Chapter Fifteen
Just do it.
Again.
Ask Buffy or
Dawn to help you. You know Buffy would be willing to help as soon as she gets
home. Or you could drag Dawn off the phone now, for that matter. Neither one of
them would mind. Maybe you could just ask one of them to take over the whole
job.
Do you want
someone else going through her things? Another
part of her argued.
No.
So just do it.
~*~
“Remember to let me do
the talking, Slayer.”
“You’ve reminded me three times in the last five
minutes.”
“Yeah? Guess I’ve seen how well you take direction.”
Buffy rolled her eyes. “Lead on, Mr. DeMille.”
Spike grasped the door handle. “‘m jes’ sayin’ – it’s not
Willy’s, and we don’t know what to expect. Anyone in there harkens on to you
being the Slayer, there could be trouble.”
“You mean I can’t announce it like I usually do when I
walk into a room full of demons?” Thinking she may have done just that at some time
in the past, Buffy hurried on before Spike could remind her of the specifics. “How
many demon bars are there in Sunnydale, anyway?”
This was the third one they’d visited in the last two
hours as they tried to get information on the Vpastus’zyn demon that had
attacked Dawn. They should have skipped Willy’s altogether, and the second
place they’d tried had also been a total loss. Unless you
wanted to count the unforgettable experience of seeing those two KaraphXionin
demons having sex on one of the pool tables. Buffy still wasn’t sure if
there had been two males, two females, one of each, or… Did some demons have
more than two sexes? Because that could explain some of the,
um…
“Hard to say.” Spike’s words interrupted her train of thought, and it
took her a moment to figure out if he was following her musings on the KaraphXionin
demons or if… “They can come and go in the blink of an eye.”
Oh yeah. Demon bars. Number of.
“Sadly, I know you mean that literally.”
Spike pulled the door open and held it for her. As she moved
past him to step into the bar, he leaned close. “They have five separate sexes,
love,” he said softly. “I’ll explain all the – ins and outs – of it later. Maybe
demonstrate some of the more interesting bits, too; make sure you’re absorbing
the knowledge.”
Buffy gave him a ‘look’, but he only smirked in return.
“We both know you tend to get more out of ‘hands on’ teaching methods than you
do from lectures,” he said. The smirk intensified. “Even if you
do seem to enjoy the – talking.”
Since she couldn’t think of a quippy reply, and wasn’t
sure she’d be able to get one out without squeaking like Dawn on caffeine even
if she could, Buffy made a show of getting down to business by studying the
crowd.
‘Tuck’s Place’ as the sign outside had named the establishment,
was probably only about half the size of the main floor of the Bronze, and if
trendy, high class demon bars existed, this was not one of them. The bare
wooden floors were rough, and unless you counted the fact that the vinyl
covering them was torn in somewhat coordinating patterns, the bar stools didn’t
match the chairs surrounding the tables, anything else in the bar, or each
other. The bar itself, though, was made of beautifully carved oak, and looked
like an antique that had been treated well over the years. It was busy, too,
surrounded by a large, noisy, diverse, and apparently very thirsty demon crowd.
We’ll get some
information here, Buffy thought.
Spike seemed to agree. “Looks promising,” he said.
His eyes were making their own careful sweep of the
crowd, and she knew he was speculating on where trouble, if it was going to
come, was most likely to start up. A few patrons were studying them in return,
but for the most part, they were being ignored.
Spike inclined his head toward the juke box. “Why don’t
you check out the music, give me a few minutes?”
Buffy nodded. She knew that, in the past, she would have
ignored, and probably resented, Spike’s suggestion, but she was coming to
understand that he was much better at this pumping for information thing than
she was. Not that he was completely
subtle, but since she totally sucked at anything even approaching subtle, he definitely
had the edge on her. He understood the demon mindset better than she ever
would, too.
Less than fifteen minutes had passed when she first
noticed it. She’d flipped through the cards of musical selections on the old
fashioned juke box; had concluded that demons seemed to like the same music as
the average Bronze crowd, and was wondering if that should worry her or not,
when her senses went on alert. There was an undercurrent; a wave of some kind
of awareness running through the
crowd.
Buffy straightened up, cocking her head as she tried to
pick up snippets from the various conversations taking place around her.
“There.”
“Can’t be. Too short.”
“I’m telling you, that’s him.”
“…think the
stories…”
“…only a vamp. Tainted blood.”
“Like you’re so pure, Moia-skin.”
“…lius…”
“Every vamp with fangs and wrinklies makes the same claim
soon… … mean a thing.”
“And a master.”
A pause. “Early night for me.
You?”
“Yeah, let’s go.”
“…the blond one.”
“… kills his own kind. And ours. Should be…”
“… said he killed seven demons
in ten seconds flat …”
“They say he’s…”
“Who the fuck says that?
They’re just a figment… paranoid…”
“… take a chance on that?”
“…should challenge him. Up my street
cred.”
“For once, just take my advice and stay the hell out of
his way. Street cred doesn’t mean fuck-all when you’re dead.”
Buffy turned slowly toward the bar, careful not to
attract any attention. What the heck was going on? Short. Blond. Vamp. Why was everyone muttering about Spike? She
didn’t like the quiver that ran along her nerve endings. Up my street cred she could handle, but if there was a problem here,
some mob-type explosion of demony violence, the odds were going to be majorly
stacked against them.
Damn!
Maybe they
should have an early night.
Her eyes sought out Spike.
They found him.
She blinked. Stared. Blinked again.
He was – posing.
He was posing.
For pictures.
With the bartender.
He. Was. Posing. For.
Pictures. With. The. Bartender.
~*~
“Thanks, luv.” Spike
accepted the cup of blood from one of the assistant bartenders, a very pretty
little Zyrya demon, who’d introduced herself as Coquine. Stacked too, he noted,
and proud of it. His eyes lingered appreciatively on her amply displayed
charms.
“A-Negative,”
Tuck told him. “I remembered.”
Spike
wished he could. He’d obviously been here before and had made some kind of
impression, one that hadn’t left the bartender swearing to kill him if he ever
darkened the doorstep again. But he didn’t have a bloody clue when it had
happened or just what that impression was.
“Looking for a
Vpastus’zyn demon,” Spike continued their earlier conversation. “Got word
someone hired one of the tossers to take me out. Thought I’d
get there first.”
“Vpastus’zyn,
huh?
Pretty rare in these parts.”
“Yeah.
‘m
hoping that’ll make this one stand out a bit more.”
“Hard to stay inconspicuous
when you’re that big and ugly,” Tuck agreed, and something in his tone had
Spike’s eyes narrowing. This bloke knew
just where his quarry could be found.
He kept his voice
casual. “Wouldn’t know, personally, being neither, but you have a point.”
“Lia,” Tuck called to
the other assistant bartender. “Get me those invoices that need signing.”
“Now?” she asked, her tone incredulous. “Kinda busy here.”
“Yeah, now,” he growled. He looked back at
Spike as the Marala demon disappeared into the back room. “Help,” he said,
obviously expecting Spike to understand his labor problems.
Spike nodded, even
though he’d never run a business. Eaten his share of businessmen, he supposed,
but it wasn’t quite the same thing, was it? If dealing with employees was
anything like dealing with minions, though… His expression became more
sympathetic.
“Got
a favor to ask,” Tuck went on.
A
scarred brow rose.
The
bartender nodded toward a wall behind the bar plastered with pictures of himself posing with a wide variety of demons, some rather
well known. “You mind?”
Bloody
hell… “You want a picture of me?”
“That
a problem?”
No
information for you… Tuck might just as well have said it out loud.
“No,
no problem.”
Lia
returned with a clipboard of paperwork and her boss scribbled away on several
things while Coquine, who apparently served as the official Tuck’s Place photographer,
fetched a camera.
It
turned out Tuck was definitely a bloke with his ear to the ground. And he
became right chatty while the camera was flashing.
“You’ll
stop back and autograph these next week, right?” Tuck asked.
Spike
kept the distaste off his face with an effort. He was working hard to convince
himself that the humiliation of being on display this way was worth it when he
glanced to Coquine’s right and saw his Slayer watching. Arms crossed, head
tilted to the side, grim expression. Oh, yeah, she was brassed off good and
proper, which, generally speaking, tended to make her a bit unpredictable.
“Be
with you in a minute, pet.”
Bloody brilliant, you wanker. Could hardly
have taken a worse tack, could you? But if Buffy would just give him another
minute or two, he could probably get the names, bios, and, quite possibly, the security
codes, if any, of every power dealer in town. Information it might be handy to
have.
<<
Go with me on this, love. >> It had worked during their debriefing of the
bit, hadn’t it?
Buffy
glared. She was damned good at it, too.
Tuck eyed her speculatively. “You the Slayer?”
Fuck!
Buffy’s head turned slowly, dangerously,
in his direction. Her expression didn’t change, but Tuck didn’t appear in the
least intimidated. “You wanna be in the pictures too?”
“I think ‘no’ is not a strong enough
word.”
“Just one?” he wheedled.
“That would sooo be OneTwoMany.”
The bartender was looking Buffy up and
down, and Spike could practically see the thoughts bouncing about in the
fellow’s brain. When his eyes went to the dartboard and back to Buffy, Spike
almost groaned. Time to head this disaster off at the pass.
