LOVE IS
BLIND
by Avalon (avalon99@telusplanet.net)
http://members.dencity.com/avalon_online
S/B, NC-17 (eventually)
***********************************************************
Please
archive wherever appropriate. Any
feedback is much appreciated.
SUMMARY: When Buffy is blinded, Spike, of all people,
becomes her only hope.
SPOILERS: Season 5, up to "Listening to
Fear". It would also help to have
seen the Angel episode "The Trial", as I stol...er...borrowed
elements from this. OK, I *borrowed*
the entire last act. When you care
enough to steal from
the
very best...
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:
To my beta reader, Linda "Is It Done Yet" Campbell, who knew that
Spike was a hottie, long before I did.
And, oh yeah...for the awesome beta reading.
DISCLAIMER: Don't own 'em. Not mine. 'Nuff said.
**********************************************************
LOVE IS BLIND - PROLOGUE
"But love is blind and lovers
cannot see"
-- William Shakespeare
//click//
Dear
Giles.
Well,
this is pretty strange. Plus, I'm not
certain this thing is working. It
sounds like it is but I can't really be sure.
I hope so. It would be too
ironic if my last words wound up as just a bunch of static on the tape.
Oops. Gave the ending away there, didn't I. Sorry. Still, it's not like you didn't see
this coming, right? We both know this
is bad. Actually I think I've reached a
whole new level on the Buffy bad spectrum.
And
it's not going to get any better, is it?
Poor
Giles. You've been trying so hard to
sound upbeat and positive around me.
But...well, I hate to be the one to break it to you, but you're a really
bad liar.
Or
maybe it's just that you can't lie to *me*.
Not
that I don't appreciate you trying, really.
It gave me a nice couple of days, where I could pretend everything was
going to be all right, that my eyes would somehow get better, and we'd all live
happily ever after.
Damned
demon.
OK,
back to what I was saying. Since I
can't tell when the tape is about to run out, I'd better get to the important
stuff sooner rather than later.
First
of all -- this wasn't your fault.
Please don't blame yourself (and don't tell me you're not -- I can hear
it in your voice). You gave me plenty
of warning -- I distinctly remember the words "...and be careful
Buffy. Don't forget it can spit
acid...." And how revolting is
that anyway? (the acid, not your warning).
I did
listen to you, honest. But I
was...well, not overconfident, exactly.
More -- distracted, I guess. Too
much going around in circles in my mind.
I should have known better, especially after that vampire skewered me
with my own stake. Guess my heart
wasn't really in it that night. Too
worried about my mom, wondering what I was going to do about Dawn, thinking
about Glory... And
besides,
it was just a little demon -- relatively speaking. But then its really, really
big cousin showed up and... well, you know what happened next.
I know
I killed the small one while I could still see a bit, but the other got
away. Actually, I'm kind of surprised
it didn't stop and kill me on the way, but maybe the wound I gave it was more
serious than I thought. Still, that means there's an injured monster roaming
around out there...and no Slayer to stop it.
You've
all done a great job of patrolling and keeping things under control, really you
have. I know I shouldn't blame myself
for what happened to Willow. Yes, I
know she'll be all right, and that we're all lucky that it was just a broken
arm and all, but still...
It was
*my* job. I'm the Slayer. I'm the one who's supposed to be out there
keeping the night safe, not sitting here, all sheltered and warm. And I keep asking myself -- what's going to
happen when Glory crawls back out from whatever rock she's hiding under? She wiped the floor with me before - you
guys won't stand a chance.
No
offence.
So --
where does that leave us? The doctors
weren't exactly holding back with the naked truth. I'm never going to see again, not even with Slayer super healing
powers. Just too much damage. I know
there's no magical cure either -- we already had this conversation when my Mom
got sick. And I'm not sure I believe in
miracles -- at least the good kind -- anymore.
So
what's left? I know - I'm being way
rhetorical. And probably pretty
pretentious. Must be all those Psych
classes at College. But I'm just trying
to prove that I really have thought all this out. That I'm not just doing
this on
some suicidal whim.
Sorry. Poor choice of words there. I don't have a death wish, really I don't,
no matter what Spike said (and why am I even thinking about him right
anyway? Sometimes I worry about my
psyche...) Anyhow, I really have
thought this
through
and we both know there's only one answer.
The
world needs a Slayer. And...and I can't
be her anymore.
So I'm
going out tonight to hunt down the demon that helped do this to me.
Don't
get me wrong. I know I don't have a
hope in hell. I'm not blind. Well, OK,
I am. But you know what I mean. I know
what the odds are and how this is all going to end. It's pretty much a
given. But maybe, just maybe, I can
take the demon with me. Give Willow a
little goodbye vengeance present. And
keep the night a little bit safer until...
...until
the next Slayer comes along.
Poor
little Slayer. Doesn't seem fair to
load all this on her somehow. I know
how tough it was when I was just starting out, and I had Merrick and then you
and all my friends to help me.
I hope
she has someone.
I don't
know if you'll be her Watcher. There's
a lot of stuff I never asked, although I always wondered. Just seemed like it would be too painful to
talk about somehow.
And the
time was never right. Well, it's
definitely too late for twenty questions now.
But -- if you do get to meet her, the new Slayer I mean, will you ask
her to watch out for Dawn for me? I
still don't know what or who she
is, but
I know she's important. Besides, she
*feels* like my little sister. I love
her, even if she is annoying pretty much all of the time.
So,
where was I? Oh yeah, Buffy's famous
last words.
Er...drawing
a blank. How about if you just think of
something clever and pretend I said it?
Anyway,
you do understand why I'm doing it this way, rather than in person, right? For starters, I know you guys wouldn't let
me out of your sight if you knew what I was planning to do. Which is why I had to wait over a week
until
you all let your guard down a bit.
