Summary: Post-Chosen, Post Hellbound. What did you think the First Evil was doing after the closure of the Hellmouth? Knitting evil jumpers?
Rating: PG-13
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Chapter 24 – Icarus
The whole church shone. Beams of light so brilliant it was like staring
for too long at the California sun: too bright to watch, too intense,
too painful.
Spike’s screams had become rasping snarls filled with agonies. A punk
Icarus too close to a vicious sun, the strange sunshine flooding in
through the shattered windows was too strong for him to bear. The light
poured into the nave like a cleansing tsunami heaven-sent to purify the
malevolent night. It took back to the divine what the profane had
defiled with innocent blood and Buffy feared the thin strips of weak
shade underneath the pews were not nearly enough to protect his undead
flesh from its scouring. She stretched herself back over his chest in
the desperate hope she was doing enough to shield him from crumbling to
dust in her arms. Her small body was poor protection from the savage
glare, but his skin had already begun to sizzle with a sickening hiss
and there was no other shelter she could offer.
Too harsh to escape, the light washed away colours and drowned shadows
as it intensified, whitewashing the walls, arches and dark sacred
hollows to a stark monochrome. But she couldn’t afford to close her
eyes, not yet, even though they stung and had begun to pool with tears
which softened the edges of her vision and made the church look like a
painting brushed in lipid watercolours. Through this watery lens the
arches rose above her like a series of tall waterfalls, solemn cascades
in a river of luminescence, the sagging wedding blooms hung from them
brought back to life as bubbling spray crashing upon the rocky pews at
the feet of the columns. Beyond them, the altar seemed vague, a boxy
island in the torrent, but the vivid spring emerald of the altar cloth
had become sallow and liquid, the intricate patterns embroidered onto
the fabric and the gruesome trail of dry anaemic blood that stained the
thin thread lost as the colours ran and bled into each other. Even the
shimmering gold cross had faded into a formless, unrecognisable blob,
bleached and pallid against the now drab cloth.
With no darkness left to sustain their tainted counterfeit of life, the
revenant dead shrank away; crawling back into the silent refuge of
their dark holes or, like the wraiths, curling away into charcoal smoke
as they let cry one last shriek of hideous complaint. As the last of
them fell mute, the banging on the church door ceased; the high tide of
the risen ebbing as they returned to their desecrated graves.
Their racket was replaced by a sudden and reverent silence, the world
falling still for a long moment out of time. As life and death
reorganised themselves back into their proper order, Buffy felt
something shift inside her, an odd movement of her being; as if the
universe was clicking her soul back into position. The unbearable
pressure of the wraith’s calls lifted from her like a heavy,
suffocating veil to reveal how false their entreaties had been. A while
ago she might have given anything to join them, to regain a longed for
peace that had been ripped away, but that was then and for all the
upheaval her life had seen since she didn’t seek death just yet.
Finally, with a new lightness inside, she let her eyes fall shut.
The weird sunlight didn’t last. After a few minutes it slowly relented.
Like a flare giving up all hope of rescue, it dropped in intensity,
fading from dazzling to daylight to a brief, deepening dusk. As the
church settled back into tranquil, moonlit shadows again, full dark
returned and Buffy opened her eyes to a black world, deep and
impenetrable.
She wiped a hand across her face, sweeping away the tears and trying to
blink away the fuzzy constellation of polka dot stars burnt into her
retinas. “The hell…?“
Spike didn’t reply. Instead he released a heavy, relieved sigh and let his head slump to the floor.
Gently, she prised his tense fingers from her arms and rolled off his
chest onto her knees. She was worried about him, but he was solid and
substantial and wasn’t on fire, and so was unlikely to dust if she left
him for a minute to check for any more dangers. Even though her eyes
were still adjusting to the dark, she peered out over the back of the
pew. The church seemed to be smothered in a quiet calm. Nothing moved
in the shadows or hollered a war cry from a undead throat. They
appeared to be alone.
Relieved – nothing to worry about except a whole undead army blocking
their way home – she sat back on her heels and looked down at Spike.