“Half a mo’,” he excused himself. His hand
curled around Buffy’s upper arm and he drew her aside, bending to speak to her
privately.
“Two minutes, love.”
“What the hell do you think you’re doing?” she hissed.
“I
think I’m trying to get information.” He bit out the response and turned
away from her in a swirl of black leather. Stupid bint should know he was
working the situation.
Bitch.
“Bird doesn’t like to be ignored,” Spike
explained to Tuck, man to man.
The bartender’s eyes ran over Buffy’s slim
body again as she strode rigidly back toward the jukebox. They lingered on her
ass.
“I don’t like to ignore her either,” the
vampire went on. “And just so we’re clear, I don’t much like it when other
blokes don’t.”
Tuck quickly rearranged his face, and
Spike took advantage of the moment.
“We about done here?” he asked.
“Yeah.” He dismissed Coquine wordlessly. “You’ve been good for
business,” he said. “I pay my debts.”
Debts? Spike’s eyes swept around the room one more time, but he knew
it would be fruitless. The place wasn’t arousing any memories at all. Neither
was the barkeep. But if he felt he was in his debt, Spike was smart enough to take
advantage of the misconception.
~*~
With a sharp motion,
Damn you,
Willow. Damn you.
I will not cry.
She lifted the box and carried it into the hall where she
added it to the pile. Xander was going to pick them up sometime tomorrow and
deliver them to the
I will not cry.
I’m too angry. In fact, I’m ******* furious. And I have every right to be.
~*~
Celebrity, it turned out, did not sit well with him.
It
was one thing to have been heard of – bit of a reputation, a touch of notoriety,
could be a good thing, but this…
Coquine’s flirting… Well, he could
probably live with that. Tuck’s fawning, though, and that of a few others, the nods
aimed in his direction and the whispers behind his back…
It was bloody revolting, and he’d had more
than enough.
Buffy’s eyes were locked on him as he
crossed the room to her side, and he tried to read them. He couldn’t quite
gauge her mood, though.
“Let’s go,” Spike leaned toward her to
make himself heard over the blare of the jukebox.
“What?”
“Let’s go kill something,” he yelled back.
Of course the jukebox chose that moment to
go silent, and Spike’s voice carried clearly into every corner of the bar.
The reaction was immediate.
To a – being – everyone in the bar moved,
like a retreating wave, away from them, clearing a pathway to the door. A wide pathway.
“Come again!” Tuck called out, as Spike pushed
the door open. The vampire saw Tuck’s eyes sweep the crowd, making sure he had
their attention, and he had a pretty good idea what words were going to be
coming out of the bartender’s mouth before they emerged. “Slayer – you’re
welcome, too, if you promise to behave yourself!”
The explosion of noise following his words
was only slightly muffled by the heavy wood of the door as it closed behind
them. The din continued as the blonds stared at each other.
“Not a soddin’ clue, Slayer,” Spike said.
“So don’t even ask. “
The hard expression in her eyes changed to
something even less desirable. “Oooh, Spikey!” she swooned. “Can I get your
autograph? Will you pose for a picture? Pretty please?
With a cup of blood on top? And the
little woman, too?”
“You’re jealous!” he burst out. The best
defense and all that rot…
Buffy rolled her eyes. “Pleeease…” She
started down the sidewalk.
Spike fell into step beside her, arranging
another smirk on his face. “Didn’t want your
autograph, did they?
Buffy had walked half
a block before she answered. “At least Mr. Spike Fan wanted my picture…” she grumbled.
“Yeah, to make copies for the dartboard,
pet.”
“What?!” Affronted, Buffy swung toward him.
“Bloke figured his patrons would pay a tidy
sum for a picture of the Slayer to put over the board before a game. Before the
word ‘no’ left your lips, he was probably halfway through working out a whole
new scoring system, too.” Spike’s expression gentled. “You’re the Slayer, love.
To that lot you’re the Big Bad.”
“Right.” A pause, then, “I am?”
“The biggest,” he assured her. He closed
the distance between them and slid his hands onto her hips. “You’re the boogie
woman mummy and daddy demons use to scare their tykes into toeing the line.”
“Yeah?” She looked suspiciously pleased now, and Spike grinned. As soon
as Buffy caught the smile, though, her expression changed. “I mean, eeeww.”
“Yeah,” he drawled out affectionately. “I
knew that’s what you really meant.” He leaned down to brush a light kiss
against her mouth. “Let’s go.”
She sighed with ‘sacred duty’ resignation
when he released her. “Where’s the next bar?”
Spike lit a cigarette, looking down the
dark street. “Few blocks that way,” he indicated the direction opposite to the
one she’d taken with his chin. “Seedier clientele.”
Buffy’s face puckered with distaste.
“Seedier? There’s seedier?”
“Hellmouth,” he elaborated. “There’s
always seedier.” He tilted his head, eyeing her weary expression with sympathy.
“Had enough, love? Maybe we should head over to
“Teague? Why? Is there a slightly less icky demon hangout there?”
“Not that I know of. Few hiding places, though.”
“Huh?”
“That bloke – Tuck. Slipped me an address while the bint was
clicking away with the camera.”
The Slayer’s
weary expression faded and a gleam of anticipation came into her eyes. “Yeah? Is this address going
to lead us to something big and hairy with an unpronounceable name that tried
to eat my sister?”
“If we’re lucky.”
~*~
She drew back from the box with a kind of revulsion.
Magic is not evil,
Her eyes squeezed shut.
No, magic was not the problem. The problem was
There’s no way,
Twenty minutes later, having hidden
Even as she climbed the stairs,
But she just couldn’t. Not now. Not yet. Maybe… maybe soon.
But not yet.
Right now she didn’t much feel like helping
~*~
How can
something this big and stupid looking move so fast?”
“Dunno. You could check with Angelus or Soldier Boy,
though. Might be willing to share their personal insights
into the condition.” He paused, anticipating her response, but Buffy
ignored the jibe. “Gotta say, though, if our girl out ran this thing, I’m
impressed.”
“Me, too. Oh, god, bleeaaaeck! I totally know why this thing has
no nose. It probably cut it off hoping it wouldn’t have to smell itself.”
The scent of curdled milk overlaid something deeper and
even more revolting, and the combination was nauseating. He could see his
Slayer was trying to avoid gagging.
Buffy landed a solid kick to the Vpastus’zyn demon’s
midsection. “This is officially the most disgusting demon we have ever killed.”
“Haven’t
killed it yet, pet.” Spike clobbered the big hairy thing with the side
of his axe, sending it staggering.
“We will,” Buffy stated. “And we could have just then if
you knew how to use that axe. Lesson the First, fang boy. The sharp cutty part
gets aimed toward the neck.”
“Wouldn’t wanna kill it too fast,” he protested. “I
haven’t had a good fight in days.” As the Vpastus’zyn demon worked to regain
its footing, Spike swung the axe again, neatly slicing off one of its fingers.
The creature roared. “Besides, I wasn’t sure if you were done trying to question
it.”
Buffy yanked a piece of pipe off the wall of the alley
where they’d finally come upon their prey, and leapt forward to try to take
advantage of the demon’s pain. She missed twice before connecting with its upper
back as it tried to dart to the side again. “Since neither one of us can
understand a ‘ugh, ugh’ it says, I don’t see any reason to keep it alive. Unless you know someone who speaks ‘grunt’.”
“Not off the top of my head. “ He kicked out at the
demon’s head as the Slayer’s blow sent it to its knees. His boot caught it just
under the chin, and its head snapped back. “We need one of those Universal
Translators.”
“A what?”
“Star Trek? Kirk? Spock?”
Buffy’s jaw dropped. “You watched Star Trek?”
“Well, yeah,” he shrugged. “Had to.
Dru thought Dr. McCoy was the reincarnation of her father. She got all
irritable if we ever missed an episode.” As soon as ‘V’ clambered to his feet,
Spike delivered two more kicks. The demon careened into the
Slayer, smearing something unspeakable onto her jeans from the hole where its
finger had gone missing. “‘Course she didn’t
understand schedules, so she thought we should be able to tune in to ‘Papa’s
New Life’ whenever she felt the urge.” He rolled his neck, and adjusted his
grip on the axe. “Cancellation hit her hard.”
Buffy slugged the demon back toward Spike, and brushed at
the goop on her thigh. “You’re kidding, right?”
“No. She was glad he was having such an interesting time
of it, doing so much traveling.”
“He was a doctor, not a tourist,” Buffy deadpanned.
Spike snorted.
The demon set up an otherworldly wailing and spun in a series
of circles. It seemed to be winding up for something, and when it was done
spinning, it lowered its head and charged at Buffy. She dodged, but wasn’t
quick enough to avoid the attack altogether. Some horny protrusion on the
demon’s forearm caught her on the shoulder, shredding the sleeve of her jacket.
She checked out the damage to her outfit before narrowing her eyes menacingly
on the hairy monster.
“That’s it!”
Spike recognized her tone. The Slayer’s clothing was
taking a beating, and she had decided it was time to end the dance. He swung
his axe, making sure the ‘sharp, cutty part’ was correctly aimed, and neatly
severed the demon’s head from its body.
“Eeeww.” They both jumped back as streams of putrid puce pus shot
from the headless neck and splattered onto nearly everything in sight,
including them. The stench was
unbelievable.