Still,
I got a week. More time than most
Slayers do, probably. And I got to say
goodbye to everyone, in my own way. I
don't think anyone suspected what I was planning, although I could be
wrong. It wouldn't surprise me if you
knew, or at least guessed. You could
always see right through me, couldn't you?
No pun intended.
Today
was nice. A day in the sun with my Watcher
and all my friends. Will you tell Riley
that I'm sorry for snapping at him? I
didn't mean to, it's just he seems to like me so much better helpless, like he
wants to protect me and look after me and...
...and
I am so not going to discuss my boyfriend with you. Besides, I can tell him
everything on his own tape. Just forget
everything I just said, okay?
Except...you
will look after him, won't you? And
Willow and Xander and all the rest? And
my mom and Dawn? They're going to need
someone.
After.
OK. I'll put the other tapes in the top drawer
of my nightstand. They'll be labeled,
although it's kind of hard to write when you can't see. Not that my handwriting was ever that great
to start with. Still, I'm sure you'll
figure out which is which. You'll make
sure my Mom and the others get them, won't you? Thanks.
I...I
guess there's nothing more to say.
Except...
Thank
you for being my Watcher.
I love
you.
//click//
PART 1
"Ever wayward, weak and
blind"
-- Gustave Nadaud
Everything
was harder when you were blind. Even
the simplest things became more difficult, more time consuming. Things like
getting dressed. Sneaking out her
bedroom window. And navigating. Yeah, navigating definitely had them all beat. Buffy didn't really care if she was wearing
different socks or if her clothes clashed - although looking frumpy on the last
night of her life was a pretty
big
downer. And climbing down the tree
outside her window hadn't been all that hard really -- it had mostly been a
matter of hugging the trunk for dear life and trying to figure out when it was
safe to let go -- OK, she had misjudged that one a bit...but finding her way
through the night, all alone in the dark...that was a bit much, even for her.
Forty-eight,
forty-nine, fifty. Buffy came to an
unsteady halt and stretched a cautious toe forward, feeling for the curb. Feeling stupid.
This
was ridiculous. If you had asked her a
week ago, she would have said she could have found the cemetery blindfolded. All those nights of patrolling, all of those
evening trips to and from the graveyard -- she should have been able to close
her eyes and find the way without even thinking about it.
Only it
hadn't quite worked out like that. She
had crept out at just after midnight -- somewhat startled to discover that she
knew *exactly* what time it was, despite the fact that she couldn't see any of
the clocks in the house.
Somehow,
she had been able to tell the time by the level of darkness pressing upon her,
as if she could sense how far away the dawn was and how long ago the sun had
set. 'I wonder if the vamps can do
this?' she had thought, then had
shuddered
slightly at yet one more example of how much her life had changed since
becoming the Slayer, and how closely her world was entangled now with the other
creatures of darkness.
As if
that wasn't depressing enough, it had started to rain. Hard.
Swell.
The
most difficult part (besides not being able to shake the feeling that she was
completely and irreversibly lost) had been trying to look as if she could see,
as if she knew exactly where she was and what she was doing, in case
someone
did spot her and wonder what a blind girl was doing wandering about at this
hour. The streets were pretty much
deserted -- she hadn't sensed anyone since she had left her own neighborhood,
but that didn't mean there weren't
people
out there. She was almost as worried
about running into a good samaritan as she was about the vampires and
demons. Well, almost. Still, her spidey sense wasn't
tingling. That was a good sign. She would know if there were people -- or
monsters -- about. Really she would.
She
drew in a quick, somewhat shaky breath.
She had to trust her remaining senses, and that *other* sense deep
inside her, the one that made her who and what she was.
After
all, it was all she had left.
Buffy
hitched her weapons bag a little higher on her shoulder and shook her head,
feeling raindrops spray around her with the movement, and an icy tendril of
water roll down the back of her neck.
Shivering slightly, she crossed
the
road then turned right. The cemetery
was close... maybe. Still, it was a
small town. She'd find it eventually. She hoped.
Or the monsters would find her first.
She reached a cold hand inside her bag and checked that her weapons were
all within reach, reminding herself where everything was stashed. She had just brought the basics - a couple
of stakes, a long, wicked-looking knife,
and a
crossbow -- although she wasn't sure how much use the last one would be. She didn't think she could hit the side of a
barn right now (not that there were a whole lot of barns that needed slaying
within Sunnydale city limits) let alone a moving target. Maybe if she asked nicely the demon would
stand still while she shot at it...
Or not.
Buffy
sighed, then trudged onward. Nobody had
ever said this would be easy, after all.
At least the weapons check, plus her constant tension, blended with just
a little bit of fear and a whole lot of frustration, kept her mind off
other,
more unpleasant things. Like how she
didn't want to die. How she really
*really* didn't want to die. Not
tonight. Not any night, actually, but
especially not tonight, and not like this -- blind, soaking wet, and probably
wearing mismatched socks. 'I wanted to
be the first Slayer to retire. I wanted
to graduate College. I wanted to see
the world. I wanted to have a
life..."
Misery
welled up within her.
"This
is so not fair," she thought as she took another step forward...
...and
promptly fell over a tombstone.
With a
startled yelp, the Slayer found herself over-balancing and falling forward,
only reaching out to slap the ground with her hands and cushion the fall at the
very last second. She still landed
jarringly hard. For a moment she lay
motionless, wincing as a shaft of pain shot through her arm, starting at her
elbow and working its way up.
She was
lying on a newly dug grave, Buffy realized (which beat lying *in* a new grave,
but not by much). The rain had turned
the earth to a sea of mud and she could feel it plastering her body, coating
her like...well, like mud.
With a
sound of disgust, the Slayer reached up to scrape a large clump of dirt off her
forehead and out of her eyes.
Not
that it made any difference, sight-wise, but it was stinging. Then she sighed and hauled herself slowly to
her feet, checking for any major damage.
Nothing. Just a few more bumps and
bruises to add to the collection she had
started
when she had fallen out of the tree...plus a funny bone that was feeling pretty
un-funny.
