Title:
Dawn's Gift
Author:
Barb (Once Bitten Spike)
Part 1
of 2
Disclaimer:
Joss' toys, but tsk, he left them outside
all
alone again. Spoiled rotten, he
is. <G> No one
is
tossing any money into my hat, so don't sue me.
Distribution:
Tell me where it's going.
Rating:
About like the show. Some language.
Spoilers:
This is post 'The Gift'
Pairings:
Post B/S
Summary:
Spike's having a pity party, and Dawn crashes.
Dedication:
To all the gals on One-Good-Day, and of
course,
the Spike Girls, and to Ivy, Pandora, and Loopy.
Feedback:
The original feedback vampire. <G>
*********************************************************
DAWN’S
GIFT
Part 1
"Hey,
Spike."
The
vampire looked up in surprise. He was
unaware that anyone or
anything
else was near, so deep were his thoughts.
A thing like
that
could get you killed. So what. Like it really mattered.
"Isn’t
it a bit late for you to be out, Nibblet?"
"No
one will miss me." She came to sit
on the stone floor beside
Spikes’
chair.
For the
first time since he’d heard it a moment before, Spike
realized
that Dawn’s voice was dull, and lifeless.
He
patted the arm of the chair and scooted over a bit.
"Get
up here. Now."
Dawn
peered up at him through her hair, which was as void of
animation
as her speech. She let her head drop
back down, and hang,
her
hands in her lap.
Spike
took in her overall condition, her hair hanging in greasy
strands,
it and her clothing looking like they needed a good wash,
and he
shook off his own funk.
"I
said, NOW."
Dawn’s
head snapped back up, and she looked, wide eyed, at him.
He’d
never spoken to her in that manner before.
His threats to her
had
always been empty, and they’d both known it.
But looking into
his
eyes at this moment, she could easily see that he could be a
formidable
enemy.
She got
to her feet and slid into the old chair beside him, but
didn’t
return his questioning gaze, instead staring off around the
crypt
as if she found it interesting.
Spike
looked down at the sneaker-clad feet which Dawn had drawn up
into
his chair and smiled a little, for the first time that day.
She was
wearing a pair of Buffy’s shoes, and he could tell that they
were a
little too small.
Then
his mind wandered back to the thought that nothing else in this
world
was ever going to matter to him again.
Buffy
was gone. End of story. No witches spell would ever bring
her
back, and all of his pleading and prayers to a God he was sure
had
forsaken him had gained him zero.
The
curses he had hurled upward afterward, had probably lowered his
status
with the powers even further, but he was past caring.
There
was no point in remaining here. In this
town. In these
memories. In this life. He was unsurprised to learn that he was
completely
calm about it.
His
thoughts had taken him to a conclusion that he’d had before, but
never
had acted upon.
This
time, he was serious. It was over.
As he
looked fondly down on Dawn’s borrowed shoes, her shoes now,
the
pain from mental wounds which might never heal, returned full
force
to his weary, sleep deprived brain.
Unbidden,
it filled his mind again, the sound of Buffy’s tiny body
hitting
the brick laden ground not far from where he had lain trying
to
recover enough to move.
The
sound had haunted him for seven days.
Spike
covered his ears with both hands, as if the act would block
out the
sound in his brain, forgetting that Dawn was even there.
His
tears fell anew, through eyes tightly squeezed shut, and his
mouth
opened in a soundless cry.
Without
thinking about it, Dawn put her arms around him and hugged
his
trembling body to hers as tightly as she could.
Spike
went rigid in her arms, at first unwilling to accept comfort
from
any human, ever again. Then,
remembering that she was as
destroyed
as he, he returned her embrace, putting into it all of the
love he
would have poured out to her sister, if she’d allowed it,
and had
there been time.
For a
second there was only the sensation of love, and the knowledge
that
neither cast any blame on the other for what had occurred.
And
then the tears came again, and both of them sobbed together,
holding
onto each other like a lifeline, which Spike knew it was,
for him
at least.
After a
moment, both became a bit self-conscious, and Spike, feeling
Dawn’s
discomfort was the first to pull away.
He
wiped at his eyes and nose, made a face at the back of his hand,
and
wiped it on his jean clad thigh.
Dawn
snuffled, hiccupped, and looked up in time to see him wiping
the
snot on his pants. She stifled a giggle.