“Bloody hell. I may have to cut off my nose! Gaa… I thought it smelled bad when it was alive.”
Buffy looked up from surveying the pus covered leather of
her pants. Her eyes widened in exaggerated dismay, and he could see the
laughter in their depths. “You mean… “Dramatic pause. “‘Its – dead, Jim’?”
~*~
The roar of the
motorbike caught Giles’ attention, and he moved to the window to glance out. It
was barely evening, but the time of year brought darkness early, and only the
illumination cast by the porch light and the nearby streetlamp allowed him to
see anything of the scene outside.
He’d left them sparring at the Magic Box, and they’d
promised to arrive at Revello Drive within the hour
to meet up with Anya, and later, Xander. When he’d gone out to his car, though,
he’d caught a glimpse of Spike’s motorbike parked in the alley, and he’d
suspected that they were only waiting for him to leave before going for a ride.
Giles had given up wondering how Spike sometimes managed to get the bike about
during the day, chalking it up to one of the many mysteries of the Hellmouth.
He’d long ago come to the conclusion that a great many things happened in
Sunnydale and to its inhabitants that would never be adequately explained to
his curious mind.
“I love it,” Buffy had told
him when he’d first noticed that she and
Spike had taken to riding it quite frequently and had mentioned it to her. Her
eyes had lit up in a way he hadn’t seen since her mother’s death. Perhaps longer.
“If you’re going to be riding, I feel I should point out
the merits of helmets…”
“Not a chance,” Buffy interrupted. “The wind in my hair –
it’s one of the most wonderful… I want it – the freedom.”
Giles found himself smiling. The wind had certainly been
in her hair tonight. It was wildly disarrayed, and she stabbed a hand at it as
she slid off the back of the bike, laughing a little. Had he seen her laugh
since she’d returned? Giles wondered. Lighting a cigarette, Spike climbed off
after her and leaned easily back against the bike, expression amused, as he
listened to whatever it was she was saying. Giles watched as the vampire raised
a hand and made his own attempt at smoothing her hair. Buffy made no protest,
accepting his touch.
When she turned toward the house, Spike snaked an arm around
her, and Giles could clearly see his hand, spread familiarly over her abdomen
as he tugged her backward toward him.
His breath stopped.
There was nothing groping or obscene about that hand. But
the widely spread fingers, the casual, intimate familiarity, told him far more
than a much more explicit display of passion would have. For some reason, Giles
had always found that particular touch – that of a man’s hand splayed over a
woman’s abdomen, over her womb, perhaps? – one of the most personal, the most
truly intimate ways a man could touch a woman.
Buffy’s response to the touch, the way she leaned back
into him, even if it was only for a moment, told him everything else.
Dear Lord. Oh, dear Lord…
They were
lovers.
Cleaning his glasses didn’t ease the racing of his mind
in the least, but he did it anyway.
~*~
He didn’t want
to act rashly. He needed to give this some thought, to look at it from all
angles. So much had happened in the last year, so much had changed. He needed
to explore this development in light of those changes, and calmly decide what,
if anything, was to be done about it.
Then he could
both react and act appropriately.
Well done, Giles, old man, he told himself. You might, to someone with little intelligence, pass for rational.
The door
opened, and the two blonds came in.
“… told him to sod off.”
Buffy
snickered.
“You’re late!”
Dawn called out, appearing at the top of the stairs.
Buffy glanced
into the dining room before grinning triumphantly at her sister.
“Are not!” she
said. “We are here. Ahn is still calculating. Therefore, we are on time. Possibly early.”
The teenager
folded her arms. “I thought you said you had to work out.”
“We did! We
were.”
“That is sooo
motorcycle hair. And,” she went on, “Before you try to tell me you just rode
over here from the Magic Box, let me clarify: That is sooo
out-of-town-going-way-over-the-speed-limit motorcycle hair.”
Buffy’s hands
flew to her head. “Is it that bad?”
The Slayer
dashed up the stairs to repair the damage, and Dawn, mission accomplished,
sauntered on down.
“Hey, pidge,” Spike greeted her.
“You’re smelling less eeeww.”
“Bloody well
better be.”
“Did you hear,
Giles? Buffy and Spike got that gross demon that I conked over the head with
that lamp. You know, that Vasput… Pavust…”
“Vpastus’zyn, pet.”
“Yeah, that one.”
“When was
this?” Giles asked.
“Last night.”
“I was in bed
when they came in but the smell woke
me up. That was a first. I mean, strange noises, demons in the house, yeah,
been there, done that, but stinko alarm clock? New.”
“You’re
certain it was the same demon?”
“Well, it
wasn’t wearing a sign that said ‘I attacked your girl’, but, yeah, we’re sure.”
Dawn bit her
lip, and Spike tugged on her hair. “It was the same one, luv.
Didn’t I tell you this isn’t their normal range? Not likely to be more than one
of them hanging about town.”
Dawn seemed
reassured.
“Anyway,” she
continued her tale. “They were just covered with this purplish-red crap, which
I sooo don’t want to know what it was. Buffy made her usual knock-down-anyone-who’s-in-her-way
dash for the shower while Tara and I tried to help Spike get all the goop off
his coat.” Dawn widened her eyes. “I think I heard her swear.”
“Tara?” Giles
asked in surprise.
Dawn nodded.
“Maybe more than once,” she added with awe.
“You sis told
me swearing isn’t allowed in this house,” Spike inserted. “Doe Eyes better
watch her mouth. She could get in trouble.”
“Oh,
god, yeah. With mom, swearing was instant grounding material. If you were
dumb enough to get caught. Which,” she gloated, “Buffy was.”
“How could you
distinguish a swear word through all the gagging the good witch was doing?”
“Well, it
didn’t help when you told her Buffy was probably hungry and asked her if she
could ‘whip something up’. I thought she was gonna hurl on the spot.”
“Speaking of
hungry…” Spike moved off to the kitchen.
“God, he can
be so gross sometimes,” Dawn said. “A total guy.”
Buffy came
back down the stairs, looking somewhat less disheveled, and went straight to
the answering machine, where she listened to a couple of messages.
“Dawn? Didn’t
I have some blood in here?” Spike called out a minute later. Sounds associated
with rummaging in the refrigerator could be heard.
“Top
shelf, back left.”
“Yeah, that’s
what I thought. Not here though.”
“Are you sure?
It was there this morning.” Dawn rose and went into the kitchen to help him
look. But apparently she too was unsuccessful. “Tara cleaned the refrigerator
this morning,” Dawn said. “Before school. I think she was up half the night and was
looking for things to do. And, ah, she’s been a little, you know, distracted.
Maybe she threw it away by mistake, or maybe she tossed it if she thought it
was spoiled. Does it? Spoil, I mean.”
“Well, yeah. Hard
to tell with pig’s blood, though. Tastes spoiled even when it’s fresh.”
“Eeeww.” Dawn could be
heard making gagging noises and stumbling in an exaggerated fashion around the
kitchen.
“Very
funny, pidge. Now c’mere.
Give us a taste of mystical key blood.”
“As. If.”
“Just
a taste. C’mon, I’m feeling peckish.”
“Ha! Like I care. You’re not getting anywhere near my neck, fang
boy.”
“Thought
you liked me.” Spike’s pout could be heard.
“Tell you
what. I find you dying, suck away. Until then – suffer.”
“An
ill-weather friend, then.”
“I could make
you some mac and cheese,” Dawn offered.
“I’m hungry,
not bloody insane.” A pause. “You got any of those
frozen hot wings?”
More
refrigerator sounds. “Viola!”
“That’s
‘voila’.”
“I know,
Blondie. I was being funny.”
“Well, knock
it off and pop them in the microwave.”
“Do I look
like a maid?”
“No. But you
look like the smart-arsed kid that needed help
getting started on that DaVinci paper last night when
I stopped by to pick up your sis.”
“Do you expect
payment every time you help me?”
“Yeah.”
“You’re such a
dork.”
“Right. Hop to it,
bit, or I’ll be on the verge of starvation, and then your neck will be fair
game.”
More noises,
leading to a shriek of laughter from Dawn, and then, loudly, “Okay, okay. I
give. Uncle, uunnncle!”
Buffy, who had
the phone tucked against her shoulder as she made notes on a pad of paper,
glanced up at the sound, smiled, and shook her head with a sort of distracted
and amused affection.
Stomping
sounds came from the kitchen, followed by the beeping of the microwave being
programmed.
Five minutes
later, Spike came into the room with a plate of wings. Dawn accompanied him,
and sat casually on the arm of his chair. Every few minutes, she would snatch
up one of the tiny pieces of chicken and eat it.
Standing
silently alongside the fireplace, Giles observed them all, taking everything in.
His brain had been whirling with his new knowledge of the deepening
relationship between Buffy and Spike, each cell seeming to tug him in a
different direction.
He knew Spike
loved her, knew the vampire loved Dawn as well. No matter how convinced he had been
of the inability of soulless vampires to feel love, his experiences with Spike
had changed that. Perhaps it was just
Spike. Perhaps the blond was an anomaly; perhaps there was something unique
about him that made him capable of
love, a capacity that did not run to the rest of his kind; Giles didn’t know.
But Spike did love, of that he was
certain.