Rubbing
her elbow, Buffy turned slowly, unsure of her footing, making sure the bag was
still looped around her neck. She
pushed ineffectively at the mud caking her shirt and pants with one hand -- it
felt like she was wearing
half
the graveyard -- and suppressed a shudder as yet another gallon or so of
rainwater ran down her back. 'I do not
believe this,' she thought miserably as she prized one foot out of the
ankle-deep mud, trying not to lose her shoe as she did. "Life just sucks," she said out
loud.
"That
is does, darlin'."
The
voice came from behind her and a little way to the right. Buffy gasped and spun around, her feet
sliding a little on the wet ground.
Nevertheless, in less than a heartbeat she was in a defensive stance,
weight balanced on both feet, knees slightly bent, crossbow in one hand and
knife in the other while her heart hammered wildly as she tried to lock in on
the other presence. The driving rain
was
making it difficult, the water messing with her senses and throwing her off
balance. There was definitely
*something* out there, she could tell, and it wasn't human.
But
other than that... If only she could
*see*. Buffy caught her breath then
stilled, blinking away the raindrops running into her eyes. And *listened*.
There. He...it...whatever it was, was moving toward
her. Slowly, unhurriedly, as if it had all the time in the world. And...it was familiar. She knew it. Him.
"Look
like you've seen a ghost. Feeling jumpy
tonight, are you, Slayer?" A pause,
then: "Gotta say I'm loving the
wet t-shirt look..."
English
accent. Taunting overtones. Sexual innuendo.
Spike.
Buffy's
shoulders abruptly sagged with relief.
Not a demon (well, yes, technically he was, but not a threat to life and
limb. Maybe.) She lowered the crossbow and knife before he could see how much
her hands were shaking as a
single
thought flashed across her mind. 'Don't
let him know.' Buffy wasn't quite sure
why, but there was definitely something inside her that did not want the
vampire to know that she was blind. Not
questioning the instinct, the Slayer turned her head to where she *thought* he
was and said flatly: "Spike. What are you doing here?"
"I
live here, remember?"
She
must be near his crypt then. Good, that
told her where she was...more or less.
"Haven't
seen much of you lately," he was saying.
He made it sound as if it was because she was wearing too much clothing,
not that she hadn't been around the cemetery, and suddenly Buffy became acutely
aware of how much her wet shirt was clinging to her. Resisting the urge to fold her arms over her chest, she put the
knife away, though keeping a good grip on the crossbow, and turned fractionally
to follow the sound of his voice.
"Too
busy with Captain Cardboard to come out and kill the bad guys, is that it? Lad seems pretty high maintenance to
me. Wonder what your Watcher thinks
about all this shirking..."
"Flattered
as I am that you seem to be so worried about my job *and* my love life, I
really don't have time for this, Chip Boy." Sarcasm dripped from her voice and for just a moment Buffy felt
better, probably the best she had felt
since
she had been blinded. Somehow, trading
veiled - and not so veiled -- insults with Spike, not having to worry about his
feelings or be treated like a piece of glass that was liable to break at any
minute...it was refreshing. And
she had
missed it. And for just a moment, she
could almost believe that things would be all right, that everything would work
out in the end, somehow...
And
then he was at her back, one hand seizing her right wrist, the one holding the
crossbow, while his other arm snaked around her waist, pulling her tightly
against him, his grip like iron. She
hadn't even heard him move. Her heart,
which had been slowing, jolted painfully and resumed a frantic pace. He would be able to hear it, Buffy knew,
would know just how frightened she really was.
Anger flashed through her instantly at the thought and she struggled
against the vampire's grip.
Nothing. She could get no
purchase on the wet mud, her feet slipping beneath her, while he seemed to be
rooted into the Earth itself, solid as a tree trunk behind her.
"Ken
doll is obviously a bad influence on you, Slayer."
Spike's
voice said in her ear. If he had
breath, she would have felt it along her neck, he was that close. "You're all distracted," he
continued. "You'd never have let
me get this close before."
"Maybe
I just let you get close so I could do this." With that Buffy lashed downward with one foot and jerked her head
backward, feeling a reassuring thud as the back of her skull impacted with his
nose while her heel drove into his
instep.
"Bloody
hell," Spike said, dropping her like a hot brick, both of his hands going
to his nose while he teetered precariously on one foot behind her.
The
Slayer spun, her actions coming fast and automatic. A stake was in her left hand, the crossbow pointed unerringly at
his heart -- she didn't need to see to know where it was pointed. She just *knew* -- and the adrenaline
rushing
through
her was helping, rather than hurting her fighting skills. Another joyous rush went through her. She was still the Slayer. She could still kick major vampire ass...
...and
then a demon launched itself at her out of the night and she flew backward
beneath its weight.
PART 2
"The night has a thousand eyes and
the day but one"
-- Francis William Bourdillon
The
demon was big, scaly, and seemed to have more than its fair share of claws and
teeth. And it smelled. A *lot*. "There's just no excuse for
not flossing," Buffy said breathlessly as she fought to remain upright,
her feet skidding on the wet earth. But
then the demon's full weight was on her, razor scales pressing against her
skin...and she no longer cared about the smell.
Buffy
tumbled to the ground beneath the monster, its weight driving all the air from
her lungs and for a moment it was all she could do just to breathe. It
reached for her throat with its fangs -- and even oxygen didn't seem all
that important anymore. The Slayer
rolled aside, evading the teeth, and reaching out desperately for a weapon -
any weapon -- but her fingers encountered only empty air. The creature's first rush must have sent
them flying -- and she couldn't see where they had gone. Unless she rolled over them by accident, she
realized grimly, she wasn't going to be getting them back in a hurry either.
This
was bad.
Gasping,
the Slayer lashed upwards with both feet - and missed. By a mile.
