night growing
around them and greeting all the routines of its arrival. “You’ve never been
liked before?”
Spike startled, opened his mouth to deny it but knew. No
more lies or he could guarantee a brutal end to this heartfelt bare-all. “No,
not really.”
And she kissed him.
“I like you,” she whispered
bravely against his lips, trusting her heart and knowing that she could be wrong
and end up dead tonight. It was a risk. Every night she wandered around it on
her own, prepared with nothing but a pointy stub of wood while some evil demon
could take her out whenever one came along that was stronger than her, bigger or
just more prepared. She could live each day in fear that a decision she made was
wrong, that she was the sole reason people continued to die in this town, or she
could just believe in herself and take whatever happiness passed her
way.
Spike made her happy, and though he had no soul, he’s shown her a
great deal more about himself and the way he could love by protecting her and
being honest when he could have taken the easy way out.
If admitting that
he was with another girl while messing around with Buffy was taking the easy
way.
“So, this Dru? She’s out of the picture?” Eager eyes watched his and
Buffy felt a light inside lit to a powerful flame as he nodded his
affirmation.
“Completely,” he voiced in wonder, his lips being teased by
the presence of hers barely a breath away. “She knows how I feel about
you.”
She wasn’t going to press, already having heard it once—probably
only by accident. She could wait longer, determined to give Spike all the time
he needed to prove himself to her friends and Giles. She had a feeling that a
soul wasn’t as big a deal as Angel made out. If Spike could change his whole
world around for her without one, then was she really supposed to be impressed
by Angel’s mediocre efforts with one?
She could feel an eyeroll coming on
and to prevent an immersion into Angel annoyance, she snuggled deeper into
Spike’s arms, feeling his affection in the unconscious efforts to breathe as
well as his tight hug.
“Spike?” Buffy made a decision, ignoring the
implications if she was wrong. No way did she believe Spike was still planning
to kill her. Not even an evil vampire filled with hate could sustain this level
of intimacy with just the desire to kill her to fuel him.
No trace of her
decision had passed through to him yet, his shoulders stiffening for the
rejection Buffy suspected he felt sure was coming his way. He was so gorgeous,
all wounded and unhappy at the thought of everything between them being
irretrievable.
“Come into my home, Spike.” Buffy bit her lip as his
awestruck gaze bathed her in happiness.
“Buffy?”
He didn’t move
until she’d moved upright, linking their fingers and leading him to her back
door. She opened it, and slowly dragged Spike through it. Progress to her room
was slow, eyes locked as they trod each step carefully. Buffy tugged him down
fully clothed onto her bed and quickly positioned herself for healthy and happy
vampire snuggles.
“Spike, I really like you.”
There’d been no kiss in her little girl
room. Spike laid back the length of her plush bed, holding her tight, and
feeling like he’d never been this close to anyone in his entire life. And all
without a kiss or a caress. It felt a lot like how he’d expect Heaven to feel,
this giddy sense of comfort. This loving sense of fulfilment. And just like the
git he was, he felt the urge to test its validity—to seek the end of something
that made him feel so special and wanted if it wasn’t truly
right.
“Buffy?” he asked, his voice hesitant but hopeful. “You sure this
is what you want, luv?”
Buffy giggled, Spike’s eyes widening as he looked
at her in amazement. Watched her as she propped herself up on her elbow and
looked down into his awestruck face. “Spike! I just found out my boyfriend—who I
really really liked a lot before I found out he was a cheating, lying yet
adorable soulless vampire—is a soulless vampire. Of course I’m sure this is what
I want.” Her smile revealed so much of her tender heart, her eyes betraying her
sincerity of feeling for him, and all he could do was stare at her in wonder.
The simple ecstasy of it crackled on the air around them.
But then he
felt the doubt seep back into his body with the flashing images of her friends
and watcher in his mind’s eye. The shade of his eyes clouded as sadness consumed
him. “Don’t expect your mates will be half as forgiving or welcoming as you,
pet.”
He looked down at her comforter and missed the fear that cast a
shadow over Buffy’s face. Then determination swept it away as her mind was made
up.
“They’ll be fine.” A heavy pause. “We just won’t tell them.” She
avoided his eyes, knowing that she should be seeing a look of censure in them at
her behaviour, but suspecting immense relief instead. Buffy could feel the
undercurrent of hope and knew that she was making the right decision, even if it
provoked derision when everyone eventually found out. But he needed a chance,
and she wasn’t ready for her friends to judge her fairytale and bring it to an
early and less happy conclusion.
Angel’s smug face when she told her
friends the truth about Spike’s lack of soul—and his original plan to take her
down—made her feel petulant and fiercer in her need to protect the relationships
Spike had formed with her friends.
“And…well…I have to admit it would be
funny to see Angel explode from the inside. He’s all ‘my soul makes me so great.
I am the one true soulful vampire; Spike is an imposter. Pick me, Buffy. Pick
me!’”
Buffy’s attempt to impersonate the brooding whiney voice of the
Angel she’d been getting to know was hysterical and Spike couldn’t help the
small puff of a laugh that escaped his lips.
“Bloody brilliant. You
should go into acting, pet.”
She looked him up and down with a glint of
mischief slipping through her grin. “I’d give you a run for your money,
blondie.”
“Oy! I’ll have you know I was being perfectly…’m not gonna get
away with that, am I?” he realised with a pout. She’d be onto every evil action
now, leaving him totally buggered.
Buffy shook her head, even as
amusement kept her smile in place. He was evil—and had been viciously so not so
long ago. She couldn’t expect him to take up the honesty train completely
overnight. That didn’t mean she didn’t have standards—just that she’d cut him
some slack as he moved up to meet them.
A shy searching look and Buffy
let her head fall to his shoulder, her hand free to trace slow, light circles
over his abdominals. Her fingers stroked over the bump of each muscular ridge,
her body thrumming with electrified tingles as quiet breaths seemed forced
through Spike’s lips. Lids heavy with a desire that wasn’t so new since meeting
him, Buffy let her eyes close and follow the internal lustiness. She kept her
hands innocent even as her mind explored the obscene.
“So, are we okay
now? You’re all free of insano vamps and duty, etcetera?” Buffy could feel his
nod of affirmation against her cheek, his chest moving with the action. Her next
words left him rigid, though, but Buffy was too absorbed in her imagination and
where their new understanding of each other could lead to. “And you’re soulless,
though all with the good, right? No eating of the population with a pulse and
helping me defend the Hellmouth against those vamps?”
His nod this time
was slower, affected poorly by the sudden kick of what this choice would mean
for him. It was one thing to start feeling a little peculiar in his belly when
he drank his victims down, completely another to recognise it as guilt and give
it up in the name of love.
It wasn’t really an argument. He had Buffy in
his arms right now after expecting her to shove him to the curb. He’d been a
lucky bloke and it wouldn’t do now to risk it all being stripped away with her
discovering his secret little pastime. So yeah, he was going cold turkey off the
happy meals.
He could rip someone’s head off about it later.
~ *
~ * ~ * ~
He watched from the shadows as she led one of the Slayer’s
friends into the dark. The door of her place was left open, the weakened body
slumped against the doorframe as he struggled with a satiated smile and a
quickly abandoned attempt to reach out to her. Darla’s lip curled in contempt,
her demon’s eyes glaring at the boy who just wouldn’t take the hint. He was
useful for some things, it was true, but he’d not yet learned the subtle art of
disappearing when she’d had her fill.
“Sweetie.” Her voice dripped with
saccharine, more than a hint of her impatience for him to be gone in the
forceful shove of him out her door. “You really should be getting home. You do
have school tomorrow, right?” She tilted her head, knowing that it showed her
off to a lovely advantage. He may not be the best toy she’d ever had, but he was
sure fun for now. His connection to that frustrating little slayer added to his
marketability no matter how annoying his tiresome flirting grew to
be.
“Oh. Yeah. I guess.” Jesse stared at her unblinkingly for a moment,
his eyes dazed and unfocused as the blood made a sludgy trek through his
veins.
He swayed drunkenly on his feet and swerved sharply once he lost
the support of the building’s solid structure. He fell, laughing hysterically as
he struggled back to his feet. The sloppily dressed teen missed her flash of
irritation as he stumbled again and finally rolled her eyes.
“Guess I
took a bit too much this time. Better stay at home tonight and rest up. If you
don’t replenish your supplies then you are of absolutely no use to me.
Understand?” She grabbed his chin and forced him to look her in her amber eyes,
her loathing plain for anyone not half drained and drowning in lust to
see.
Finally he blinked and instead of rearing back in horror at the
monster less than an inch from his face, he grinned, a look of relief and desire
making rapid imprints on his features.
“Don’t think I can do that, baby.”
His voice was slurred, his body heavy on his legs as he smirked and looked her
curves up and down. He was going for sexy; she thought he was
pathetic.
“Look, as much as I don’t care if your organs shut down from
the loss of blood, I’m not ready yet for your superfreak friend to come bashing
down my door. Be a good little stray and scat.” She said it like ‘boo’,
obviously thinking she still had enough menace to make him wet his pants, but
instead he lunged forwards and latched onto her lips with an amorous
kiss.
“Ewwwww, can’t you take no for an answer?” A violent push sent
Jesse careening against the wall of the next building, his head cracking on the
bricks as he slumped down them and flopped on the ground unconscious. She felt
such revulsion that her body shook, yet her gaze wandered almost immediately to
find another hassle she didn’t want to have to deal with.
“If you’re
planning to stalk me to death, at least be original about it.”
Angel fell
away from the shadows, his moves slow and calm as he casually walked up to his
sire and one time lover.
“You planning on leaving the boy there?” He
stared at her, his eyes soaking up the blonde beauty that had rejected him and
his soul while he purposefully blocked out the very real existence of the
Slayer’s friend passed out through injury and loss of blood.
“Believe me,
it couldn’t have happened to a dumber geek.” She turned her back and made to
leave him, showing her disdain for his presence that made his jaw clench and his
hands squeeze into tight fists.
“I need your help.” The words were out
before he could think them out thoroughly, and he cringed at his stupidity when
she laughed uproariously. She was beautiful when she laughed—as evil and
dangerous as she was at any time, the radiance of her smile always stunned him.
It explained so much about him—his attraction to Buffy for one—and he was
momentarily startled speechless.
“Why Angelus,” she purred as she turned
and began to stalk him, her fingers reaching out and walking up his arm to rest
with a pat on his chest. “Whatever could I help you with?”
He couldn’t
miss the malicious glint that challenged him, couldn’t suppress the growl that
rumbled beneath his breast for the pleasure of her touch. It had been so long,
too long since she’d cast him out, rendered him homeless and without family to
love and provide for. He’d been a good provider—bringing home the bacon on a
viciously regular basis. He felt a momentary pang of disgust before shirking it
off and finding her again.
“I need you to help me find out what Spike’s
up to.” His lips were tight as he watched every flicker of emotion on her face.
She was an expressive woman, yet usually she settled on derision and flirty, two
ends of the spectrum while she pursued her prey.
He’d expected her to
refuse. Instead she looked confused which quickly changed to
intrigued.
“Why, I thought our baby boy was all shiny like you. Has he
been naughty?” Her smile was so infectious, so stunning that Angel often felt
she’d inspire a man to breath, counteracting the undead part of his
curse.
“Well, I don’t know for sure,” Angel admitted bashfully, but envy
churned in his gut until he could barely stand there without committing
violence. The little creep had stolen his life, had slipped in when he wasn’t
looking to take over his mission and pinch his girl. “I might not have the
proof, but I know Spike. You know Spike. No way is he telling the truth. Can’t
you ask Drusilla?”
Darla waved her hand dismissively at that option.
“That fruitloop hasn’t said a thing that made sense in over a hundred years. I
doubt I can decipher her babble now if my life depended on it. Which it
doesn’t.” A slow disturbing grin spread over her face and consumed Angel in its
glory. “But I have an idea.” She stepped to the side and they both took in the
crumpled form of Jesse. “Meet my own little pet spy. He’s got an in with the
Slayer. I shouldn’t have to promise much for him to do exactly what I want.
Lucky for you the boy is so desperate for me that he’ll do anything I
wish.”
Angel cringed. He could feel the weight of his guilt settle
heavily on his shoulders, but could feel the futility of his presence in this
place even more. Buffy wouldn’t need him if Spike were to stay by her side. She
wouldn’t need his soul, his muscle, or even his affection. It hurt even more
that because of him, the biggest mistake of their family, Buffy didn’t even want
Angel. He’d never been last on the list before. Even soulful the Powers wanted
him. Had expectations of him.
Still, his soul rejected he allow his sire
to use this human. Angel felt the pain of it as it ate away at the thing in him
that fought against evil every day. One more look at the brunette and he closed
his eyes, stubborn and selfish need making up his mind. There were always
casualties in war.
“Do whatever you need to. I’ll be in
touch.”
And with the swish of his coat he was gone, not even watching as
Darla turned her back on her fucktoy and headed back inside.
Jesse didn’t
even moan as Xander came out of hiding, the fear and shock making him shake
violently as he heaved up his friend and dragged him to safety.
Xander was fuming, and not a little scared. He’d managed to get
Jesse all tucked up in a hospital bed before wandering home, his head full of
vampire flambé. Seeing bleached hair enter the library behind Buffy was like
waving a red flag. Xander was out of his seat and jabbing furiously into Spike’s
chest with his finger, emotion tying his voice up even as he spat out his hatred
for the undead.
“Whoa!” Buffy gently shoved Xander away from her
boyfriend, her eyes wide and disbelieving that her friends could possibly know
Spike’s truth. How could they? They hadn’t believed Angel totally yesterday so
it was quite a stretch that they suddenly did overnight. “What is going on here?