He’d been
terrified for his wonderful girl and
for his Slayer when she’d first come back. The memory problems, the nightmares,
the silent solemnity of her, had driven his fears for Buffy. Her seeming
inability to take change of anything had fueled his fears for his Slayer. She
had constantly deferred to himself or to Spike, a state of affairs that Giles
felt simply couldn’t continue without dire consequences.
With the return of her memories that night of the mass
amnesia, Giles felt she’d also regained some sense of her responsibilities as
the Slayer. The instincts that he’d felt were still missing had seemed to kick
in with the first big challenge she’d faced after that – the attack on Dawn. It
hadn’t really occurred to him until the next day, but Buffy had very much taken
on a leadership role that evening, making decisions rather than looking to
himself or to Spike for guidance as she’d been doing since her resurrection.
Since then, the rate of her recovery had seemed to
escalate. Occasionally, he caught glimpses of her that were so much like her
old self… the one that had never really reappeared after Acathla,
that he would catch his breath. There were still problems, still long silences
and a drawing into herself that worried him, but those
glimpses made him smile, and gave him a sense of hope.
Was Spike
instrumental in any of that? Giles felt that he must be.
Since her
return, Buffy had spent a great deal of time with the vampire, far more, he
thought, than any of the others were aware. The discomfort and detachment she
seemed to feel around her old friends didn’t extend to Spike. He’d listened to
them while they worked out, had many times noted the ease with which they
talked; about demon threats, about Dawn, about random nothings. They bickered,
asked each others opinions, bickered more, and worked hard. He’d never noticed
any sexual byplay or innuendo between them. He had, however, heard Spike
sharing some pieces of his past with her, occasional comments that revealed
bits of himself, something Giles' own time with the vampire had led him to
believe didn’t often happen.
Giles turned
toward the fireplace, looking with brooding eyes into the empty grate, his mind
replaying the interactions between Buffy and Spike, between Spike and Dawn.
There was no doubt those two got
along famously; the genuine caring between the vampire and the teenage girl was
obvious. And oddly, it no longer seemed – odd
– to him.
His brain
might be tugging him in many different directions, but one thought overrode
everything else.
I can’t, he thought. I can’t
intrude on this – on them.
This is the happiest I’ve ever
seen Dawn or Spike, and Buffy has a contentment about her that I just can’t
disturb. I can’t do anything to take that away from them – from any of them.
I can’t.
And I won’t.
It might not
be a well thought out, rational decision, but the peace that Giles felt inside
when he reached it went a long way toward reassuring him that it could well be
the right one.
He knew he’d
think about the situation more, knew he’d remain guarded, knew too that he’d
debate the pros and cons of a romance between these two volatile warriors
often, but for now…
He lifted his
head and turned back toward the others.
Buffy hung the
phone up and reached for the small pile of mail sitting next to it. Her eyes
flickered to her sister and the vampire.
“Are those
actually edible?” she asked, looking at the mass of orange meat with something
approaching fear.
Spike’s mouth
curved wickedly as he extended his thumb to her. “Taste?” he purred out.
Buffy’s eyes
attached themselves to Spike’s thumb, and Giles tried to interpret the
expression on her face. But when some sense seemed to alert her to the fact
that he was watching, and she blushed and jerked her eyes away from the
extended digit, Giles decided he really didn’t want to know what she’d been
thinking.
“Um, no
thanks,” she muttered. She ducked her head, and started sorting through the
mail.
“Pity,” Spike shrugged,
and leaned back in his chair, his lips pursing. “You might find it –
delicious.” His drawl was low and
intimate, and Giles found himself having to suppress a roll of his eyes at the
blatant sexual innuendo threaded through it. So much, he thought, for no
obvious sexual byplay. Had this been going on for some time? Had he just been
oblivious to it?
Could he be again?
Buffy’s eyes
returned to Spike just long enough to deliver a Death Glare, and the vampire
gave a brief bark of laughter.
“There’s food
in this world that is not fruit or yogurt, Slayer. “ Spike told her, his tone
more serious.
“A
fact of which I am well aware.” Buffy’s eyes gleamed lustfully, but this
time her expression had nothing to do with Spike or, thankfully, with his
thumb. “There is also chocolate,” she continued. “And it comes in lots of
calorie fest forms, complete with a wide variety of nut choices.”
“Hands off,”
Spike reprimanded Dawn, swatting at her fingers with a tiny drumstick as she
reached for the last piece of chicken.
But the teen
distracted him with a smile and swooped it up anyway,
darting into the kitchen with her prize.
“Tomorrow
night, Slayer?” Spike glared after Dawn. “We are taking the bit out for a meal
that involves meat. And you will eat, too. You burn up thousands of calories a day, and you need more than chocolate bars.”
“Yogurt is
very healthy! So is fruit.”
“It’s a
question of balance.” His eyes ran over her. “You’re skin and bones.”
“You can never
be too thin,” Buffy said lightly.
“Yeah, love,
you can be.”
Buffy’s head
came up and she frowned, seeming to come to the realization that he wasn’t just
giving her grief in order to amuse himself.
“I’m not too
thin,” she protested. His snort had her eyes swinging to Giles. “Tell him.”
“Ten pounds,”
Giles said firmly, glad that Spike had brought up a subject that had been
weighing heavily on his mind since before her death. Buffy was far too slender,
and he was deeply concerned about it. When he compared her thin little body to
that of the girl who had moved to Sunnydale six years ago, his concern only
deepened. “I’d feel less concerned if
you’d agree to gain ten pounds.”
“Ten
pounds!” She made it sound like fifty. Then, “Less concerned? There’s concern?
You’re concerned?”
Spike rose and
walked to her, lifting her arm. He wrapped his fingers around her wrist, and as
she watched, slid them up her arm, showing her how far up he could go without
breaking their circle.
“I…” Buffy
frowned. Her eyes lifted to Spike’s, flickered to catch the almost identical
expression in Giles’, and returned to Spike’s. He tilted his head to one side,
his expression steady and serious. “Can we get Prime Rib?” she asked at last.
“Oh,
at Brandi’s?” Giles revealed his enthusiasm for the decision, the food
choice, and his desire to go along. “If you invite me to join you, I could be
persuaded to make it my treat.”
Buffy smiled
with approval, her eyes darting over her shoulder toward the dining room. “The
picking up of the bill is definitely of the good.” She raised a brow toward
Spike, seeking his agreement.
“Dawn?” he
called out. “You like Brandi’s?”
“Oooh, yes,”
she practically skidded back into the room, her tone as rapturous as her words.
“They have the best desserts in the entire world. Cheesecake, and pies, and oh,
god, Buffy, do you remember that thing with the cream cheese and the
blueberries? Mom about died for that.”
“They have
meat and vegetables?” Spike asked with disgust, reseating himself.
Miss Kitty Fantastico jumped into his lap, and he
began stroking her absently, sending the cat into contented purring.
“Oh, yeah, that crap, too.”
Spike bumped
his head against the back of the chair. “Brandi’s it is.”
The whirring
sounds of the calculator had been constant, and when they stopped, it took a
few moments for them to take in the meaning of their sudden cessation. Every
eye in the room turned toward the dining room as Anya emerged, a pile of papers
in one hands, and an extremely long tape from the calculator in the other.
“Finished?”
Giles asked.
“Yes,” Anya
said. She seated herself on the sofa and made note of one or two final figures.
Then she looked up, straightened her shoulders, and assumed a professional
expression. “Well, the bad news is, you’re not rich, and aren’t likely to be
any time soon.” It was obvious Anya was genuinely sorrowful about this
unfortunate state. “And the financial situation? It’s
not terrific,” she said bluntly. “But it’s not as bad as it might have been,
either. Your mother had the incredible foresight to take out life insurance on
the mortgage, and if you can keep up with the property taxes, the house is
secure.”
“Woo-hoo!” Dawn whooped. She was perched on the arm of Spike’s chair
again.
“Perhaps Dawn
should go to her room,” Giles suggested to Buffy.
“Hello?
Sitting right here!”
Giles shifted
uncomfortably. “Yes, quite. I apologize,” he said to Dawn. Any effect the
apology might have had was negated, though, when he turned back to his Slayer.
“Do you want her here for this?”
“Yes,” Buffy
assured him, over her sister’s muttering. “Dawn has informed me several times
over the last year that she’s old enough to deal with some of this ‘grown up
stuff’.” Buffy smiled at Dawn’s beam of happiness. “And if money is going to be
tight, I want her to hear it from outside sources, so that I don’t come off
like the Wicked Witch of the West if we can’t buy something.”
“I think
“That’s quite
clever,” Anya smiled. “Tying
She made a
note in her well used day planner as everyone in the room stared at her; their
faces stamped with almost identical expressions of disbelief. No one was quite
brave enough to comment, however.
“The income
you get from Dawn’s Social Security check each month will easily cover phone,
power and water.”
“That should
be her money, for college.” Buffy objected.
“It’s
perfectly legal to use it for her support,” Anya said. “And you may need it.
Perhaps you could come to some agreement where the money is split, and some is
put away each month for college. Remember, there’s federal grant money for
education as well, and I’m sure Dawn will qualify for some of that.