Mortified,
she ducked her head again. What kind of
a sister was
she? To laugh, when Buffy would never laugh
again?
Spike
put one finger under her chin, and lifted her face up to meet
his
blue eyed gaze.
"Nothing
like a bit of mucus to remind us we’re alive.
Or undead,
in my
case."
Spike
gave her a watery smile, and she returned it.
"Now
then, Little Bit. Suppose you tell old
Spike just what brings
you out
into a cemetery at night, in a town where a Hellmouth yawns
beneath
us."
She
looked up at him, the tears drying on her face, and said in a
voice
that was hoarse with the strain of the past few months and
days.
"They
hate me."
For a
moment he was clueless, and tried not to show it.
He brought one arm around Dawn and scooted her
closer to him so
that
they were both sitting together in the seat of the chair, and
laced
the fingers of his hands together forming a protective circle
around
her.
Hoping
to make her feel secure, he was rewarded when she laid her
head
trustingly on his shoulder.
He bit
his tongue to prevent an ‘Angel/Poof’
related joke from
popping
out of his mouth. The girl didn’t need
bloody jokes, she
needed
comforting. And he had loads of
experience in that
department
due to his years with Drusilla.
"Who,
Luv. Who hates you?" He expected her to say something about
her
school chums, but he knew that she hadn’t been to school in some
time
now.
"Everybody. All of them. And I can’t blame them, because I hate me
too!" Her voice was rough and filled with self-hatred.
A
terrible suspicion began to grow in Spikes’ brain, and with it
anger. But before he asked a horrible question,
he found himself
kissing
the girl on top of her head, and laying his cheek on it.
"Dawn. This whole bloody Glory thing. You didn’t cause it, and you
didn’t
make the decision that ended Buffy’s life.
She did that.
And if
she were here right now, she’d kick your bleedin’ ass for
sayin’
that."
Dawn
sniffed, but otherwise remained quiet.
Spike
sighed, his voice catching on his next words.
"Buffy
was never very far from death. It
stalked her from all
angles,
and she’d already outlived most of her peers.
And I should
know
about that, because I killed two of them."
Spike
felt her stiffen in his arms, but to his surprise, she stayed
put
right where she was.
Silent
for a second, she breathed, "I
know. Buffy told me about
it."
"Did
she, now?"
"Yes. The same night she told me about the bondage
party under your
crypt,
with Drusilla."
Damn
it. No wonder she’d given him the big freeze with the rest of
the
group, that day in the Magic Box.
"Well,
I can understand how that would make you less than fond of
me, but
you seem to have gotten over it."
Dawn
looked up at him for a moment. "It
cured me of having a crush
on you,
but after I thought about it, I knew that Buffy was telling
me as
many bad things as possible, just to scare me away from
hanging
with you. And I think to maybe scare
herself away, too."
"Oh?" It figured.
The wrong little bird had fallen for him.
Dawn
gave him a scathing glance, and laid her head back down on his
chest. "Stop pumping me for info. You
‘knew’ that she felt
something
for you, even if she might never have admitted it."
Right
on target. He’d certainly told Buffy
that very thing, hadn’t
he?
But he
realized that she’d led him, perhaps purposely, away from his
original
line of questioning.
"OK.
So I’m goin’ to be bleedin’ dense, here, and just come out and
ask
you. Who hates you?"
He
prayed that it was just a schoolmate.
Dawn,
knowing that she shouldn’t say it but powerless to stop
herself,
the pain overwhelming her, stuttered it out, crying again,
her
tears falling on Spike’s clasped hands.
"The
Sc…….Scoobies," she sobbed. "They blame me for everything, I
know
it!"
Spike
looked upward, and sneered. Another
prayer, wasted.
He
waited until her crying slowed, and moved one hand to smooth the
hair
from her brow, then moved the hand to the top of her head, and
stroked
her, like a person would soothe a cherished pet.
Two
minutes of that, and Dawn was asleep, confirming Spike’s
suspicion
that she hadn’t slept in quite a while.
As he held her
there,
his thoughts turned to her little revelation, and he was
suddenly
at war with his demon.
That
part of him had no problem with just racing over to Dawn’s
home,
where he knew that Willow and Tara were staying temporarily,
and
flashing some fang.
He
wanted answers. His demon knew how to
get them.
His
demon also had an unfortunate habit of getting his ass in a
sling,
which Spike wanted to avoid, at least until he heard someone
else’s
take on the situation.