She tried again and managed to land a weak blow on the demon's --
shoulder? -- which it ignored, backhanding her so that she found herself flying
through the air, hitting the ground even harder than before.
Very
bad. Badness on a cosmic scale.
Buffy
sensed movement and rolled again hastily, barely avoiding the demon's raking
teeth. One tooth-edge caught her along
the back of the hand, drawing a thin line of blood, but she ignored it. Instead she aimed another kick up at the
monster.
She
might as well have kicked one of the tombstones. The demon rocked back slightly from the impact then lunged for
her again, roaring in what she could only presume was fury. 'Great. Guess I made it mad.' Together Buffy and the
monster
rolled down a slight incline with it, their limbs tangling.
"Very
nice," she heard Spike say distinctly as she fell. "Slayer
mud-wrestling." "Wish I'd
known ahead of time. Could've sold tickets..."
Buffy
came to a stop on top of the demon and, for just an instant, she had the upper
hand. But no weapons. With a frustrated curse Buffy settled for
hitting the demon as hard as she could.
Maybe
she could beat it to death...
Or
maybe it would die of boredom. Her blow
had no effect at all, at least not on the monster. Her own arm went slightly numb from the impact though, as her
fist connected with its jaw. It was
like hitting a slab of concrete.
Big,
angry concrete with fangs. With an ease
that was frightening, the demon threw her off and she landed hard again,
several feet away.
If she
had injured it in her previous fight, the monster certainly wasn't showing the
effects now. Which meant that it healed
fast. Or was pretty much impervious to
whatever she could throw at it. And it
was fast. The Slayer barely had time to
get her feet beneath her before the creature was on her again, roaring like a
banshee and slashing at her with both sets of claws. She aimed a series of punches at it, driving it back a little by
sheer force of will, but she was beginning to tire...and it still seemed as
strong as ever.
* * *
What
the hell was she playing at? Spike
frowned and moved closer to the two combatants. He had been keeping out of the way, enjoying the fight...and the
view. Wet, muddy Slayer, with bits of
clothing starting to come undone...
very nice. But she kept leaving herself open to hits
that a child could have avoided, and passing up obvious opportunities to go in
for the kill. And why she refused to
use her weapons when they were so close was beyond him.
As he
watched, the Slayer reeled back from another blow and Spike's frown
deepened. This was just...weird.
* *
*
Buffy
was still hitting the demon with everything she had, but all it was doing was
making her arms ache. Whereas, when its
blows connected, it felt as though buildings were falling on her. Big, bricky buildings. Her breath was coming in ragged gasps -- on
the upside, at least she *could* breathe again -- and her reactions were
beginning to slow. Actually, everything
seemed to be slowing, the Slayer realized distantly. The world around her, what she could still sense of it, was
fading, as if time itself were coming to a halt. For a moment, alarm darted through her...and then recognition
banished the fear.
She had
experienced this sensation before -- just a few times, true, but often enough
that she recognized it for what it was.
She had felt it when she had faced the Master, and when she had gone up
against Adam. Had felt it at the moment
when Angelus had had her cornered and defenseless. 'Take everything else away,' he had said then, mockingly, 'and
what's left?'
'Me.'
She had answered. Buffy.
No, not
Buffy.
The
Slayer.
And, as
simply as that, she forgot the rain, forgot her blindness, forgot where and
when she was...forgot everything except the battle. And the enemy.
She was
the Slayer. And she would not go down
without a fight.
* *
*
'Attar
girl,' Spike thought, as Buffy surged back to her feet, landing two swift hits
on the demon and following up with a roundhouse kick, one foot connecting
squarely with its chest. 'That's the
Slayer we all know and hate.' He took
another step closer...which was when he noticed it.
She was
fighting with her eyes closed.
* *
*
The end
came suddenly, unexpectedly. An unseen,
*unsensed* blow caught Buffy across the chest and she found herself sailing
backwards, crashing into a nearby statue, hard enough to crack the marble. And, for just a moment it felt as if
something else, besides the statue, had cracked.
As
quickly as that, it was over. The
trance -- whatever it was that she had been in -- ended and she was suddenly
all too aware of her body again, of the burning in her lungs and the way her
muscles were trembling with fatigue.
And
most of
all, of the pain shooting along her shoulders and down her back, over her right
thigh and hip, and across the back of her hand. Once again she was aware of the cold rain pouring down on her and
the ambient noises surrounding
her...
The demon
howled, as if sensing its triumph and then, to Buffy's complete and utter lack
of surprise, it came at her once more.
Only this time the Slayer couldn't seem to move. Her battered body refused to surmount the
wall of
pain
that had risen up around her. She
managed to get her hands up in time to grasp the creature by the neck and hold
it away from her, but that was all. She
could do no more.
And she
couldn't keep this up much longer...
* *
*
Spike
was becoming seriously worried. Stupid
git was going to get herself killed.
And she wouldn't even ask him for help.
Bloody arrogant Slayer. He
should just walk away and let the demon finish her off. Serve her bleeding well
right...
Only...he
couldn't. Much as part of him would
like to, he couldn't really let her die.
Could he?
* *
*
Buffy's
fingers were starting to cramp, the muscles in her arms and back screaming from
the strain of holding the demon back, and her tired mind was all out of
options. She couldn't let go of the
monster or it would kill her. On
the
plus side, the demon could get no closer while she had it by the throat. So the only question was which one of them
was going to weaken first. And, given
the way Buffy's arms were trembling, it didn't take a rocket scientist to
figure
out which way the fight was going to go.
The
impasse was finally broken when the demon suddenly did the unexpected --
pulling *backwards* and breaking her grasp. Before she could move again, before
she could even *think* about moving, the monster was lunging at her, raking
downward with one set of claws...
...and
the world stopped.
The
horrible sound of something tearing...
Something
warm and wet pouring down her left arm, mixing with the rain...