Anya went on
for another five or ten minutes without pause. Assets, debits, funds needed,
funds available. Giles listened carefully, his worries over the financial
situation of these young women easing as Anya went on. No, not rich, and there
would be precious few luxuries, but Joyce had planned well. Perhaps, Giles
thought, the realities of living on the Hellmouth, not to mention the special
-- circumstances – of her own family, haad convinced her that it would be wise
to do so.
He felt rather
as if a cloud of some doom hovering over the Summers
household had blown off, and he noticed that his breathing seemed easier.
~*~
By the time Xander arrived, Buffy's eyes had long since glazed over with the incomprehensibleness of it all. She was sure the information Anya continued, and continued and continued, to impart was important, but all she’d really wanted to know was the bottom line; Do Dawn and I have a home? With food in it? And maybe a phone? Once she was assured of those things, the rest ran together, and dribbled into the ‘Too Much Information of a Type I Can’t Retain Anyway’ part of her brain. She knew that sometime tonight, probably while she was asleep, it would dribble right back out of there, and into oblivion.
Xander’s
arrival, therefore, provided a welcome distraction, and had the bonus effect of
bringing the financial discussion to an end.
Unfortunately, he didn’t look like he was in a very good
mood.
How
is she?” Buffy asked.
“I
don’t know,” Xander’s face was dark with anger. “I wasn’t allowed in the house. Mr. Rosenberg was kind enough to watch me
unload Will’s things and place them in a neat pile in their garage,
though. I felt like he was using x-ray
vision on every box, wondering which one held the bomb.”
“You
didn’t see her at all?”
“No.
I saw the curtains fluttering at her window like some scene in a horror movie
that’s supposed to be spooky, but that was as close as I got to finding out if
she was even in the house.”
“Damn.”
Buffy had been hoping – what? That things would be better, what else? She could
feel the tension that had blown any on the back of the motorcycle beginning to
coil inside her again.
Dawn
ran past them toward the door, her backpack slung over her shoulder.
“Hey, you there! Running girl!”
“What?”
“Where
are you going?”
“Library? Pam? Studying?”
“Oh, yeah.” Buffy remembered the permission
asking over breakfast. “Pam? I thought you were going with that Suzy Skirl girl?”
Dawn’s exhaled noisily in disgust. “If you
mean Sue Salouri, Pronunciation Queen, she’s coming,
too.”
Spike
rose from his chair, frowning. He was still holding the cat, though, which cut
into the intimidation factor. “You’re not walking?”
Another exaggerated sigh. “No. Pam’s mom, Mrs. Roberts
– you remember, you met her at the art show – is giving us a ride. There – and back.” She tacked on the last before
he could ask.
“This the paper on DaVinci? You got
the outline we did?”
“Yeah.” The blare of a horn cut off further questions.
“Gotta go. Be back after the library closes! Bye!”
The
door slammed loudly in her wake. Buffy winced.
“Are
you leaving, too?” Xander asked. Buffy looked around to see that Anya had
picked up her coat and purse. He glanced at the Slayer. “I thought there was a
Willow meeting.”
“I’m
tired of Willow meetings,” Anya pouted, ignoring Buffy’s nod of confirmation.
“And I have shopping to do.”
“More shopping?”
“For the reception decorations.”
“Oh.”
That gave Xander pause, and Buffy smiled inwardly. By now, they’d all
discovered that it was unwise to get between Anya and anything wedding related.
She was approaching the upcoming nuptials with a single minded determination
and an eye for detail that frankly terrified everyone around her.
Xander
squared his shoulders. “Nothing pink,” he said bravely as Anya pulled on her
coat.
His
fiancée went still, her arm partially thrust through a
sleeve, and eyed him closely.
“We
agreed,” he plowed on. “Light, medium, dark, hot or pastel.”
He glanced at Buffy. “Did I miss anything?”
“Salmon.”
“Or salmon.”
Anya
relented. “Nothing pink,” she agreed, kissing him lightly. “Good
night, everyone!”
“Thank
you, Anya,” Buffy remembered to say. “For your help with the
bills and um, all that other stuff.”
Anya
smiled happily. “Thank you for
asking! It was fun!”
Buffy
eyed the neat stacks of paper, some of them half a foot tall, which covered
every available inch of the dining room table and shuddered. What. Ever.
Anya
opened the door, but before going out, she glanced across the room toward
Spike. Her voice was warm, pleasant. “Goodnight, Spike!”
The
blond frowned, obviously confused at being singled out for a personal
goodnight, but he nodded politely.
Seeing
Xander’s eyes fly between his wife-to-be and the vampire, Buffy repressed the
urge to whack him on the back of his head. They did not need any further dissention in the group. They had enough to
deal with already.
“Wanna
help me clean all that stuff of the table?” she asked him. “I think Ahn’s done with everything, but just in case, I thought you
might know how she’d want it all stacked.”
“Alphabetically by type – mortgage, utilities, insurance, food,
clothing, miscellaneous. Then cross-referenced by
billing date.”
“Huh?”
Xander
shrugged. “I’ll do it.
It
only took them a few minutes. When they were finished, Buffy replaced the
centerpiece her mother had made.
“Is
Tara coming down?” Xander asked.
“No,
she’s out,” Buffy said. “I think she’s still finding it really hard to talk
about any of this. And cleaning out Will’s things sort
of took its toll, too.” Buffy smoothed her hand over the table, her fingernail
finding a groove in the grain of the wood and tracing it. “Did… did you know
Will dropped out of school?”
“What?!”
“I
guess that’s a ‘no’,” Buffy said.
“The
semester is almost over! She just dropped all her classes? Now?”
“Yeah. Tara told me this morning after breakfast. I
guess one of their professors asked her about it yesterday.”
“Shit.”
“That
was sort of my reaction, too.”
~*~
“Caia mentioned that we might expect to see
“How long will it last?”
“I haven’t a clue.”
“Not good, but I think I’ll prefer Lackluster Willow to
Sparks of Electricity Willow.”
“I’m holding out for Normal Willow. If she feels the urge
to bake cookies, and look really, really sorry, that would be a plus.”
Giles’ friend, Caia, whom he’d called for help when Willow
had first returned to Buffy’s crackling with power, had promised to look into
the subject of power dealers and the effects of various kinds of demonic power
on humans. Power dealers seemed to exist in some type of demon underworld, and
rarely came into any contact with humans, in whom they had little interest. In
her research, however, she had come across another Englishwoman, a Lady Anne
Murchison, who had some limited knowledge of the subject. Unfortunately,
neither could contribute much, and none of what they had learned was good.
“Species seems to count for little. The only prerequisites
for the job are greed, ruthlessness, and the desire and ability to manipulate
on a large scale.”
“Bloke who’s willing to experiment with lots of different
kinds of power and doesn’t much care how many of his clients die while he’s at
it is gonna rise to the top of his profession bloody fast, too.”
“Caia phrased that a bit differently, but I believe that
was the impression she got as well.”
“How do they get these ‘jobs’?” Buffy asked. “Are they
chosen somehow, then trained? Who chooses them?” The
words sent a familiar tingle of curiosity through Buffy. ‘Are they chosen somehow? Who chooses them?’ She’d often wondered
the same things about herself. In her opinion the background and history of the
Slayer line lacked big time in specifics.
Spike shrugged when the others turned to him. “Dunno.”
“Maybe they use headhunters.” Xander looked around at the
unsmiling faces. “Sorry. Willow worry has severely affected the funny.”
“I don’t know that how they get their ‘jobs’ matters at
this point. We have more serious things to think about. Caia’s acquaintance
only had knowledge of two humans who’d had dealings with these creatures. The
first died on her second visit from an influx of power from a D’Ebcoh En demon.
She said the other probably wished for death often before it finally claimed
him.”
“Do I wanna know why?”
It turned out none of them did. The explanation included
words like manipulation and blackmail, and the imbibing of the client with
power known to be deadly to humans, then withholding the antidote unless
certain services were performed. Once the dealer no longer had any use for the
man, he’d simply stopped providing doses of the antidote, which needed to be
taken on a regular basis in order to sustain the man’s life. Power dealers
didn’t just love to deal in power, they loved to wield it. And
with as much cruelty as possible.
“But if stuff like this is known about them, why would
anyone…? I don’t get it.”
“It’s rather like Spike and Anya said that first night.
There are always going to be those who think they can beat the odds, that they
can outwit the dealer, get what they want, and walk away free and clear.
Knowingly doing something reckless or dangerous is a fairly common human
practice. Apparently demons indulge in it as well.”
“So
if Will keeps going to this guy…”
“There
will, undoubtedly, be dire consequences.”
Xander
looked at Buffy. “I hate when that happens.”
“’Favorite Vacation Spot of ‘Dire’’. It’s the
motto of the Sunnydale Department of Tourism.”
“Did this person – this Lady Anne – Anne? Miss Murchison?”
“Hey, You There, Titled Person?” Buffy suggested.
“Whatever. Did she have any ideas what a human might have
that one of these guys would be interested in?” Xander went on. “Did this one
who popped up on the street one night in front of Willow – all understanding -- just want someone to
jerk around? Or – does Will have some kind of power
that these guys would want?”
Spike shifted in his chair, and Buffy glanced toward him.
Her gaze lingered to study him more carefully. He’d been almost completely
silent since the meeting had begun, and he hadn’t once tried to catch her eye,
which was highly unusual.