I thought we were giving Spike the benefit of the doubt.”
Xander stood,
agitated and confused as he glared holes into a suddenly wary Spike. “This whole
soul thing is a great steaming pile of horse crap.” His arms crossed, he stared
at the blonde couple and dared them to correct him.
“Oookay.” Was it bad
that Buffy felt fearful that they knew the truth and would judge him? “What
exactly brought this on?” God she hoped it was something else. Something other
than the truth she’d spent the night processing and forgiving. Buffy took
Spike’s hand, neither of them taking their eyes from the angry teen as Xander
began to pace and throw out his arms in frustration.
“Creepy stalker guy,
that’s what brought this on. He says he’s got a soul and he’s all good? Well,
big on the NO to that one, folks. Either he’s lying or his soul isn’t worth
the…I can’t think of a good way to finish that sentence, but he’s full of it,
and I’m not talking of a nice shiny soul.” Xander practically threw himself back
in his chair, his head falling forward hard to the wood of the table with a dull
thump.
Spike squeezed Buffy’s hand and then slowly took an opposite seat
and sat down. He felt suddenly very insecure—and worried about these kids
getting on any side of his grandsire. None of them would survive that meeting,
except maybe Buffy, but the rest were too puny to go up against the wanker’s
games and come out of it alive.
“You saw Angelus? He didn’t see you,
obviously, or you wouldn’t be here to tell the tale.” Then the information that
had spewed out in a colourful vitriolic message of hate hit him right between
the eyes—in that place that was often a bit slow on the move. “Wait, what? What
bloody soul? Bugger. I thought you were just taking the piss.”
Buffy
cringed under his intense stare. With all her wigging over his own soul status
and his undead ex, she’d kind of forgotten to go into details about what late
breaking news was discovered regarding Angel. Her crude joke about the vampire
and his pompous claim of soul haveage was something that seemed to have skipped
right past Spike. His look of confusion and panic tore at her heart and she was
suddenly afraid that he was going to reveal everything in his shocked
realisation that though his own soul was made up on the spot, Angel had
supposedly possessed one for countless years.
Buffy caught his eyes and
very slowly, sincerely told him what they all knew—if they’d been told the
truth. Again, not with the easy tests for the soul existence. “Angel came by and
told us he has a soul. He had some book thingy that made Giles’s eyes bulge, but
his main point was to tell us he was the real vampire with a soul.” Please don’t
anyone ask Spike if he really has one. Don’t let them find out now it was a
trick. Buffy felt almost light-headed with holding her breath, then found
herself trying to be inconspicuous about needing to drag in great gasping
lungfuls of air as Spike’s expressions of doubt caused her pain.
He felt
like his very foundations had been taken to with a sledgehammer. Was the girl he
was falling for making fun of him? Setting him up to fall not only in front of
her friends, but against the tosser that had always ensured his failure in the
past?
“There is no way Angelus has a soul. I would’ve known about it.”
Except niggling little images came to barrage his brain. Darla and Angelus had
been rigidly supportive of each other, never allowing for either of them to be
placed in the way of danger without a way to back out of it. Lessons had been
learned was all they’d say, but Spike had always envied the way they had always
watched each other’s back. Even when it looked like they didn’t.
He’d
always thought it made no sense when she’d kicked him out. Made even less sense
how quietly he’d gone. Any normal Angelus behaviour would have alerted him and
Dru to the expulsion from their close knit group, and suddenly Spike felt the
weight of his misunderstanding heavy in his gut. The bitch had never told him.
She’d let them believe that Angelus had bolted because he was sick of them, that
it was HER call to split them up. The years of disappointment and hurt that he’d
been abandoned suddenly was lifted, and though it didn’t give him any warm
cuddlies for his grandsire, it removed some of the responsibility he’d felt at
the loss. Altered his feeling of destiny that he’d finally gained Drusilla to
care for. Events outside his control may have kept them together, but it wasn’t
some preordained destiny like he’d always romantically believed.
Still,
knowledge didn’t suddenly buy loyalty, not as much as this little group had
earned just by trusting him and allowing him into their lives. He’d felt Angelus
was off in their earlier encounter, and now that he was a little more advised of
the facts, he understood Xander’s concerns.
“What did you see?” he asked,
his voice low with suppressed fury. Too many times had he stood by and been made
a fool of by his own family. Too many times he’d been used, lied to, and
callously tormented and denied simply because he was never enough. Well, he
seemed to be enough for Buffy, and in a twist of irony that hadn’t stopped his
head yet from spinning, Spike was feeling bloody alright with that. Completely
satisfied with the uncanny about turn of his life.
And her mates were
more than enough for him. Thoughts of feasting on their blood were long gone; he
saw them now as potential friends, and felt as well as saw the wisdom in waiting
to reveal his lack of spiritual guidance. His soul was Buffy, and in time, he
hoped they would hear that devotion and allow him to live with it.
Xander
seemed startled at the anger in Spike’s voice. The vampire had so far been
especially careful to remain even tempered in front of Buffy’s friends. While
his plot had been to lure the Slayer in and be victorious in her death, he’d
been gentle and unobtrusive so as to allay any fear they may have had that a
vampire near was something to be rejected—whether with soul or not. It had
worked like a charm, and now he was reaping the benefits of Harris seeing
exactly how furious and concerned Spike was that Angelus had upset him with some
scheme the boy had witnessed.
Their eyes met, warm chocolate brown
melting the reserve as he found the sincerity that Spike didn’t have to act to
own. And Xander spoke, telling them all the scene he’d overheard and where Jesse
was now.
“I went to the Bronze last night. I waited an hour or two and
when no one showed—” he glared at Willow and Buffy, then shrugged and smiled
sadly. “I started off for home. Thought I heard Jesse in one of the alleys, and
after the other near death experience, I headed down to check he wasn’t being
someone’s snack.”
Buffy had taken a seat near Spike at the table across
from her friend, watching with fear filled lungs that suddenly deprived her of
air. Xander nodded in acknowledgement before dropping his head in his
hands.
“I think we made a mistake, not telling him. I found him falling
out of this blonde chick’s place. The same one that took him before.” He raised
tortured eyes to the group, his guilt radiating off him so that they all felt it
and sunk into the misery by his side.
“Darla,” Spike offered, though he
knew that they knew her name. “Bloody game of her to take him to her place.
She’s not one to take her food home with her. She doesn’t like the
clean-up.”
Xander stared in shock, then the light of innocence that he’d
clung to over the past week slowly faded until there was nothing left but the
dark shine of a boy that had learned too much of horror and life to ever be
carefree again.
“He told me it all on the way to hospital. He’s been
going to her for sex—” He screwed up his nose in disgust, even as the envy
battled valiantly. “And letting her feed off of him. He knew she could kill him,
but he doesn’t seem to care.” Xander seemed to space out before them all, his
mind repeating the details Jesse had relayed rather vividly and fought extra
hard to keep his cock flaccid even as the bile trekked up his
throat.
Spike felt the apology teeter on his lips. “Some are seduced by
the bite.” He wanted the words to be more, but couldn’t make it expand in
meaning to these that had no real knowledge of what they were beginning to deal
with. They were new to this game, to his breed, and even the Slayer, as young to
the role of warrior as she was, didn’t know the fools sex and blood could make
of a man. Particularly a spotty one lured in with the promise of some
mind-blowing sex and blood play.
But the Watcher was aware. He knew the
lure of a vampire’s bite, knew the danger many put themselves willingly in once
they succumbed to their curiosity and danced with almost certain death. Spike
could see the acknowledgement in the stuffy git’s eyes and was surprised at the
level of compassion he felt for these humans that chose to rub shoulders with
his kind and come out winners. And righteous. It was enough to make Spike
determined to fight, to show he was more than what his family had claimed him to
be.
“I-I believe it’s almost impossible to reject the desire one feels
when they are bitten,” offered Giles hesitantly, knowing that it was small
explanation to Xander who was obviously hurting a great deal.
“And so not
the point,” Xander huffed, his hand suddenly slapping hard down on the table and
making them all jump. Giles stepped forward, ready to intervene if this tale
proved too much for the boy he was just getting to know.
“We can help
Jesse. Chain him up somewhere till he gets his head back in the right place. It
was this Angel guy that worries me. He came in here with the big talk, soulful
warrior of the people yadda yadda, and he made a deal with this really dangerous
babe. They plan to use Jesse as bait to find out what Spike’s deal is. If not
saving a human from the evil clutches of the monster that almost killed Jesse
isn’t part of his new job description, then it’s beyond time the guy got
terminated. All in favour, say aye?” And he gathered up the stick of wood he’d
been concealing up his pant leg in his sock and brought it down with an emphatic
crack against the table.
Buffy felt almost too afraid to turn to
Spike—was desperate to not reveal in some subtle glance or worry that her
boyfriend would fail the tests Darla and Angel set up for him. The truth of what
this was finally hit her and Buffy felt sick at the responsibilities that were
pushing brutally hard on her shoulders.
“He was so desperate to out Spike
as an impostor that he was going to sacrifice a human?” Buffy’s voice lacked the
usual strength that made them all step back in respect to her position. This
revelation had her rattled. If someone who claimed to have a soul was willing to
let a boy possibly die in the course of proving his argument right, then he
wasn’t one to be trusted. She’d known both Angel and Spike for the same period
of time, and not once had Spike threatened one of her friends. She’d never felt
unsafe with him; never had to question if he would protect as well as inform her
about his opportune warnings.
“Not only a human, pet. But one of your
mates.” It was so matter of fact that there was no argument and Buffy knew that
the time spent considering the soul versus no soul debate was superficial and
stupid. To compare them wasn’t enough. She had to search deeper to know what to
do, though losing Spike at this time was something she wouldn’t contemplate. His
lack of soul didn’t concern her, and she was sure once he’d shown his new
loyalties that it wouldn’t bother her friends either.
“So, we have to
take this Darla out as soon as possible.” Grimly determined, the Slayer sat back
and marvelled at how simple the solution was. To save her friends, to save her
love life, she had to rid them of this one vampire. How hard could it
be?
“Won’t be so easy, pet. She’s an elder and she’s the Master’s get,
favoured childe and all that. Strong, cunning and vicious as hell. She taught
Angelus everything she knows.”
Giles stepped forward again, his eyes
suspicious as he looked warily at Spike and kept himself on the opposite side of
the table. “Yes, Buffy. Angel without a soul is not a vampire you want to tangle
with normally. It would seem that the Aurelian clan are an imposing group. I
should think you would be careful and tread lightly.”
Spike glared.
Something was up. Looked like the little Watcher had finally done some homework.
“No need to pussyfoot around with the details, Rupes. Slayer knows my history.
She met Drusilla last night. It’s sorted. Yes, Darla isn’t going to be a walk in
the park, particularly if Angelus is in the background. But I’ve got Buffy’s
back. Nothing is going to happen to her as long as I’m around.”
“And how
long exactly would that be, Spike? What are your plans?” Giles shifted nervously
and wondered at the spontaneous snort of amusement from Spike before the blond
shuffled his feet, dug his hands into his duster pockets and leaned forward to
stare intently at the one whose job it was to put Buffy in the line of fire
every day until she perished.
“Plans always have a way of buggering me
up, right and proper. I’m wingin’ it.”
And that was that.
Spike
stared the Watcher down, his lips shaped in smugness that had the older human
squirming.
“That’s all well and good for you, but for Buffy to have any
measure of success in this venture she will undoubtedly need to rely on a plan.”
Giles stood tall, nodding at his slayer before offering his thoughts on what he
considered to be the most logical course of action, and Spike just leaned back
to soak it in.
He was in, finally in the Slayer’s circle and for all
intents and purposes tolerated. The redhead kept darting him looks until he
dared to return them, and her encouraging smile did everything to warm his
heart. So many years he’d existed without true acceptance and he’d never
realised he’d craved it quite to this extent. Never really knew how it would
feel to be included in a plan that was to save lives rather than destroy
them.
As the group discussed the pros and cons of attacking Darla before
she could influence Jesse further, plotting sneaky ways of surprising Darla with
a shapely stick to the heart, Spike sat back and admired them all. The stalwart
Watcher who guided his slayer with a steady yet frustrated hand, her friends who
stood by her despite not knowing her for long or being previously acquainted
with the world of their nightmares. There was so much about them that was
impressive and it was all that Spike could do to stay seated and not give in to
the sudden urge to show affection. He couldn’t do that. ‘Big Bads’ didn’t hug
their food, except now they were friends and not something he’d easily select
off his menu. Still, it seemed somehow too awkward and not something he wanted
to expose himself over. Tying himself up in emotional knots for Buffy was enough
for now. So he let his heart swallow these knew emotions, felt them swirling
around and influencing the smile on his face.
At last they’d decided and
it was time for action—the part that Spike excelled at and looked forward to
sharing with his…girlfriend. Grinning giddily, Spike realised how innocent that
term was and how much he loved it. He loved everything about his current
existence, this diversion into the light, and if that included a blonde petite
slayer who smelled delicious and who had a heart the size of the continent, then
he’d just have to suffer it.
“Right, let’s bleeding well get on with it
then.”
Buffy gave last minute encouragement to those staying behind and
took his hand in her warm fist.
He just couldn’t get rid of that
smile.
The plan, as he’d suspected it would be with his uncanny luck with
such things, was blown all to fuck as soon as they reached the hospital and
found Jesse’s bed empty. It was simply too much energy to even roll his eyes.
Spike tensed, finding himself in such new territory that he didn’t know how to
act, wasn’t sure how to care that this boy was more than likely back in the
clutches of his greedy great grandsire. He knew what was likely on the cards for
him, and even if they did manage to restrain him and keep him away from the
cravings Darla had been capitalising on, Jesse was more than likely on borrowed
time. Spike had never seen a human seduced into the darker realms of life and
made it out with any semblance of their former existence intact.