The
feeling when the body knows that it has been injured but the pain hasn't had
time to travel up the nerve-ends to the brain yet...
And
then the agony. Like a wall of flame,
tearing through her body, burning every nerve end and scorching her soul.
'Didn't
think it would hurt this much,' Buffy had time to think...and then her eyes
were sliding shut as the world around her began to fade away.
* *
*
Spike
was already in motion. He had begun
moving the moment that the scent of the Slayer's blood, sharp and metallic, had
pierced the night air. As the demon's
claws were ripping down the length of her left arm, starting at
the
collarbone and ending just above the back of her wrist, he was launching
himself through the air toward the monster.
Once,
Spike would have stood back, admiring the details as he watched the Slayer
die. He probably would have
applauded...or helped. Or he might have
attacked the demon himself so he could be the one to finally end her life. He had fantasized about this moment so many
times, had visualized what it would be like to stand over this Slayer while her
blood poured out onto the ground and the light faded from her eyes. He had dreamed about it, had envisioned
every nuance, every motion, every word...
But
never once had he pictured himself leaping into the fray to save her. To *save* the Slayer.
Bugger.
Spike's
rush hit the demon with enough force to send it staggering to one side, away
from Buffy. His game face on, he threw
everything he had at the monster. Just
keep it on the defensive, keep it moving away from her...but then it hit him on
the jaw and the vampire's goal changed to merely staying conscious. Damn, the thing was strong. Spike ducked another blow and backed up a
step, wondering what to do next.
In his
right mind he never would have taken on something this big. At least not without a hell of a lot more
reinforcements and/or weaponry. Yeah --
heavy ordinance would be good. And a
plan. Definitely a plan. Like running. Spike had never had a problem with running away.
Live to
fight another day, or at the very least come back and stab the enemy in the
back -- that was his motto.
Well,
one of them, anyway. He could just go,
take to his heels -- odds were good the demon wouldn't even follow him.
Only...
"Stupid
bloody pillock," Spike snarled to himself as he launched himself forward
again and swung another punch at the demon.
"Bleeding soft-hearted prat."
He punctuated every word with a hit to the creature. "It wasn't bad enough you went and got
this sodding chip in your head, that you're about as scary as
Donald-Bloody-Duck now. But no, now you
have to go and risk your stupid un-life for the stupid bloody Slayer. Isn't that just great? How pathetic can you get?"
On the
other hand -- it did feel kind of good to finally have something on which to
take out his frustrations. A little
violence to take the edge off. Couldn't
hurt, could it? For just an instant
Spike found himself grinning as the demon reeled back under his assault. But then it struck him in the middle of the
chest...and the vampire's grin vanished.
Spike
went down like he had been hit by a wrecking ball, enveloped in pain. For a moment the world spun and it was all
he could do to keep his eyes open...to see the monster reaching down for
Spike's head with both sets of clawed hands.
The
vampire's mouth went dry as the demon took a good grip on both sides of his
head...and began to twist. Fear tore
through him. The sodding demon was
going to rip his sodding head off and smile at him while it did it.
Shit.
Spike
was struggling frantically -- and futilely -- reaching for something to use as
a weapon when the creature suddenly stiffened.
A surprised look flitted across its face and then its eyes rolled back
in its head. A thin stream of dark
blood trickled out of its mouth...and it collapsed. Right on top of him.
Well,
that was unexpected.
And
uncomfortable.
Hesitantly
at first, then with more force Spike reached up and shoved the creature off
then put a hand that was shaking slightly up to his neck, as if to reassure
himself that his head was still attached to the rest of him. It was.
Oh good.
Another
movement caught his attention and Spike looked up, blinking away the rain that
was running into his eyes. Someone was standing over him, he realized, a long
silver knife held in a bloodstained hand.
"Is
it dead yet?" Buffy managed to
ask, her voice reed thin and shaking.
And then she too crashed to the ground beside him, her legs crumpling
beneath her.
PART 3
"Comes the blind
Fury"
-- John Milton
Spike
didn't catch her before she fell. He
didn't even try. He was still flat on
his back, trying to make the pain go away and hoping the world would stop
spinning, when Buffy collapsed. For a
long moment he stared across the
soggy
grass at her, blinking in surprise, then he hauled himself upwards slowly. Or tried to.
It
hurt. That last hit from the demon felt
like it had broken a few ribs.
Actually, it felt like it had broken a whole *lot* of ribs. Damn.
Spike hated broken bones. They hurt like hell.
Still...he
had other things to worry about. The
ribs would heal soon enough, but not if the demon got back up and continued
with the killing. And then there was
the Slayer, who might or might not be dead.
Or at the very least, bleeding to death beside him.
No. There.
He could hear her heartbeat through the rain. It was a little weak, but
even and steady. She wasn't dead. Or even dying. Not yet. Relief poured
through him, followed by a chaser of annoyance at yet more evidence of how much
he cared, despite his best efforts to the contrary.
"Damned
Slayer," he muttered as he climbed painfully to his feet, holding his side
with one hand. "This is all your
fault. Couldn't even kill one demon
without getting yourself all shredded.
Not to mention me." Stiffly
he
walked
over to her then bent down and pulled the knife from her limp grasp. Narrowing his eyes, he turned and moved
towards the demon, kicking the unmoving creature in the side and enjoying the
solid thump of his boot on its hide.
"As
for you," he said, hefting the knife in one hand.
"Let's
see how you like this..."
With
that, Spike bent down and, with relish and a certain grim sense of satisfaction,
hacked off the demon's head.
* *
*
It
didn't take long. Once Spike might have
lingered over the task, enjoying himself, but he had more important things on
his mind. Like the fact that he had an
unconscious Slayer to deal with. And
how anyone could come along at any time.
Her friends would probably jump to the wrong conclusion -- what else was
new? -- and stake him on the spot, whereas *his*
friends...er...acquaintances...
fellow
creatures of the night -- whatever -- would try to finish her off. And him too if he got in their way. Besides
which, she was still bleeding. The
scent was wafting around him like honey and clover -- and probably drawing
every creature within a five-mile radius.