Hell! If he hadn’t let them all tell him that Dawn
would be
alright,
that they’d see to her, and he could check on her in a few
days,
he wouldn’t be so out of the loop.
He’d
let his shock and utter devastation at Buffy’s loss, plus his
need
for time to heal physically, prevent him from being there when
Dawn
had obviously needed him.
He’d
made a promise to a lady, had failed to protect her sister, and
now had
made it even worse.
Since
when did he let anyone tell him to make himself scarce?
He
should have told them all to bloody well sod off, and stayed in
the
thick of things, where he saw now he’d been desperately needed.
Guilt
crowded into his thoughts, then. And
there was more than one
kind of
guilt to reflect upon, which made it all the worse for guilt
was a
feeling that Spike was fairly unaccustomed to dealing with.
There
was the obvious one, for the urge he’d had to blow off going
after
Glory, for the few minutes it would take to grab Buffy and
shag
her silly.
At the
time he’d thought he might just buy the farm, after all, and
there
was that little nagging suspicion that Buffy would have joined
him,
gladly, at least for the few minutes they had left, alone.
There
was time, as they’d stood there, looking at each other on the
staircase
in her house. She couldn’t have been too certain about her
own
future at that point, either.
But
he’d settled for a speech about being grateful that she’d
treated
him like a man, and not a monster. He’d
meant every word of
it, was
glad he’d said it, but would always wonder………
And as
he remembered the look in Dawn’s eyes as he was unable to
save
her, and was thrown off the tower by that infuriating little
demon,
he closed his eyes in pain.
The
whole thing might have ended happily.
If Doc
had gone off that Tower, there wouldn’t have been enough time
to do
the ritual, and Buffy’s sacrifice would not have come to be.
But if
he continued to think like this, his demon would win, he’d do
something
stupid, and follow it up with something even worse. He
knew
now, that he did have a purpose for living, at least at this
moment,
and for now, it was enough.
He
slowly extricated himself from Dawn’s embrace, grabbed a blanket
from
atop the stone coffin he often slept on, and wrapped her in it.
She
didn’t stir as he lifted her up, and carried her out of the
crypt
and began walking toward the Summer’s home.
Not surprising,
as
exhausted as she was.
Someone,
possibly several someones, had some explaining to do.
END PT
1
PT 2
Willow
slowly swam back to consciousness from a deeper slumber than
she
thought possible under the circumstances.
She had
been dreaming, and the images were still at the forefront of
her
mind, as well as the noise, the sound of the Troll hammer as it
bashed
Glory’s skull into mush.
Willow’s
dream was much more satisfying than the actual event had
been,
with a lot more damage, and maximum squishage.
The
noise continued until finally it penetrated her brain that
someone
was pounding on the front door. She got
out of the bed and
paused,
in spite of her urgency, to look around her.
She had
slept in Buffy’s room, after repeated requests to Dawn that
she
take it, but the teen had glumly shook her head and refused. So
she and
Tara were bunked in here, and Dawn had stayed in her own
room.
Willow
wished that she’d tried harder to get Dawn to sleep in here,
because
the memories associated with this room were mainly happy
ones
for the red head, but now, it was just too sad. If not for the
presence
of Tara, she couldn’t have withstood it.
She
looked down on the form of the girl in the bed, and smiled.
She had
decided that at least one of them would get the rest she
needed,
and had worked a spell that caused Tara to sleep so deeply
each
night that a brass band might not have awakened her.
She
needed to heal, and get over what Glory had done to her mind, in
spite
of the fact that she seemed her old self.
Willow
jumped as she heard what sounded like someone kicking in the
front
door.
Glancing
down at her teddy bear pajamas, she decided there was no
time to
worry about it, and grabbing a baseball bat from behind the
door,
she turned and ran from the room and down the stairs.
She
didn’t know what she had expected to find, but an angry vampire
holding
a blanket wrapped figure was not among the choices.
She
dropped the bat, in surprise.
"Spike?"
"Well
it’s not the bloody paper boy, now is it?" He pushed past her
and headed
for the couch where he deposited the sleeping Dawn, who
had
barely stirred through the whole thing.
Willow
was still unaware of the identity of his burden, and came to
look
down at the slumbering figure in the dim light. Spike reached
and
turned on a lamp, and the witch gasped.
"Oh,
shit! I mean, Oh my God, Dawn!"