Buffy
felt like screaming, but instead she just kicked the bed. Through the window,
she watched the foreboding night that the turning in of Mr. Sunshine had left
behind, feeling the swell of defeat on her shoulders. Its weight almost buckled
her knees forcing her to the floor. She had this feeling, a leaden ball swirling
around in her gut that something bad was about to happen, and whatever it was it
would destroy their innocence for good. Well not her, she’d been deprived of
innocence the second she’d killed a person with a demonic face—the first time
her life was touched with murder by the loss of Merrick.
Spike draped an
arm across her shoulders, hugging her to his chest as if he knew what she was
thinking. He knew vampires though, unlike her with her limited experiences and
associations anyway, so perhaps he did. Maybe even better than her. She was
betting that his being of the demon would be an edge on understanding the
realities of vampirism that an outsider could never grasp. Slaying was still of
the new as far as her nightly activities went, but he’d been out in the darkness
a lot longer. He’d been around for worlds longer. He knew the depths of the evil
Jesse had immersed himself into. And most horrifying of all, he knew Darla.
The look on Spike’s face scared Buffy the most. It was a look that said
he knew it was too late, and that he just didn’t know what to do about it. Tears
prickled and she felt the cover of slayer slip precariously as she gave into the
weakness of grief, barely held on her feet by a persistent vampire with need in
his heart.
“Buffy? Pet, you can’t give in to it. He’s not dead yet, luv.
Not if Darla plans to use him to follow me and dish up the
dirt.”
Momentary hope blossomed in her eyes and Spike cursed himself for
giving it to her. He knew it was unlikely that Darla would stick to the plan,
not if she now knew Xander was aware of it. And she’d know. She’d wonder where
the silly git got his fresh blood and why he wasn’t looking as peaked as the
night before. Why he was flushed in his almost overwhelming need to be bitten
hard, again, before the new blood had a chance to take.
Still, Buffy
dealt with the realities of the world and no matter what he said, or which
bubble he burst, he knew it would be just one at the front of a long line of
them. If she wanted to cling to the string of this one just that little bit
longer, he’d tie it to her wrist. He could do that.
“Where is
he?”
The anger in the voice behind them made them both jump guiltily.
They were in effect already mourning, and Buffy had thought she’d been very
convincing in managing to keep Xander and Willow at the library. Seeing the hard
determination in the boy’s eyes now, Spike felt like chuckling at how naïve
she’d been. The life of Xander’s best mate was in the balance. No way was he
going to stay out of danger while Buffy sought a little justice.
“W-we
think he’s gone back to Darla.” Buffy tried to hide her quick swipe at tears but
Xander saw it and his jaw flexed in fury.
“He isn’t dead yet. I’d know
it—in here,” he claimed desperately, slapping his hand over his heart. “I am his
friend, right? I didn’t save him last night to lose him to that bitch now. Let’s
go.” Xander turned on his heel and strode down the corridor, his hand flexing in
preparation of when it would hold a stake over the black heart of the one who
had seduced and ruined his friend. He’d assumed the role of General and Buffy
was faltering to catch up and gain it back.
“No, Xander. This is my job.
I’ll get him back, but I can’t have you in danger too. Angel’s a loose cannon.
We don’t know if he’ll be there or what he’d do if he was faced with losing his
chance to out Spike.” Buffy’s voice was frantic, seeing too closely the
possibilities of losing everything and everyone. Another friend narrowly bent on
revenge could easily end up in a matching casket to Jesse, and had she really
just admitted Angel had something to out?
The boy didn’t notice the
falter in her step when she verbally slipped and virtually admitted he had been
lying about the soul, that there really was something for Angel to find, but
Spike did. And he hurt for her. Holding his secret shouldn’t be something she
did, not if it was going to cause her pain. Now that he’d had the luxury of real
friendships, he knew what it would cost her to be cast aside if her friends
found out he was soulless and that she’d known and continued to lie. If they
left her side, he didn’t know if she could remain strong every night. It was
something slayers had never had—friends. Not even family that he could recall.
Except the two he’d fought against and won. The Chinese girl—he’d pretended to
not know what she asked him, knowing she was more than likely off her nut to ask
him, her killer, to go and tell her mum she was sorry. Only way he’d be calling
on that lady would be to see if she tasted as sweet as her daughter—or if the
fire of her blood was strictly a slayer delicacy. The one in New York—he’d heard
rumours and had even thought he’d detected a heartbeat as he fought her, but
even that tenuous link hadn’t been enough to rid her of her lethargy. A son
hadn’t been enough to fight for when she was surrounded by no one but the kid
and her watcher. Keeping them emotionally bereft had seemed to make them
fighting machines, but no one could exist without love forever. Not even when
the burden of responsibility was a weight heavier than the world.
No one
should exist without love forever.
Bloody good thing he was determined to
stick around, even if her friends wouldn’t have him once they learned the truth.
He couldn’t let Buffy know what it meant to be alone. The darkness would be too
deep for one such as her to keep clear of, and he felt his heart unload that
little bit more toward her that he had something to offer. Wasn’t much. He
didn’t even know if it was good. But it was pure and he didn’t feel like she was
revolted by it—not if the previous night was any indication. As dark as he was,
he could hope that his love would be a light for her. He’d always been raised to
believe in love—the power of it and the vast need of it in this world. He’d
loved Drusilla—or thought he did, at least. Didn’t hold a candle to the wealth
of sacrifice he felt when he looked at Buffy. His love was pure, and it was
deep. And it was hers. For as long as she wanted it.
For now they were on
the move. Xander continued to shrug off Buffy’s attempts to not just slow him
down, but get him out of the mix completely.
“Xander, you can’t go into
this with us. It’s just not safe. How can I do my job if I’m worrying about you
too?”
The brunette jerked away, his eyes hard in their temper as he
stared down his friend.
“I’m doing this, Buff. Nothing you and your
wonder dog can do will stop me.”
Buffy stepped back as if slapped, Spike
staring at the boy that he’d thought he’d had a shot of being mates with.
“You wanna have a go, Whelp?” He was all gruff and vigour, though he
felt something inside seize up with the unexpected pain of losing something he’d
never expected to have in the first place.
Xander had the grace to look
embarrassed, and took a small step back before turning an apologetic expression
to Spike.
“Look, I didn’t mean that. You’ve given me no reason not to
trust you, and you’ve done more than help us in all this. I’m upset and I let my
mouth do unnecessary laps of the Xander Hall of Insert Foot. I’m sorry.” His
eyes implored Spike to understand his panicked reaction and see the insult for
the desperate attempt to be in control that it was.
Spike could feel his
body—previously taut in defence and ready to spring—loosen and risk a softening
toward the boy. He knew what it felt like to fear the loss of someone that was
cared about. Too many times to mention he’d thought Drusilla was as good as
gone. As much as he was impatient with her now, as at an end as his reign of
deluded love was, he never wanted her to be gone from his world.
He
shrugged, a look of geek-like understanding passing between them before Xander
turned and started back on his purposeful march. Buffy made as if to renew her
objection, but Spike held her arm, shaking his head ‘no’. He understood the need
that flowed through Xander for vengeance. The sadness in Buffy’s eyes showed
that she did too. She was just afraid to lose more to this situation than she
had to.
It was in a charged silence that accompanied their walk behind
Xander, Spike feeling the warmth through his body as he ventured a touch to
Buffy’s arm, feeling the tingles of happiness that she wanted him, him the man
even as they made their way into battle.
Xander paused on the corner and
turned a hate-filled glare down the alleyway, his hand up to stop them moving
beyond him. A finger drifted to his lips to indicate quiet and they all stood
and watched, stunned, as Angel stopped at a door, raised his fist to knock
before thinking better of it and twisting the knob till it clicked and opened
for him.
His angry voice burst loudly down the alleyway to their ears
before the door was snapped shut. Buffy was just a second too late from grabbing
Xander’s arm and preventing him jumping into a situation he wasn’t prepared
for.
The boiling rage that evil had tainted his friend was enough,
sparking Xander into motion he hadn’t planned on. He’d thought Jesse would see
the foolhardiness of his actions and would still be lying and healing in his
hospital bed waiting for visitors. In no part of his mind had he believed his
friend was so stupid as to go back to his own personal freak show.
Not
sparing a thought for thought, not caring about back-up or preserving his own
life, Xander was off.
And the Slayer was left with the wretched vision of
seeing her friend burst into a vampire nest with no details about what he would
encounter and armed with nothing but bravado and a stake he wasn’t that used to
wielding. Buffy’s heart rate increased even as she felt her feet turn to cement
blocks and hold her motionless in the face of danger. Spike dragged her fast in
the same direction Xander had bolted, his hands not quite rough but very urgent.
Numbed in mind and body, Buffy couldn’t help but wonder as she was dragged into
evil’s den—if not for Spike…
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Angel hadn’t been able
to lift his head from his hands since he’d signed the death warrant of that boy.
His sense of competition and pure intolerance of the vampire who had contributed
a large injection of risk and danger to their family from the beginning was
working hard at making him relinquish control. Not for the first time since he’d
left Darla, with her pet collapsed in the alley, had he considered going back
and retracting the deal. As much as he needed to know the score with Spike, as
much as he suspected his grandchilde was up to something evil and dangerous, his
soul cried that sacrificing a human to get the dirt was not the way to go about
it.
Raising his head, he stared at his hands and marvelled at how well
they shook. He looked convincing, like this tearing of motivations was not a
small thing that he’d decided. That the pain of sacrificing life was not
something he’d chosen lightly. Yet it had been something that had easily tumbled
from his lips, his acceptance of Darla’s offer, and as much as he grieved for
the life he already knew Darla would extinguish as soon as his use was at an
end, Angel was ashamedly content to let the arrangement stand.
That
didn’t alleviate his anxiety that she would doublecross him. Once his soul had
made peace with his selected casualty of war, Angel felt the need to be sure
Darla would do as she’d promised. Would use the little bite victim to good
advantage and sort out his Spike problems.
With a lightness that both
worried and relieved him, Angel donned his coat and left his apartment, the eyes
of a predator scanning the surroundings. He hoped against hope to come across
his bleached family so he could take action now and not have to depend on the
reliability of Darla’s pet.
The term didn’t even make him cringe now. It
seemed that once his head had resigned the boy to death, he didn’t need to worry
about the decision. It was done, and the end results could be nothing but a
benefit. If he found out Spike was pretending to be trustful, if he could
prevent Buffy from being slain by her supposed boyfriend, then he’d more than
done his job. It wasn’t like he didn’t know that the boy was as good as gone,
whether Darla did the honours or not. He knew what happened to those that craved
what Darla was freely giving him.
He’d been brought here, his presence
sanctioned by Powers far higher than any other he knew of, to keep his eye on
the Slayer and to help her whenever she needed it. Angel didn’t feel any doubt
at all that she needed it now. She was trusting the wrong vampire, letting Spike
too close to her where he could strike without warning and do more than a little
damage. He felt like she’d made a fool out of him—with Spike’s help—and it
fuelled a rage deep inside that Angel feared.
He’d reached Darla’s door
before he knew it, paused and inhaled the ghastly stench of human flesh that had
been fucking his sire and getting off on the flow of his blood down her throat.
Angel couldn’t hold back the growl, didn’t even think to let his soul out to
berate this primitive response to mate and food. He’d left, she’d moved on and
this boy wasn’t that close to Buffy yet. Wasn’t someone her heart had become too
attached to. What did it matter if he perished through becoming involved in
dangerous addictions?
It was all he could do not to punch a hole in the
door to announce his presence and then intimidate the boy into unmanly fear as
he whipped Darla off the parody of a cock and beat them both senseless. He
stopped at the sight, feeling his control slip as Darla growled at him, blood
dripping from her fangs and tongue with the boy laid out unconscious and pale on
the bed. His heart faltered, his body ghostly and Angel had to fight to control
his hunger.
His soul didn’t feel a thing.
Spike had never felt such seething hatred toward his family ever
before—not when they’d chastised him, or made fun, and not even when they’d
beaten him bloody to remind him of his place in the group. Always he’d held an
underlying perception of awe that he’d been chosen by someone to exist—to be
meaningful within the world, even if it was one he’d never even known about. Now
the disgust oozed throughout his body and he felt no fear at all that the Slayer
would go hell bound on each of their asses—if Harris didn’t get there
first.
He stood back and watched as the scene unfolded—observed his
supposedly souled grandsire as he slowly reigned in his lust for the kill that
had so obviously been taking place when he’d burst onto the scene. Spike wasn’t
fighting any kind of struggle within himself; he barely even noticed the scent
of freshly spilled blood as he lit up a cigarette and leaned up against the
doorframe. The show was just too entertaining to make him want a snack break—not
that he’d ever be stupid enough to get the munchies for one of the Slayer’s
friends.
Xander had been on the end of a vicious shove that had sent him
careening to the bed his drained friend lay upon and there he gratefully
stayed—his face a picture of grief and horror—as Buffy whaled on the cause of
all this heartache. Darla.
It was the first time Spike had ever seen the
blonde bitch scared. She’d obviously just managed to grab an oriental satin robe
before the Grand Imposer barged into her boudoir, possessive growl at the ready
though he told all and sundry he was souled up. What a load of absolute
bollocks! Not having one himself didn’t make Spike stupid. He had enough of
William left in him to know what a conscience and a will to do right by others
meant—how wanting something good altered a body’s perceptions and actions.