Slayer blood. The ultimate goal
of half the undead population of Sunnydale.
Scratch
that. The *entire* undead population of
Sunnydale. Including him. His fangs had
descended again, unbidden, at the thought of all that lovely hemoglobin, just
lying there. Spike licked his lips...then
shook his head. He
didn't
need the warning tingle from the chip in his head to stop that line of thought
in its tracks. No. It was...
It was
one of those emotions that Spike had decided he wasn't going to think too hard
about. He glared down at the
unconscious Slayer. "I should just
leave you here," he said out loud.
"You're more bloody trouble than you're worth..." Nevertheless, with a sigh he straightened,
wincing, then crossed to her side.
Her
heartbeat was still steady and the bleeding from the wounds on her arm had
slowed a little. When Spike laid one
palm along her cheek though, her skin was cold and she did not move at his
touch. "Probably get sodding
pneumonia, you will. *And* find a way
to blame me for it." Swearing
under his breath, Spike shrugged his coat off, wrapped it around her, then,
bracing himself against the pain in his ribs, bent down to pick her up.
She was
surprisingly light, the vampire found as he lifted her. There was so much strength that emanated
from her, so much force of mind, that he tended to forget just how small she
really was. Now though, her body limp
and cold in his
arms,
she seemed almost...
Actually,
she seemed pretty much like she always did.
Only unconscious. And
bleeding. He had to get her out of
here. Nevertheless, for the briefest of moments, Spike allowed himself to savor
the feeling of having the Slayer in his
arms. He swallowed once, deeply, then straightened
and, ignoring the fire that was burning a path along his right side, carried
her off into the night.
* *
*
Buffy
was dreaming. She was on a boat sailing
away from something or someone, the spray from the water lashing her across the
face and the even motion of the craft making her faintly nauseous. Besides which, she was cold. And her
arm
hurt where the giant tuna fish had fallen on it. And why the hell was Giles dancing with an octopus anyway?
OK. This was way too bizarre. Time to wake up. But then the dream changed and she was underwater, miles beneath
the surface, the light swiftly receding.
There was something else with her in the dark, something that grabbed
her by
the
ankles and was trying to pull her even deeper... Buffy kicked out desperately
with both feet, fighting to get back to the light, but it was no use. A fish, or another creature altogether
brushed by her, its skin cold against her own, but she couldn't see it, could
see nothing except the inky blackness surrounding her. Then, even the fish was gone, and she was
all alone. In the dark. Panic ripped through her, and she flailed
out with both hands...
...and
hit something solid. Buffy's eyes flew
open - and met only darkness. Suddenly
the terror from the dream became real.
She was trapped in the dark, couldn't see, couldn't...
"Quit
bloody struggling, will you?" A
voice said, sounding slightly winded.
"I'm trying to help!"
Buffy
stilled, her heart thudding as reality crashed in around her. "S-spike?" There was a faint quaver in her voice, one
that she couldn't quite conceal.
"No,
it's bleeding Prince Charming. Who do
you think?"
Buffy
blinked as the last traces of the dream faded.
She gradually became aware of her surroundings. The scent of leather and stale cigarettes. The sound of rain falling.
Cold
water running down her face and neck.
Something warm and soft enfolding her -- Spike's coat, her mind supplied
- and her cheek resting against something cool and solid.
The
sensation of movement... He was
carrying her. Buffy jerked once in
instinctive reaction and Spike's grip around her tightened.
"Are
you *trying* to make me drop you?" he snarled.
Buffy
stilled, but it wasn't because of Spike's words. No, it was the pain that was rising up inside her with every
movement. Her left arm felt as if it
were on fire and she could feel blood dripping down her fingers onto the ground
below. And, for the first time, she was glad to be
blind - - she so did not want to see how bad the damage was. The rest of her wasn't much better either --
pretty much everything hurt. A
lot. That demon had really done a
number on her.
The
demon... Buffy tensed slightly,
ignoring the various body parts that shrieked at her and the wordless growl
from the vampire carrying her. "Is
it dead?" she asked, her voice a little breathless. It wasn't from fear though. It *wasn't*. And neither did it have anything to do with the fact that she was
cradled against Spike's chest while he carried her to god knows where...
"Yeah,
it's dead," he said.
"You
sure?"
She
could almost sense his grin.
"Pretty sure."
Buffy
frowned, but let it go as relief began to cascade through her, leaving her weak
and shaken. It was over. The demon was
dead. And she was still alive.
She was
still alive.
Oh.
Not
quite certain how she felt about that, Buffy turned her mind to other
things. Like the fact that she was in
Spike's arms...and wrapped in his coat.
She twitched. "Put me down," she said, her voice as steady as she
could make it.
"Oh
sure. So you can fall on your face
before you get three steps. Not bloody
likely."
"I
can walk..."
"Sure
you can." With that he moved his
left hand, the hand that was beneath her shoulders, and squeezed her left arm,
just above the elbow.
She
didn't quite pass out, but it was a near thing. The pain became agony, sweeping all the way down to her toenails,
and she couldn't stifle the gasp that rose to her lips. The world rocked for a moment and she
distantly realized that Spike's chip had kicked in with his actions.
He
staggered briefly then righted himself and kept going. 'Serves you right,' she
thought hazily.
"Sure
you can walk, Slayer," Spike was saying, an echo of pain still in his
voice. "Run a bloody marathon, you
can. I'll just leave you here then. Let
you find your own way home."
"So
why don't you?" Her voice was
tired, bleak, and wracked with agony.
"Why are you helping me anyway?
Why didn't you just let the demon kill me?"
He
didn't answer her. Instead, there was a
brief silence then he said shortly:
"We're here."
"Where?"