“It’s okay, they’ve gone.”
He nodded, slowly heaving himself up to sit beside her. “About time.”
“What was that?” she wondered aloud, not really expecting him to have the answer.
“Not a buggering clue.” He hissed as he shrugged stiffly. “Ow. Bloody hurt though.”
“Are you okay?” she asked, not seeing anything wrong. He was nothing
but a black shape tipped with silver where his hair caught the
moonlight, but she couldn’t forget the terrible sounds he’d been
making. She reached out to help him somehow, soothe him maybe, but as
she touched his hand he snatched it away.
“Bit sore, pet,” he croaked apologetically, lifting his head out of the
shadows. His exposed skin looked angry and red, just like he was a real
boy who’d fallen asleep on a beach in the mid-day sun. In some places
it was already beginning to blister and peel. “Nothing to worry about.”
She had her doubts; he looked so raw, but her concern could wait until
they had figured out the cause of the mysterious light. If it happened
again they needed to be ready for it. The sunlight – if that was what
it really was – hadn’t felt evil though, like something The First would
conjure, and it had driven the dead back to their rest, but she already
knew that it wasn’t divine in any way – slayers didn’t get that kind of
intervention. Instead it had felt more like being caught in a nuclear
blast or standing too close to a star. Spike, pinned under her body
where they’d fallen, had been protected from its full strength, but he
was lucky not to have crumbled to powder a second time.
If she hadn’t fallen across him…
She didn’t think anymore, suppressing the cold fear scything through her, and just kissed him.
If she’d thought it through rationally, she wouldn’t have expected him
to respond, maybe ducking out from under her searching lips as he tried
to re-establish the distance between them, but instead he grabbed her,
wincing a little with the pain, but kissing her back forcefully as if
this was what he’d wanted all along.
A perfect moment became captured in one kiss. She shut her eyes, her
hands gripping his arms, clenching the leather of his coat tighter and
tighter after every second they were connected. She'd forgotten!
Forgotten how great the soft swell of his lips felt against her mouth,
how his touch made her feel so, so good. She never wanted to forget
again, never, because this was what she had been missing all this time;
that fission fusion, ying yang push-pull of their auras that drew them
together, pitching light against dark in such wonderful ways; a
struggle as old as the sun and the moon themselves.
And how different this was from the all the kisses they’d shared
before, when she’d been so wrapped up in her own misery that she hadn’t
noticed his. In her life she'd tasted young love, remorse, hopeless
longing and, all too often, despair on another’s lips, but this kiss
was in another class. This was one of those moments she’d tried to
deny, when heat expanded like a supernova inside them, the same intense
passion there had always been causing her to tingle all over with
excited sparkles that exploded in her fingers and toes. A churning
whirlpool of lust spun in her stomach as the kiss lingered; past
passion into the barest of touches, a connection between them that
neither wished to break.
They always came back to each other; to this now… though what this was
exactly she couldn’t put a name to. A tangled knot of opposing feelings
had warred within her. She knew they weren’t soul mates or anything
fanciful like that, most of the time she’d known him she’d wished him a
swift dusty death and meant it, but she had the fleeting thought that
maybe they had become tied together somehow, tangled up on a tether
that reached even through dimensions and death. How they’d got to this,
she couldn’t say; but she couldn’t help wondering if this thing between
them that kept drawing them to each other had all been part of some
spell, perhaps even a residue effect of mistaken magic that had bound
them together in a twisted arranged marriage. Maybe that spell of
Willow’s had had much deeper consequences than a whole lot of red-faced
embarrassment.
Whatever it was, whatever they’d felt, at some point it had deepened;
Buffy couldn't quite pin down the exact instant when Spike had gone
from murderous annoyance to sex-on-a-stick, but she guessed it had been
something to do with her death. His weight, plummeting with guilt and
grief, had somehow accentuated his best features and suddenly, tall,
looming hunks were as out as last season’s hottest shoes and in came
short, lean, muscular punks in mean leather and silver jewellery. If
she’d realised just how deep a punk-rock, beached blond, irritating
vampire could worm his way into her heart, she could have defended
herself. Without a soul he would always be Mr. So Very Very Wrong, but
that was no longer an issue. So here he was, Mr. Can't Live Without
back from the dead again, cocky and coarse and with a soul just for
her. She would not squander her second chance.