Peaches had done little by way of proving his new status—other than the lack of
corpses piling up in the area with his own especially artistic bite. If Angelus
had a soul, then Spike couldn’t work out what exactly it was doing for him. His
complexion might have suggested a less than stellar diet, but the way he’d
surrendered up a life in order to jockey positions ahead of him in the Slayer’s
favour…well, it was a bit much for Spike to believe this soul he professed to
have was that meaningful, nor much in the way of guidance. It was barely even a
leash for the more disturbing of Angelus’s personality traits.
Spike
grinned at the magnificent sight of Buffy and Darla going at it, fists both
making impact too accurately to leave nothing but mere bruises behind. Both
girls bled and again Spike marvelled at the extraordinary control his demon had
over his normally lustful urges. A twitch in other parts told him that the lust
wasn’t altogether absent but it was the lithe grace of his girl that turned him
on, not the delicious sweetness of her life’s blood.
While not exactly in
control, Buffy seemed to be holding her own, hurling emphatically crude
observations at Angel’s decidedly soulless behaviour over her shoulder. The
useless git was cowering in the corner, the confrontation and the inability to
justify his actions apparently making the guilt finally surge forward and
overwhelm him. That, or he’d taken some acting lessons since he’d
left.
All of a sudden, Buffy was propelled with blinding speed into the
far wall, her petite form leaving a matching imprint in the cheap plaster. Her
furious thrust to her feet did it in and her arm disappeared into the dusty
remains of a once solid wall, Spike chuckling at how his girl just didn’t know
her own strength.
She glared at him—initially, and then she winked, a
gentle smile teasing her lips until she felt her gaze falter back to the bed and
her deathly pale friend and his lack of movement. Spike almost gasped as the
veil of the Slayer visibly inched into place and the furious warrioress stomped
her way back into the fight. She stood back a little way, her eyes never leaving
the threat in front of her as she challenged Angel about his duty.
“If
you don’t stake her, I will,” she hissed, tolerance and understanding long
absent from her voice. Tears made her voice crack, the girl in her struggling
with the burden of seeing a friend dead as a supposed ally stood useless and
conflicted.
Spike could see the shock reflected boldly in Angelus’s
midnight dark pools of menace and wondered how he could suck anyone in with his
puppy dog act. The great lumping forehead shook as the wanker met the eyes of
his sire, her furious gaze almost striking him down where he stood. The lines
had been drawn, Spike could see it as clearly as he had seen the moment Dru had
betrayed him with this tosser. Buffy didn’t see it and he doubted she was quick
enough to catch onto Darla and Angelus’s age old tricks to protect each other.
The stupid bitch rocked and parried, slowly manipulating Buffy into a
position on her own on one side of the room and Darla with two of her familial
vampires at her back. Spike could see, from his angle, the gloat that was
already spreading across her face, her sickly sweet grin taunting Buffy with a
knowledge she only thought she had. While she consolidated that line, renewed
her power over the biggest git on the planet, Spike stubbed his cigarette into
the carpet, smirking with evil pleasure at the fizzle and melt of the cheap
blend. He took a stake out of his inside pocket, marvelling at the feel of his
own instrument of death in his hands—something he’d never thought he’d need to
possess. He spun it in the air, a supernaturally fast rotation before he caught
it and almost playfully plunged it into Darla’s back. Her scream of mixed
outrage and terror amused him as she just managed to turn around and stare at
him in shock before she crumbled into dust. She settled on the floor in front of
him and Spike didn’t even bother to step over her filth as he made his way to
the bed, knowing without any doubts that Buffy could handle Peaches in a
castigating minute. He ignored the snarls of fury, and Buffy’s surprised yet
amused ‘eep’ at the resolution of her fight as he stared down at the forlorn
figure of Xander.
“You alright, mate?” He was hesitant in his approach,
feeling confused and out of place for the first time since he’d entered this
balls-up of a confrontation. The sight of the boy’s tears did something to Spike
that he’d not felt in almost a hundred years—not since he’d failed the dying
wishes of a Chinese slayer by not knowing her language. Once he’d learned the
meaning of her words, he’d felt a sadness that he was never meant to feel as a
vampire. He was never meant to know compassion for the pulsers, not even for his
own kind really.
As he looked at the lifeless form of Xander’s friend,
he felt that chilling sense of not being enough or never being on time to make a
difference. The slowing thud of the nearly dead teen’s heart suddenly meant
something other than the glee over a good healthy feed. This one would have
consequences, and he only hoped it wasn’t against him that they
materialised.
“How could he let this happen?” Xander turned wet
shimmering chocolate eyes toward Spike and almost begged him to answer in a way
that made sense. Though looking at it from an entirely different angle was
enough for Spike to see that none of it could make sense. Death was death. It
was selfish; it was inevitable. But the timing of this one—so soon—it had been
preventable. The boy had had a death wish. Spike wished that for the sake of his
new friends it wasn’t so, but he wasn’t God. He couldn’t have done anything
different. They chose to keep Jesse in the dark, and as much as he hurt for
them, all Spike could do was step aside and be haunted by their
pain.
“You should give him a nudge, mate. Get to say
goodbye.”
“W-what?” Xander turned from Spike, checked over Jesse and saw
an infinitesimal shudder where his heart should be strongly beating. Xander
jolted to his feet in surprise, a wobbling finger pointing at what he thought
was already a corpse. “H-he’s still alive? Oh my God, can’t you do something? We
should get him back to the hospital.”
Spike held his gaze as he shook his
head slowly, deliberately. “He’s just barely alive. Not even if I was Superman
and I gave him my powers could I save him now. Best to just accept it and try
an’ say goodbye.”
“No. I can’t just accept that. He can’t be dead.” Eyes
that refused to let go stared down on his friend and Xander gulped to hold back
the flood of tears as they choked his throat. Cold hard calculation suddenly
entered the moment though, and Xander turned back to Spike with steady intent.
“So, if you were really Superman, you’d give Jesse your powers to save
him?”
As bizarre as the question was, Spike felt it was some kind of
test—felt his own paranoia at the outcome of an ‘I don’t really have a soul’
discussion would be explosive in a really bad way, and he needed to show his
sincerity from the start. And the truth was, maybe not for the whelp—not yet—but
definitely for Buffy he’d do whatever it took to minimise her pain.
His
nod of affirmation was strong and steady, and Xander returned it with
decision.
“Turn him.” The words were shot at him, only a thin sliver of
tolerance dividing the hate from need.
Spike slowly shook his head, his
eyes narrowed in disbelief. “You really don’t want me doing that.”
Xander
glared with the look of a boy seizing the last of his options—despite that
option being both scary and repulsive.
“I really do,” he confirmed, his
lips tight and his hands splayed on his hips.
It was one of those moments
that Spike knew he was bound to face from time to time—if not even more
frequently than that. A situation where he’d be confused between the ambiguity
of right and wrong. Would granting the boys wish be doing the right thing, or
creating a bad even more than if they’d left Jesse to die of his own ignorance?
He was tempted to turn to Buffy and demand she take this responsibility off him
by making the decision, by consoling her friend into commonsense before things
spiralled out of control. But having her cuss Angel out was both entertaining
and essential, and Spike had never surrendered his free will to anyone in the
past. He couldn’t ask it of her. He couldn’t make her be responsible for the
death or unlife of her friend.
The responsibility of either agreeing or
torpedoing the plea was agonising. Spike felt caught, despite being totally off
Buffy’s radar as she chewed Angel out for being the gutless wonder Spike had
always known him to be. The desperation in every jerk of Xander’s body made him
feel nervous and he couldn’t help but dart worried glances at all the players in
the room. The boy that was minutes away from a full organ shutdown, the Slayer
that would stake him for turning her friend, her other friend that would surely
dust him if he didn’t, and Angelus that would sit on his high and mighty stool
the second Spike was revealed for the demon he never refuted being.
The
only thing that felt right to Spike was his urge to fight it, to make Xander see
sense before they did something they couldn’t come back from. Before Spike had
added to the terror of the night with the shape of someone this boy and the
redhead had cared about for years.
“Look, Harris, he won’t be coming back
as your friend. You’re not doing him any favours by making him a demon.” Spike
blanched at the fight that surged in the powerful puff up on the school
boy.
“We can help him come back right. Help him not give into it and be a
monster. Look at you. You did it.” There was an age old wisdom in the chestnut
eyes that shocked Spike. He had been worried about encountering this moment and
finding out what it meant for his security amongst this crowd. “Maybe it was
something Buffy said, or maybe it was how you don’t act all cut up about the
past like him.” He jerked a thumb at Angel and Spike could see the curl of his
lips and the repressed desire to spit on him. “I don’t know how I know, and I
don’t know how it makes me trust you over him—other than the fact that he did
nothing to save my friend—but I know that even without a soul, you’re twice the
vampire he is. If Jesse can be like you, where’s the bad?”
Fuck, he
wanted to argue so badly, catalogue each and every time a rabid beast had
replaced the unassuming human possessed by evil. But all he could remember was
himself, his shyness and his need to impress his new family. To be the best
vampire he could be to make them proud of him—just like he’d strived at his crap
poetry to have his mother’s good favour.
So, despite the warning bells,
and despite the sense of wrong that almost screamed through his blood, Spike
bent and lowered his lips to the mark on Jesse’s neck, and made a man a
monster.
Spike knew he’d made a colossal mistake the second the boy’s
hungry lips fed from his wrist. The minute he found Xander’s stare of fascinated
horror fixed on the act. The moment he saw the sweat break out on the terrified
boy’s brow. Spike just knew it. Should have known it before. Instead, he stared
fearfully at the body that collapsed on the bed once he took his arm away, and
wondered how much time he had before Buffy would kill him. Or Peaches would
gloat before stomping over in his heavy footed hypocrisy and stake him in front
of those he was starting to love with everything he had.
He raised wary
eyes to Xander, already taking a step back in self-defence and thinking of a way
that might justify what he’d done and still hang on to Buffy’s affections. Not
love. How could she love him for adding to her nightly worries? Before he even
took in Xander’s censure, Spike’s gaze had flitted back to the bed, panic rising
sharply as he took another step back. He’d added another monster to the line-up,
a young boy who’d had everything to live for before Darla came to this town. All
he could see was HER. The one he should have remembered but always forgot.
Tried to forget.
He could feel the shakes starting already, even
as he saw the soft waves of renewed healthy silver hair hanging long around her
shoulders, the healthy but pale pallor of her skin as she looked at him in
disgust masquerading as lust. Saw her lips move as she suggested the most
revolting heinous things a good son could never have contemplated with his
mother in a million years. A century on and Spike felt wilted by the shame,
horror that he’d not learned the lesson, and no matter what he’d decided, he was
as good as fucked. He’d let Xander appeal to his vanity—his own belief that he
was different, in a way above the others on the demon scale of evil. He’d
retained heart and that’s how he was able to love—adore the girl so much it was
killing him standing here and observing his huge mistake, all the while waiting
for the whip to crack and his ashes to fall.
Fear gave him energy and he
couldn’t help but run—run so fast so he wouldn’t have to look at them or face
what he’d done. He bolted for the door, leaving Buffy in the presence of his
grandsire and his newly made…something. What made the difference between a
childe and a minion? He’d never been allowed to know, was never permitted to do
anything other than suck them dry or create a little army of servants. Spike
didn’t know where that fine line was that would make him responsible for the new
demon that lay in jeopardy even as his sire ran like a coward. All he knew was
that given the choice, that boy would never have been picked by him to wander
immortal throughout the world.
“Spike!” Buffy called at his rapidly
departing figure, but he didn’t stop. The last thing he wanted was for her to
see the blood from her friend on his lips. He couldn’t outrun the memories
though, and suddenly what he felt he needed—what the in-your-face vamp
desperately searched for—was a quiet venue where he could grasp firm to calm and
try to work out how best to come back from this event. If it was even
possible.
The last thing he heard as he powered away from the scene of
his latest crime was Buffy’s frantic call for him to wait.
Problem was,
he had nothing left to wait for. Judgement would be harsh for this one and he
knew it, expected it and even forgave it. How could it be anything else when he
failed the test, when the Slayer was his girl? Miracles didn’t happen to evil
bodies like him, and…well, he ducked his head in shame. He was off his nut to
think it could have ever worked with Buffy. One little appeal from a desperate
boy unwilling to lose his friend, and Spike had buckled—raced in to do the easy
thing, and now he’d lost everything.
Deserved it. He did, bloody deserved
every fucked up thing that came his way. So with a head filled with his
impending destruction, rising vampires that wore his mark, he slipped
hazardously into the night and into the arms of the Master’s minions.
He
was too surprised to put up any resistance as they grabbed his arms and twisted
him this way and that, battering him and making him weak before dragging him off
to his ancestor. Bugger, he’d forgotten there would be retribution for offing
Darla. Just another mistake he’d made of the night.
Spike closed his eyes
and surrendered.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Buffy threw her hands up in the air
as she watched Spike streak through the really dark shadows of the alley and out
of sight. She’d just turned around in time to see Jesse’s shiny red lips fall
from Spike’s arm and her once lively friend slumping deader than dead on the
sheets beneath him. Spike had appeared shell-shocked by his actions, and Buffy
couldn’t help but want to kick his ass for doing something so inherently true to
his nature. She thought he could be good, was trying to be good and he couldn’t
resist taking a final taste of her friend and then making him into a monster
she’d have to kill?
Something so didn’t sit right about this mess.
Buffy was loathe to turn around. For as long as she stood staring out
the door and into the now empty but smelly alley, she could ignore a friend
grieving and another beyond dying. She could forget that she was led into this
situation by a supposedly souled vampire that obviously had trouble seeing where
the wrong was. She could forget she was a slayer with a destiny and a duty to
rid the world of vampires and just be a girl in love with one. She couldn’t kill
the guy she wanted to be hers in all ways possible—eventually—so how could she
lift her stake to someone who could potentially have been her friend for the
next however many years?