Buffy whispered, the agony in her arm beginning to abate, just a little. But not enough. Not nearly enough.
"My
place."
Sensations
sweeping over her. No more rain. Damp earth. A sense of great age. A small, enclosed room. Spike's crypt. He was telling the truth.
Something
deep inside in the Slayer loosened, some tension that she hadn't even known was
there until it was gone, vanished. She
knew where she was. With that knowledge
came a sense of relief -- and she began to shake, her body trembling violently
within the folds of Spike's coat. It
wasn't because of her injuries or the cold, she knew. It was...everything was beginning to crash down upon her. The aftereffects of the battle with the
demon. Shock probably.
Surprise
that she was still in the land of the living -- more or less. And...and something else altogether.
For
just an instant she felt Spike's arms tighten around her...and then, without
warning, he let her go. Buffy tensed,
expecting to hit the ground hard.
Instead she found herself being deposited fairly gently on the top of
the
marble tomb in the middle of his crypt.
He set her down...and she immediately began to topple over to one side,
just managing to brace herself with her good arm so that she remained upright
-- weak, dizzy, blind, and
shaking
like a leaf. But sitting up. Yay for Buffy.
"You
okay?" Buffy heard the scratch of
a match, then a wreath of smoke wafted toward her. She shifted uncomfortably, trying to find a position where her
arm
didn't
hurt quite so much.
"Yes,"
she said firmly, keeping her gaze leveled downward so he couldn't see her eyes,
wishing the trembling would stop.
"I'll be fine."
"You
sure?"
"Yes."
"Good." With that he seized her, holding her firmly
by both wrists, ignoring the way she flinched as his fingers closed on her left
arm. "Then do you want to tell me
what the hell that was all about?"
There was real fury in his
voice
and Buffy leaned backwards, trying to free herself.
"Let
me go!"
The
vampire ignored her, his fingers tightening around her. "Are you trying to
get yourself killed? 'Cause if you are
maybe you could let me know ahead of time and I won't bother to save your
sodding life in future."
At that
moment something broke inside her.
Later, Buffy would say that it had all finally become too much. Her blindness, the battle, everything that
had happened to her up to that point...
She had finally reached breaking point.
The straw that broke the Slayer's back.
With what was probably the last of her strength, she wrenched loose from
the vampire and shoved him violently away with one well-placed fist, sliding
down the tomb until her feet reached the ground. Her legs held her up...just.
"I
never asked you to save me!" Her
voice was choked with emotion and she swung her right arm, desperately wanting
something...anything to fight.
Something she could actually defeat, someone she could beat into the
dust until it all went away... Fury was
running through her in torrents, wiping away the pain and the memories and
leaving only rage behind. Pure, unsullied
rage. Buffy aimed
another
blow at the vampire. "I was doing
fine on my own. If you hadn't interfered I would be..."
Spike
evaded her with ease then moved forward again, shoving the Slayer violently
back against the side of the tomb and pinning her hips with his own. He caught both of her wrists and forced her
arms behind her back, holding on to them both with one hand. Then he reached up with his other hand and
seized a fistful of her hair, tilting her head back as far as it would go,
baring her throat to him. She struggled, but he held on, moving even closer so
that
the
full length of his body was pressed tightly against hers.
"Dead,"
Spike said menacingly in her ear, listening to the pulse of the vein beating
beneath the skin of her throat as he held her.
"Dead is what you would have been if I hadn't *interfered*. What's the matter, Slayer? Sacred duty
finally
got too much for you? Got a little
taste of that death wish and you want more?
Well, just give the word, girl, and, chip or no chip, I'll
still..." But then his voice
trailed away as what his brain had been telling him for several minutes now,
finally began to sink in.
The
Slayer was still fighting to get loose, though her efforts were weaker
now. Her heart was fluttering against his
like a wounded bird and her entire body was shaking, with more than cold. But that wasn't what had stopped him. No, it
was her eyes. And their complete and
utter blankness. The way they *weren't*
focused on him and the way they didn't follow his every movement. Almost as if...
Spike
dropped her abruptly and stepped backwards, stunned. Blind?
He must
have said the word out loud because her shoulders sagged, all the fight
abruptly going out of her. Buffy
collapsed back against the tomb as if it were the only thing still holding her
up, and dropped her head, no longer meeting his gaze. There was a long moment of silence, then she said wearily: "Yes, I'm blind."
"Happy
now?"
PART 4
"Before mine eyes in opposition
sits grim Death"
-- John Milton
"Yes,
I'm blind. Happy now?" At that moment, Buffy's knees abruptly gave
way and she found herself sliding down the side of the marble tomb until she
was sitting limply on the ground. With
a shudder, she leaned her head back
against
it and closed her eyes. Waiting.
Silence. Spike hadn't moved. A few more heartbeats passed then the
stillness finally became too much for her shattered nerves to bear any longer. "Well?" Buffy asked tautly. "Aren't you going to say it?"
"Say
what?" Spike's voice sounded
odd. Flat somehow.
"I
don't know. Some crack. How this really makes your century,
maybe. I don't know..." Her voice trailed away and she shifted a
little, cradling her left arm in her lap, wishing the waves of pain that were
rolling across her body would go away for a while. Wishing *he* would go away...
"How?" Spike's question abruptly brought her
wandering mind back to the present.
Buffy
didn't pretend not to know what he meant.
"Acid-spitting demon.
Ducked right when I should have dodged left. End of story."
"When?"
He
really was a vampire of few words. Or
syllables. "Last Tuesday. And no, there's nothing anyone can do. I'm blind.
For life. However long that
turns out to be." This time her words were laced with bitterness.
She
heard him shift his weight, sensing the slight movement of his feet on the
hard-packed dirt, and braced herself for the...no, not sympathy. She didn't expect sympathy from Spike --
despite that moment on her mother's porch a week
ago
when he had...when he had been kind.