When they finally broke apart, his smile was warm, as happy as any
she'd seen him wear, but when she looked up at him, trying to decipher
his deeper mysteries in the soft moonlight, she saw a wariness there
that lingered in his eyes as if he still couldn't believe this to be
true. But he held her gaze and she saw there the same devotion she’d
denied, buried under the doubt and the hope and the fear and the
elation. She wanted so much to reassure him that this time she would
get it right, but this wasn’t time for words. She said it all with
another kiss.
When that was over she reluctantly pulled away. She licked her lips absently. “We had better go.”
“Yeah,” he replied, his rumbling voice scratchy and low, a promise for more to come.
She dropped her eyes and turned away, breaking the moment. She might
even have blushed. If she kept her eyes locked with his, they might
never leave and she seriously needed a shower. “Um. There’s—“
She never finished her sentence.
A whiplash crack of thunder rent the air and the church door imploded
inwards, wrenched violently off its mangled hinges by the blast. The
pew that had wedged it shut was propelled backwards, smashing against
carved stone, the old wood pulverised into matchwood. As it fell to the
floor, nothing more now than sharp, toothpick splinters, a dark figure
stepped into the doorway, terrible in silhouette.
“Willow!” At the sight of the witch standing in the porch, hair
bleached silver with raw magic billowing around her head at the centre
of its own cyclone, angry ivory whips lashing at the air above her,
Buffy brightened into a relieved grin.
Following Buffy’s voice, Hurricane Willow turned her head. For a second
she still looked inhuman as she scanned the church for her friend,
something capricious and elemental. Sparks still zipped and snapped
from her fingers, her eyes fathoms deep with magic, but the impression
was gone the instant she saw Buffy. Her power started to dissipate,
colour flushing into her pupils and her hair bleeding back to red as
the magic drained away.
A normal girl again, she gave Buffy a goofy smile in return.
Buffy pulled away from Spike and jumped to her feet, rushing down the
nave to throw her arms around her friend. "Will! You're here! What
happened? The First was outside. It had an army.”
“Yeah, we saw it.” Willow smile upped in wattage to become a broad
grin. “Most of them are all dead or dusty now. The rest fled back into
the woods.”
Of course, Buffy realised, a bright, uncanny light from out of nowhere – a spell. “That light. That was you?”
“Tara’s little sunshine spell. I tweaked it a bit,” Willow nodded proudly. “Okay, a lot.”
“Careful where you’re firing it next time, Red.”
As Spike spoke and emerged from the shadows, Willow’s sweet grin
evaporated and she darkened; hair turning to russet, auburn, black. The
glittering softness in her eyes hardened to flint. Her hand shot out
and he froze mid-step, locked into freeze frame.
“Willow, no!” Buffy pleaded, moving herself between Spike and the witch. “It’s just Spike.”
Before Willow could answer, Giles appeared at her shoulder. He looked
tired and worn, worry carving deep lines into his forehead, but he
still looked dangerous and determined, a worthy adversary to anything
evil foolish enough to cross his path.
“No, Buffy, it’s The First.” he told her, not greeting Buffy with any
friendliness. There was work to be done and this wasn’t the time for
happy reunions. “Please stand aside.”
“Giles! No!” Buffy protested, worried that this stand off was going to
end up like a gunfight at the Not-Okay Corral. “Believe me, this is
Spike. I know it. The First is out there somewhere.” She waved her arm
in the vague direction of outside.
Willow’s glare seemed to waver. She gave Giles an anxious glance.
He stepped forward with an arm outstretched, trying to soothe and
reassure her like she was an uneasy thoroughbred. “Buffy. I know these
past few months have been difficult and you have lost a lot, including
Spike. But this is not the Spike you knew. Something happened in Los
Angeles, Buffy. The First has changed…”
“Giles, I know,” Buffy couldn’t help rolling her eyes. “I’m not jumping
to conclusions because I want him back. The First is solid and it’s
wearing Spike’s face. I’ve seen them both. Tonight. Together. In the
both in the same place standing next to each other kind of together.”