“I
don’t know,” Giles said. “Certainly, Willow has power. She’s proven that more
than once. Whether it’s the type of power that would interest others… “ Giles removed his glasses and tapped them on the table.
“We could speculate forever. We need to get some concrete information, and I’m
afraid that means we’ll have to find the dealer Willow met with. Question him.
Did anyone hear Willow use a name? Something we can go on?”
“Rack,”
Spike provided.
“Do
you think you can locate him?”
“Not
gonna get much out of him,” the vampire muttered.
“Why?”
Buffy asked. “Are these guys really good at keeping their mouths shut?
Because…” Her voice slipped into a really bad German accent. “… ve half vays…”
“Not
necessarily.” Something in Spike’s tone had Giles looking at him sharply.
“What
–? Oh.” Giles rolled his eyes, and gave a huff of annoyance.
“What?”
Buffy was confused by their exchanged looks.
“Spike
killed him,” Giles announced with a sort of offhand exasperation.
Buffy
frowned at Spike. “You did?”
“Our aromatic friend from last night? He met up
with our girl at Rack’s place, didn’t he? So I decided to pay the bloke a
visit, see if he had any idea if this demon went after Dawn deliberately, or
just thought she looked like the tastiest morsel in the waiting room.”
“And?” She knew her fear could be heard in her voice.
It hadn’t occurred to her that Dawn might have been anything but a chanced upon
victim, and they sooo did not need any demon, Hellgod,
monk, knight, or anything else, for that
matter, focusing on her sister again.
“He
claimed it was a random attack. Didn’t have a thing to do
with him.”
“Did
–“ She tried again. “Did you believe him?”
“Yeah. I guess I did.”
“Did
you get anything else out of him before you, er…”
“Tore
his heart out,” Spike filled in with some pride.
Buffy
made a ‘eeeww’ face.
“He
liked to hear to himself talk, but what he had to say didn’t amount to much.
Implied Red had stirred up some powerful forces, and that he’d been asked to
keep an eye on her, maybe help her make the move over to the dark side.”
“Asked
by whom? Stirred up interest where?” Giles asked.
“He
didn’t say.”
“And
we can’t ask him now, can we?” Xander jibed.
“Wanker had a big mouth. Liked to
throw threats around.”
Buffy looked at him, at his tight expression, and
at the fist that was lying clenched on his thigh.
“He threatened Dawn, didn’t he?” she asked, and
Spike’s eyes swung to hers, their expression fierce.
“No one threatens my girls.”
The
sudden explosion of hostility in the room caused Buffy's body to jerk in shock.
“Buffy
and Dawn are not ‘your girls’.” Xander grated out. “They are never
gonna be ‘your girls’.”
The
words seemed to hang in the air.
“Xander…”
“You
are a dead man walking and they are –“
“Please…”
“Tell
him, Buff. “
“No,”
she whispered.
“What?
Why?”
Her
mouth opened, but nothing came out. She felt distinctly ill.
Spike
had been glaring at Xander, but he suddenly yanked his head to the side,
touching stormy blue eyes to Buffy’s frozen face. His face went cold and he
stood up.
“Think
I’ll go have a smoke,” he said.
“Sit
down,” Giles ordered, his eyes focused on the table. When Spike didn’t comply immediately, Giles
raised his head, fixing him with grey eyes every bit as icy as the vampire’s
voice had been. “Sit. Down.”
Spike
looked like he wanted to attack something – or someone – but he obeyed the Watcher.
“This
ends,” Giles said. “Now.
We have work to do; work that is far more important than any hostility between
the two of you and whatever is causing it.
“Spike,
Xander has been a part of this group since the beginning. His loyalty to Buffy
and to Dawn is beyond question, and equally, his contributions to Buffy's work
are beyond measure. You need to respect that.
“Xander,
Spike’s help with Buffy’s training and patrolling has been incalculable since
her return. She was quite badly out of practice, to a degree that could have
been extremely dangerous to her. Further, I’ve come to learn that his demon
knowledge is much greater than I could have hoped, and could prove extremely
valuable to us. You need to respect that.”
“I
cannot ask that the two of you become fast friends, but I will insist that the juvenile sniping and name-calling the two of
you have spent years perfecting not start up again. Foolishly, I had thought
circumstances might have helped you to move past it, but I can see that I was
mistaken. If you must refrain from speaking to or looking at one another in
order to maintain some semblance of civility, please do so.
“Now,”
he finished, slipping his glasses back on. “Let’s get back to business.”
~*~
Atmosphere
strained = Understatement, Buffy thought a few minutes later.
Spike
and Xander looked equally sullen, but it seemed that Giles' intervention had
gone a long way toward easing the coiling nausea in her own stomach that had
flared up along with Xander's temper.
She
hated this, this – hostility --
between Spike and Xander, this dissention. She hadn’t seen much evidence of it
since her return, but she was afraid that had more to do with a lack of
opportunity than with any easing of the longstanding dislike between the two.
She’d been annoyed by arguments between her friends in the past, but this
overwhelming desire to hurl was new.
“Well, if you were surrounded by
peace for hundreds of years…” Dawn had offered as a possible explanation
when they’d talked about the feelings of revulsion Buffy had experienced when
feeling anger. Strangely, and thankfully, this sort of tension didn’t seem to
flare up when she was dealing with demons. It was only here, among her friends
and family…
Maybe
Giles' lecture would do some good, she thought, before snorting inwardly. Yeah,
that was likely. We’re talking oil and water here, Buffy. But damn it, like
Giles had said, they didn’t have to be friends. Exactly. But couldn’t
they get back to that ‘I don’t like you, but let’s have a beer and shoot a game
of pool, anyway’ relationship stage?
Giles
went on calmly, as if nothing had happened. He often amazed her.
“Rack
is dead, and we won’t be able to learn anything from him about his partners.”
He glanced at the vampire. “You do believe these partners exist, am I right?”
“Probably.”
“Right. Spike perhaps, acted rashly, and that’s
unfortunate. However, it’s done. On the other hand, Willow’s reaction upon
waking the other day led me to believe that she wouldn’t hesitate to seek the
fellow out again at the first opportunity, so his death might be best for her
and us in the long run.”
“So
this is a good thing?” With obvious reluctance, Xander seemed to consider that.
“I guess… maybe it is, isn’t it? I mean, Ahn and – Spike -- said a human couldn’t find a dealer on her own; that a
dealer would have to find her – invite her back or something. Right?”
“Rack
found her, Xander. The other dealers
will, too.”
“I
must agree with Spike. We know that someone else is ‘interested’ in Willow. Since this mysterious someone used a power
dealer to approach Willow before, they could use that same avenue again. “
“It’s more than that, Watcher. Red’s had a taste of
power. Seems to like it, too. She might not be able to
find a dealer without someone helping out, but if she drops a few words in the
right ears, the dealers will find her. Especially –”
“Yes?”
“If she mentions she’s close to the Slayer.”
“Shit.” Xander sat up straighter. “Blackmail,
manipulations, performing services… Oh yeah, I can feel the good times
a-comin’.”
Long looks were exchanged around the table. As
everyone contemplated the possible ramifications of the situation, the
hostility still lingering in the air lessened.
“We’re going to have to take steps to protect Will, even
if she doesn’t want it, and even if it’s from herself.”
“We could chain her up,” Spike suggested. “What?” he went
on, off their looks. “It’s a highly effective method of keeping trouble prone
people out of trouble.”
“No.”
“Don’t see why you’re so opposed to it, pet. Watcher
could send Red back to sleep and we could –“
“N. O. Look it up.” She paused. “We’re going to have to
take all these dealers out.” Her eyes widened a little, and she turned back to
Spike. “That’s why you wanted to try to locate a few of these places tonight,
isn’t it? You knew we’d have to go after them.”
“Considered it likely, yeah.”
“The
two of you aren’t planning to go after these power dealers alone, are you?”
Giles asked. “I was under the impression some of them employ considerable
security.”
“No.
We’re just doing one of those renaissance thingies.”
“Reconnaissance,” Giles corrected automatically.
“Yeah, one of those.”
“Even though
the locations shift, not all of them jump about every hour, or even every few
days. We’ll try to get two or three locations,
maybe get some information on what kind of security we might run into. Then
tomorrow night – if we have to – we can all go in.”
“If these places are hopping around town all the time,
how will we ever know if we’ve gotten them all?” Xander asked.
“Oh, we can find out,” Buffy assured him. “Spike has sources.”
“Don’t go there, Slayer.”
Giles’ eyes betrayed his curiosity, and Buffy ignored the
vampire’s warning.
“We stopped in at a demon bar last night. And, Oh. My. God. Blondie has,
like, a fan club there.”
Spike glared at her before sliding his eyes to Giles. “Don’t
ask.”
Giles didn’t.
Buffy stood up. “Are we done?” she looked to Giles. “If
I’m going out again tonight, I think I’ll get something to eat first.” She
twisted a little as if testing the emptiness of her stomach. “I’m feeling all
hungry.”
Giles smiled. “Good. Make a sandwich. A big one,” he
added as she walked into the kitchen. “And have a glass of milk, too.”
“Eeeww. A big ‘no’ to the milk.
Gonna be a few days before I can get past the bad associations.”
“I’ll
come along,” Xander offered. “Maybe I can help.”
Buffy's
light tone drifted out to them. “Oh, not tonight.
Spike and I can handle it.”