She didn’t have the answers. Buffy never wanted
to have the answers. That’s what the Council paid Giles to have, and in deciding
what to do about Jesse, he could make with those answers, too. She so was not
going to be the one that ruled he had no chance of being good—of being how she
thought Spike could be—simply because she was irrational and trusted a vampire
she thought was more soul-having than the actual one was.
“Just what the
hell went on here?” Eyes squeezed tightly shut, Buffy had no choice but to turn
around and face the know-it-all smirk of a brunette she was coming to totally
detest, and Xander, his expression a mix of shattered grief and
hope.
“Let me go after him, Buffy. I’ll be able to scent him and then
dust him so you won’t have to even face it.” Angel stood before her, eager and
renewed in purpose now his grandchilde had screwed himself over and was surely
on borrowed time. He reminded her of a hyena, that bloodlust very firmly showing
on his shirtsleeve.
The thought of Spike’s fate being nothing but
indiscriminate ash in some dirty, public yet unknown point was too much for her
to bear and the knowledge that if she didn’t find him and bring him to
safety—Angel surely would, but so without the safety
part.
“No.”
The cold derisive snort that came along with the
denial didn’t come from her and Buffy looked at Xander in surprise. Sure, she
hadn’t known him long, but God his moods were unpredictable. Nobody knew how
another would respond to the death of a friend, but this was even beyond that.
This was Xander’s best friend from childhood about to be raised a soulless
demon. And that really should have sounded more doom and gloomish than it had in
her head.
Buffy took tentative steps toward Xander, her hand reaching out
for his as they stood looking at the body.
“What happened, Xan? Why did
Spike do this? Why would he put me in this position of having to stake my
friend?” The sadness of failure was creeping up on her and Buffy felt the
smallest wobble of her bottom lip even as her eyes felt the sting of tears. Her
other hand clutched her stake and she marvelled briefly that it hadn’t even
known the thrill of piercing an undead heart tonight, and yet the devastation of
death was rife in the little room.
“I asked him to do it. He didn’t want
to, so you can’t punish him for it. I-I didn’t know…not that he’d feel bad about
it. Didn’t know he’d run off—” Xander shook his head, his eyes never wavering
from the stillness of Jesse as they waited.
“Oh,” Buffy began before
Angel jumped in, oozing confidence now that Spike had dug his own grave and run
off like a monumental idiot.
“He knew he’d be staked, that’s why he ran
off. Knew Buffy would plant that stake as deep into his heart as she could push,
and his self-preservation kicked in.”
Pure rage ran through the two
humans, passing from one to the other through the hand clasp that whitened their
hands with the tightness of the hold.
“Then he was worlds of wrong,”
Buffy spat, her frustration and irritation at Angel climbing notches faster than
Spike disappearing into the night. “There will be no staking of Spike. Go near
him and it will be you who gets to feel the wind rushing through more than your
hair. Capiche?”
Angel stepped back in confusion. He’d finally been
provided with the perfect opening to get rid of the most irritable boil on the
butt of vampirism, and he had every right after the blond fool had destroyed his
sire. Darla. Oh God! The thought suddenly hit him and all strength departed his
body and left him fumbling on his knees so close to her ashes. The pain in his
chest built and burst into a crescendo of howls that he couldn’t control and it
was as if the demon spawn of her making had curled in on itself and huddled
Angel into a corner of the room.
Buffy and Xander watched in a mixture of
disgust and ethical interest before sinking down to the bed, adrenaline sapped
from them due to the death at their side. It was way too easy to ignore
him.
“I’m so sorry, Buffy.” Xander couldn’t even look up as Buffy
started, but firmly squeezed his hand.
“None of this is your fault. Maybe
he’d have been a little more careful if we’d warned him, but somehow I’m
guessing that her being a vampire wasn’t that big a surprise.” It was a brave
but tragic smile that graced her lips, yet Buffy couldn’t bring herself to stand
and walk away. Her friends needed her, both boys needing something that only she
could give at this point. Strength of protection against the evils not so beyond
their current door, but also the truth of knowing what had happened. Even Willow
wouldn’t have been enough this time. She hadn’t seen the devastation, the
choices left to them with Jesse’s heart beating every beat like it was about to
be his last.
“He was thinking with that thing most of us guys think with.
It’s a highly productive thought—most of the time.” He chuckled humourlessly,
the sound difficult to hear against Angel’s wailing the opposite end of the
room. “God, can’t he put a cork in it?”
Buffy giggled. “I guess he’s
having memories of when HE only thought with that thing boys think
with.”
The shared humour, the laughter was too short lived and they were
quickly focused again on Jesse.
“Spike really only did this because you
asked him to?” Buffy watched Xander’s eyes harden through her watery view on the
world and sighed as his jaw ticked.
“Nope. He did it because I ordered
him to. I don’t think I was probably very fair, but this is my friend. He
deserves the chance, doesn’t he, Buffy? Please don’t tell me I did the wrong
thing.”
All Buffy could do was be silent.
It only hurt when he opened his eyes.
He did it once, at
the beginning when he first regained consciousness. Dru was there, her face
serene in that confused little girl way of hers while she held her doll—that
bloody meddlesome Miss Edith—and looked at him like he’d been the saddest most
upsetting thing to happen to her in a long while. When the sword was thrust
through his gut, wrenching a shout of ragged agony from his lips, he saw her
tiny smile and could guess the way she would have it be made better. She stood
back from her minions as they thrust more sharp blades into his broken body,
wary of getting his blood spatters on her spotless filmy white dress. It was her
encouraging little clap and bounce that finally did it, and Spike closed his
eyes.
It didn’t hurt if he couldn’t see. He wouldn’t let it hurt. They
could slice open his testicles for all he cared, on the inside of his eyeballs
was a vision in the sunlight, her golden hair swept about her face in a sudden
gust of wind as she giggled and the tinkling sound of her happiness gave him
something to hold onto.
Something that wasn’t Dru and her
disloyalty.
If he was honest with himself, he’d let go of Dru in that
moment of irritation and sarcasm when they’d first rolled into town. When it
became clear that his opinion was again inconsequential to her bigger plan,
Spike had had enough and allowed his feelings for her to dull. And then she’d
left him wandering around the town while she shacked up with the wrinkled up old
git and the rest of their family. It had been, for the most part, convenient
while he researched the Slayer with his unusual soul card. Until the impromptu
deception turned into something else entirely. Until it became opportunity that
showed him many different paths and ways toward true happiness.
Like was
apparently his tradition, he’d buggered that up in no short order. His
commonsense had become skewed from a century of evil thoughts and actions so he
wasn’t quite aware of what was acceptable or not in this world of many
alternating shades.
Buffy might be smiling in his dreams, but he knew his
nightmares would be closer to reality. Each hot painful lance in his body, each
and every blunt punch that shattered his bone could have been her. He knew that
hatred could be the only response to what he’d done. It seemed only fitting that
he realise his mistake and almost immediately being captured by Dru and her
minions.
Up to now he just hadn’t wondered why.
He knew that
Drusilla wouldn’t react well to rejection, but he never pictured her going this
far. He’d never taken her for a hypocrite, not really. Mixed up for sure,
especially if she had her git of a sire prodding her into confused loyalties. So
why was he here when he could be ducking and diving into hiding spots until he
was ready to face the stake that Buffy had most assuredly carved his name
upon?
As holy water was thrown in his face and he felt and smelled the
way his flesh burned, he gave up caring. It seemed more than apparent that
whether Buffy or Dru had him, he was the proverbial toast. And as the image of a
drained Jesse and a desperate Xander came to his mind, he couldn’t summon up the
will to care.
To be condemned was to be condemned, didn’t much matter who
took care of the sentence. At least he wouldn’t have to see her face as he
fluttered into dust. At least he could die remembering her lips and her smile
for him, and imagine that that one time they’d committed their feelings for one
another had been more explicit and she’d said the words to his face.
His
jaw clenched until his teeth felt pained, his eyes flowing water through the
tightly squeezed barrier, Spike imagined how her lips could convey the words,
and he felt it alright to give up.
His last moments had been an effort to
do good by her, to try to turn the leaf she needed to be with him guilt free. He
could pass with the knowledge that in his last he’d made peace with himself and
his actions. He made peace with being a demon and killing indiscriminately until
pain painted the world over.
Feeling serenity sweep over him, Spike
opened his eyes and soaked in Dru’s frown. He smirked and winked at her, knowing
that she could tear him apart limb by limb and he wouldn’t even feel it.
Self-absolution was powerful.
He waited for the final toll to be paid and
his chance to pass beyond.
Bloody hell it was slow.
~ * ~ * ~ *
~
Buffy kicked Angel out of the apartment so he couldn’t stand over them
with his ironic judgement about what they should or shouldn’t do with Jesse. One
missing vampire was all the stress she could handle from that quarter and to
have a souled yet unrepentant demon staring at them with judgemental disdain and
disapproval was too much even for her.
Buffy had phoned Giles, requesting
he take Willow home before meeting them with the intention of transporting Jesse
somewhere they could control the situation when he rose. Not that she’d told
Giles that. Only that they had a man down and needed his trusty car. It was only
after as much of the plan was relayed that she felt comfortable sharing over the
phone and she’d hung up the receiver that Buffy marvelled at the existence of a
phone line in an evil vampire’s apartment in the first place.
And a comfy
bed, though the ewwness of that discovery so didn’t want to be visited at this
time. Buffy felt like she was doing pretty well at holding the consuming grief
at bay, but realising the truth, she knew that she ultimately hadn’t gotten that
close to him. It was that fact that upset her more than anything—even that Spike
had sired him and run. This was what made her feel the tight constriction of
guilt in her throat. It seemed like as soon as she’d arrived in the school she’d
come between such a strong trio of friends, offering up a secret that only two
of them became privy of. Oh, it had been Xander’s call, and evidence was pretty
good at showing that that may not have been the best course of action to follow,
but she’d still given Xander enough of a situation for him to make such hard
decisions.
It was like she’d walked in and just taken his place in the
group and it made Buffy feel such wrenching guilt that she almost felt the need
to collapse and cry against Xander’s shirt.
“You’re not gonna stake him,
are you?” Xander looked at her with big earnest brown eyes and Buffy felt the
anger that had begun to rise at being put in this position falter and dive.
She’d thought all vampires were black until Spike had introduced the concept of
a soul. Now that she’d met the true vamp with soul, she was glad that she’d
learned of it from Spike first or she might have felt the need to disbelieve the
possible good in whatever incarnation. Despite the tableau spread out dead
centre of the bed—and she was so ignoring that unintentional pun!—Buffy still
believed it was loving motives that made Spike do something so monumentally
stupid.
“What did you think was going to happen?” She couldn’t stay mad,
even though she had every right to be. “Why did you ask Spike to do this, Xand?
You know that vamps are evil. It’s my job to take them out.”
He hefted a
crazy sounding sigh in a mix-up of laughter. “Well, thank God that’s not true or
that crazy blonde bitch might have killed us all. If it was your job then you’ve
slacked off with Spike—and that so isn’t a criticism right now.”
Buffy
jerked in surprise. Did that mean that Xander suspected…
“I know, Buff. I
know Spike is soulless and yet, I’m so not with the caring right now. I know
it’s something that’s supposed to make me wig spectacularly, but he’s been nicer
to us and more helpful when we’ve needed him than Angel—and he’s the one who
claims to have the real soul.” He snorted, his lip curling in obvious disgust
for what he saw as soulful behaviour. His friend was dead because of that soul.
“Nah, I took advantage of him. Kinda goaded him into doing it. Yeah, he might be
trying hard, but I could see he didn’t quite have all the knowledge the soul
crowd have inbuilt to do the right thing. Strangely—not that concerned. He still
seems no worse than Cordelia on a bad hair day. So yeah, he may struggle with
the technicalities, but he tries to do the right thing—if he can work out what
that actually is.”
They shared snickering laughter before settling with a
fond smile. Buffy knew she should have been worried—should have started to
prepare herself that Xander might one day take this act and hold it against her.
Use it to drive a wedge between her and Spike. Ever since they all discovered
her secret they’d had the badness of vampires almost beaten into them. Hopefully
this relaxed and accepting attitude he held now would exist long enough for her
to show them that Spike really did intend to do good, and that he was a great
vamp to have around. Obviously the collar of a soul wasn’t enough to keep them
safe, just using Angel as the only example they had, so it was left to their
instinct and reliance on example to decide if being around any vampire could
ever be considered risk free.
She so hoped nothing would happen to
jeopardise the one thing she had full belief in.
The hesitant knock on
the door broke her from the uncomfortable reverie and Buffy felt a tightening in
her stomach. Giles poked his head around the door and found them sort of
shielding the body on the bed. He stepped inside, shutting the door with a
determined click before making his way around the bed and stopping at the
obvious corpse.
“Oh dear lord. I-I understand why you wanted Willow
home.” Giles’s eyes seemed to focus on the ragged puncture marks at Jesse’s
throat and he slumped a little in sadness. “I’m so sorry, Xander. This must be
tremendously difficult.”
Xander shrugged, about to open his mouth and get
on with the telling of the dilemma when Buffy subtly elbowed him in the ribs and
he clamped his lips shut.
“Giles, we have a bit of a sitch. Jesse’s kinda
about to be undead. We need somewhere we can keep him comfortable for when he
rises, but somewhere that we can chain him up and stuff.”
Giles looked at
them as if they were insane. “Are you mad? Your job is to stake vampires, Buffy.