She gestured to Spike beside her, as still as a statue sculpted in
ebony and alabaster. “And this one is Spike.”
Giles stopped and straightened. “Are you sure?”
“A million percent sure.” Buffy nodded. “I can tell the difference, Giles.”
“Hmmm.” he pondered as he gave Spike a critical inspection. Buffy bit
down on her anger as she saw him weighing up the pros and cons of
trusting her judgement. After all that had happened he still couldn’t
quite accept that she was an adult capable of putting her feelings to
one side.
Eventually he seemed to come to a conclusion and gestured for Willow to
stand down. She lowered her arm sheepishly and she lightened again.
Spike, staggering slightly as he was released from his temporal trap,
snapped. “Watch it, Red. This body’s brand new. Not likely to get
another one!”
Willow's eyes grew huge as she realised he really was Spike. "Wow, then it's true! You're back."
Spike shrugged, using nonchalance to cover the awkwardness. "Just took a bit of a detour getting here."
“Two of them!” Giles sighed, rubbing his face with a hand. “As if one wasn’t enough already.”
Buffy chose to ignore that. “So how did you know we needed help?
"Giles got a call from Angel,” Willow said, picking her way through the
debris she’d made to join Giles in the nave. Her nose wrinkled as she
caught the stink of death that hung in the air. “He said you might need
some Scooby assistance."
“Yes,” Giles added. “I believe Wesley found out something about the
First's plan. Angel thought you should know. They're on their way."
Buffy ’s stomach dropped like a runaway elevator, hitting the bottom with a smash. "Angel's coming here?"
Spike snorted with disgust or contempt. Probably both. "Great, might
have known the old bugger couldn't leave it alone. Still can't trust
me, can he?"
"There’s a lot of that going round,” Buffy said acidly, but she put her
irritation with Giles aside. “So how did you even get into the
village?” she asked. “There's a spell..."
"Yeah, it's a really strong one too. We had to punch our way through
it,” Willow gave the air a half-hearted right hook with her delicate
fist.
“Indeed,” Giles agreed. “The village has been pulled into another reality…”
Buffy couldn’t resist. “Another dimension? Is there shrimp?”
“Yes, I believe so. Buffy. Please pay attention,” Unconsciously, Giles
removed his glasses and started to polish them. This discussion was
getting all too familiar; she might have been back at High School
getting her daily Giles-lecture. “As I was saying, this village has
been pulled into another reality, as it were, but we’re in nothing as
complicated as a whole dimension. We’re within a spell. A powerful one
that is holding us out of phase with the rest of the world, but the
village remains real and physical. Unless they know it is here, people
will subconsciously avoid the area, but once they find a way in they
cannot escape. They get caught here.”
Buffy thought that over. Absently, she rubbed her biceps. Spike had
held them so tightly she would have a bloom of bruises by morning. “A
bit like a magical spider’s web?”
“That would be an excellent analogy. Yes, indeed it is.”
Spike nodded in that way he did when he was mulling things over. “It’s
a trap. Lures you in, keeps you going round in circles til it drives
you bonkers.”
“It’s like the whole village is contained in this big invisible
bubble,” Willow threw her arms out wide to demonstrate her point and
Buffy didn’t miss they way Spike dodged warily out of their range. “We
had to ignore what our eyes were telling us and drive straight into
it."
“We break the spell then.” Spike said firmly. “Get the hell away from here.”
Buffy perked up at that. "Great, that means we can leave."
"Not really,” Giles just had to pour cold water on an awesome plan. “We
could break the spell, but for the moment I’m not sure that’s wise.” he
explained, “As it is, The First has contained its armies within the
village and the spell, but that only means they’re just as stuck as we
are. They cannot harm anyone outside the boundaries. We may find it
prudent to keep them here for as long as possible.”
Buffy slumped back down onto a vacant pew. “So what do we do?”
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