Giles
groaned inwardly, Xander frowned, and Spike smirked.
~*~
“I know you don’t care for Spike, but he
really has been of a lot of help in getting Buffy retrained.”
Buffy's attack of hunger had spread to the
rest of the humans, and, after the Slayer and Spike left on their ‘renaissance
mission’, Giles and Xander had picked up the dishes scattered around the living
room. They were still doing the washing up in the kitchen. Giles didn’t know if
bringing this subject up was a good idea, but then, he had been known to behave in a less than cautious manner at least
once or twice in his past.
“She trained without him for years. She
doesn’t need him. We don’t need him.”
“Perhaps he needs us,” Giles suggested.
“And we should care about that – why?”
The Watcher sighed, and the sound seemed
to anger Xander.
“He’s a killer. He’s tried to kill us, has
plotted against us. He stalked Buffy, and still seems to have some fixation on
her. I just don’t get why you suddenly seem willing to overlook all that.”
“It’s not that sudden. I’ve spent a lot of
time with him since – the summer. Patrolling, researching, playing chess…”
“I could play chess too.”
Giles was somewhat taken aback. “I didn’t
know you played.”
“Well, I don’t. But I could. If Spike
learned, I’m sure I could stumble through, too.”
Giles frowned. “I –
alright. The point is, I believe Spike has become someone we can –“
“Trust?” Xander broke in.
“Trust takes time,” Giles acknowledged. “But to a degree, yes.”
Xander washed the last plate and handed it
to the Watcher.
“I just don’t get why things have to
change.”
Giles turned to look at the younger man.
Oh dear… This was an entirely different kettle of fish.
“Xander, things always change. Change is, perhaps, one of the few constants in
life.”
“It doesn’t have to be that way.”
“You’ll find it inevitable. It’s apart of
growing up, of living. You have a job now that occupies a lot of your time.
“Getting married doesn’t mean I’ll abandon
my friends.”
“I don’t think ‘abandon’ is the right
word. Friendships can remain strong even across time and distance. High school
friends rarely spend most of their lives experiencing the same degree of
togetherness they did in school. It’s just not realistic. And Anya has every
right to expect to be put first in your life.”
“Yeah, I’ve seen friends fall apart. But
its not gonna happen to us. We’ve been through too much together.”
“Falling apart and growing apart are not the same thing. There are people I feel very close
to even though I haven’t seen some of them for several years. I still consider
them very good friends.”
“Not gonna happen to us,” Xander repeated.
Xander
could be incredibly stubborn, and in some cases that stubbornness irritated
Giles. But the Watcher also knew that that very stubbornness was one of the
things that made Xander so loyal to those around him, which was one of his most
endearing traits. That stubbornness was also a contributing factor in Xander’s determination
to work beside the others. Many young men in his situation, when faced with the
supernatural and growing powers of those around him, would feel increasingly
frustrated with their own lack of same.
But,
for the most part, Xander seemed to have avoided that pitfall, and appeared to
be quite satisfied with his life. He enjoyed his work and his friends, he was
engaged, and planning his wedding. For a boy that had come from the rather
unfortunate home-life Xander had come from, he seemed remarkably well adjusted.
It
was likely that that home-life also had some bearing on his disquiet about
change within the group. The Scoobies had been not only his friends; they had
been his haven from a youth scared by alcoholism and abuse. Even
without superpowers, within the Scoobies Xander had worth. Perhaps he
was wary of losing his place in the group, of being replaced, as it were. By anyone. That that person might be Spike
would just make the situation that much more unpalatable for him.
He
and Xander had long been the two most important men that could be said to be a
part of the Summers household. Xander had filled the
brother role, to both Buffy and, after a rather lengthy prepubescent crush on the
little girl’s part had abated, to Dawn as well. But, unless he was blind,
Xander was probably becoming more aware of the deepening relationship between Spike and ‘his girls’. It was also quite likely that he had
noticed that neither of those ‘girls’ seemed to be objecting to the vampire’s
growing role in their lives.
Worry
about losing his place could well be the most important aspect of Xander's
hostility toward Spike. That wasn’t to say that Xander's concerns about Spike
and his trustworthiness were baseless.
After
all, everything he’d said about the vampire was true. Spike had tried to kill them,
had, in fact, killed thousands, he had
behaved in a less than sane fashion with Buffy, he had worked against them…
His
own feelings concerning Spike had changed gradually, over the course of many
months. Xander had not been a part of the conversations between Watcher and
vampire; he hadn’t been privy to some of the insights Giles had been granted
that had helped him to see Spike differently.
And,
for the most part, Spike was either silent or snarky around the other man. Certainly,
Spike had never made any attempt to befriend Xander. Nor had he shown any
desire to acknowledge him as more than an annoying appendage of some sort to
Buffy and Dawn, someone he was forced to tolerate if he was going to be a part
of the girls’ lives, and so did, but barely, and with the greatest reluctance.
There
were a lot of changes going on in Xander's life right now. Buffy was quite
obviously not quite the same as she had been before her death,
“I’ll come along. Maybe I can
help.”
“Oh, not
tonight. Spike and I
can handle it.”
Buffy's
unthinking words and her lightly dismissing tone had perhaps been the worst
response she could have made tonight to Xander's offer of help. Spike's smirk
had just rubbed salt into the wound of feeling unneeded.
He didn’t
think there was much he could do to change Xander's attitudes toward Spike's,
er, demonhood. Giles was still working through a few
of his own issues in that area. Most effective for him had been learning to see
Spike as an individual, trying to ‘judge’ him, if that was the right word, on
his own current actions, rather than
looking at him simply as a ‘vampire’ and not attempting to see beyond that. To
do that, he’d had to get past years of council indoctrination and scholarly
studies. If he’d managed to succeed, even in part, perhaps there was hope that Xander
could learn to do the same.
However,
there were always things he could do to help Xander feel that his place in the
group was secure, that he was appreciated, needed and cared for.
“Xander?”
The young man turned in the doorway. “Yeah?”
“If you really want to learn how to play
chess, I’d be happy to teach you.”
“
“You’re older now,” Giles said. “More
patient, I should think. And I’m quite a good teacher. I taught a good number
of the fellows in my house at school.”
“You’ll be patient?” Xander asked.
“I shall.”
The younger man smiled. “I’d like that.”
~*~
”Hey.” Dawn’s voice was hushed.
“Can’t
sleep?” Spike asked casually as she climbed out her window, pulling her
comforter out after her.
“I
guess not.”
She
didn’t sound too pleased about it.
“Yeah,
I heard you floppin’ about like a fish out of water.”
She’d been tossing for
nearly two hours now. She usually fell asleep easily, and now that she wasn’t
having as many nightmares, she didn’t often wake.
“Lovely
word picture there, fang boy. Thanks.”
“One
of those fish with long fins,” Spike placated.
“An angel fish?”
“Why
would you wanna be named for that wanker?”
Dawn
snorted with laughter. She wrapped her comforter around her and settled in next
to him.
“It’s
flippin’ freezing out here. How do you stand it every
night?”
Spike
eyed her.
Wrong thought. It led him to thoughts of his
Slayer’s blood, not thin at all, but thick, rich, and powerful. And so long
absent from his mouth. His forced his thoughts back to Dawn.
“Guess
it doesn’t bother me, bit.”
“You
and Buffy kill stuff?” she asked, making conversation.
“Yeah.” An opportunity had presented itself, and
they’d taken out the first of the power dealers, a M’Lgm-Misa demon that had laughed at them right up to the
minute Buffy had run a rapier through its guts. “You want a blow by blow? Or in
this case –”
Her
arm flew up and she placed a hand over his mouth. “Stop right there,” she
ordered, and he grinned behind her hand, nipping at her fingers playfully. Dawn
laughed and snatched her hand back.
“I
wish we could see stars from here like we can in the cemetery. They’re never as
bright here.”
Spike
glanced at his Slayer’s window. “You wanna head over there?” The two of them
hadn’t taken off for an all night adventure since Buffy had come back.
Dawn’s
eyes followed his, and she gnawed on her lower lip for a moment, clearly
tempted. Finally, reluctantly, she shook her head. “Not tonight. I have that
annoying interruption of life called ‘school’ tomorrow, and I should at least try to stay awake during my classes. How about for our Friday date?”
“Thought it was too cold to spend your nights lookin’ at the stars.”
“Well,
yeah, but I’ll bring a sleeping bag. Stay cozy. You want me to bring one for
you, too?”
His
look informed her of the stupidity of her question.
“Geesh.” Dawn tossed
her hair. “I was just asking. Rein in the sarcastic. “ Her
demeanor changed and she peeked a couple of looks at his face as she pulled at
a loose thread on her comforter. “We could, um, buzz around on the motorcycle
for awhile before getting down to some serious stargazing…’
“Your
sis would skin me alive,” he said.
“Pffft. Like she hasn’t threatened you a million times
before,” she dismissed. “It never stops you. I’ll borrow a helmet from
someone.” She shifted. “Oh, god, I’ll end up with total helmet hair.” Her eyes,
wicked now, went to his blond locks. “We’ll be, like, twins!”
“You
gonna start on the hair again?”
“Nah. You’ll see the light before long. I have faith
in you.”
The
comfortable almost silence between them was punctuated with single words or
short phrases muttered out under her breath, and spaced out for effectiveness.