Spike
took off his leather duster and laid it across a chair. "I
think
she’s worth a shit, don’t you?"
"Huh?"
"Never
mind. Obviously, we have a little
problem."
Willow
frowned up at Spike. She often had
trouble deciphering his
meaning,
and now was no exception.
"How
the hell did you end up with Dawny?"
She settled for direct
and to
the point.
Spike
sat down on the edge of the couch, still unwilling to stray
very
far from his charge. Willow remained
standing, feeling
suddenly
nervous, as if she were on the witness stand.
After
casting a tender glance Dawn’s way, Spike looked up directly
into
the witch’s eyes. "Someone around
here is making Dawn feel
very
persona non grata."
Taken
aback, Willow stammered.
"S…..Spike. I don’t know
what to
say. Well, yes, I guess I do, but… What do you mean?"
He came
up off the couch to stand nose to nose with her. Then he
noticed
Dawn stirring a little, and grabbing Willow’s hand he all
but
dragged her around the corner and into the kitchen, ignoring the
twinge
in his brain that told him that he must be hurting her a
little.
Willow
winced from his grip, and tried to pull away but suddenly
found
herself pulled up against him and backed against a counter.
She
began to get angry, now, and knew that she could easily send
Spike
flying if she chose to, but something in his demeanor stopped
her,
for the moment, although being so close to this vampire still
caused
her to sweat, and she wasn’t too sure it was all caused by
fear.
"Spike. We’re on the same side, you and I. Remember?
Now back off
and let
me breathe, and we’ll talk."
He
pressed even closer. It wasn’t often
that he had the chance to
toy
with someone, and he’d forgotten how good it felt.
Willow
arched her brow at him. "I can
move you, you realize that,
right?"
"Really?" He smirked. He had no doubt of that, but
didn’t budge.
Willow
glanced at the windowsill where a potted plant sat, and
narrowed
her eyes a bit.
Spike
followed her gaze, and watched, as it wilted.
"Big
deal. So your gonna wilt me?"
The
plant, pot and all, exploded, sending dirt and bits of clay all
over
the room.
Spike
backed up.
Willow
smiled at him. "That’s
better. Now what the hell are you
doing
with Dawn at this late hour?"
"Little
Bit came to see me at the crypt, she did.
Must have climbed
out the
window after you and your lover Wicca nodded off."
Willow
frowned. That trellis on the side of
the house had to go.
Spike
moved to the cabinet and began searching for his pacifier, the
hot
chocolate mix, talking as he looked.
"The
Nibblet is convinced that you and the rest of your merry little
band
hate her guts."
Willow’s
mouth dropped open and just hung there as she tried to
think
of a reply.
Spike
passed her on the way to the sink, and closed her mouth with
one
finger. "Gonna catch a fly like
that, Pet."
Willow
found her voice. "That’s
ridiculous! I love Dawny. I would
never,
never…………wait a minute."
She
came to lean on the counter beside the vampire who was spooning
way too
much cocoa into his cup, along with half the marshmallows as
well.
"Spike,
where would Dawn get the idea that we are angry with her?
She
can’t possibly think that we……"
She
paused as she reviewed the last few days in her mind. The
funeral,
at which half the town showed up to everyone’s surprise,
the
worries about what would happen next, and the aftermath of just
dealing
with the reality that Buffy was dead. The paralyzing grief.
She
began to remember little things, then.
Dawn trying to joke a
little
with Tara, and Xander telling both of them to quiet down.
He’d
had a headache, but Dawn didn’t realize that at the time.
And one
bigger occurrence that she herself had caused, only
yesterday. Dawn had been going through the leftovers in
the fridge
and
tossing what was getting old, but stuffing a lot of it into her
mouth
with gusto.
Willow
had admonished her for it, saying that she didn’t see how
anyone
could stuff their face like that. She’d
left out the ‘after
what
we’ve been through’, but it was clearly implied. She’d only
‘really’
meant that it wasn’t good to cram down all of that food, or
at
least she’d thought so, at the time.
Dawn
had stopped chewing and just stared at her, her eyes haunted,
and
Willow had realized that something was wrong with her, but
before
she could say anything else, the girl had dropped the bowl
she was
holding which shattered on the floor, and ran from the room
and up
the stairs.
Willow
now wondered if that had been the first food that Dawn had
eaten
since Buffy’s death. As she thought
more on it, she couldn’t
remember
having seen the poor kid eat much of anything, just pushing
the
food around on her plate at meals.