No. She couldn't deal with any
more kindness right now. She'd had more
than enough from her friends and family, and it was killing her. Insults,
threats, demons trying to murder her -- those she
could
handle. But not kindness. Not now.
And not from him. Buffy opened
her eyes -- not that it made any difference -- and straightened her shoulders. "And don't bother saying how sorry you
are, because I won't believe you," she snapped.
There
was another long pause and then:
"Not likely. I was just
going to say that you're bleeding all over my bloody...uh...coat."
Oh. Buffy reached up with one hand to the
leather that was still wrapped around her.
For a moment her fingers tightened around one edge, then she doggedly
began to pull it off, trying to jar her left arm as little as possible.
A
moment later hands were touching hers, helping to slide the leather duster off
her shoulders.
"Always
figured I'd get to undress you one day," he said tauntingly.
Buffy
tried to bat the vampire's hands away but failed miserably. "In your dreams," she muttered.
"Yeah,"
he breathed, so quietly that she almost didn't hear him. And then he was pulling the coat aside,
causing a fresh wave of agony to shoot through her, and she decided she had
misheard.
"Can
you stand?" Spike's voice was
calm, matter-of-fact, as if he didn't care one way or the other. He probably didn't.
Buffy
frowned, then shook her head, not even trying to make the effort. She knew she couldn't stand. The dizziness was back with a vengeance and
she was colder than ever. So cold she
felt as if she were turning to ice.
Buffy the
Snow-Slayer. Funny.
She could no longer feel the ground beneath her, she realized dimly, and
the world was becoming distant and remote.
Blood loss and shock, part of her mind supplied...but she couldn't
really find it in her to care. Maybe *this* was it. This was how she would die -- not in battle as she had always
thought, but bleeding to death in Spike's crypt -- which was ironic in a way
that pretty much redefined the word 'irony'.
Still, maybe that would be ok. She didn't think she'd ever have the
courage to try this again. If it didn't
end tonight... Buffy's eyes began to
flicker shut.
A
resounding cuff across the face banished the oblivion that was beginning to
enfold her and the Slayer's eyes flew open again. Without warning she found herself being dragged to her feet then
tossed roughly onto the top of the
tomb. Buffy gasped, wincing at the pain in her jaw
which now rivaled that of her arm.
"Ow. What are--?" she
started to say, but Spike's words overrode hers.
"You
are so damned...pathetic, do you know that?
God, any more nobility and self-sacrifice around here and I'm going to
throw up."
"What..."
she tried again but he ignored her, reaching out to give her a shove so that
she fell backwards, laying full length on the top of the tomb.
"Just
shut up and keep still," he said.
His voice was practically vibrating with fury and for a moment the
clouds in her mind rolled away. Chip or
no chip, Spike was still dangerous.
Always would be. Buffy froze as
she sensed him
moving
closer...but then he went around the tomb, heading across the crypt where she
could hear him rummaging for something.
Then he moved back towards her and she tensed again, wishing for the
millionth time that she could see what was happening.
"If
you think you get to bleed to death here you're off your rocker. I don't want your gang of Scoobies staking
me because I let you die. And I
certainly don't want the next Slayer coming along, out for revenge and a little
Spike-
slayage
-- not while I've got this chip in my head at any rate."
"So
throw me out in the rain and don't get involved," she said weakly.
"Don't
tempt me. No, I'm going to patch you up
-- only to keep you from dripping blood all over my floor, mind - and then I'm
taking you home where you can be somebody else's problem. *Anybody* else's problem."
"No!" Buffy tried to sit up but he held her down
easily. "Spike, you don't understand..."
"Don't
I?" He reached for the collar of
her shirt, yanking open the top button.
"And before you get any ideas, I'm taking this off so I can fix
your arm, is all. So don't get
excited."
"Like
this would excite me. Listen, you don't
know..."
He undid
the next button and then the next, wrenching her shirt open. Buffy flinched and her shivering increased
as a cold draft played over her bared skin.
"How
'bout I tell you what I know," Spike was saying, pulling her right arm
through the shirtsleeve. "Like how
you probably spent the last few days deciding that the world needs a Slayer, a
new Chosen-bloody-Whiner. Since
the
other one's, what? Doing ten to twenty
for murder?" He succeeded in freeing her right arm and moved on to the
left. "So heroic little Buffy
decides to go out and get herself killed so the next Slayer can be called and
fight the forces of evil, blah blah blah.
How'm I doing so far?"
She
said nothing. Partly because he was
right, partly because she was in too much pain to do more than clench her teeth
and try not to scream -- and partly because she was *way* too aware of the fact
that Spike was undressing her.
Which
was more than a little surprising, given that she was in agony, frozen to the
marrow, and hanging onto consciousness by a thread. What the hell was the matter with her anyway?
Spike's
fingers brushed against her bare stomach and she inhaled sharply, then shook
the bizarre thoughts away, concentrating instead on remaining awake.
He was
still talking. "Bet you planned everything,"
he said derisively. "Wrote all the Scoobies tragic little goodbye
notes. Probably shagged your boyfriend
one last time and then went out demon-hunting.
Right?"
A small
shaft of anger went through Buffy and for a moment she forgot everything
else. How come Spike got to be the one
who could always get inside her head?
Why could she fool everyone else but not him. Never him. It wasn't
fair...
"Well,
am I right? I like the lacy lingerie,
by the way," he added, almost as an afterthought as he pulled her injured
arm through the shirtsleeve then let the blood-soaked garment drop to the
floor.
Buffy
didn't answer. Couldn't. The sudden jolt of pain in her arm was
overwhelming and she felt as if she were being pulled backwards and downwards,
sinking ever deeper into shadows.
'Can't faint,' Buffy thought desperately, a
tremor
going through her. 'Won't...' But her grip on the world was failing. For a fleeting moment the Slayer thought she
felt something soft brush against her hair --Spike? -- and then even that was
gone and she was alone in the dark.
Again.