Not make friends with them. We are not about conducting experiments with our
friends. A-as painful as it is to lose a friend—” Giles paused and both Buffy
and Xander could see the sudden hollow guilt that tinged his eyes. “You can not
expect that he will rise to be anything but a monster in the body of a boy you
once knew. He will not remain your friend. He will wake a vicious monster who
will want nothing from you but your blood.”
Buffy swallowed hard, knowing
in her heart that in this situation that was exactly what would happen. But she
had to support Xander and she also owed Spike the benefit of the doubt. Besides,
if he’d created a disaster it had to be one he dealt with on his own. Perfect
learning opportunity for him, too.
Xander’s face was lined with tragedy
and a knowledge no boy his age should have to deal with. “I know that this is
probably a mistake. But I have to give him the chance, right? He’s my friend.
He’d do the same for me.” He implored the Watcher to see what he meant—and hoped
that he could recognise the desperation that had spurred on this act by a
vampire who would now be struggling with these people to be trusted and
accepted.
Rather than fight further, Giles helped them carry the dead boy
out to the car, glad that rigour had not quite started to fully set in as they
manipulated him into the back seat.
“I guess my place is the only one
that is even half set up for something like this. He can sleep on that old bed
in the basement and I have chains—plenty of chains.” She studiously ignored the
raised eyebrows aimed her way. “Ooh, but we’ll need blood and—” Buffy stopped
babbling, running out of things to say and the energy to say it with. The night
had been exhausting and she still had a wayward vampire to find.
The look
on Spike’s face had been worrying, and teemed with his rather sudden
disappearing act, Buffy felt a chill settle. Something was making her feel that
it wasn’t so simple—not any of it—and not having Spike there to guide them was
way beyond wiggy. This was his experiment—his childe. How were three humans
meant to know what to do to pave the way for a newly born demon?
The
little car zoomed through the streets of Sunnydale, preparing all of them for
what was yet to come. The urgency of it all escaped none of them, and an edge of
apprehension settled over all of them.
The night had been forever
altered; a new level of darkness had corrupted their lives and Buffy was left
staring out the window, imagining what kind of future there would be for them
all.
The chill in the basement made her shiver.
Buffy clung to
the cardigan she’d retrieved from her room as soon as the emotionally difficult
job of chaining her school friend to the wall had been taken care of. Xander and
Giles had been uncharacteristically silent while they waited, not knowing
exactly how long the process of turning would take for a new vampire to exist in
the world.
He was stretched out on a basic cot against the wall, the
chains just long enough for his hands to lie beside his body. Buffy knew that it
wasn’t just the atmosphere in the dank basement that caused ice to creep through
her veins. Prolonged looks at this boy that she’d once walked in the sun beside
was enough to add an element of gothic horror to her night.
It was late.
Spike hadn’t returned and anxiety ripped at her to go and find him. She had a
bad feeling, despite suspecting that he wouldn’t come back to them quite so
willingly. There was nothing to indicate a need to anticipate problems—if you
could exclude the fact that a grief-stricken yet defectively ensouled vampire
was gunning for dust.
“How long do these things take, Giles?” She’d
always been under the impression it was a couple of days from the draining to
the dusting, given that most were in the ground before she got to them. Things
like funeral services took planning. But what did she know? It was probably
outlined in that nifty little handbook that gave her all the nitpicky hints
about being the perfect slayer, but being that she never got one, she was
operating under a severe lack of knowledge.
I wonder how Giles
justifies not letting me read it? Maybe he knew me and study, not so
mixy.
“I’m actually not that certain. The Council was able at some
point to gain access to a number of…er…bodies, and observed the length of time
it took for each to regain consciousness. I rather think the length depended on
the sire. O-of course, Spike is a master vampire—”
“Huh?” Xander butted
in, his face a picture of confusion before understanding shifted and anger took
its place. “But, isn’t he kind of young? And what did he have to do to get that
honour?”
Giles was suddenly shifty, looking at Buffy before quickly
diverting to the floor, his hands scrabbling for the ear piece of his glasses as
the nerves set in.
“I-it would seem that Spike was—is—known as the Slayer
of Slayers. He’s killed two in his time, Buffy. If what Angel said is true, and
Spike doesn’t have a soul, then it seems more than reasonable to assume he was
here to make you his third. I’m so sorry to have to tell you this.” Compassion
settled around his eyes and he let go of the stiffness that was his calling as a
watcher, moving decisively to hug Buffy awkwardly around her shoulders. “I know
you care a great deal for him.”
Buffy nodded, her heart beginning to ache
with how much. She was scared now. Terrified about him being out on his own when
he was obviously reacting emotionally to something that she had no clue about,
as well as knowing that Darla’s dusting wouldn’t remain a secret for long if it
hadn’t already reverberated throughout the clan, and Spike was a sitting duck
for The Master.
“Giles, that whole soul thing? So not what it’s
cracked up to be. And if Angel has one, it’s defective. Spike doesn’t and yet I
trust him anyway. I—” She wanted to say the words to her friends, despite not
having been explicit with them to Spike himself, yet the stunned look in Giles’s
eyes forestalled her confession. “Look, what you just said? So not news. Spike
told me everything already and I trust him. I…care about him. He didn’t do this
to be evil. He did this to be good.”
Everyone looked again to the deathly
pale prisoner of the Summers’ basement and Buffy felt tears prickle at her eyes.
She didn’t want this to be happening. It was one thing to have this as her
calling—to go out every night and stake the badness of the night so the rest
could sleep safe and indulge dreams of things better. It was entirely another to
have to look at one of her friends and see the life bleach from their skin only
to be replaced by artificial animation in death. A horrifying monster. Despite
Xander’s hopes, Buffy knew this would only end in badness.
The silence
this time was a little more comfortable, though it stifled through the shared
knowledge that none of them really knew what to do—what to expect. There was
little to do but wait, and unfortunately none of them were much with the
patience. There was nothing left but to fill the emptiness with talk, and as
soon as Giles opened his mouth, Buffy felt twitchy.
“So, you knew then?
That Spike made up the story of having a soul. Was it to get into the group and
slaughter us all?”
Yup, straight for the jugular.
“Yes, I knew.
Well, okay, I just found out, and before you hold your breath and go purple, it
was my idea not to tell you. Spike thought it was over, and I wanted you to just
have some time to see that he wasn’t just a monster and that he could be good if
we just gave him a chance.” She stopped, held herself strong and clenched her
jaw. Catching Giles shocked glance, she stared him right in the eyes and said
the words that would change everything.
“I love him.”
Either her
watcher would accept how they felt about each other, or not. Heart thumping
wildly in that scared way it does when you wait for parental trouble, Buffy
watched and took her turn at bating her breath.
He said nothing.
Looked at her for one shocked and disappointed moment, and turned away.
Buffy stood confusedly to the side as Giles flopped down on an uncomfortable
slab of the floor near Xander and then took a book from the duffle bag he’d
carried down the basement stairs from his car after Jesse had been
settled.
Well, that hook had been kind of weak—as in letting her off it
really fast. Buffy sighed in relief as she took to pacing in front of the
huddled pair. The older man took his time to open the book carefully, his
fingers reverent of the pages as he turned them slowly. Only when his eyes
widened and he sat forward, repositioning his glasses to see more closely
something so entirely captivating did Buffy feel the urge to interrupt. To push
her luck. She was getting a bad feeling, and added to the previous fear she’d
felt welling inside at Spike’s absence, it was adding up to all sorts of scary
images in her head.
Giles’s head whipped up too fast and his glasses
dislodged, allowing Buffy to catch the flash of guilt there. Somehow, in the
pocket of time between his disbelief of her actions and his tentative reading of
the cryptic book, he’d found something that Buffy wasn’t meant to
know.
“What?” she demanded, her voice all kinds of hard now that there
was something other than Spike’s motivations at hand. “You’ve got ‘uhoh’ face.
‘Uhoh’ face is never good.” Beneath it all she was wide-eyed and innocent,
scared of all the baddies that were out there and targeting her because she was
the Slayer.
“I-it’s nothing, Buffy. Just a prophecy that I will need to
do some further work on in order to translate it accurately.” He tried to brazen
it out, taking to his feet and shuffling uncertainly until he quickly stuffed
the book back into his bag—at complete opposites with the way he’d venerated its
very existence earlier—and sat back down.
“So, Xander, how are your
studies coming along?” Giles smiled at the adolescent, being both desperately
encouraging and panicked.
“Ah, you know,” Xander answered as his eyes
darted questioningly to Buffy’s, asking for some kind of clue. “Pretty much as
non-existent as it was the last time you never asked.”
Buffy felt the
dead weight of dread as it settled in her stomach. Giles was keeping something
from her. He’d read something in that ancient book that probably affected her
and he didn’t want her to know about it. That just felt so wrong.
Her
worried eyes settled on the body on the cot and Buffy suddenly felt like the
walls were closing in. It was all happening again; the evil she’d escaped by
leaving LA was following and spreading, and yet here she thought it could hurt
her a whole lot more than before. No matter what she did, she couldn’t escape
it. Evil sought her out—and even if it was Spike and he changed for meeting her,
it was never going to stop. Not until she was dead. Or all her friends were and
she didn’t care anymore.
Looking at Jesse sprawled flat out on top of the
sheets, she couldn’t help believing that it was starting already. Tears sprung
to her eyes and Buffy felt the weight of helplessness.
One friend down,
three to go.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
He felt so cold. Wasn’t meant to;
wasn’t meant to feel anything. Not now that he was so beyond physically broken
that the pain was just a numbing backdrop to the emotional torment.
He’d
not wasted any time berating himself for getting into this mess. He couldn’t
even hold on, expecting the cavalry to gallop to his rescue. Not the way he’d
run out like a coward. Even if Buffy hadn’t wanted to stake him after what he’d
done, after what grief he’d more than likely caused her, and she didn’t hate him
as much as he was beginning to hate himself, she had no clue that he’d been
caught. His girly run out the door would probably be enough for her to think he
wanted to hide and that would keep her hesitant long enough for him to be
dust—or fulfil whatever nasty plan the bat-faced pillock had in
mind.
Besides, she’d likely have her hands full. He didn’t even question
that Xander would be as coercive toward her as he was to Spike, convincing her
to give the newly turned school mate the benefit of the doubt by letting him
rise. Not for one second did Spike contemplate that she would have planted her
stake in the boy’s chest—even if he had no doubts that it was exactly what she
should do.
Dru had surrendered her game to the minions—to that wanker
Luke—and retired to wherever it was she wallowed her loss and dreamt up her
insane predictions. Spike was relieved. No matter how much he loved Buffy now,
it hurt to see the face of the woman he’d spent over a hundred years worshipping
and caring for wanting to do him damage. And not the kinky kind,
either.
Luke’s fists hit a whole lot harder and believe it or not, his
punishments were much more twisted and devastating. As it now stood, Spike
couldn’t move one small part of his body. He couldn’t even crack open an eyelid
without feeling a tearing pain. He was covered in blood—could feel it dried and
caked on his flesh. Sometime after Luke had entered the scene, Spike had been
relieved of his jacket, the leather being ripped from him to show the manacles
holding him helpless wouldn’t impede them taking it. He’d been rendered
shirtless, then, and they’d painted their death patterns on his chest and poked
him full of holes.
When his eyes were still under his command, Spike was
reminded what the bitch Darla had first seen in Angelus. The ugly forehead look
seemed to be a family trait and he only could thank his lucky stars Dru had seen
something else in him and made him the black sheep. Black—because he wasn’t.
Plutonic hair, a heart that loved the Slayer; he’d left black way back in Europe
and it was Dru’s fault entirely. If she’d let them go to Prague he’d more than
likely still be happily feeding on young, innocent virgins. Anyway, bugger the
rambling. He was thinking about Luke and how the nasty bastard never changed out
of his demon face. The Master was surrounded by demons of the purest intentions
and Spike was left regretting his jump over the fence. At least—no. He couldn’t
regret it, couldn’t feel that what had happened between Buffy and himself was
wro…
“Argghh!”
Something white hot and sharp sliced its way
through his gut and struck the rock wall behind him. Spike screamed out in
agony, his eyes shooting open against the blood crust that had hidden the view
of his own attack from him. Luke, a grin from one lopsided ear to the other,
watched as the pain took Spike over and he sunk as far as the chains
allowed.
“You’ve been bad, Spike.” The deep, amused tones were barely
heard as Spike felt the groans against such intense pain fight their way from
his internal darkness. “You must be punished for your transgressions. You will
not be alone in this. Not once we catch Angelus and show him that there are
consequences for not protecting one’s sire. How long do you think you have,
Spike, before I show you mercy and end your miserable existence?”
He
couldn’t answer. He honestly didn’t know. And to top it all off, he didn’t know
what to wish for. Make it quick, something screamed in his head, wanting
to continue his not so courageous night and have it finally reach its
end.
But then another thought barged its way to the surface, just as his
head was lolling and he was fighting the onset of darkness and unconsciousness.
It was the voice that had turned him in Buffy’s direction and taught him that
there was sense in falling in love with her. It told him to hang on, because no
matter what he thought, no matter what he expected, she was
coming.
Against the agony of his position, he waited.
She would
save him.
He counted those minutes suspended between agony and consciousness
with an altered mind. His face too slicked with blood to allow eyes to view the
world, he existed inside his head and felt things he’d never known. The first
was hatred, so overwhelming that he wanted to roar with it. Wanted to shatter
the stone walls of his prison as he made it so known that no one would ever risk
his displeasure again. Without a doubt he no longer had any loyalty to his sire.
As barmy as Dru was, she was as good as dust if he ever got free.