“Short.”
“Spikey.”
“No
gel.”
“Soft, uncrunchable.”
“The
babes’ll like it.”
“Twenty-first century.”
She
laughed when he cuffed her gently on the back of the head, reminding her that
she’d said she wasn’t gonna start on the hair, and stopped razzing him.
Spike
had grown accustomed to Buffy’s occasional and, for the most part, silent
companionship on the roof at night, but he knew Dawn was allergic to lack of
sleep and he figured her presence suggested she had Something Important to Talk
About. It wasn’t long before she got around to it.
“So,
um… All that money talk… Did it sound okay to you?”
“Sounds
like you’ll do fine,” he assured her. He may have done well with languages and
history in school, but numbers had always bored him, and he’d tuned out a lot
of what Anya had said. The Watcher, though, had looked pleased and relieved, so
he figured that meant things would be okay.
“Oh.
Good.” She paused. “Really?”
He
touched her hair. “Yeah, bit. No fancy trips, and I
doubt you’ll be lookin’ for real estate in
“Some
of that adult crap really sucks,” she said seriously. “I’ve um, started looking
at colleges.”
“Bit
soon, isn’t it?”
“Maybe. That
financial aid stuff Anya mentioned – does that work at any school?”
“You’d
probably be better off asking
“Good.
The private art schools are gonna cost a fortune – with housing, like $30,000 a
year. Probably more. And I have a feeling that’s only
if you don’t wanna eat.”
“That much?” Spike was genuinely shocked. He
never paid attention to things like that.
“Yeah. So I’m checking out which UC campuses have the
best art departments.”
“Still
set on art them?”
“Oh, yeah. Not much chance of that changing. It’s like my
dream, ya know. How about you?”
He
looked a question.
“You
ever think about writing?”
He
cocked his head to the side. The question remained.
“Didn’t
you say that’s what you wanted to do?”
He
turned, looking out over the lawn. “That was more than a hundred years ago.”
“So?
Writing hasn’t gone out of style has it? And you haven’t got anything better to
do, do you?”
“Lots
of evil to get up to, pet.”
She
snorted in derision. “Right. Evil’s just oozing out of
you.”
“From
every pore,” he affirmed.
Dawn
rolled her eyes and shook her head slightly. It was a moment before she spoke
again.
“You
could write evil books.”
Spike
turned to look at her pointedly. “You
wanna run that by me again?”
“Vampire books. All blood and
stuff. Big sellers right now.”
“I
can’t stand that Anne Rice crap.”
“Forget
her then. How about Laurell K. Hamilton, or Tanya
Huff, or, um, there are some more. I just can’t think of their names. Lots of stuff with ‘Blood’ or ‘Dark’ or ‘Night’ in the title.”
“They any good?” Spike asked curiously. Not that
he’d admit it to anyone, but he tended to read biographies and non-fiction
historical texts. Few paperbacks sitting about, maybe even a hardcover or two,
with lovely bloody covers would probably lend his crypt some atmosphere. Coffee
table books, he thought they were called.
“You
think anyone in this house would let me read something like that? Vampires and sex and stuff?”
“So – got ‘em tucked away under your
mattress, then?”
She
smirked. “Under the extra pillow on the top shelf of my closet.”
Spike
grinned back. “That’s my girl.”
“I’ll
loan you one,” she promised, leaning her head on his shoulder. “I think it’ll
be kinda nice to leave something behind when I die,” Dawn said quietly after
another comfortable silence.
“What?”
Spike demanded. He didn’t like the shot of horror that went through him.
“You’re fifteen. Shouldn’t be talkin’
that way.”
“Yeah,
and I live in Sunnydale, where, every year, the graduating class compares their
mortality rate to previous classes. I think everyone here thinks about dying
young. It’s just one of those things they don’t talk about.
“After
Buffy died – you know what I wanted?”
“You
confiscated a lot of her clothes.” It had been painful, at times, to see her in
Buffy’s things.
Dawn
frowned in annoyance, and he could see this was something serious she wanted to
talk about.
“Sorry,
pet.”
“I
wanted her diary. And no, not for stupid boyfriend details
and junk like that. I wanted it because it was something she wrote.
Something she sort of – created. It was the same with mom’s stuff. I wanted to
keep the pots she threw when she was in high school, and the sketches she did
of me and Buffy when we were kids. You know, before the divorce, mom used to
draw quite a bit. She didn’t have time afterward, ‘cause
she had to be working all the time.”
Spike
touched her hair again. It had become his trademark soothing gesture with her.
“I didn’t know that. Your mum never said.”
“Yeah. She used to dream about being an artist, but
she figured the closest she would ever get was managing the gallery…”
“She
loved that place. You know that. Aside from worryin’
about you and your sis, your mum was pretty happy with her lot in life.”
“Yeah,
I – I know.” Dawn cleared her throat. “But knowing what I wanted to keep from
mom and Buffy made me think about it. You know, about leaving something
personal behind. I’m still mad at myself for burning my own diaries when I
found out about being the key.”
Tonight
she sounded disgusted with herself for the rash act of destruction, but she’d
mentioned the diaries more than once over the summer,
and he knew how upset she was about destroying them. Talking about them had
sometimes led to tears. She’d had mementoes tucked into the pages of those
diaries; ticket stubs, programs from ice shows, the menu from the restaurant
her dad had taken the family to on her seventh birthday... Dozens
of things. Not to mention the diaries themselves, filled with funny
things her mom had said, details of the latest round of trouble Buffy had
gotten into, her worries about her parents marriage, and… All gone, she’d
sobbed one night. Just like her family.
“Memories
are all that really matter.”
“Do
you have a lot of memories of your family?”
He
didn’t answer for a long time. “Some,” he finally admitted.
“You
wanna tell me about them?”
Another drawn out silence. “It was just Mother and me
when Dru turned me.”
Dawn
slipped her hand into his.
“My
father – I didn’t know him, really. I was young when he died. He was crossing
the street in
Spike
pulled his hand out of her hold, and lit a cigarette. He looked out over the
lawn silently.
“I
– I’m sorry. I can see you don’t want to talk about this,” Dawn offered
quietly. “I shouldn’t have asked.”
“’s
okay, bit. I don’t think about them much.” His voice was clipped. But after
taking a long hit off his fag, he went on. “I had two younger sisters, twins.
They were born just a few days after my father died. They died, within a few
weeks of each other, not long after their twelfth birthday.”
Even
without his father, the house had been full of laughter while the twins were
there. After they died, from some wretched fever that could probably be cured
with a pill that cost less than a dollar today, the laughter had stopped. In the house, and in his soul. He hadn’t really realized it
until years after he’d been turned, but their deaths had changed him deeply,
had made him withdraw from the world, from those left around him, and from
himself. He’d tried desperately to close out the ugliness of the real world,
and he’d sought refuge in studying, in literature, and, he winced inwardly, in
poetry.
A
minute or two passed before he spoke again. “They had beautiful blue eyes. Like
yours.”
Dawn
wrapped a hand around his arm, and this time he didn’t try to pull away. “Yeah? I bet, really, they were like yours,” she smiled at
him, and the mood lightened.
“Sometimes
you think of me as your sister, don’t you?” she asked. “It’s okay, you know, if you do. I kinda like it.”
“Sometimes,”
he said thoughtfully. Actually, he viewed her more as a daughter. He didn’t
have one bloody idea why either, or even when exactly he had begun to feel that
way. But over the course of the summer, his feelings for his girl had gone
through a series of metamorphoses, and ‘daughter’ seemed to be the final
form. He’d always figured she’d be
happier with the ‘friend’ or ‘sister’ designation, since ‘daughter’ could put
all kinds of parental barriers on their odd relationship, so he’d never told
her.
“Buffy
said she could kinda feel mom when she was in heaven. But that they really
weren’t together…” Dawn’s shoulders lifted and fell. “I thought they’d be
together.”
“My
theory on your sis is that she was in some kind of holding pattern.”
“Huh?”
“It’s
eternity. Hundreds of years isn’t long at all. Sooner
or later, she and Joyce would’ve hooked up, pidge. ‘m sure of it.”
“Do
you think, you know, you’ll be able to feel your sisters? Be with them?”
Something
twisted inside him. He looked away. “Not in the cards for me, pet. You should
know that.”
“Yeah,
I guess,” she murmured. When she spoke again a moment later, her voice was only
a breath of sound. “Maybe you’ll be able to feel me, and then neither one of us
will be so alone.” He wasn’t even sure if she was aware she’d spoken the words
so that he could hear them.
“What?”
he asked quietly. “Bit, wha’d’you mean?”
But
Dawn just shook her head and didn’t respond. He couldn’t let that go.
“You
know you’ll be in heaven with your mum and your sis. I’m thinkin’ it’s all
arranged already.” He made sure his voice sounded offhandedly certain. Now he
was the one trying to lighten the mood.
“Yeah,
maybe,” Dawn agreed. She shrugged, dismissing the subject and changed the topic
to her friend Aimee’s new dog, which Dawn was convinced was possessed. Did
Spike know any way she could test out that theory?
When
she climbed back in her window a few minutes later, though, and crawled into
bed, he noticed that her breathing didn’t even out for a long time. He spent
most of what remained of the night smoking and staring at her window.
~*~