Spike
sipped his cocoa, and watched, as tears began to fill the
witch’s
eyes. In spite of his former anger he
knew, deep down, that
Willow
cared very deeply for Dawn, and he had his own soft spot for
the red
head.
"Oi
now, none of that." He sat down
the cup and put his arms around
her,
giving her a comforting, hard hug, and releasing her.
"No
time for your guilt party just now. We
have to convince Dawn
that
none of us blames her for what happened."
He
looked at Willow, his eyes suddenly piercing hers, and rooting
her to
the spot.
"And
we all have to mean it."
She
sniffed back her tears, and swallowed.
She knew what he meant.
Every
last one of them had thought, at least once, that if not for
Dawn,
Buffy would still be here.
And
somehow, in their day-to-day interaction with her, they must
have
let those feelings slip enough to show.
She
recalled then, Giles’ pain, the pain of losing a cherished
daughter.
He had been so lost and had holed up for a few days after
seeing
to the necessities, and what had Dawn thought about that?
That he
was avoiding her, blaming her, of course.
Xander
had been like a zombie all week, rarely speaking unless
spoken
to. Anya had wisely kept her mouth
shut, thank God.
All of
their reactions had been similar, and to a guilty child, had
been as
glaring as actual accusations would have been, and twice as
powerful
due to Dawn’s fertile imagination.
"So
what do you think we should do?"
She wiped one tear away that
had
slid down her cheek.
"Well,
I’m as guilty as the rest of you lot.
As far as she knew, I
was off
wallowing in my self pity, and blaming her for the whole
thing."
Willow
smiled and reached to pat his arm, as she watched his hand
shake
when he put the cup down on the counter.
"You
didn’t know. WE didn’t know. But I guess we should have."
Pleased
more than he could say by her use of the word, ‘we’, he
smiled
back at her.
"I’m
glad I came over here tonight. I should
have come sooner."
Willow
looked down at her bare feet.
"That was our fault. Or
mine,
because
I should have known that Dawn needed you, too."
"Well,
it’s under the bridge, now, and while there’s time left
tonight,
I’m gonna go to the cemetery, see Buffy and her mom. I
need to
talk to
them for a bit."
He
started to brush past Willow, but she stopped him and startled
him by
hugging him to her, firmly. She drew
back and completed his
surprise
by kissing him lightly on both cheeks.
He
responded by putting one hand at the back of her head, and
kissing
her fully on the lips, a soft kiss, brotherly, but not
quite.
They
stepped apart, both looking about the kitchen nervously.
Spike
smiled. "Well, I’ll be goin’
now. Tell Dawn, when she wakes
up that
I’ll be back tonight." The time
had flown and it was nearly
four
a.m.
Willow
said, softly. "You’re welcome to
stay here, if you’d like."
She
blushed brighter than her hair. "I
mean on the couch, or in the
basement,
of course."
Spike
grinned, enjoying her discomfort. It
was good to smile again.
"Thanks
for the invite, but I’ve been spending a lot of my nights
with
Buffy
and Joyce, right up until light. And
tonight I have some more
things
I want to tell them, as well as an apology for being so
bleedin’
dense."
Willow
was touched. "What will you
say?"
Spike
drew himself up with some of his old bravado.
"That the ‘big
bad’ is
back, and on the job, I suppose. And
some other stuff, I
guess."
He
didn’t see the point in telling her that he’d spent most nights
since
Buffy’s burial, lying on her grave and sobbing until first
light
made him leave, and that he had planned to make this night his
last
one. His plans had changed.
They
were going to get through this, the lot of them. His thoughts
of
leaving the planet had vanished, and as it often happened, the
cause
was Buffy related.
Willow
smiled as she watched the vampire whom she’d grown to admire,
respect,
and love as a friend, gently wash out Joyce’s cup and place
it on
the drainer.
"Hey,
Big Bad. Thanks for doing the
dishes."
He
grinned back at her, and nodded, then tiptoed softly out of the
kitchen
and paused to look down on the snoozing Dawn, reaching to
brush
the hair from her face. She smiled in
her sleep.
Then he
was outside, and on his way to keep his appointment.
He had
a job to do, and he would keep his promise to the lady after
all. He would watch over her sister, and keep her
safe, until the
end of
the world. And he too, would be brave,
and live in it.
END