Just as
strong was love. It coursed through his stagnant veins and slammed into his long
dead heart with a shattering impact. He’d known so little of it; thought he’d
felt so much of it. Really, it had all been playing and the game had come to an
end. Until she’d slipped beneath his barriers when he’d had his back turned,
slipped and bashed them to splintering nothingness as she took his heart and
made it beat.
She was everything beautiful, and all he’d ever hoped for
in his life. The one where he’d lived the life of a poet. Not this half life
where he’d thought he was thrumming with it, killing and slaughtering merrily
along. He’d thought it had been satisfying. His emotions had been splashed upon
Dru and not once did he question her lack of intensity in her return of them.
Not once had he suspected she hadn’t loved him.
Not until he’d been
taught what love really was by a slip of a teenage girl that he would worship
until his dust littered the cave floor.
A new sensation battered his
already raw senses, filtering weakly through at first and then wakening him with
a hunger that had fled him a while back. It was fresh, this sensation of
rebirth. Of waking with the instincts already programmed to kill, to rejoice in
the death of others that had once filled your living days with joy.
The
awareness grew stronger the weaker Spike became. A thudding need within his body
for blood—for first blood—made him tremble and at last he knew what he’d done.
Xander’s friend Jesse was rising and that meant only one thing: the Slayer had
spared her friend the pain of not trying to help the newly turned, and Spike had
turned him wrong. Right, two things then. He couldn’t be expected to count and
be coherent when he was on the edge of finished every false breath he
took.
Dru had disappeared and taken her flunkies with her, luring Luke
with promises that the revolting pug probably hadn’t experienced willingly since
the day he was turned. It hadn’t ended his torment. They’d left him swinging
from the chains against the wall, the resounding blunted thump of many fists
going for him at once leaving his mind and body swirling and careening into the
meaner side. They’d ceased the active punishment, but this was where the head
tricks began.
He couldn’t keep the swell of regret from surging and
drowning him in its pool of intent. He’d been snagged before he could attempt to
pry open his eyes. All right, ceasing with the dramatics, that wasn’t so swift
in the case of them being welded shut with dried blood. Spike barked a laugh and
wondered if insanity by sire was catching. It would be nice. Give him something
of a certainty to cling to, something to get him out of this mess. If he was as
bug shagging crazy as the rest of his loopy family they’d maybe loosen the
shackles a bit and perhaps let him free.
A bloke could dream.
Fact
was he knew it was over. Even if Dru merely thought she was punishing him back
into the fold, Spike knew what Nest really did to those that defected. Truth be
told, he was a little confused why the bugger hadn’t hunted down Angelus and
given him what for. The arse must serve a purpose, he thought. Something that
Spike never had. He’d dealt with it a century ago. Had emerged from raging
obscurity even more well known than the rest of the Aurelian flock—cemented his
place in the history books so that none of them could laugh at him again. Seemed
like now was as good a time as any to acknowledge that that plan had backfired.
No matter what kind of rep he fostered for himself, his family couldn’t give a
fuck unless there was a way to use it against him.
Spike slumped against
the wall, his shoulders burning along with the numerous bloodied lances crossing
his body. He only had one chance, and he was buggered if he knew whether it
would work. Exhaustion was tempting him back toward blackness and carefree Buffy
porn, yet the tantalising newness of his get kept unconsciousness at bay. Jesse.
Time would show him just how powerful he was, and whether his mistake had been
in turning a teenager into a monster, or creating an opportunity for escape by
extending his kin.
Deep down the connection to this boy made him feel
ill. And even deeper still he felt a rage that the connection wasn’t with
someone else entirely. He’d done well to block out the impulses that had formed
him for the past hundred years, but now that his body was devoid of many volumes
of blood, he felt the elemental pull of his primitive urges tenfold. And he
wanted Buffy. He wanted part of him inside her—his blood, his cock. He wanted
her to know where she belonged, that his side was the last place she would walk
before she saw the end of the world. His face her salvation before they crumbled
to the ground.
As his minds eye saw her naked and with fangs, his body
jerked and he cried out in horror. He was hallucinating, allowing the demon side
of him too much control. This was not the kind of Buffy he wanted—even if it
meant being alone for the rest of his existence. He wanted to know her as she
was, feel her heart beat as they made love.
Dreamlike images flitted
behind his lids, of a Buffy he’d had a crack at until he’d blown it so
spectacularly. His body reacted with contradictory moans and a rigid erection as
she alternated between blushing virgin and demonic temptress, a fight between
the elemental sides of himself, and as the stirrings of his newest creation
stirred to life somewhere under the slayer’s watchful eye, Spike lost the battle
of controlling his desires. Preferences bled into an indistinct Buffy and he was
lost to know which was which. As the parts that made up the total of Spike lost
control, his need for blood and sex did so too.
Fury, hate, need and
desperation had him surging wildly against the chains, growling with feral
intensity into the silence as every muscle strained against captivity. He had
things to do: a vampire to train, a woman to fuck, a town to paint red. Ideas
and actions snapped like whips in his head and Spike was lost to sensation,
losing clear thought and his mental stability with each ear-shattering
crack.
It was time to rage.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Xander had gone
to pick-up Willow, and Giles had left to do some research. It had taken awhile
to convince them all that she could cope with Jesse on her own. They
conveniently forgot that she faced fledglings on a nightly basis and rid the
world of them efficiently if not a trifle quickly.
On second thought,
maybe that’s what they were worried about.
It had taken two hours of
standing and watching before Buffy realised she should have brought down a
chair. Another hour to actually go up and do it. It was obviously taking some
time for Xander to break the news, and the longer they took to come back, the
more relieved Buffy felt. She knew she was a coward in the way she took comfort
in knowing she wouldn’t be the one seeing Willow’s face crumble with grief that
her friend from childhood was no longer of the living, and depending on the very
near future, possibly not of the unliving either.
It was amazingly quiet
down in the basement. There was only one being drawing on breath, only one heart
beating in the room, and yet they were things Buffy was so used to while being
human that it felt like a betrayal beside the one who no longer could claim that
affinity. Buffy looked at Jesse, already so pale before he’d gone to the
lioness’s den that fatal night and submitted to a monster’s fangs.
He was
an idiot.
Feeling suddenly agitated, Buffy bounced to her feet and paced
away from the bed—away from the boy who was supposed to be her low-pressure
friend. Like Xander, although she’d definitely picked up vibes from the newly
turned demon implying a not so easygoing future with him in the group had ever
been on the cards. The way he’d checked her out had been kind of slimy—not that
she’d been worried about taking him on if he overstepped the very distinct
friends boundary. It would have been the ensuing awkwardness that would have
killed the friendship. In a way, Buffy was relieved it had happened this way as
the fault fell far from her shoulders.
Twenty minutes into the fourth
hour, Buffy began to feel the irritating itch creep up her spine and settle at
the back of her neck. It had started so quietly, so subtly that she really
hadn’t noticed until she began to feel angry at Jesse for putting them in this
position. The sensation was new, unfamiliar despite Giles warning her she should
have been feeling it for weeks. Been sensing vampires all along. It awoke a
reaction that took her breath away with its swiftness and she felt her feet
divert her pacing in search of a stake.
She was the Slayer and she was
absent a weapon. It was wrong. It was foolish and a primitive urge inside her
told her she needed it in her hand NOW. Looking around, Buffy discovered a
distinct lack of wood. Even the chair was metal and useless in providing a
makeshift weapon in this sudden urgency. She didn’t want to leave, didn’t want
to go only to come back and find she’d been caught and lured into a web of a
monster’s making.
A tiny part of her brain screamed at Spike for doing
this to her—for creating something she’d have to kill. And she knew she would,
could feel the increase in adrenaline that informed her a demon was in her
presence and needed to be slayed. It was so much stronger than anything she’d
felt before—much stronger than the non-existent urge she’d had to stake Spike.
The difference was staggering and Buffy paused to wonder why. He was a master
vampire, so much stronger and more powerful than a nerd like Jesse could have
ever aspired to be, and yet he’d not sparked one single impulse to kill. This
was her friend—a new and not very well known friend for sure, but still not an
enemy. Not yet. Not like Spike had been when she first met
him.
Desperately trying to put it in perspective, to get control of her
feelings and her desire to slay, Buffy sat back on the chair and used her hands
to grip the seat tightly. If she hung on fast, maybe, just maybe, it would be
okay. The panic might go away and leave her to be just Buffy again.
And
then a tear-soaked Willow clomped down the stairs and their world changed
again.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
So loud. Ripe. Sensations overwhelming
yet delicious. Crave death; crave violence. Hungry—so very hungry it
hurts.
The pain of waking raced through him until he felt agony in every
limb, yet desperation to keep still and not allow anyone to know he was back. He
felt so different, like a thousand parties had launched in his head and the
party drugs had all been sunk into his veins. He buzzed, and everything was
vibrant, even behind his closed lids.
Three rhythms echoed around him,
his mouth salivating until he felt bursting teeth cut the inside of his lip. A
snarl was so close to the edge of his tongue and Jesse struggled to keep it in,
feeling so eager to experience himself with that kind of power behind
him.
He awoke with a knowledge spurring him on to impetuous activity, yet
automatic caution now that he recognised the appearance of power even greater
than his own. It was Buffy—he knew in a second that she was a threat, yet so far
he had been left alone. There were two others—two he knew and couldn’t wait to
get to know even better. He could sense Willow’s tears and felt like hitting her
violently for grieving his change. He wasn’t. He gloried in it.
Until he
realised he couldn’t sense HER.
Jesse could hardly believe it. She’d been
draining him and he’d known it was the end. She’d refused to save him, wanting
to savour the taste of his fear as she sucked it into her mouth. Wanting him to
be truly dead. Meaning so little to her after all he’d given so freely hurt. Not
belonging to her was a hard blow against the face. Not sensing her at all made
him feel weak and cheated.
His sire’s blood coursed through his veins at
a phenomenal rate, and with it was dictated a respect that he would have refused
given the situation. It wasn’t possible. He could feel it, the awe that surged
through his blood despite his desire to hate and destroy.
And then other
things imprinted his first moments as a demon—the certainty that his sire was in
trouble, that he was needed for help and that importance puffed him up more than
all of Darla’s kinky rounds of sex had done.
Remnants were there; the boy
who was loyal though foolish was still on the outskirts of existence, but the
demon banished them as irritations well gotten rid of. Jesse couldn’t continue
what he was—and he felt it possible that he liked who he was becoming a whole
lot better. It was like an alien at first, invading his body and changing his
thoughts and memories until it was anger and violence he was consumed with, not
failed flirting and hit-and-miss study.
He was new, improved, and deadly
intent on showing it to those that thought themselves friends. He could tell
them apart now, and he didn’t even have to open his eyes. Sweet sweet Willow,
fresh yet cloaked in grief. She was a delicate one, but she’d sing as he drank
her down. Xander, tired and resigned, and yet his blood would be so good teasing
the back of his throat. He’d take long gulps of him, feeling how strong he was
against a boy who’d always been his equal, in all things dorky. Not anymore.
Jesse could feel himself drowning in the possibilities of his sudden cool
factor, even if he did get to eat everyone who thought it.
They talked
around him, and then Willow sobbed. It was like he’d planned it—the perfect
moment. The muscles in his face groaned and cracked and then amber eyes rested
on his new world, wide and bright. A smile tilted the end of his lips and then
an attempt to smoothly sit up was foiled by the chains. Despite this blow to his
plan, Jesse laid back and stared.
He’d watch them scurry around him like
mice.
Chapter Nineteen
It had taken courage
to come back this far. He’d lost himself in the mire of guilt and grief over the
past two days and it had taken tremendous effort to regroup and attempt that
bold step back on the right road—and right now the road led to Rupert
Giles.
It wasn’t what he might have wished. A beacon of shining blonde
hair might have made the passage brighter and less fraught with catastrophe, but
he thought that way could lead to instant dust. That option he’d obviously
miscalculated as the Watcher stared at him down the shelf of a lethal, loaded
crossbow.
“What are you doing here?” There was no concession in the
Watcher’s icy glare and Angel cursed himself again for not thinking of the wider
ranging consequences of his actions. Of course, this man—this man who had
devoted his life to fighting on the side of good and training the one girl whose
sacred duty it was to save the world and the precious lives within it—would not
look well upon a misguided vampire who believed it acceptable to sacrifice the
one if it meant saving the many.
He’d had no choice but to show
Spike up for the lying, scheming vermin that he really was, and there had been
no other way he’d seen to do it. It wasn’t as if their little friend hadn’t had
a death wish in the first place—even if Angel was more firmly placed to
understand the seductive personality of Darla and her erotic promises.
He
had no choice now but to put forth a good argument. If he didn’t, then he didn’t
fancy how many times Giles would make him try and catch the bolts shot
unerringly accurate.
“I thought I could help you fight the Master.” Not
needing breath aided him in stillness and he thanked whatever star had blessed
him that being undead robbed him of the adrenaline that notched up
fear.
“We are currently managing…if not fine then definitely
adequately, from your previous version of help. My Slayer is faced with the
possibility of slaying someone she called friend—and before you attempt to lay
the whole blame on Spike for doing the turning, let us wonder at your less than
stellar actions in not coming to the rescue of the boy. Pillock.” The crossbow
wavered just slightly, but the bolt remained fixed and sharp on its intended
target.
“He was too far gone under Darla’s spell. You’d have had to chain
him up for weeks to get him to let her go. The power of a vampire like Darla is
indescribable, indeterminate—” Angel became lost in the lure of his memory—of
the night he’d succumbed to her and all her promises. He felt the blow hard when
the Watcher’s voice broke in and reminded him of his difference.
“Yes,
for you, perhaps. And if chaining is what it would have taken, then chaining we
would have done. You had no right to make a decision of such magnitude and then
claim that you are good by virtue of possessing a soul.” Giles took a crucifix
off the study table and held it tight before letting the still loaded crossbow
rest on the polished wood. “Were Buffy here, she would have staked yo; make no
mistake of that. She still bloody might—and I would be the last to step in her
way.” And then he gave into the misery of being the smart one—of being her
watcher, the trained one entrusted with her safety and her skill.
Angel
glanced at the now relinquished weapon and stepped closer, his eyes narrowing at
the human and seeing the pain that suddenly overwhelmed him. He watched as Giles
slumped into a chair, his hand clutching at his glasses as his other swept
roughly through his hair. In a room filled with books, only one stood out on the
table.
The Watcher was lost in his focus of it to the extent of
starting when Angel took a seat opposite. The vampire tried his concerned look,
but it gave quickly away to curiosity as he identified the book as the
Codex he’d left behind when he’d first dropped the soulless Spike bombshell. Not
that it seemed to have the widespread results he would have
appreciated.
“It would appear that I would need your—if not your
help, then certainly your confidence.” Rupert Giles looked tired beyond measure
and Angel nodded by way of acceptance, his curiosity piqued as to why this
strong, knowledgeable man seemed weaker than the most oblivious human. He had
information and awareness of an existence the world knew nothing about—and yet
it wore on his efforts to even the fight. “It would seem that my slayer is to
die in this battle against the Master. And there isn’t a damn thing I can do to
prevent it.”
So that was it. Well, they hadn’t wanted his advice before
now, and Angel couldn’t help the feeling of ‘I told you so’ that wanted to
rocket off his tongue at their mistake.
“Why don’t you just ask Spike?
He’s been more than creative in the past. Stealing my destiny was one of his
more brilliant examples—and you all fell for it.” The churlish tone crossed the
barrier and Giles sat up straighter, his stare harder.
“Spike would
appear to have disappeared, and no, I don’t believe it is for any such nefarious
purpose as setting Buffy up. I think you are more out of touch with your family
than you even realise.” The suggestion that Giles knew more of Spike than Angel
possibly could drifted untouched on the air and Angel felt like biting him for
the audacity.
“If you’re about to ask me help you find Spike, you’ve
really tipped back too much—”
“You really are blindly oblivious to the
good around you, aren’t you? Spike is not the issue here, though I will admit
that had he been I might have received some actual help with this awful
miscarriage of justice. You claimed to be here to aid Buffy in her fight for
good. So far, all I have seen in you is a vindictive streak that you bow to
before all else. You sacrificed a human life so as to expose a vampire you
haven’t even known for a century. Your view on this situation is wrong, and it
appals me that you would rather continue on this childish expedition to change
Buffy’s feelings than to actively aid in saving her life—and the world.” The
passion died in the librarian’s eyes suddenly and he gave into the wave of
hopelessness he’d been struggling against since the moment foreign words began
to make sense to his tired brain and a prized book became his most hated
possession.
The hypnotic jaw clenching almost made him snap as he took
one final look at the vampire that could have become their greatest ally and
decided he would be best to enclose himself in his office and contemplate the
best way to circumvent these predictions.
“Just…just go, will you? There
is nothing you can do here, and I rather think Buffy is far from wanting to see
your face in her current predicament.” He dismissed the vampire with less than a
look, just a callous wave of his hand as he stumbled to the back of the library
in total preoccupation.
It’s the Codex. It’s never been wrong. The
events have always come to pass. Oh God, Buffy. Whatever can I do? He
mumbled, repetition of his mind and words mixing to create a horror in his heart
that made it difficult for him to breathe.
And Angel slipped out as
unwelcome as when he’d arrived.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Twisted little
hearts danced around her in his mind. Naked and glorious, her breasts were young
and pert and just straining for the first lick of his tongue. But she was
covered, covered in the bizarre caricatures of love as they flipped and slipped
across her skin.
His hands itched to pluck them away, to reveal the glory
of her body, taste the richness of her flesh as his fangs raped her resistance
away. He understood her fear—wasn’t he scared the first night Dru had shown him
the pain of forever? Hadn’t he been afraid when she’d stroked his cock and he’d
gathered his wits enough to slide in his possession, to lay rights to her
nights?
As life altering as that moment had been, he knew Buffy would
surpass it all.
Touching her would award him the taste of freshness he
himself had offered Dru—fresh untainted blood with the spice of arousal. He’d
kissed Buffy and knew. Till the day he dusted, she was meant for him. As
irrevocably as Dru had known that particular something the moment she’d come
across him weeping in a stable, he knew that Buffy was his and he’d make sure
she understood how satisfying it was to know the place you belonged.
What
little awareness he had left allowed Spike to know where he was. He hung in the
drafty hall between caves and he burned from overextended muscles and a bleeding
heart. She would come for him. He knew that—in between the times he felt like
his body was crumbling to the floor, only to jerk awake and find that Dru was
just pouring dirt upon his head.
He hated her now.
Where once her
cool beauty had mesmerised him completely, now he heard her voice and felt every
year of strain that he’d spent with her. Every year of resentment that she’d
held out for the return of her precious sire. And every second she’d made Spike
clear her path with his bare hands while she swept a parade laughing around his
heart.
Fanciful visions flickered between the red of his hatred and the
blood of his love. Yet Drusilla whispered, saying things that were sending him
not so quietly insane.
She enacted his end, showed him how many particles
he’d be on the floor when Buffy had had enough of him—warning that it was a
‘when’, and not his hoped for ‘if’.
Only when she was gone would he fight
to remember the look on Buffy’s face the night they’d spent curled up in each
other’s arms, the reality of Dru a distant hurt that had lost all its sting the
moment he’d indulged in the truth. The moments were sweet and he could clearly
picture her smile, the affection in her touch and the desire in her kiss as she
visited him in this hell where he hung.
Fleetingly he was soft and
gentle—the moments passing into the heat of sex and power where he was eager to
have her dwell. He could feel the childe of his blood rising, could sense the
anger and hatred that swelled in this new abomination and the demon inside of
him relished it. Revelled in the test of Buffy’s love in her response to its
existence.
He’d passed beyond using the creature to free him. He knew it
would be automatic, that the boy would demand they rescue him and then attempt
to eat them in gratitude. The part inside Spike that had been trying—no,
succeeding to be good for Buffy, quailed at the notion that she and her friends
could perish for trusting his get. It was the part that was being suppressed
more and more as visions of his goddess nude and covered in marks seduced him to
his darker side.
Fangs bursting from his gums, Spike slumped against his
wall and swallowed up the image of his Buffy coming for him. She looked older,
smaller, yet bore the ravages of time enormously well. As she walked closer, he
could see her hands clenched, her jaw ticking as her eyes swept over his demon’s
face and screwed up in disappointment.
“I don’t want YOU,” she said. Her
lip curled in disgust as she swept a glance over his broken and pale body,
noticing every small prick of his skin that had pained him, destroyed his flesh
while he’d been waiting for a miracle.
Primal violence welled up within
and Spike felt like he’d blacked out. It must have only been for seconds but by
then he felt strength flow through him, felt anger at being rejected renew his
efforts to break out, and he roared in reaction to his loss.
“Too fucking
bad, Goldilocks. I’m what you’ve got.”
The creak of shattering rock and
stretching chains filled his ears as he tried to hold in the snarl—and then he
was free and on her, ripping her clothes from her body and punishing her for
daring to discard any part of who he was. He bruised her and ripped her open as
many times as he could find places, defying her treacherous mouth to open and
tell him more lies.
“How’s that feel, Slayer?” And he thrust himself hard
beyond her restricting passage, feeling her rip; loving her tears. Celebrating
the song of her screams.
He was brought back to reality with a hard fist
to his gut, and Spike choked and dry wretched into Luke’s hideous face.
“You were looking far too happy, Spike.”
There was no shame in
the tears he shed for Buffy. The lapse would cost him as his control slipped
well beyond his grasp.
Spike only hoped Dru staked him before she
arrived.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Willow hadn’t believed the story that
Xander had told her. He had a busted bottom lip to prove it when she’d been so
overwhelmingly angry with what he was trying to say. Making jokes about Jesse
becoming a vampire was really not funny.
It had taken hours for him to
convince her he wasn’t lying and to come to Buffy’s basement to see for herself.
And now she stood at the bottom of the stairs, tasting her dinner in the back of
her throat as she fought to decide between throwing up, staking her friend, or
running all the way back home.
He was staring at her. No, leering and
licking his lips and it was the most unnerving—terrifying—experience she’d ever
had. Jesse had never looked at her like that before. Oh, once she might have
hoped he’d take an interest in her—for the five minutes before she’d pegged all
her hopes on Xander—but not for a long time had she had the slimmest thought of
him as anything but a friend. Now she could see why—because his lewd interest
was making her sensitive skin crawl.
Though it was wrong of her to blame
him now that he’d been taken over by a demon. Wasn’t it?
This was a
friend—a friend Xander was apparently so fond of that the thought of letting him
die with his soul intact and travelling to the good place people went when they
were murdered by vampires, was just unbearable. That he’d actually encouraged—no
wait, she remembered his explanation, emotionally blackmailed—Spike to do this
was almost too much to process. Still, friend as human. Surely the example of
Spike showed them that it was possible to have a friend as a vampire as
well?
“J-Jesse?” She took one tentative step forward then felt a part of
her childhood die at his callous laugh.
“Awwww, Willow. You didn’t even
dress up for me.” His eyes lowered and stayed on the fabric gently stretched
across her breasts and he laughed at her gasp of humiliation.
He’d never
made her feel inadequate before—not enough to be uncomfortable around him. Until
now. Just one foul opening of his demon’s mouth and she was shuddering and
whimpering in confusion and fear. Where was sweet—do-anything-for-his-Willow
Jesse?
“I-I didn’t know I had to,” the flustered red-head fumbled as an
excuse—always feeling like she owed it even when commonsense told her she
didn’t. Buffy and Xander were there with her, intellectually she knew that, but
the experience of this Jesse overwhelmed her senses and she couldn’t recognise
the security of knowing her friends—one super-powered at that—were right at her
side.
Her eyes could focus on nothing but the vampire—and that’s what he
was now. Willow could see the changes immediately—and not just the lumpies and
the sharp fangs that were being traced by a roughened tongue.
“So sad.
Poor fashion-challenged Will. I live in hope. Or not. Get it?” He cracked up at
his less-than-funny pun and Willow felt the numbness take over, ignored the
cracks at her composure as a river of tears flowed down her frozen
cheeks.
“Stop it.” Xander stepped forward, horrified, yet clinging to one
last hope that the change could be reversed. If only Spike would show; he could
control his new little vampire recruit and make him the Jesse they all knew and
loved.
“Stop it,” the evil demon mimicked before automatically flinching
at Buffy’s authoritative step forward.
“I’m only letting your ass remain
undusty until Spike gets here. If he can’t improve your manners for you, it’s
bye-bye cruel world. Capische?” Despite the tough words, Buffy knew he could
hear her heart beating faster, could, perhaps, smell her fear as she bluffed her
way through this first conversation with the evil in her basement. If only her
mom could see her now, she’d be certified crazy with her ass back in a pretty
white cell faster than you could scream ‘vampire’.
“Yeah, should probably
do something about that. Daddy Spike is kinda—all tied up? Well, you know what
it’s like when the evil enemy vampnaps you and tortures you for days? Ah, guess
you don’t. My bad,” Jesse mocked coldly, his tone betraying his lack of interest
in the real fate of his sire.
Pure cold horror raced through Buffy’s
nervous system at his implication and she felt the loss of control in several
parts of her body. Bile rose in her throat, disgust at her own naïve ignorance
barely allowed her to continue standing and she at last faced the reason why
Spike had disappeared and not returned.
“H-how do you know? How
can you know where he is?” Her tone held as much disbelief as she could
muster, despite the building sense of terror that it made too much sense and
Spike—even if scared of her reaction—wasn’t such a coward that he wouldn’t face
this mistake. And one hard look at Jesse and his almost dripping fangs told her
it was absolutely a mistake.
“I can feel it,” he said confidently. “In
here,” he said with a grin as he tapped his head, and then continued with a jerk
of his hips and a defined bulge in his jeans. “And most definitely here. He’s
thinking of you, little pretty. He wants to fuck you raw.”
Willow gasped
and Buffy vaguely heard Xander’s shocked placating ‘that’s so not nice, man’
before she could control the urge she had to step forward and rip his foul head
off.
“Do you know how to find him?” she ground out, a burgeoning hatred
developing in her heart, and yet a hesitant belief that maybe it wouldn’t be too
late. Hoping, but not quite believing, that with Spike, this vampire could
redeem himself.
She watched as Jesse tipped his head to the side, her
stomach clenching in revulsion that he’d emulated one of Spike’s signature
characteristics, and saw his contemplative nod.
“Think so. He’s kinda
been calling for me for the past few hours at least. Sending some pretty
interesting daydreams, too. Hey Buffy, how do you look with fang marks and cum
dripping from your—”
Xander beat her to the punch; she was too weakened
by the need to empty everything she’d ever eaten onto the
floor.
“Y-you’re disgusting,” Willow sobbed at the boy she’d spent years
growing up with, sharing sandpits and sandwiches, and then in a show of strength
all of them were unaware of, grabbed Buffy’s arm and tugged her to the
stairs.
The demoralised slayer stumbled her way upward to sanity and
collapsed against the kitchen island, feeling the return of her strength only
when she could finally push her lungs into accepting air.
Xander stood
silent as he shut the basement door and watched his friends—these girls. And he
offered silent penance for his selfish mistake.
TBC